Tag: Golden Globes

  • FULL LIST: Golden Globes unveils nominees for 2026

    FULL LIST: Golden Globes unveils nominees for 2026

    The 2026 Golden Globes nominations have been announced, marking the beginning of Hollywood’s awards season.

    The biggest and best films, shows, and stars from the past year are up for consideration, with winners to be revealed on January 11.

    This is a key milestone in the lead-up to the Oscars in March.

    The nominations showcase a diverse range of talent, with “One Battle After Another” leading the pack with nine nominations, followed closely by “Sentimental Value” with eight and “Sinners” with seven.

    Notable film nominees include “Frankenstein”, “Hamnet”, and “It Was Just an Accident”, while top TV contenders include “The Diplomat”, “The Pitt”, and “The White Lotus”.

    The biggest and best films, shows, and stars from the past year have been named on the shortlists for Golden Globes glory, as this year’s Hollywood award season gets underway in earnest.

    The Golden Globe nominations were announced on Monday, with the winners to be revealed on 11 January, which is all part of the build-up to the Oscars in March.

    Here are the Golden Globe shortlists:

    Film categories

    Best film – drama

    Frankenstein

    Hamnet

    It Was Just an Accident

    The Secret Agent

    Sentimental Value

    Sinners

    Best film – musical or comedy

    Blue Moon

    Bugonia

    Marty Supreme

    No Other Choice

    Nouvelle Vague

    One Battle After Another

    Best non-English language film

    It Was Just an Accident

    No Other Choice

    The Secret Agent

    Sentimental Value

    Sirât

    The Voice of Hind Rajab

    Best animated film

    Arco

    Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle

    Elio

    KPop Demon Hunters

    Little Amélie or the Character of Rain

    Zootopia 2

    Best female actor – drama

    Jessie Buckley – Hamnet

    Jennifer Lawrence – Die, My Love

    Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value

    Julia Roberts – After the Hunt

    Tessa Thompson – Hedda

    Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby

    Best male actor – drama

    Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams

    Oscar Isaac – Frankenstein

    Dwayne Johnson – The Smashing Machine

    Michael B Jordan – Sinners

    Wagner Moura – The Secret Agent

    Jeremy Allen White – Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere

    Best female actor – musical or comedy

    Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You

    Cynthia Erivo – Wicked: For Good

    Kate Hudson – Song Sung Blue

    Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another

    Amanda Seyfried – The Testament of Ann Lee

    Emma Stone – Bugonia

    Best male actor – musical or comedy

    Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme

    George Clooney – Jay Kelly

    Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another

    Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon

    Lee Byung-Hun – No Other Choice

    Jesse Plemons – Bugonia

    Best supporting female actor

    Emily Blunt – The Smashing Machine

    Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value

    Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good

    Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value

    Amy Madigan – Weapons

    Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another

    Best supporting male actor

    Benicio Del Toro – One Battle After Another

    Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein

    Paul Mescal – Hamnet

    Sean Penn – One Battle After Another

    Adam Sandler – Jay Kelly

    Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value

    Cinematic and box office achievement

    Avatar: Fire and Ash

    F1

    KPop Demon Hunters

    Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning

    Sinners

    Weapons

    Wicked: For Good

    Zootopia 2

    Best director

    Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another

    Ryan Coogler – Sinners

    Guillermo del Toro – Frankenstein

    Jafar Panahi – It Was Just an Accident

    Joachim Trier – Sentimental Value

    Chloe Zhao – Hamnet

    Best screenplay

    Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another

    Ronald Bronstein, Josh Safdie – Marty Supreme

    Ryan Coogler – Sinners

    Jafar Panahi – It Was Just an Accident

    Eskil Vogt, Joachim Trier – Sentimental Value

    Chloé Zhao, Maggie O’Farrell – Hamnet

    Best original song

    Miley Cyrus, Andrew Wyatt, Mark Ronson, Simon Franglen – Avatar: Fire and Ash; Dream as One

    Joong Gyu Kwak, Yu Han Lee, Hee Dong Nam, Jeong Hoon Seo, Park Hong Jun, Kim Eun-jae (EJAE), Mark Sonnenblick – KPop Demon Hunters; Golden

