'The Brutalist,' 'Emilia Perez' triumph at Golden Globes
		
		 
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		 [January 06, 2025] 
		By JAKE COYLE 
		
		Two wildly audacious films — Brady Corbet's 215-minute postwar epic “The 
		Brutalist” and Jacques Audiard's Spanish language, genre-shifting trans 
		musical “Emilia Perez” — won top honors at the 82nd Golden Globes on 
		Sunday. 
		 
		The Globes, which are still finding their footing after years of scandal 
		and makeover, scattered awards around to a number of films. But the 
		awards group put its strongest support behind a pair of movies that 
		sought to defy easy categorization. 
		 
		“The Brutalist” was crowned best film, drama, putting one of 2024’s most 
		ambitious films on course to be a major contender at the Academy Awards. 
		The film, shot in VistaVision and released with an intermission, also 
		won best director for Corbet and best actor for Adrien Brody. In his 
		acceptance speech, Corbet spoke about filmmakers needing approval on the 
		final cut. 
		 
		"I was told that this film was un-distributable," said Corbet. “No one 
		was asking for a three-and-half-hour film about a mid-century designer 
		in 70mm. But it works.” 
		 
		“Emilia Pérez” won best film, comedy or musical, elevating the Oscar 
		chances of Netflix’s top contender. It also won best supporting actress 
		for Zoe Saldaña, best song (“El Mal”) and best non-English language 
		film. Audiard, the French director, made way for Karla Sofía Gascón, the 
		film's transgender star who plays a Mexican drug lord who undergoes 
		gender affirming surgery, to speak on behalf of the film. 
		 
		“The light always wins over darkness," said Gascón, gesturing to her 
		brightly orange dress. “You can maybe put us in jail. You can beat us 
		up. But you never can take away our soul or existence or identity.” 
		
		
		  
		
		“I am who I am. Not who you want.” 
		 
		Demi wins her first Globe 
		Though the Globes audience was particularly starry, including nominees 
		Zendaya, Timothée Chalamet, Angelina Jolie and Daniel Craig, most of the 
		winners hailed from smaller, less seen films. 
		 
		That included some surprises. One was Demi Moore's win for best actress 
		in a comedy or musical. Her comeback performance in “The Substance," 
		about a Hollywood star who resorts to an experimental process to regain 
		her youth, landed the 62-year-old Moore her first Globe — a victory that 
		came over the heavily favored Mikey Madison of “Anora.” 
		 
		"I’m just in shock right now. I’ve been doing this a long time, like 
		over 45 years, and this is the first thing I’ve ever won as an actor," 
		said Moore, who was last nominated by the Globes for a film role in 1991 
		for “Ghost.” “Thirty years ago, I had a producer tell me that I was a 
		popcorn actress.” 
		 
		Best actress, in a drama film, was an even bigger surprise. The 
		Brazilian actress Fernanda Torres won for her performance in “I’m Still 
		Here,” a based-on-a-true-story drama about a family living through the 
		disappearance of political dissident Rubens Paiva in 1970s Rio de 
		Janeiro. Torres dedicated the award to her mother, the great actor 
		Fernanda Montenegro, who appears in “I'm Still Here,” too. 
		 
		“She was here 25 years ago," said Torres. "And this is like a proof that 
		art can endure through life even through difficult moments.” 
		 
		Best supporting actor in a musical or comedy went to Sebastian Stan for 
		“A Different Man,” in which Stan plays a man with a deformed face who's 
		healed. Stan, who was also nominated for playing Donald Trump in “The 
		Apprentice," noted that both films were hard to get made. 
		 
		“These are tough subject maters but these films are real and they're 
		necessary,” said Stan. “But we can't be afraid and look away.” 
		 
		Glaser lightly roasts the Globes 
		Comedian Nikki Glaser kicked off the Globes, with a promise: “I'm not 
		here to roast you.” 
		 
