82nd Annual Golden Globes® LIVE COVERAGE.

News

  • HFPA

TALKING POINT: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN

Christopher Nolan, Golden Globe nominee as Best Director and Best Screenwriter for “Inception” told the HFPA: "As a filmmaker this mysterious process of dreaming, that's completely universal, has always fascinated me. We're dreaming every night, creating stories and worlds in our minds, so for me there's an interesting relationship between that and sitting in a movie theater watching a world that somebody has created unfold in front of you and you can immerse yourself inside of it.
  • HFPA

TALKING POINT: GEOFFREY RUSH

Geoffrey Rush, Golden Globe nominee as Best Supporting Actor for "The King's Speech", said to HFPA journalists: "Director Tom Hooper said something quite wonderful, that you don't have to be a stammerer to get the theme of the film, because that is just the dramatic device. The metaphor is: How do we find our better selves? That should be our life's goal, and falling short of that is what keeps us human, because unless you're Gandhi or a Tibetan Buddhist monk, I don’t think you ever reach a state of complete perfect being.
  • HFPA

TALKING POINT: MICHAEL DOUGLAS

Michael Douglas, Golden Globe nominee as Best Supporting Actor for "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps", said to HFPA journalists: "If I look at this picture, to me it's almost like an operetta, on a larger than life stage, it’s wonderfully dramatic and surprisingly shows a lot of heart, compared to most of Oliver Stone's pictures. And with everybody screwing everybody else in this picture, my daughter included, I'd like to believe that there is a positive and hopeful ending.
  • HFPA

Talking Point: Helena Bonham Carter

Helena Bonham Carter, Golden Globe nominee as Best Supporting Actress for “The King's Speech”, said to HFPA journalists: ""Everyone's got an opinion about the Queen Mother, because she's so well known, but my job I guess was to get beneath her public front of amazing sweetness, because underneath she was a very powerful and strong woman. Royal photographer Cecil Beaton described her as a marshmallow, but made with a welding machine, and I felt like I wanted to capture that duality.