    Raphael Saadiq, Ludwig Göransson – Sinners; I Lied to You

    Stephen Schwartz – Wicked: For Good; No Place Like Home

    Stephen Schwartz – Wicked: For Good; The Girl in the Bubble

    Nick Cave, Bryce Dessner – Train Dreams; Train Dreams

    Best original score

    Alexandre Desplat – Frankenstein

    Ludwig Göransson – Sinners

    Jonny Greenwood – One Battle After Another

    Kanding Ray – Sirāt

    Max Richter – Hamnet

    Hans Zimmer – F1

    TV & podcast categories

    Best series – drama

    The Diplomat

    The Pitt

    Pluribus

    Severance

    Slow Horses

    The White Lotus

    Best series – comedy or musical

    Abbott Elementary

    The Bear

    Hacks

    Nobody Wants This

    Only Murders in the Building

    The Studio

    Best limited series

    Adolescence

    All Her Fault

    The Beast In Me

    Black Mirror

    Dying for Sex

    The Girlfriend

    Best female actor – drama

    Kathy Bates – Matlock

    Britt Lower – Severance

    Helen Mirren – Mobland

    Bella Ramsey – The Last of Us

    Keri Russell – The Diplomat

    Rhea Seehorn – Pluribus

    Best male actor – drama

    Sterling K Brown – Paradise

    Diego Luna – Andor

    Gary Oldman – Slow Horses

    Mark Ruffalo – Task

    Adam Scott – Severance

    Noah Wyle – The Pitt

    Best female actor – comedy or musical

    Kristen Bell – Nobody Wants This

    Ayo Edebiri – The Bear

    Selena Gomez – Only Murders in the Building

    Natasha Lyonne – Poker Face

    Jenna Ortega – Wednesday

    Jean Smart – Hacks

    Best male actor – comedy or musical

    Adam Brody – Nobody Wants This

    Steve Martin – Only Murders in the Building

    Glen Powell – Chad Powers

    Seth Rogen – The Studio

    Martin Short – Only Murders in the Building

    Jeremy Allen White – The Bear

    Best female actor – limited series

    Claire Danes – The Beast in Me

    Rashida Jones – Black Mirror

    Amanda Seyfried – Long Bright River

    Sarah Snook – All Her Fault

    Michelle Williams – Dying for Sex

    Robin Wright – The Girlfriend

    Best male actor – limited series

    Jacob Elordi – The Narrow Road to the Deep North

    Paul Giamatti – Black Mirror

    Stephen Graham – Adolescence

    Charlie Hunnam – Monster: The Ed Gein Story

    Jude Law – Black Rabbit

    Matthew Rhys – The Beast in Me

    Best supporting female actor

    Carrie Coon – The White Lotus

    Erin Doherty – Adolescence

    Hannah Einbinder – Hacks

    Catherine O’Hara – The Studio

    Parker Posey – The White Lotus

    Aimee-Lou Wood – The White Lotus

    Best supporting male actor

    Owen Cooper – Adolescence

    Billy Crudup – The Morning Show

    Walton Goggins – The White Lotus

    Jason Isaacs – The White Lotus

    Tramell Tillman – Severance

    Ashley Walters – Adolescence

    Best stand-up comedy performance

    Bill Maher – Is Anyone Else Seeing This?

    Brett Goldstein – The Second Best Night of Your Life

    Kevin Hart – Acting My Age

    Kumail Nanjiani – Night Thoughts

    Ricky Gervais – Mortality

    Sarah Silverman – Sarah Silverman: PostMortem

    Best podcast

    Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard

    Call Her Daddy

    Good Hang with Amy Poehler

    The Mel Robbins Podcast

    SmartLess

    Up First from NPR

  • Celebs wear black to protest sexual harassment at Golden Globes

    Celebs wear black to protest sexual harassment at Golden Globes

    With the ongoing reports on sexual harassment, which have had many popular faces emerged to share their stories, the just concluded golden Globes Awards held on Sunday, held history as celebrities stormed the red carpets with black sophisticated gowns to show their support against sexual harassment.

    Known for celebrating the best in film and television, this year’s Golden Globe Awards was dominated by one topic: sexual harassment against women.

    Various celebrities arrived at the event on Sunday wearing black in a show of solidarity against the culture of sexual misconduct in the entertainment industry, with several men donning pins in support of the “Time’s Up” initiative.

    First-time host Seth Meyers told the audience as he opened Sunday’s show in Los Angeles, “It’s 2018: marijuana is finally allowed, and sexual harassment finally isn’t,” the NBC “Late Night” host said to applause.

