BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (Reuters) - Revenge drama "The Revenant" and space adventure "The Martian" took the top film awards at Sunday's Golden Globes, setting them up as formidable Oscar contenders after a night of surprises and stinging barbs from return host Ricky Gervais.
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Actress Kate Winslet poses with her award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in any Motion Picture for her role in "Steve Jobs," backstage at the 73rd Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California January 10, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson[/caption]
Pioneer-era tale "The Revenant" won three awards including best drama film, beating out front-runners "Carol," a lesbian romance, and investigative journalism drama "Spotlight." "Revenant" star Leonardo DiCaprio won best drama actor and Alejandro Inarritu was named best director.
"This is the most difficult journey I've embarked on," said Inarritu, who last year won directing and best picture Oscars for "Birdman."
Jennifer Lawrence poses backstage with the award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy for her role in "Joy" at the 73rd Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California January 10, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson[/caption]
"Listen, if you do win tonight, remember no one cares about that award as much as you do," he said.
Gervais riled up the audience with an opening monologue in which he called the A-list audience "disgusting, pill-popping, sexual deviant scum," setting the tone for the bawdy humor that filled the night.
There were a large number of bleeped-out words during the telecast of the show, from Jonah Hill swearing while pretending to be the bear from "The Revenant," to Amy Schumer using an expletive while enaging in light-hearted banter with Lawrence.
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Damon won best comedy actor for "The Martian," about an astronaut stranded on Mars, and the film also won the best comedy/musical movie category.
"I've made a lot of movies that people just didn't go to see, so to make a movie that people just enjoyed this much ... it really came down to (director) Ridley Scott," Damon said.
"Carol" went into the night with five nominations but came out empty-handed, as did "The Big Short," about the financial crisis, and admired Catholic Church sex abuse probe film "Spotlight."
Rising star Brie Larson, 26, beat veteran Cate Blanchett to win best drama actress for her role as a young woman held captive for years with a young son in "Room," while Lawrence won best comedy actress for "Joy," about the Miracle Mop inventor.
Lawrence, 25, dedicated most of her speech to thanking "Joy" director David O. Russell, with whom she has made several films. "David, I want us to be buried next to each other. I really do."
Other key winners included Sylvester Stallone, 69, who received a standing ovation as best supporting film actor for reprising his iconic role as boxer Rocky Balboa in "Creed."
"Steve Jobs," a controversial look at the late Apple co-founder that floundered at the box office despite warm reviews, took home Golden Globes for supporting actress Kate Winslet, and screenwriter Aaron Sorkin.
In the television categories, newcomers prevailed in key categories as USA Network's "Mr. Robot," a cybersecurity expert with social anxiety, won best TV drama series while Amazon's musical show "Mozart in the Jungle" won best TV comedy series.