Reuters/Los Angeles
Facebook film The Social Network and thriller Inception won top honors from the Writers Guild of America on Saturday in one of the last major Hollywood award shows before the Oscars later this month.

US screenwriter Aaron Sorkin holds his WGA Award for Outstanding Adapted Screenplay for The Social Network at the Writers Guild of America Awards (WGA) in Hollywood on Saturday. Right: British-American director Christopher Nolan holds his WGA Award for Original Screenplay for Inception
Social Network writer Aaron Sorkin took the award for best adapted screenplay from the group that represents US film and television writers and Inception creator Christopher Nolan was named best writer of an original script.
Awards from Hollywood’s professional guilds often provide hints about which films and film-makers will compete for Oscars, the world’s top film awards, given out by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences on Feb. 27, because many members of the guilds also belong to the academy.
While that is certainly true in the category for best adapted screenplay, where Sorkin and Social Network are tipped to win, the other Oscar front-runner, royals drama The King’s Speech, was not nominated for the Writers Guild award for best original screenplay.
Accepting his trophy, Nolan gave a nod to the absence of The King’s Speech, which is leading the Oscar race with 12 nominations but was ineligible for the WGA award because the production was made outside WGA guidelines.
Nolan noted he was “heartbroken” nine years ago when he failed to earn a nomination for his screenplay for Memento because it too was outside WGA guidelines. He indicated his award on Saturday night would have been more meaningful had “certain screenplays” been nominated.
He did not name The King’s Speech by name, however, “for fear of boosting their chances at any other awards,” Nolan said to a knowing audience. King’s Speech did receive an Oscar nomination for best original screenplay.
Nolan said his was “one man’s opinion,” adding, “This is an incredible honour to me.”
Sorkin’s script detailing the creation of the social networking site in a Harvard dormitory room in the early 2000s, took top prize for adapted screenplay, and he gave a nod to the movie’s director, David Fincher.
“I wrote a good screenplay, but David Fincher made a great movie,” Sorkin said.
Along with King’s Speech, Social Network is the other front-runner for the best movie Oscar. Sorkin is widely considered the favourite for best adapted screenplay having won several early critics’ awards and now the WGA honour.
In the documentary category, writer/director Charles Ferguson took the prize for best writing of a nonfiction film for Inside Job. More winners can be found at http://www.wga.org.
The Writers Guild also gives awards in TV categories, and the top two honours in that arena went to Mad Men for best TV drama series writing and Modern Family for top TV comedy series.
Top movies at theN American box office
Following are the top 10 movies at the North American box office for the three days beginning on Feb. 4, led by the new release The Roommate, according to studio estimates compiled yesterday by Reuters.
1 (*) The Roommate ......... $15.6mn
2 (*) Sanctum .............. $9.2mn
3 (2) No Strings Attached .. $8.4mn
4 (5) The King’s Speech .... $8.3mn
5 (4) The Green Hornet ..... $6.1mn
6 (1) The Rite ............. $5.6mn
7 (3) The Mechanic ......... $5.4mn
8 (6) True Grit ............ $4.8mn
9=(7) The Dilemma .......... $3.4mn
9=(8) Black Swan ........... $3.4mn
NOTES: Last weekend’s rankings in parenthesis; (*) = new release.
CUMULATIVE TOTALS:
True Grit ............. $155.0mn
Black Swan ............ $95.9mn
The Green Hornet ...... $87.2mn
The King’s Speech ..... $84.1mn
No Strings Attached ... $51.8mn
The Dilemma ........... $45.7mn
The Rite .............. $23.7mn
The Mechanic .......... $20.1mn
The Roommate .......... $15.6mn
Sanctum ............... $9.2mn