Golden Globes 2026: Which films got nominations, and who was snubbed?

The Hollywood award season in the United States is hitting high gear, with nominations unveiled for one of the biggest contests of 2026: the 83rd annual Golden Globes.

Often seen as a bellwether for the Academy Awards, the Golden Globes honour achievements in both television and filmmaking — a distinction that, with the advent of streaming over the last two decades, has become all the murkier.

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Limping post-pandemic box office numbers and high-stakes mergers have also complicated the future of the motion picture industry, with streaming giants like Netflix making a play for the century-old studio Warner Bros.

Still, several big-name blockbusters and critical darlings topped this year’s Golden Globe nominations.

Paul Thomas Anderson’s political thriller One Battle After Another was a standout, making good on its star-studded cast to sweep up five acting nods, plus nominations for Best Comedy, Best Director and Best Screenplay. It leads the field with nine nominations overall.

Anderson was not the only cinematic “auteur” to receive laurels from the Golden Globe Foundation.

Chloe Zhao’s historical tear-jerker Hamnet — based on the relationship between playwright William Shakespeare and his wife Agnes — nabbed six nominations in various drama categories.

And Ryan Coogler’s springtime crowd-pleaser Sinners — a vampire film and cultural commentary, wrapped in one — scored seven nods, including Best Drama, Best Director and Best Cinematic Achievement.

While the Golden Globes are often seen as a cozy, champagne-clacking affair for Hollywood titans, this year’s nominations also suggest an ever-more international scope for its honourees.

The meditative Norwegian drama Sentimental Value scooped up eight nominations, and the French nominee It Was Just an Accident, by Iranian director Jafar Panahi, earned four.

South Korea and Brazil also broke free from the Non-English Language Film category, scoring nominations in the acting, songwriting and animation competitions for films like KPop Demon Hunters, No Other Choice and The Secret Agent.

Some pieces of award bait, meanwhile, failed to deliver on their potential. Director Luca Guadagnino’s slippery, post-MeToo drama After the Hunt, for example, only scored a single nomination for star Julia Roberts.

Likewise, the musical film Wicked: For Good — the sequel to last year’s award-season juggernaut — disappointed its expectations. While it scored nods in acting and song categories, it failed to land in contention for some of the biggest prizes, including Best Motion Picture: Comedy or Musical.

The 83rd annual Golden Globes are scheduled to air on January 11, 2026. Here is the full list of nominees:

Best Motion Picture: Drama

  • Frankenstein
  • Hamnet
  • It Was Just an Accident
  • Sentimental Value
  • Sinners
  • The Secret Agent

Best Motion Picture: Musical or Comedy

  • Blue Moon
  • Bugonia
  • Marty Supreme
  • No Other Choice
  • Nouvelle Vague
  • One Battle After Another

Best Motion Picture: Animated

  • Arco
  • Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba — Infinity Castle
  • Elio
  • KPop Demon Hunters
  • Little Amelie or the Character of Rain
  • Zootopia 2

Best Motion Picture: Non-English Language

  • It Was Just an Accident, France
  • No Other Choice, South Korea
  • Sentimental Value, Norway
  • Sirat, Spain
  • The Secret Agent, Brazil
  • The Voice of Hind Rajab, Tunisia

Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Motion Picture: Drama

  • Eva Victor for Sorry, Baby
  • Jennifer Lawrence for Die My Love
  • Jessie Buckley for Hamnet
  • Julia Roberts for After the Hunt
  • Renate Reinsve for Sentimental Value
  • Tessa Thompson for Hedda

Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Motion Picture: Drama

  • Dwayne Johnson for The Smashing Machine
  • Jeremy Allen White for Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere
  • Joel Edgerton for Train Dreams
  • Michael B Jordan for Sinners
  • Oscar Isaac for Frankenstein
  • Wagner Moura for The Secret Agent

Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Motion Picture: Musical or Comedy

  • Amanda Seyfried for The Testament of Anne Lee
  • Chase Infiniti for One Battle After Another
  • Cynthia Erivo for Wicked: For Good
  • Emma Stone for Bugonia
  • Kate Hudson for Song Sung Blue
  • Rose Byrne for If I Had Legs I’d Kick You

Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Motion Picture: Musical or Comedy