    Capping off the evening as she introduced the night’s biggest prize, the award for Best Motion Picture Drama, singer and actress Barbara Streisand delivered a stirring message to the celebrity-packed room.

    “I’m very proud to stand in the room with people who speak out against gender inequality, sexual harassment, and the pettiness that has poisoned our politics,” she said.

    “I’m proud that our industry, faced with uncomfortable truths, has vowed to change the way we do business.

    Film producer Harvey Weinstein, actor Kevin Spacey and comedian Louis C.K. were just some of the prominent entertainment figures to face allegations of sexual harassment, assault or misconduct last year in a wave of accusations that swept through Hollywood and prompted the #MeToo movement.

    Several winners used their acceptance speeches to address the hot-button issue.

    “For too long, women have not been heard or believed if they dared to speak their truth to the power of those men. But their time is up,” Oprah Winfrey declared as she accepted the prestigious Cecil B. DeMille Award. “Their time is up!” Winfrey said to a standing ovation.

    Laura Dern, Best Supporting Actress winner for HBO’s “Big Little Lies,” said: “Many of us were taught not to tattle. It was a culture of silence and that was normalized.”

    “I urge all of us to not only support survivors and bystanders who are brave enough to tell their truth, but to promote restorative justice. May we also please protect and employ them. May we teach our children that speaking out without the fear of retribution is our culture’s new north star,” Dern said during an emotional speech.

    Nicole Kidman, who also picked up a Golden Globe for her role in “Big Little Lies,” told the audience: “I do believe and I hope we can elicit change through the stories we tell and the way we tell them. Let’s keep the conversation alive.”

    “Handmaid’s Tale” actress Elisabeth Moss, who won in the Best Actress in a TV Drama category, quoted the author of the book that inspired the apocalyptic Hulu series.

    Afterward, she said: “Margaret Atwood this is for you and all the women who came before you and after you, who were brave enough to speak out against intolerance and injustice, and to fight for equality and freedom in this world.”

    Last week, a bevy of A-list actresses — including Reese Witherspoon, Ashley Judd and Natalie Portman, among others — writers and female entertainment execs announced the creation of “Time’s Up,” an initiative aimed at combating systemic sexual harassment.

    Many actors and actresses also participated in a sartorial show of force at the awards ceremony, opting to wear black in support of “Time’s Up,” and as form of silent protest against sexual harassment in Hollywood and beyond.

    Another highlight of the night was the profound speech, of the world’s most influential woman Oprah Winfrey; the media mogul’s acceptance of the career honor defined the evening more assuredly than Seth Meyers’ able if understated performance as host, or any other moment in the three-hour, eight-minute broadcast.

    Thundering through a speech that cut through the perfume of self-congratulation and social justice-as-accessorizing, Winfrey hit the pause button to remind the audience just how much work still needs to be done. She acknowledged the awe-inspiring power inherent to standing on that stage, describing how she felt at seeing Sidney Poitier accept such recognition so many years ago. Without pretentiousness, she recognized what seeing her occupy that same rare air meant to younger women determined to take their shot in a world that long has stacked the deck against them.

    Then Winfrey used her power to invoke the name of a black woman unknown to most: the main subject of the 2017 documentary “The Rape of Recy Taylor.” Briefly recounting the story of her case, Winfrey explained that in 1944 Taylor was walking home from a church service when she was abducted by six armed white men, raped, and left by the side of the road.

    Through the NAACP and the efforts of Rosa Parks, Taylor sought justice that was denied her but, Winfrey revealed, she died 10 days ago, shortly before her 98th birthday.

    “She lived, as we have lived, too many years in a culture broken by brutally powerful men,” Winfrey said. “For too long women have not been heard or believed if they dared to speak their truth to the power of those men. But their time is up. Their time is up.”

    Has the Globes ever been capable of genuinely moving viewers to tears? If so, it’s been a long while. Expecting Winfrey to deliver a rousing oration is reasonable, but the level of emotional release sparked by her words felt unprecedented and necessary. Entertainment industry visibility has been crucial to maintaining the momentum of #MeToo and keeping the conversation about gender inequity alive and top-of-mind, but Winfrey employed her singular talent for bridging privilege and fame to everyday people, cementing the night’s efforts as something more than simply fashion. Her gratitude at the honor bestowed upon her was exceeded only by her honest deference to the labors of all women who quietly keep going while enduring abuse, “because they, like my mother, had children to feed and bills to pay and dreams to pursue.”

