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Top honours for ‘Oppenheimer’ at Golden Globes

AP – Christopher Nolan’s blockbuster biopic Oppenheimer dominated the 81st Golden Globes, winning five awards including best drama, while Yorgos Lanthimos’ Frankenstein riff Poor Things pulled off an upset victor over Barbie to triumph in the best comedy or musical category.

If awards season has been building toward a second match-up of Barbenheimer, this round went to Oppenheimer. The film also won best director for Nolan, best drama actor for Cillian Murphy, best supporting actor for Robert Downey Jr and for Ludwig Göransson’s score.

“I don’t think it was a no-brainer by any stretch of the imagination to make a three-hour talky movie – R-rated by the way – about one of the darkest developments in our history,” said producer Emma Thomas accepting the night’s final award and thanking Universal chief Donna Langley.

British director Christopher Nolan and spouse British film producer Emma Thomas pose in the press room with the awards for Best Director – Motion Picture and Best Motion Picture – Drama for ‘Oppenheimer’ during the 81st annual Golden Globe Awards. PHOTO: AFP
Winner of the award for best performance by an actor in a motion picture, drama for ‘Oppenheimer’ Cillian Murphy, and winner of the award for best performance by an actor in a supporting role in any motion picture for ‘Oppenheimer’ Robert Downey Jr. PHOTO: AP

Along with best comedy or musical, Poor Things also won for Emma Stone’s performance as Bella, a Victorian-era woman experiencing a surreal sexual awakening.

“I see this as a rom-com,” said Stone. “But in the sense that Bella falls in love with life itself, rather than a person. She accepts the good and the bad in equal measure, and that really made me look at life differently.”

Lily Gladstone won best actress in a dramatic film for Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon. Gladstone, who began her speech speaking the language of her native tribe, Blackfeet Nation, is the first Indigenous winner in the category.

“This is a historic win,” said Gladstone. “It doesn’t just belong to me.”

The Globes were in their ninth decade but facing a new and uncertain chapter. After a tumultuous few years of scandal, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association was dissolved, leaving a new Globes, on a new network (CBS), to try to regain its perch as the third biggest award show of the year, after the Oscars and Grammys. Even the menu (sushi from Nobu) was remade.

“Golden Globes journalists, thank you for changing your game, therefore changing your name,” said Downey in his acceptance speech.

It got off to a rocky start. Host Jo Koy took the stage at the Beverly Hilton International Ballroom in Beverly Hills, California. The Filipino American stand-up hit on some expected topics: Ozempic, Meryl Streep’s knack for winning awards and the long-running Oppenheimer. (“I needed another hour.”)

After one joke flubbed, Koy, who was named host after some bigger names reportedly passed, also noted how fast he was thrust into the job.

“Yo, I got the gig 10 days ago. You want a perfect monologue?” said Koy. “I wrote some of these and they’re the ones you’re laughing at.”

 

HI, BARBIE

Downey’s win, his third Globe, denied one to “Kenergy”. Ryan Gosling had been seen as his stiffest competition, just one of the many head-to-head contests between Oppenheimer and Greta Gerwig’s Barbie. The filmmakers faced each other in the best director category, where Nolan triumphed.

It was two hours before Barbie, the year’s biggest hit with more than USD1.4 billion in ticket sales, won an award on Sunday. Billie Eilish’s What Was I Made For? took best song, and swiftly after, Barbie took the Globes’ new honour for “cinematic and box office achievement.” Some thought that award might go to Taylor Swift, whose Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour also set box-office records. Swift, though, remains winless in five Globe nods.

Margot Robbie, star and producer of Barbie, accepted the award in a pink gown modelled after 1977’s Superstar Barbie.

Margot Robbie arrives at the 81st Golden Globe Awards. PHOTO: AP

“We’d like to dedicate this to every single person on the planet who dressed up and went to the greatest place on Earth: the movie theatres,” said Robbie. Barbie and Oppenheimer, two blockbusters brought together by a common release date, also faced off in the best screenplay category. But in an upset, Justine Triet and Arthur Harari won for the script to the French courtroom drama Anatomy of a Fall. Later, Triet’s film picked up best international film, too.

Though the Globes have no direct correlation with the Academy Awards, they can boost campaigns at a crucial juncture. Oscar nomination voting starts on Thursday, and the twin sensations of Barbenheimer remain frontrunners.

Other contenders loom, though, like Poor Things and The Holdovers.

Paul Giamatti and Da’Vine Joy Randolph both won for Alexander Payne’s The Holdovers. Giamatti, reuniting with Payne two decades after Sideways, won best actor and Randolph won for her supporting performance as a grieving woman in the 1970s-set boarding school drama. “Oh, Mary you have changed my life,” Randolph said of her character. “You have made me feel seen in so many ways that I have never imagined.”

Hayao Miyazaki’s The Boy and the Heron won best animated film, an upset over Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.

 

‘SUCCESSION’ AND ‘THE BEAR’ LEAD TV WINNERS

The final season of Succession cleaned up on the television side. It won best drama series for the third time, a mark that ties a record set by Mad Men and The X-Files. Three stars from the HBO series also won: Matt Macfadyen, Sarah Snook and Kieran Culkin.

“It is bittersweet, but things like this make it rather sweeter,” said Succession creator Jesse Armstrong.

Hulu’s The Bear also came away with a trio of awards, including best comedy series. Jeremy Allen White won for the second time, but this time he had company. Ayo Edebiri won her first Globe for her leading performance in the Hulu show’s second season. She thanked the assistants of her agents and managers. “To the people who answer my emails, you’re the real ones,” said Edebiri. Beef won three awards: best limited series as well as acting awards for Ali Wong and Steven Yeun.

US actor Steven Yeun, South Korean writer Lee Sung Jin and US actress Ali Wong, winners of the Best Performances in a Limited Series, Anthology Series, or Motion Picture Made for Television and Limited Series, Anthology Series, or Motion Picture Made for Television award for ‘Beef’ pose in the press room during the 81st annual Golden Globe Awards. PHOTO: AFP

The Globes also added a new stand-up special award. That went, surprisingly, to Ricky Gervais, who didn’t attend the show he so often hosted. Some expected Chris Rock to win for Selective Outrage, his stand-up response to the Will Smith slap.

 

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