  • Ethan Hawke for Blue Moon
  • George Clooney for Jay Kelly
  • Jesse Plemons for Bugonia
  • Lee Byung-hun for No Other Choice
  • Leonardo DiCaprio for One Battle After Another
  • Timothee Chalamet for Marty Supreme

Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role in any Motion Picture

  • Amy Madigan for Weapons
  • Ariana Grande for Wicked: For Good
  • Elle Fanning for Sentimental Value
  • Emily Blunt for The Smashing Machine
  • Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas for Sentimental Value
  • Teyana Taylor for One Battle After Another

Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role in any Motion Picture

  • Adam Sandler for Jay Kelly
  • Benicio del Toro for One Battle After Another
  • Jacob Elordi for Frankenstein
  • Paul Mescal for Hamnet
  • Sean Penn for One Battle After Another
  • Stellan Skarsgard for Sentimental Value

Best Director for a Motion Picture

  • Chloe Zhao for Hamnet
  • Guillermo del Toro for Frankenstein
  • Jafar Panahi for It Was Just an Accident
  • Joachim Trier for Sentimental Value
  • Paul Thomas Anderson for One Battle After Another
  • Ryan Coogler for Sinners

Best Screenplay for a Motion Picture

  • Chloe Zhao and Maggie O’Farrell for Hamnet
  • Jafar Panahi for It Was Just an Accident
  • Joachim Trier and Eskil Vogt for Sentimental Value
  • Paul Thomas Anderson for One Battle After Another
  • Ronald Bronstein and Josh Safdie for Marty Supreme
  • Ryan Coogler for Sinners

Best Original Score for a Motion Picture

  • Alexandre Desplat for Frankenstein
  • Hans Zimmer for F1
  • Jonny Greenwood for One Battle After Another
  • Kangding Ray for Sirat
  • Ludwig Goransson for Sinners
  • Max Richter for Hamnet

Best Original Song for a Motion Picture

  • Dream As One for Avatar: Fire and Ash
    • By Miley Cyrus, Andrew Wyatt, Mark Ronson and Simon Franglen
  • Golden for KPop Demon Hunters
    • By Joong Gyu Kwak, Yu Han Lee, Hee Dong Nam, Jeong Hoon Seo, Park Hong Jun, Kim Eun-jae (EJAE) and Mark Sonnenblick
  • I Lied to You for Sinners
    • By Raphael Saadiq and Ludwig Goransson
  • No Place Like Home for Wicked: For Good
    • By Stephen Schwartz
  • The Girl in the Bubble for Wicked: For Good
    • By Stephen Schwartz
  • Train Dreams for Train Dreams
    • By Nick Cave and Bryce Dessner

Cinematic and Box Office Achievement

  • Avatar: Fire and Ash
  • F1
  • KPop Demon Hunters
  • Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  • Sinners
  • Weapons
  • Wicked: For Good
  • Zootopia 2

Best Television Series: Drama

  • The Diplomat
  • Pluribus
  • Severance
  • Slow Horses
  • The Pitt
  • The White Lotus

Best Television Series: Musical or Comedy

  • Abbott Elementary
  • The Bear
  • Hacks
  • Nobody Wants This
  • Only Murders in the Building
  • The Studio

Best Limited Series, Anthology or TV Movie

  • Adolescence
  • All Her Fault
  • Black Mirror
  • Dying for Sex
  • The Beast in Me
  • The Girlfriend

Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Series: Drama

  • Bella Ramsey for The Last of Us
  • Britt Lower for Severance
  • Helen Mirren for MobLand
  • Kathy Bates for Matlock
  • Keri Russell for The Diplomat
  • Rhea Seehorn for Pluribus

Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Series: Drama

  • Adam Scott for Severance
  • Diego Luna for Andor
  • Gary Oldman for Slow Horses
  • Mark Ruffalo for Task
  • Noah Wyle for The Pitt
  • Sterling K Brown for Paradise

Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Series: Musical or Comedy

  • Ayo Edebiri for The Bear
  • Jean Smart for Hacks
  • Jenna Ortega for Wednesday
  • Kristen Bell for Nobody Wants This
  • Natasha Lyonne for Poker Face
  • Selena Gomez for Only Murders in the Building

Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Limited Series, Anthology or TV Movie