    It was entirely in line with an evening that balanced the completely expected with a few moments that were refreshingly unpredictable, starting with the symbolic sartorial blackout for the Globes red carpet and ending with Natalie Portman’s sucker punch to the nards in the wake of Winfrey’s speech. As if she knew people wondered how anyone could follow that tour de force, Portman introduced the Best Director category at Ron Howard’s side by way of brightly stating, “And here are the all-male nominees!” with wicked precision. “The Shape of Water” director Guillermo Del Toro won the category this year, but Portman won the sisterhood for the foreseeable future.

    That also means Winfrey was the only woman of color to go home last night with an individual honor from the HFPA.

    Sunday night’s telecast of the awards exemplified everything great and awkward about the industry’s highly publicized efforts to confront the surge of sexual harassment scandal and embrace the age of #MeToo.

    As planned and well-publicized, the pre-show couture parade of black gowns, many relatively demure in comparison to past showings, provided a respectable show of solidarity with the embattled women of the world.

    Social media captured it under the umbrella of #WhyWeWearBlack, part of supporting the recently established ‘Time’s Up initiative’, a celebrity-backed effort dedicated to confronting abuse of power and promoting equality in the workplace.

    Several nominees brought activists as guests, notably Meryl Streep, who walked the carpet the director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance, Ai-jen Poo, and Michelle Williams, who was joined by #MeToo founder and civil rights activist Tarana Burke.

  • Celebs wear black to protest sexual harassment at Golden Globes

    Celebs wear black to protest sexual harassment at Golden Globes

    With the ongoing reports on sexual harassment, which have had many popular faces emerged to share their stories, the just concluded golden Globes Awards held on Sunday, held history as celebrities stormed the red carpets with black sophisticated gowns to show their support against sexual harassment.

    Known for celebrating the best in film and television, this year’s Golden Globe Awards was dominated by one topic: sexual harassment against women.

    Various celebrities arrived at the event on Sunday wearing black in a show of solidarity against the culture of sexual misconduct in the entertainment industry, with several men donning pins in support of the “Time’s Up” initiative.

    First-time host Seth Meyers told the audience as he opened Sunday’s show in Los Angeles, “It’s 2018: marijuana is finally allowed, and sexual harassment finally isn’t,” the NBC “Late Night” host said to applause.

    Capping off the evening as she introduced the night’s biggest prize, the award for Best Motion Picture Drama, singer and actress Barbara Streisand delivered a stirring message to the celebrity-packed room.

    “I’m very proud to stand in the room with people who speak out against gender inequality, sexual harassment, and the pettiness that has poisoned our politics,” she said.

    “I’m proud that our industry, faced with uncomfortable truths, has vowed to change the way we do business.

    Film producer Harvey Weinstein, actor Kevin Spacey and comedian Louis C.K. were just some of the prominent entertainment figures to face allegations of sexual harassment, assault or misconduct last year in a wave of accusations that swept through Hollywood and prompted the #MeToo movement.

    Several winners used their acceptance speeches to address the hot-button issue.

    “For too long, women have not been heard or believed if they dared to speak their truth to the power of those men. But their time is up,” Oprah Winfrey declared as she accepted the prestigious Cecil B. DeMille Award. “Their time is up!” Winfrey said to a standing ovation.

    Laura Dern, Best Supporting Actress winner for HBO’s “Big Little Lies,” said: “Many of us were taught not to tattle. It was a culture of silence and that was normalized.”

    “I urge all of us to not only support survivors and bystanders who are brave enough to tell their truth, but to promote restorative justice. May we also please protect and employ them. May we teach our children that speaking out without the fear of retribution is our culture’s new north star,” Dern said during an emotional speech.

    Nicole Kidman, who also picked up a Golden Globe for her role in “Big Little Lies,” told the audience: “I do believe and I hope we can elicit change through the stories we tell and the way we tell them. Let’s keep the conversation alive.”

    “Handmaid’s Tale” actress Elisabeth Moss, who won in the Best Actress in a TV Drama category, quoted the author of the book that inspired the apocalyptic Hulu series.

    Afterward, she said: “Margaret Atwood this is for you and all the women who came before you and after you, who were brave enough to speak out against intolerance and injustice, and to fight for equality and freedom in this world.”

    Last week, a bevy of A-list actresses — including Reese Witherspoon, Ashley Judd and Natalie Portman, among others — writers and female entertainment execs announced the creation of “Time’s Up,” an initiative aimed at combating systemic sexual harassment.

