The Latest: The Golden Globes kick off award season

Hollywood is getting dressed up as the Golden Globes return for their annual champagne-soaked celebration of film and television workers at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California. The show serves as the ceremonial start to the 2025 awards season.

The audacious musical “Emilia Pérez” leads all nominees with 10. Other nominees include “The Bear,”“Shōgun,”“Wicked” and “Challengers.” Comedian Nikki Glaser will be emceeing the ceremony.

Here’s the latest:

Glen Powell loves his family

Looking back on a huge 2024, Glen Powell says his family is crucial to his success and keeping him centered.

Powell attended the Golden Globes with his parents, posing with them on the red carpet.

“You know, I got my family,” the “Hit Man” star said when asked how he remains grounded after such a groundbreaking year. “I got my sisters, cousins, my family keeps me grounded. That’s for me … that’s the key. They’re here with me tonight, so it’s like … It never feels like a storm when you have … them around.”

Cate Blanchett recycles Cannes Film Festival gown

Actor Cate Blanchett shone in a gold sequined gown from Louis Vuitton that she previously wore on the Cannes Film Festival carpet in 2024. It’s not the first time Blanchette has reworn a red carpet look in sustainable fashion. She famously rewore looks to the Venice Film Festival in 2020.

The actress is nominated for Best Performance by a female actor for “Disclaimer.”

Wait, where’s ’60 Minutes’?

Sorry, “60 Minutes” heads.

The Golden Globes are tonight on CBS, but the network’s NFL coverage, not the long-running TV newsmagazine, will be the lead-in and could last until near showtime.

While “60 Minutes” is being preempted this week, it’s slated to return Jan. 12.

Director Jon Chu pushes against pessimism

“Wicked” director Jon Chu says he’s happy some people see his film as subversive.

Walking the Golden Globes red carpet not long after diapering his newly arrived fifth child, Chu said, “We hope that in this time of cynicism and pessimism and maybe even cruelty we rise up for who we are and take control of the story. I love that we get to do those things in a delicious little musical.”

“Wicked” is nominated for four Globes including best musical or comedy film.

Baby Nessarose hits the Golden Globes carpet

The darling of “Wicked,” Cesily Collette Taylor posed for cameras on the Golden Globe’s red carpet in her white and black polka dot dress.

Fans of the film were taken with the child star’s delivery of the line “Yeah!” as a young Nessarose. (The adult Nessarose is played by Marissa Bode.)

Taylor, who accessorized with an adorable white bow and a white beaded bag, beamed on the carpet in her pink-rimmed wheelchair.

Monica Barbaro gets another take

The Golden Globes red carpet is heading up with stars, like “Hit Man” star Glen Powell who flashed his high-wattage smile as he walked the carpet arm in arm with his mother.

Elsewhere, his old “Top Gun: Maverick” co-star Monica Barbaro tripped on her blush gown while walking toward a roaming photographer. She laughed about the minor stumble.

“Can we pretend I didn’t just do that,” Barbaro said. “Let’s do that again.”

Barbaro plays Joan Baez in “A Complete Unknown.”

The lookalikes have arrived

Most of the famous nominees at the Golden Globes have yet to walk the red carpet, but some semblance of them have.

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Max Braunstein and Miles Mitchell showed up on the Beverly Hills carpet holding signs that read “I won a lookalike contest and now I’m at the Golden Globes.”

Braunstein earned the honor for his resemblance to Glen Powell, nominated for best male actor in a movie musical or comedy for “Hit Man,” while Mitchell got his trip for looking like Timothée Chalamet, nominated for best male actor in a drama for his own mimicking of Bob Dylan in “A Complete Unknown.”

How to watch the Golden Globes red carpet

Variety and “Entertainment Tonight” are teaming up for the official red carpet preshow, which will air on the outlets’ websites, goldenglobes.com, and Paramount+. Their show, hosted by Variety’s Marc Malkin and E.T.’s Rachel Smith, begins at 6:30 p.m. Eastern.

And after taking a year off, E! will return to covering the fashion fiesta of the Globes red carpet with a show starting at 6 p.m.