  • Amanda Seyfried for Long Bright River
  • Claire Danes for The Beast in Me
  • Michelle Williams for Dying for Sex
  • Rashida Jones for Black Mirror
  • Robin Wright for The Girlfriend
  • Sarah Snook for All Her Fault

Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Series: Musical or Comedy

  • Adam Brody for Nobody Wants This
  • Glen Powell for Chad Powers
  • Jeremy Allen White for The Bear
  • Martin Short for Only Murders in the Building
  • Seth Rogen for The Studio
  • Steve Martin for Only Murders in the Building

Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role on Television

  • Aimee Lou Wood for The White Lotus
  • Carrie Coon for The White Lotus
  • Catherine O’Hara for The Studio
  • Erin Doherty for Adolescence
  • Hannah Einbinder for Hacks
  • Parker Posey for The White Lotus

Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Limited Series, Anthology or TV Movie

  • Charlie Hunnam for Monster: The Ed Gein Story
  • Jacob Elordi for The Narrow Road to the Deep North
  • Jude Law for Black Rabbit
  • Matthew Rhys for The Beast in Me
  • Paul Giamatti for Black Mirror
  • Stephen Graham for Adolescence

Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role on Television

  • Ashley Walters for Adolescence
  • Billy Crudup for The Morning Show
  • Jason Isaacs for The White Lotus
  • Owen Cooper for Adolescence
  • Tramell Tillman for Severance
  • Walton Goggins for The White Lotus

Best Performance in Stand-Up Comedy on Television

  • Bill Maher: Is Anyone Else Seeing This?
  • Brett Goldstein: The Second Best Night of Your Life
  • Kevin Hart: Acting My Age
  • Kumail Nanjiani: Night Thoughts
  • Ricky Gervais: Mortality
  • Sarah Silverman: Postmortem

Best Podcast

  • Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
  • Call Her Daddy with Alex Cooper
  • Good Hang with Amy Poehler
  • SmartLess with Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes and Will Arnett
  • The Mel Robbins Podcast
  • Up First

Yemeni separatist group claims broad control of south

Yemen’s main southern separatist group has claimed broad control of the southern part of the country, marking a major shift in power for the area.

Amr al-Bidh, a senior official of the Southern Transitional Council (STC), told the Reuters news agency on Monday that the group had extended its presence in all southern provinces – including the port of Aden, the base of the internationally-recognised government over the past decade – following a military operation codenamed “Promising Future” launched last week.

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The eight southern governorates “are under the protection of the Southern Armed Forces”, al-Bidh said by text message.

“We are concentrating on unifying the operational theatre of our armed forces to enhance coordination and readiness to reinforce stability and security in the south, as well as combatting the Houthis should there be a willingness to head in this direction.”

The STC’s advance marks a major shift in control in southern Yemen. The group seeks greater autonomy for the south, which was an independent state until unification with the north in 1990.

The STC said senior figures from other groups had left Aden, including the head of the eight-member body that acts in place of a president, and the prime minister.

The STC, which has been backed in the past by the United Arab Emirates during Yemen’s decade-old civil war, has clashed with other groups in the Saudi-backed government, which relocated to Aden after the Iran-aligned Houthis captured the capital Sanaa in 2014.

Since 2022, the STC has served in an administration that controls southern areas outside the grip of the Houthis, under a Saudi-backed power-sharing initiative.

Presidential Council head Rashad al-Alimi, who briefed diplomats in Riyadh on Sunday, said in a statement on Monday that the STC’s actions across the south “undermine the legitimacy of the internationally recognised government” and violate power-sharing agreements.

A UAE official told Reuters on Monday that the country’s position on Yemen “is in line with Saudi Arabia in supporting a political process” based on Gulf-backed initiatives and United Nations resolutions. The official did not directly address the STC’s moves in southern Yemen.

Paramount goes hostile in its bid for Warner Bros Discovery

Paramount has gone hostile in its bid for Warner Bros Discovery, challenging Netflix, which reached a $72bn takeover deal with the company just days ago.

Paramount said on Monday that it is going straight to Warner Bros shareholders with a bid worth about $74.4bn, or $30 per share in cash. Unlike Netflix, it is also offering to buy the cable assets of Warner Bros, and asking shareholders of the company to reject the Netflix bid.