    Many actors and actresses also participated in a sartorial show of force at the awards ceremony, opting to wear black in support of “Time’s Up,” and as form of silent protest against sexual harassment in Hollywood and beyond.

    Another highlight of the night was the profound speech, of the world’s most influential woman Oprah Winfrey; the media mogul’s acceptance of the career honor defined the evening more assuredly than Seth Meyers’ able if understated performance as host, or any other moment in the three-hour, eight-minute broadcast.

    Thundering through a speech that cut through the perfume of self-congratulation and social justice-as-accessorizing, Winfrey hit the pause button to remind the audience just how much work still needs to be done. She acknowledged the awe-inspiring power inherent to standing on that stage, describing how she felt at seeing Sidney Poitier accept such recognition so many years ago. Without pretentiousness, she recognized what seeing her occupy that same rare air meant to younger women determined to take their shot in a world that long has stacked the deck against them.

    Then Winfrey used her power to invoke the name of a black woman unknown to most: the main subject of the 2017 documentary “The Rape of Recy Taylor.” Briefly recounting the story of her case, Winfrey explained that in 1944 Taylor was walking home from a church service when she was abducted by six armed white men, raped, and left by the side of the road.

    Through the NAACP and the efforts of Rosa Parks, Taylor sought justice that was denied her but, Winfrey revealed, she died 10 days ago, shortly before her 98th birthday.

    “She lived, as we have lived, too many years in a culture broken by brutally powerful men,” Winfrey said. “For too long women have not been heard or believed if they dared to speak their truth to the power of those men. But their time is up. Their time is up.”

    Has the Globes ever been capable of genuinely moving viewers to tears? If so, it’s been a long while. Expecting Winfrey to deliver a rousing oration is reasonable, but the level of emotional release sparked by her words felt unprecedented and necessary. Entertainment industry visibility has been crucial to maintaining the momentum of #MeToo and keeping the conversation about gender inequity alive and top-of-mind, but Winfrey employed her singular talent for bridging privilege and fame to everyday people, cementing the night’s efforts as something more than simply fashion. Her gratitude at the honor bestowed upon her was exceeded only by her honest deference to the labors of all women who quietly keep going while enduring abuse, “because they, like my mother, had children to feed and bills to pay and dreams to pursue.”

    It was entirely in line with an evening that balanced the completely expected with a few moments that were refreshingly unpredictable, starting with the symbolic sartorial blackout for the Globes red carpet and ending with Natalie Portman’s sucker punch to the nards in the wake of Winfrey’s speech. As if she knew people wondered how anyone could follow that tour de force, Portman introduced the Best Director category at Ron Howard’s side by way of brightly stating, “And here are the all-male nominees!” with wicked precision. “The Shape of Water” director Guillermo Del Toro won the category this year, but Portman won the sisterhood for the foreseeable future.

    That also means Winfrey was the only woman of color to go home last night with an individual honor from the HFPA.

    Sunday night’s telecast of the awards exemplified everything great and awkward about the industry’s highly publicized efforts to confront the surge of sexual harassment scandal and embrace the age of #MeToo.

    As planned and well-publicized, the pre-show couture parade of black gowns, many relatively demure in comparison to past showings, provided a respectable show of solidarity with the embattled women of the world.

    Social media captured it under the umbrella of #WhyWeWearBlack, part of supporting the recently established ‘Time’s Up initiative’, a celebrity-backed effort dedicated to confronting abuse of power and promoting equality in the workplace.

    Several nominees brought activists as guests, notably Meryl Streep, who walked the carpet the director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance, Ai-jen Poo, and Michelle Williams, who was joined by #MeToo founder and civil rights activist Tarana Burke.

