Danny Boyle wins DGA; one step closer to Oscar
Danny Boyle was chosen Best Director for the film "Slumdog Millionaire" Saturday night at the annual Directors Guild of America Awards. This brings the British native one step closer to the all coveted Academy Award for Best Director, since the DGA award recipient almost always wins the Oscar.
And, usually, the Academy Award-winning director's film usually wins Best Picture.
Other winners were The Office for television comedy, The Wire for TV Drama and Recount won for TV movie.
Ari Folman's "Waltz With Bashir" won the documentary award, and is expected to take the Oscar for Documentary as well.
And, in what was the most touching part of the evening, Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert was honored with an honorary life membership to the guild. Ebert, who can no longer speak because of complications from thyroid cancer, was fetted by testimonials from directors including Steven Spielberg, Clint Eastwood, Martin Scorcese and Oliver Stone.
"The motion picture is the art form I love above all others," Ebert said in a statement recorded via a synthetic computer voice with a British accent. "It is the symphony, and you are the conductors."
Congratulations Roger and may you have a long, happy life to come!!
Labels: Danny Boyle, DGA, Directors Guild of America, Roger Ebert, Slumdog Millionaire