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It said its offer is worth about $18bn more than the competing bid from Netflix, which it says is based on an “illusory prospective valuation” of those cable assets.

It is the same bid that Warner Bros rejected in favour of the offer from Netflix in a merger that would alter the United States entertainment landscape.

Paramount criticised the Netflix offer, saying it “exposes WBD shareholders to a protracted multi-jurisdictional regulatory clearance process with an uncertain outcome along with a complex and volatile mix of equity and cash”.

Paramount said it had submitted six proposals to Warner Bros Discovery over a 12-week period.

“We believe our offer will create a stronger Hollywood. It is in the best interests of the creative community, consumers and the movie theater industry,” Paramount Chairman and CEO David Ellison said in a statement. “We believe they will benefit from the enhanced competition, higher content spend and theatrical release output, and a greater number of movies in theaters as a result of our proposed transaction.”

Trump influence

On Friday, Netflix struck a deal to buy Warner Bros Discovery, the Hollywood giant behind Harry Potter and HBO Max. The cash and stock deal is valued at $27.75 per Warner share, giving it a total enterprise value of $82.7bn, including debt. The transaction is expected to close in the next 12 to 18 months, after Warner completes the previously announced separation of its cable operations. Not included in the deal are networks such as CNN and Discovery.

But US President Donald Trump said on Sunday that the deal struck by Netflix to buy Warner Bros Discovery “could be a problem” because of the size of the combined market share.

The Republican president said he would be involved in the decision about whether the federal government should approve the $72bn deal.

Usha Haley, a Wichita State University professor who specialises in international business strategy, said Paramount’s ties to Trump are notable. Paramount CEO David Ellison is the son of longtime Trump supporter Larry Ellison, the world’s second-richest person.

“He said he’s going to be involved in the decision. We should take him at face value,” Haley said of Trump. “For him, it’s just greater control over the media.”

In October, Paramount said it had bought the news and commentary website The Free Press and installed its founder, Bari Weiss, a conservative opinion writer, as the editor-in-chief of CBS News, saying it believes the country longs for news that is balanced and fact-based.

It was a bold step for the television network of Walter Cronkite, Dan Rather and 60 Minutes, long viewed by many conservatives as the personification of a liberal media establishment. The network placed someone in a leadership role who has developed a reputation for resisting orthodoxy and fighting “woke” culture.

Paramount’s tender offer is set to expire on January 8, 2026, unless it is extended.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar sign high-speed rail deal to link capitals

Saudi Arabia and Qatar have signed a formal agreement to construct high-speed rail connecting their capitals, the first project of its kind between the two Gulf states that were once deeply at odds.

According to a statement in official Saudi media on Monday, the “high-speed electric passenger railway” would connect Riyadh’s King Salman International Airport with Doha’s Hamad International Airport.

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The Saudi cities of Al-Hofuf and Dammam are also expected to be on the network.

The train would reach speeds exceeding 300km/h (186mph) and the trip would take roughly two hours between the two capitals.

A direct flight between the cities clocks in at around 90 minutes.

The project, set to be completed in six years, expects to serve 10 million passengers per year and create 30,000 jobs across both countries, the statement said.

The agreement was signed by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani during the latter’s visit to Riyadh.

The project, considered one of the most significant modern infrastructure undertakings between Saudi Arabia and Qatar, marks the latest in a series of moves marking the drastic improvement in ties between the two Gulf countries in recent years.

Saudi Arabia and its allies the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt had cut all diplomatic and transport ties with Qatar in June 2017.

The four nations accused Doha of backing groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood and seeking closer ties with Saudi Arabia’s archrival Iran – allegations Qatar vehemently denied.

Relations were fully restored in January 2021 after a summit in the Saudi desert city of AlUla.

MBS visited Doha in December 2021 for the first time since the thaw in ties, as part of a regional Gulf tour.

Since then, leaders from the two kingdoms have met regularly and joined forces to back diplomatic initiatives including calls for a ceasefire in Israel’s more than two-year genocidal war on Palestinians in Gaza.

Riyadh also threw its support behind Qatar following Israel’s first known attack on Qatar in September, which targeted leaders of the Palestinian group Hamas, housed in a Qatari government residential complex, as they gathered to discuss a ceasefire deal proposed by United States President Donald Trump.