  • Golden Globes: ‘La La Land’ breaks awards’ record

    Golden Globes: ‘La La Land’ breaks awards’ record

    •As criticism of Trump helms award speeches

    Sunday night’s Golden Globe ceremonies recorded a sterling performance for 2016 American romantic musical comedy-drama which won seven out of 14 possible movie prizes.
    Written and directed by Damien Chazelle and starring Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, John Legend and Rosemarie DeWitt, the film which had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival last August and released in the United States in December, tells the story of a musician and an aspiring actress who meet and fall in love in Los Angeles.
    The film broke 74th Golden Globe records with laurels including Best Motion Picture (Musical or Comedy), Best Actor (Ryan Gosling), Best Actress (Emma Stone), Best Screenplay and Best Director (Damien Chazelle), Best Score (Justin Hurwitz), and Best Original Song (“City of Stars”).
    The last time any film came close was 1975 and 1978 when ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ and ‘Midnight Express’ led the pack with six awards respectively.
    Interestingly, the Globes’ opening number was an affectionate parody of La La Land’s big opening number, “Another Day of Sun,” with nominees from Nicole Kidman to the Stranger Things cast participating along with the show’s host, Jimmy Fallon and his bosom friend Justin Timberlake.
    Other winners include ‘Moonlight’, winning overall Best Motion Picture – Drama; Isabelle Huppert (Elle), Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama and Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea), Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama.
    But all was not about the laurels, as the ceremony’s most buzzed-about moments tended to come from the winners’ speeches.
    While accepting her Cecil B DeMille award for lifetime achievement, actor Meryl Streep took a swipe at America’s president-elect Donald Trump for allegedly mocking of disabled reporter during the presidential campaign. She said the act stunned her that Trump could be imitating a disabled reporter while campaigning to be president, saying it “gives permission” to others to do the same.
    ”There was one performance this year that stunned me. It sank its hooks in my heart,” Streep said, referring to when Trump mocked the New York Times reporter Serge Kovaleski.
    “It was that moment when the person asking to sit in the most respected seat in our country imitated a disabled reporter. Someone he outranked in privilege, power and the capacity to fight back. It kind of broke my heart when I saw it and I still can’t get it out of my head because it wasn’t in a movie, it was real life,” she said.
    In front of a visibly stunned room of stars who are renowned for being boisterous at the Golden Globes, she went on to add that Trump’s actions had legitimized bullying and that it could trickle down into people’s everyday lives.
    “This instinct to humiliate, when it’s modeled by someone in the public platform,” she said. “By someone powerful, it filters down into everyone’s life because it kind of gives permission for other people to do the same thing.
    “Disrespect invites disrespect, violence invites violence. When the powerful use their position to bully others we all lose.”
    Trump had since responded to the actor’s speech by saying that although he hadn’t seen her remarks he was “not surprised” that he had come under attack from ‘liberal movie people.’
    Describing Streep further as ‘a Hillary lover’, he denied mocking Kovaleski. “I was never mocking anyone. I was calling into question a reporter who had gotten nervous because he had changed his story”, he told the New York Times. “People keep saying I intended to mock the reporter’s disability, as if Meryl Streep and others could read my mind, and I did no such thing.”
    Meanwhile, Streep wasn’t the only star to address Trump. Viola Davis, who won best support actress for her performance in ‘Fences’, spoke about the president-elect backstage and said his win is a reflection of America.
    “I think that America in and of itself has been an affirmation, but I think that we’ve fallen short a lot because there is no way that we can have anyone in office that is not an extension of our own belief system,” she said.
    Hugh Laurie also took on the president-elect and his party in his acceptance speech.
    Laurie, who won best performance by an actor in a limited TV series for playing arms dealer Richard Roper in The Night Manager, said: “I suppose it’s made more amazing by the fact that I’ll be able to say I won this at the last ever Golden Globes.”
    “I don’t mean to be gloomy, it’s just that it has the words ‘Hollywood,’ ‘Foreign’ and ‘Press’ in the title. I just don’t know … I also think to some Republicans, even the word ‘association’ is slightly sketchy.”
    He then told the crowd that he was accepting the award “on behalf of psychopathic billionaires everywhere.”

  • ‘The Revenant’ wins big at Golden Globes

    ‘The Revenant’ wins big at Golden Globes

    The first major film award of 2016, the 73rd Golden Globes, which held on Sunday, might have set a tone of film awards to follow. The big winner of the night, “The Revenant,” stole the show, carting Globes for best drama, best actor (Leonardo DiCaprio) and best direction (Alejandro G. Iñárritu).

    “I cannot say how surprised I am,” Mr. Iñárritu said while collecting the night’s top prize.

    The event which held in the ballroom of the Beverly Hilton hotel returned Ricky Gervais as host waxed heavily on humour.

    “The Martian” won two Globes – best picture, comedy or musical while Matt Damon was named best actor in a film comedy or musical.

    HBO, which was nominated for seven awards only clinched one — Oscar Isaac won best actor, mini-series or television movie for “Show Me a Hero”.

