The Manila Times

Golden Globes kicks off awards season

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LOS ANGELES: Hollywood’s award season kicks off Sunday at a very different Golden Globes, with a mainly virtual ceremony set to boost or dash the Oscars hopes of early frontrunne­rs like “Nomadland” and “The Trial of the Chicago 7.”

Usually a star-packed, laidback party that draws Tinseltown’s biggest names to a Beverly Hills hotel ballroom, this pandemic edition will be broadcast from two scaled-down venues, with frontline and essential workers among the few in attendance.

Deprived of its usual glamour, the Globes — which also honor the best in television — remain a coveted prize, and a high-profile source of momentum in the run-up to the season-crowning Oscars, which were pushed back this year to April.

“Nomadland,” Chloe Zhao’s paean to a marginaliz­ed, older generation of Americans roaming the West in rundown vans, has long been viewed as a frontrunne­r for the Globes’ top prize.

But it will face stiff competitio­n from Aaron Sorkin’s “Chicago 7,” a courtroom drama about the city’s anti-war riots in 1968 with a mouth-watering ensemble cast including Mark Rylance, Eddie Redmayne and Sacha Baron Cohen.

Both films are fueled by their timely themes of protest and joblessnes­s.

“I think that it’s likeliest between them,” said The Hollywood Reporter’s awards columnist Scott Feinberg.

“And then the spoiler, if something were to come out of left field, would probably be ‘Promising Young Woman,’ which is just unlike anything else in recent memory.”

Its star Carey Mulligan — playing a revenge-seeker who lurks at bars, feigning drunkennes­s to lure men into revealing their own misogyny — is tipped by many to win best actress.

She will have to fend off Frances McDormand’s grounded and nuanced turn alongside a cast of non-actors in “Nomadland,” and Viola Davis’ portrayal of a legendary 1920s crooner in “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.”

‘Hard to resist’

The other films vying for best drama, the night’s final and most prestigiou­s prize, are “Mank” — David Fincher’s ode to “Citizen Kane,” which topped the overall nomination­s with six — and “The Father” starring Anthony Hopkins.

Hopkins, who has never won a competitiv­e Globe despite seven previous nomination­s, has been showered with praise for his harrowing portrayal of the onset of dementia.

But he is up against sentimenta­l favorite Chadwick Boseman, the “Black Panther” star who died last August from cancer at age 43.

Boseman is nominated for his kinetic performanc­e as a tragic young trumpet player opposite Davis in “Ma Rainey.”

“This is his best part, and the backstory is that he knew this might be his last performanc­e — so that’s kind of hard to resist,” said Variety awards editor Tim Gray.

The race will be closely watched by groups including Time’s Up, who this week slammed the Globes-awarding Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n for failing to admit a single Black member.

“I support and congratula­te all the nominees, but the HFPA needs to change in meaningful ways,” tweeted actress Olivia Wilde. “Cosmetic fixes are not enough. #TimesUpGlo­bes.”

The HFPA released a statement recognizin­g that “we need to bring in Black members, as well as members from other underrepre­sented background­s.”

‘Two white guys’

The organizati­on has voted for just one female as best director in 77 editions — and only ever nominated five women in the category before this year — but “Nomadland” director Zhao is tipped to buck that trend.

The race to emulate Barbra Streisand’s 1984 win for “Yentl” has two other contenders: Emerald Fennell (“Promising Young Woman”) and Regina King (“One Night in Miami”).

“This is a year when women have strong movies... that is good news, and deserving,” said Deadline awards columnist Pete Hammond.

“But we’ll see how it goes — in the end, David Fincher and Aaron Sorkin, two white guys, may win.”

Unlike the Oscars, the Globes split most movie categories into drama and “musical or comedy,” with Baron Cohen’s “Borat” sequel and the Disney+ film of hit musical “Hamilton” leading the latter fields.

Baron Cohen also has a best supporting actor nod for “Chicago 7,” while the Globes offer “Hamilton” its best shot at film honors after the Oscars declared the taping of Broadway shows ineligible.

The A-list audience and nominees are expected to largely remain at home, accepting awards via videolink — similar to the format of September’s widely praised Emmys.

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