You don’t see many 83-year-olds pull off a successful backflip. But the Golden Globes seems to have dramatically course-corrected back into relevance. The winners of the 83rd edition of the glitzy ceremony will be announced today (11 January) yet the nominations themselves were enough to reset expectations of what is usually seen as a frivolous curtain-raiser for the self-obsessed, overheated frenzy of Hollywood gong season.
The film frontrunner is clearly revolutionary thriller One Battle After Another: the madcap Leonardo DiCaprio-starring movie from writer/director Paul Thomas Anderson has nine Globes nominations. What is more interesting is the nominees seem actually global, with subtitled movies making up almost half of the 12 Best Picture contenders across the Globes’ quirky split of categories.

Iran’s It Was Just an Accident, Brazil’s The Secret Agent and Norway’s much-admired Sentimental Value are competing in Best Picture (Drama), while South Korea’s No Other Choice and France’s Nouvelle Vague (directed by Richard Linklater, just in French) are up for Best Picture (Comedy/Musical).
Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter
There is still the recently introduced Golden Globe for Box Office and Cinematic Achievement, so movies that resonated more with audiences than critics can get their flowers. That’s where blockbusters like Avatar: Fire and Ash and F1 get a look in and, controversially, KPop Demon Hunters. Netflix’s animated musical is a cultural phenomenon, but whichever way you slice it, a streaming smash does not do a whole lot to help cinemas get bums on seats.

On the whole, though, the Globes are more credible than ever, suggesting that the 2023 reboot – where organisers the Hollywood Foreign Press Association sold the brand and promptly disbanded – has been a success.