    Amazon’s “Mozart in the Jungle” won best comedy and Gael García Bernal won best comedic actor.

    USA’s fledgling “Mr. Robot” won best drama while Christian Slater won best supporting actor for the series.

    Kate Winslet won supporting actress for her portrayal of an Apple marketing executive in “Steve Jobs” while Aaron Sorkin collected the Globe for best screenplay for the same movie.

    Taraji P. Henson, a winner for best actress in a television drama. (She plays Cookie on Fox’s “Empire.”) Jon Hamm won best actor for “Mad Men,” which concluded its celebrated run last year.

    Jennifer Lawrence won best comedic actress for her role in “Joy”.

    And Brie Larson won best actress in a drama for playing a mother and kidnapping victim in “Room.”

    Sylvester Stallone won best supporting actor for playing an aging Rocky in “Creed”.

    Lady Gaga won best actress in a limited series or TV movie for the latest incarnation of FX’s “American Horror Story” while the Globe for the best animated film went to “Inside Out.”

    Hungary’s “Son of Saul” was awarded best foreign film while “The Hateful Eight” took the Globe for best score by Ennio Morricone and the best song Globe went to Sam Smith and Jimmy Napes for “Writing’s on the Wall,” from “Spectre,” the latest James Bond movie.

    For his efforts over the years, Denzel Washington clinched the Cecil B. DeMille lifetime achievement prize. The best television movie or mini-series went to “Wolf Hall” by PBS, Maura Tierney won supporting actress, mini series or television movie for her role in “The Affair” and Rachel Bloom won best actress, comedy or musical for her role in “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.”

    The Globes are given by the 83-member Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a group of mostly freelance journalists.

     

     

  • 12 Years a Slave wins at Golden Globes

    12 Years a Slave wins at Golden Globes

    Crime caper, American Hustle , on Sunday, emerged the highest recipient at the Golden Globes, capturing three major awards, including the Best Comedy.

    But voters favoured the much-anticipated film of 2013, 12 Years a Slave, which stars British-Nigerian actor, Chiwetel Ejiofor, with the Best Drama slot, while Alfonso Cuarón went home with Best Director laurel for Gravity.

    The two female stars of American Hustle, Amy Adams and Jennifer Lawrence, both picked up acting awards.

    Ms. Lawrence beat Lupita Nyong’o of 12 Years a Slave, who was viewed as the leading contender in the supporting actress category. Thereafter, Ms. Adams was announced as Best Actress.

    Ejiofor, however, who has been predicted as an Oscar-hopeful, will be taking his next chance, having been nominated as Best Actor in the British Academy Film and Television Awards (BAFTA) for 12 Years a Slave.

    The awards ceremony is billed for Sunday, February 16, at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London.

    Ejiofor starred prominently in two movies in 2013, including Half of a Yellow Sun, an adaptation of Chimamanda Adichie’s novel under the same title, but was touted more for 12 Years a Slave, a British-American epic and an adaptation of the eponymous 1853 autobiography by Solomon Northup.

    Also at the Golden Globes, Dallas Buyers Club received two acting prizes for Jared Leto as Supporting Actor and for the heavily campaigned Matthew McConaughey as Best Actor in a drama.

    Woody Allen’s Blue Jasmine won a Best Actress award for Cate Blanchett and Mr. Allen took home the Cecil B. DeMille lifetime achievement award, though he was predictably absent from the ceremony.

    Also favoured by voters was Leonardo DiCaprio, who won the Best Actor in a comedy slot for his performance in The Wolf of Wall Street.

    In the TV categories, Andy Samberg won Best Comedic Actor for the Fox series, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, while the show also emerged as winner of Best TV Comedy, besting HBO’s Girls.

    Amy Poehler, returning as co-host along with Tina Fey, was Best Actress in a comedy for Parks and Recreation.

    Breaking Bad made back-to-back trips to the stage, winning trophies for Best Drama and Best Actor for Bryan Cranston.

    Cranston, who was nominated four times for his role as a teacher and a crystal meth dealer, received a raucous standing ovation for his first victory.

    The prizes were a double defeat for Netflix, whose House of Cards was a hot competitor in the categories. But Netflix series appeared to be compensated by Robin Wright’s win as Best Actress in a TV drama.

    For flicks like Nebraska, Philomena, August: Osage County and Captain Phillips, it was a bad outing.