Backstage once the show starts, The Associated Press will livestream Globe winners speaking to reporters backstage at the show, beginning at 8:15 p.m. Eastern.

Wallace and Gromit have arrived

Nick Park and Merlin Crossingham, the co-directors of the nominated animation film “Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl” walked onto the carpet proudly carrying their claymation stars.

“These are the actual figures from the film,” Crossingham said.

Feathers McGraw, the film’s villain, did not make the cut. A representative for the scheming penguin could not immediately be reached for comment.

First stop: Security checks, plus bomb squad sweeps

The line of cars to get to the Golden Globes red carpet is the great democratizer.

Everyone entering the venue has to go through an elaborate and time-consuming security check from the bomb squad. Trunks popped. Windows open. Security dog does the round in the trunk.

One member of the team told The Associated Press that security hasn’t necessarily increased from years past and that they always treat the checks with the same level of seriousness.

Attendees are known to grumble about the backlog it can cause, but this year’s event is following terror incidents in New Orleans and Las Vegas. There’s a heightened appreciation for the rigor, even if the line of big black SUVs is already long and slow three hours before the show.

Keep your eyes on Kris Bowers

Kris Bowers, one of The Associated Press’ Breakthrough Entertainers of 2023, is nominated for his first Golden Globe.

His work on “The Wild Robot,” the tear-inducing, fish-out-of-water-but-starring-a-robot animated tale, is up for original score. It may be a new honor for him, but Bowers is far from a novice: The Emmy- and Grammy-nominated composer has created moving compositions for prominent filmmakers, including Ava DuVernay and Justin Simien, and Oscar-winning films like “King Richard” and “Green Book.”

He’s quickly becoming Hollywood’s favorite composer — and a name that cannot be ignored.

▶ Read more about Kris Bowers

What’s in a name?

There are two men named Brody hoping to go home with a Globe on Sunday. And both those actors happen to share the same initial of their first names — A.

Adrien Brody was nominated as best male actor in a movie drama for his work on “The Brutalist,” while Adam Brody got a nod for best male lead in a TV comedy or musical for “Nobody Wants This.”

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The works are very different even if the stars’ names are similar. Adrien Brody stars as a Hungarian architect who escaped the Holocaust and sails to the United States to find his American Dream. Adam Brody’s comedy explores the relationship between a charming rabbi and an agnostic sex-positive podcaster.

No less a star than Kim Kardashian has mixed them up. She recently offered a shoutout on Instagram gushing over “Nobody Wants This” but tagged Adrien Brody instead of Adam.

Sharing a last name at awards shows is most common among famous siblings, like Jake and Maggie Gyllenhaal or Vanessa and Lynn Redgrave. But the whole same-last-name-and-same-first-initial could happen if Raini Rodriguez from “Paul Blart: Mall Cop” gets nominated the same year as “Modern Family” star Rico Rodriguez.

It’s a pop star melee in the best song category

There are six songs up for best original song at the 2025 Golden Globes:

    1. “Beautiful That Way” by Andrew Wyatt, Miley Cyrusand Lykke Li from “The Last Showgirl” 2. “Compress / Repress” by TrentReznor, Atticus Ross and Luca Guadagnino from “Challengers” 3. “El Mal” by Clément Ducol, Camille and Jacques Audiard from “Emilia Pérez” 4. “Forbidden Road” by Robbie Williams, Freddy Wexler and Sacha Skarbek from “Better Man” 5. “Kiss the Sky” by Ali Tamposi, Delacey, Jordan K. Johnson, Maren Morris,Michael Pollack and Stefan Johnson for “The Wild Robot” 6. “Mi Camino” by Ducol and Camille, once again for “Emilia Pérez.”

Some things to note:

    7. This is Cyrus’ second Golden Globe nomination. Her first was 16 years ago, for the song “I Thought I Lost You” from the animated film “Bolt.” 8. There will be justice for Take That fans! This is Williams’ first Globe nomination. And after “Forbidden Road” was deemed ineligible for Oscars’ consideration, it’s quite a big deal. 9. This is also country star-turned-pop powerhouse Morris’ first Globe nomination.

