'Barbie' brings her pink party to Sunday's Golden Globes
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[January 04, 2024]
By Lisa Richwine
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood stars are preparing to dance the night
away as box office smash "Barbie" leads nominees for Sunday's Golden
Globes, the kickoff to the industry's glitzy awards season.
The first big party in Tinseltown since contentious labor disputes last
year, the Globes will honor the best of film and television according to
roughly 300 entertainment journalists from around the world. That is a
change from the past, when about 80 people chose the winners.
"Barbie," the female-empowering doll adventure, tops the field with nine
nominations. The movie directed by Greta Gerwig and starring Margot
Robbie is expected to claim the trophy for best film musical or comedy
over "The Holdovers," "Poor Things" and others, according to experts
polled by the Gold Derby website.
Historical drama "Oppenheimer," with eight nominations, is the favorite
for best movie drama. The story about the man behind the atomic bomb had
competed with "Barbie" over the summer in a box office clash dubbed "Barbenheimer."
"Barbie" reigned as the highest-grossing film of 2023 with $1.4 billion
in ticket sales. "Oppenheimer" finished third with $952 million.
"I can see both of them doing really well on Sunday night," said Joyce
Eng, senior editor at Gold Derby.
Robbie and Ryan Gosling, who played Barbie's boyfriend Ken, are
nominated in acting categories, as is Cillian Murphy, who portrayed J.
Robert Oppenheimer, and co-star Robert Downey Jr.
Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro and Lily Gladstone are contending for
Globe acting honors for "Killers of the Flower Moon," Martin Scorsese's
film about the murder of Native Americans in 1920s Oklahoma.
Bradley Cooper is in the running for best actor and best director for
Leonard Bernstein biopic "Maestro."
The Globes are the first major awards show since Hollywood endured two
bitter strikes by writers and then actors last year. The work stoppages
shut down film and television production, as well as many red carpet
events, for months.
Known as a booze-fueled celebration more relaxed than the Oscars, the
Globes nearly became extinct. A 2021 Los Angeles Times report revealed
ethical lapses and a lack of diversity among members of the Hollywood
Foreign Press Association, the group that previously voted on the
Globes. The 2022 ceremony was scrapped while the organization made
reforms.
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Margot Robbie attends the European premiere of "Barbie" in London,
Britain July 12, 2023. REUTERS/Maja Smiejkowska/File Photo
Last year, the Globes were sold to
new owners and the association was disbanded. Eldridge Industries
and Dick Clark Productions now operate the awards, with a voting
body of 300 journalist members from 75 countries with 60% racial and
ethnic diversity.
There are 27 first-time nominees for this year's Globes.
'LOVE A GOOD PARTY'
Hollywood's top talent appears ready to move forward with the
Globes, said Chris Gardner, senior staff writer for The Hollywood
Reporter.
"They love a good party and they also love the recognition," Gardner
said. "This is a show that is looser than the other shows you see on
television."
Sunday's ceremony will be hosted by comedian Jo Koy, a comic of
Filipino heritage, in his first major hosting gig. It will be
broadcast live on CBS and streamed simultaneously for subscribers to
Paramount+ with Showtime.
One possible guest in the A-list crowd is pop superstar Taylor
Swift. Her concert film, "Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour," was
nominated in the new category of cinematic and box office
achievement. It is unclear whether she will attend the ceremony.
In the television field, "Succession" is expected to win accolades
for its final season about the high-stakes battle for control of a
global media empire. It leads all nominees with nine nods, followed
by restaurant dramedy "The Bear" with five.
Winners of the film awards are closely watched as they can provide a
boost in the race to the Academy Awards in March.
The Globes were known in the past, however, for some unexpected
choices. Awards watchers will be looking to see whehter that changes
with a larger voting body.
One category to watch, Eng said, is best original song, where three
"Barbie" songs are competing. They are Billie Eilish's
soul-searching "What Was I Made For?," Dua Lipa's upbeat "Dance the
Night," and Gosling's lamenting power ballad "I'm Just Ken."
"It would be a total Globes thing to give it to 'I'm Just Ken,'" Eng
said. "It's like a novelty song and it's kind of quirky."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Additional reporting by Rollo Ross;
Editing by Mary Milliken and Jonathan Oatis)
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