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 | Screenwriters Paul Haggis (L) and Robert (or 
 Bobby) Moresco pose with the award for best original screenplay for 
 the film 'Crash,' which they won at the 2006 Writers Guild Awards in 
 Hollywood, California February 4, 2006. Haggis also directed the 
 film. |   
 
  
  
  
  Hollywood's screenwriters gave their two top film awards to race drama 
 "Crash" and gay romance "Brokeback Mountain" on Saturday, setting up a 
 showdown between the two message movies for the best movie Oscar. 
  "Crash," which looks at racial tension in Los Angeles from the points 
 of view of different ethnic groups, won the best original screenplay award 
 from the Writers Guild of America for its writers Paul Haggis and Bobby 
 Moresco. 
  "Brokeback Mountain," about a love affair between a pair of lonesome 
 cowboys that spanned decades, earned Diana Ossana and Larry McMurtry best 
 adapted screenplay honors from the guild. 
  Moresco said he felt humbled to be honored by his peers. "To say our 
 script is any one bit better than the others is nuts," he said. "It's not a competition, and 
 we all know it." 
  Likewise, Ossana took note of all the scripts and writers competing for 
 awards and said she felt honored just to be in the same "stellar company" 
 as the others. 
  The guild awards are widely watched in Hollywood because many of their 
 members also belong to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, 
 which gives out the Oscars on March 5. Together, "Crash" and "Brokeback" 
 have scooped up many of the 
 top honors from Hollywood's professional groups. 
  "Brokeback," earned the best motion picture honors from the Producers 
 Guild of America and director Ang Lee won the top award from the Directors 
 Guild of America. "Crash" came back to win the Screen Actors Guild trophy 
 for best ensemble acting. 
  Before giving the Writers Guild award to Haggis and Moresco, Terrence 
 Howard, who starred in "Crash," praised the power of many of this year's 
 competing movies offered audiences stories that made them think about the 
 world and about society. 
  That could also be said of "Good Night, and Good Luck," which explores 
 free speech issues in a tale about newsman Edward R. Murrow's battle 
 against McCarthyism in the 1950s. 
  Its writers, Grant Heslov and George Clooney, were given an honorary 
 award for a screenplay whose spirit embodies constitutional and civil 
 rights issues. 
  The Writers Guild also gives out awards for television series, and its 
 many writers for ABC network's "Lost" won for best drama series, while 
 Larry David won the trophy for best comedy series with "Curb Your 
 Enthusiasm." 
  (Agencies)  |