No Oscars for ‘Dune 2’ score

The larger-than-life “Dune: Part Two” score, composed by the Academy Award-winning Hans Zimmer, is up for a Golden Globe but will not compete at the Oscars this year.

The Academy rules state: “In cases such as sequels and franchises from any media, the score must not use more than 20% of pre-existing themes and music borrowed from previous scores in the franchise.”

Because the “Dune: Part Two” score pulls from the first, it qualifies as preexisting music and therefore cannot compete in that contest.

Will it win tonight? Lisan al Gaib says … hopefully!

Who’s up for best original score?

The original score nominees are a collection of newer voices and long-established talent: “Emilia Pérez” by Clément Ducol and Camille, “The Brutalist” by Daniel Blumberg; “Dune: Part Two” by Hans Zimmer, “The Wild Robot” by Kris Bowers, “Challengers” by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, and finally, “Conclave” by Volker Bertelmann. What to know:

    10. Ducol has been nominated three times. If he wins, it will be his first-ever win. 11. Ditto Camille — three nominations, no wins. 12. This is both Blumberg’s and Bowers’ first Golden Globe nomination. 13. This is Bertelmann’s second Golden Globe nomination. His first was in 2017, for the “Lion” score. 14. Zimmer has won three Golden Globes and boasts of 16 career nominations. 15. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross have two Globes and 7 career nominations.
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‘Better Man’ won’t go down a forbidden road at the Oscars

The Golden Globes are not a perfect predictor for what will happen at the Oscars, and no one should appreciate that more than Robbie Williams.

The English pop star who launched his career in the British boy band Take That knows a little something about writing a big pop tune. But according to Variety, the song “Forbidden Road” from his cheeky monkey biopic, “Better Man” was disqualified from the Oscars shortlist — after initially making the 15-song cut — because it “incorporates material from an existing song that was not written for the film” and is therefore ineligible.

No matter! The song is still up for the original song trophy at the Globes.

TV fights upstream

If you want to watch all the nominated TV dramas this year, prepare to dig into your wallet — the category is split among a lot of streaming services.

You’ll need Peacock for “The Day of the Jackal,” Netflix for both “Squid Game” and “The Diplomat,” Prime Video for “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” and  Apple TV+ for “Slow Horses.” The only linear channel in the bunch is FX’s “Shōgun,” but all episodes also stream on Hulu.

Streaming viewership exploded during the pandemic and hasn’t looked back. Nielsen says streaming accounted for 40.5% of TV use in October 2024, with broadcast at 24% and cable at 26.3%.

Over a decade ago in 2010, just for comparison, broadcast networks were still making a strong showing, with wins for network programs like “Glee” on Fox, “30 Rock” on NBC and “The Good Wife” on CBS. Basic-cable shows like “Mad Men” on AMC and pay-cable offerings, including “Dexter” on Showtime, were viable options.

No more. In 2020, all commercial broadcast networks — ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, The CW — were shut out completely during Golden Globes nominations.

The irony is the Globes telecast has always been on a legacy network. This year it is CBS, with a streaming option for customers who have Paramount+ with Showtime.

Are the Golden Globes here to stay?

After a tumultuous few years for the annual award show, the Golden Globes have secured their future — for now, at least.

In March, the Globes and CBS reached a five-year deal to broadcast the show and stream it live on Paramount+.

CBS stepped in to air the 81st Golden Globes last January and was rewarded with a rating boost. The telecast pulled in an average of 9.4 million viewers, up about 50% from 2023, when NBC moved the Globes to a Tuesday.

For years, the Globes had resided at NBC before scandal enveloped the organization behind the awards, leading NBC to give them up.

The Golden Globe nominations’ surprises

The Golden Globes have always had quirks, like A-lister tunnel vision, and while there might not be anything quite as glaring as the infamous year of “The Tourist,” this batch is not without its oddities: Some good, some bad, some simply perplexing.

Here are some of the biggest surprises from the nominations:

    16. “All We Imagine as Light” 17. Sebastian Stan in both “The Apprentice” and “A Different Man” 18. Pamela Anderson in “The Last Showgirl”

▶ Read more on why these were surprises

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