		But Glaser, a stand-up whose breakthrough came in a withering roast of 
		Tom Brady, made her way around the ballroom of the Beverly Hilton in 
		Beverly Hills, California, on Sunday picking out plenty of targets in an 
		opening monologue she had worked out extensively in comedy clubs 
		beforehand. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
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            Demi Moore poses in the press room with the award for best 
			performance by a female actor in a motion picture - musical or 
			comedy for "The Substance" during the 82nd Golden Globes on Sunday, 
			Jan. 5, 2025, at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP 
			Photo/Chris Pizzello) 
            
			  While Glaser might not have reached 
			Tina Fey and Amy Poehler levels of laughs, the monologue was a 
			winner, and a dramatic improvement over last year’s host, Jo Koy. 
			Last year's Globes, following a diversity and ethics scandal that 
			led to the dissolution of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, 
			were widely panned. But they delivered where it counted: Ratings 
			rebounded to about 10 million viewers, according to Nielsen. CBS, 
			who waded in after NBC dumped the Globes, signed up for five more 
			years. 
			 
			Hosting the Globes two weeks before the inauguration of Donald 
			Trump, Glaser reserved perhaps her most cutting line for the entire 
			room of Hollywood stars. 
			 
			“You could really do anything ... except tell the country who to 
			vote for,” said Glaser. “But it’s OK, you’ll get ’em next time ... 
			if there is one. I’m scared.” 
			 
			The Globes are now owned by Todd Boehly’s Eldridge Industries and 
			Dick Clark Productions, which acquired the award show from the now 
			defunct Hollywood Foreign Press Association. However, more than a 
			dozen former HFPA members are currently seeking to have the sale to 
			Eldridge Industries and Dick Clark Productions rescinded. 
			 
			A win for ‘Wicked’ 
			Unlike last year's Oscar race, when “Oppenheimer” rolled, this 
			year's season has more uncertain, with a field of contenders. Most 
			of the movies that are seen as having a chance — “Conclave,” “Emilia 
			Perez,” “The Brutalist,” “Wicked” and “Anora” — came away with at 
			least one award Sunday. The exception was Sean Baker's Palme 
			d'Or-winning “Anora,” which went home empty handed despite five 
			nominations. 
			 
			The Globes' award for cinematic and box-office achievement went to 
			Jon M. Chu's “Wicked,” which has nearly collected $700 million in 
			theaters. In a heavily arthouse Oscar field, “Wicked” is easily the 
			biggest hit in the best picture mix. Accepting the award, Chu argued 
			for “a radical act of optimism” in art. 
			 
			Though few awards have been predictable this season, Kieran Culkin 
			is emerging has the clear favorite for best supporting actor. Culkin 
			won Sunday for his performance in Jesse Eisenberg’s “A Real Pain,” 
			his second Globe in the past year following a win for the HBO series 
			“Succession.” He called the Globes “basically the best date night 
			that my wife and I ever have,” and then thanked her for “putting up 
			what you call my mania.” 
			 
			The papal thriller “Conclave” took best screenplay, for Peter 
			Straughan's script. “Flow,” the wordless Latvian animated parable 
			about a cat in a flooded world, took best animated film, winning 
			over studio blockbusters like “Inside Out 2” and “The Wild Robot.” 
			Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross won best score for their thumping 
			music for “Challengers.” 
			 
			TV prizes 
			Most of the TV winners were oft-awarded series, including the Emmy 
			champ “Shōgun." It won four awards, including best drama series and 
			acting wins for Hiroyuki Sanada, Anna Sawai and Tadanobu Asano. 
			Other repeat winners were: "Hacks" (best comedy series, actress for 
			Jean Smart), “The Bear” (Jeremy Allen White for best actor) and 
			“Baby Reindeer” (best limited series). 
			 
			Ali Wong won for best stand-up performance, Jodie Foster for “True 
			Detective” and Colin Farrell for his physical transformation in “The 
			Penguin.” 
			 
			“I guess it's prosthetics from here on out," said Farrell. 
			
			
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