Los Angeles Times

Netflix leads the studios with 10 wins

The company finished first, appropriat­e after a year of staying at home and streaming.

- By Ryan Faughnder

Netflix led the studios and networks in wins at the 78th Golden Globe Awards, a fitting coda to a year when streaming dominated the entertainm­ent industry conversati­on, as much of the audience was stuck at home.

The awards ceremony was broadcast on NBC under a cloud of controvers­y after a Los Angeles Times investigat­ion into the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., the group that presents the prizes. Los Gatos-based Netflix scored 10 wins in all for shows and movies including “The Crown,” “The Trial of the Chicago 7” and “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.”

“The Crown,” squarely in the HFPA’s wheelhouse of glamorous British fare, won four awards including best drama series. The acclaimed historical program’s fourth season also cleaned up in acting categories, winning for dramatic actress (Emma Corrin as Princess Diana), actor (Josh O’Connor as Prince Charles) and supporting actress (Gillian Anderson as Margaret Thatcher).

Netflix’s popular chess champion series “The Queen’s Gambit” won for limited series and best actress in a limited series (Anya Taylor-Joy for her starring role).

In film, “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” which moved to Netflix from ViacomCBS’ Paramount Pictures during the pandemic, won for original screenplay (Aaron Sorkin).

Lead actor in a drama went to the late Chadwick Boseman for his part in “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.” Boseman, most famous for playing the title character in Marvel’s “Black Panther,” died of colon cancer in August at 43.

Additional­ly, British actress Rosamund Pike won best comedy actress for the con-artist film “I Care A Lot.”

But the top prize of the night — best film drama — went to a traditiona­l distributo­r, Walt Disney Co.’s Searchligh­t Pictures, which emerged victorious with Chloé Zhao’s film “Nomadland,” starring Frances McDormand. It beat Netflix’s David Fincher film “Mank,” which had the most nomination­s of any motion picture but came away with no wins.

“Nomadland,” which premiered in February simultaneo­usly in theaters and on Disney-owned streamer Hulu, also won best director for Zhao.

Disney ended up the second winningest company overall with five awards, thanks to “Nomadland” and two very different jazzthemed movies. Hulu’s “The United States vs. Billie Holiday” won best dramatic actress (Andra Day), and Disney’s Pixar won two awards for its jazz afterlife parable “Soul,” earning best animated feature and original score.

Netflix came into the ceremony with a total of 42 nomination­s, far more than any other distributo­r this year. The streamer scored 22 nomination­s for films, while securing 20 kudos for series.

Streaming shows and movies did well in a year when in-person entertainm­ent options were limited because of the novel coronaviru­s. Theaters were closed in parts of the country for much of the year, studios delayed many of their major releases or sold them to direct-to-consumer apps, and media companies funneled many of their best series to à la carte platforms.

The COVID-19 pandemic handed Netflix and other streamers another advantage as traditiona­l studios mostly held back their biggest and best movies while theaters remained closed in key markets such as Los Angeles and New York.

Amazon Prime Video scored three victories including best comedy film for “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm,” which also won Sacha Baron Cohen the award for comedy actor; while TV supporting actor went to John Boyega for his role in Steve McQueen’s anthology “Small Axe.”

Apple TV+ notched a win for its comedy “Ted Lasso,” for which Jason Sudeikis won for comedy actor.

Among the traditiona­l distributo­rs, AT&T-owned Warner Bros. snatched a prize for its film “Judas and the Black Messiah,” which debuted on HBO Max and in theaters simultaneo­usly. Daniel Kaluuya earned supporting actor for playing Black Panther Party chairman Fred Hampton.

Indie distributo­r A24 took home the award for foreign language film with “Minari,” Lee Isaac Chung’s tale of a Korean American immigrant family that moves to a rural farm in the 1980s. Though the film is American, it was controvers­ially placed in the Globes’ foreign language category because of HFPA rules.

Burbank-based studio STX Entertainm­ent nabbed a win for its political-legal drama “The Mauritania­n,” for which Jodie Foster won best supporting actress.

The Golden Globes can boost the prestige of the nominated shows, movies, networks and studios, and they can draw more attention to little-known production­s, such as “The Mauritania­n.”

They’re still seen as a precursor to the Oscars, even in a highly unusual awards season like this year’s. But the impact may be dampened during a year that lacked major blockbuste­rs. Many of the nominated movies, like “Mank,” “Nomadland” and “The Father,” are relatively obscure. The scarcity of high-profile films and the idiosyncra­sies of producing a live event during a pandemic meant viewership of the telecast was widely expected to fall at a time when live TV ratings are broadly declining.

The awards were also doled out under renewed scrutiny of the HFPA, an 87person nonprofit made up of internatio­nal entertainm­ent journalist­s. A Los Angeles Times investigat­ion raised fresh allegation­s of ethical lapses and self dealing within the organizati­on, revealing payments made to members for activities including serving on committees. HFPA said in response that its payments were “vetted by a profession­al nonprofit compensati­on consultant and outside counsel, where appropriat­e.”

The nomination­s this year included such headscratc­hers as “Emily in Paris,” which was up for best TV comedy or musical despite middling reviews. In 2019, more than 30 HFPA members were treated by the group to a two-night stay at a five-star French hotel to visit the set of the show, The Times reported. “Emily in Paris” lost to CBC/Pop TV comedy series “Schitt’s Creek,” which won two awards.

The Times investigat­ion also revealed that HFPA has no Black voters, prompting the organizati­on to issue a statement to The Times promising an “action plan” to achieve goals of bringing in Black members. The nonprofit faced further criticism for this year’s slate of nomination­s, which did not include several Black-led Oscar contenders such as “Da 5 Bloods,” “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” and “Judas and the Black Messiah” in the nominees for the group’s top award.

Groups including Time’s Up and industry luminaries such as Ava DuVernay, J.J. Abrams and Ellen Pompeo criticized the HFPA after The Times’ investigat­ion. The HFPA addressed the lack of Black members during the ceremony, in which the group’s leadership gave a speech that lasted less than one minute.

 ?? David Lee Netf lix ?? “MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM’S” Chadwick Boseman posthumous­ly won for lead actor in a drama.
David Lee Netf lix “MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM’S” Chadwick Boseman posthumous­ly won for lead actor in a drama.
 ?? Christophe­r Polk NBC ?? ANYA TAYLOR-JOY reacts via video after being announced the winner of the lead actress award.
Christophe­r Polk NBC ANYA TAYLOR-JOY reacts via video after being announced the winner of the lead actress award.
 ?? Christophe­r Polk NBC ?? WINNING for dramatic actress was Emma Corrin as Princess Diana in Netf lix’s “The Crown.”
Christophe­r Polk NBC WINNING for dramatic actress was Emma Corrin as Princess Diana in Netf lix’s “The Crown.”

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