82nd Annual Golden Globes®
00d : 00h : 00m : 00s

74th Golden Globe Awards

  • Golden Globe Awards

Ryan Gosling, La La Land – Nominee, Best Performance By An Actor In A Motion Picture – Musical Or Comedy

Ryan Gosling’s involvement with La La Land started with a night of drinks and movie talk with writer-director Damien Chazelle, whom, he met through a common friend, producer Marc Platt. “we talked a lot about film in general, and Damien has a very infectious love of movies”, he told us in Toronto When Chazelle emailed Gosling the theme song for La La Land, the deal was closed.
  • Golden Globe Awards

Colin Farrell, The Lobster – Nominee, Best Performance By An Actor In A Motion Picture – Musical Or Comedy

Working with writer-director Yorgos Lanthimos  to build the sad-sack bachelor David, the protagonist of the dystopian love story The Lobster, Colin Farrell was given a mantra of sorts: “(Lanthimos) mentioned the word soft and I just got softer and softer and softer”, he told us in Cannes. “Until he texted me one night and said ‘stop eating now!’” Round, contained to the point of apathy and, yes, very soft, Farrell infuses David with a sort of militant sadness that cuts across Lanthimos’ tale of a society where being single is a crime punishable by a sort of death – becoming an animal.
  • Golden Globe Awards

Hailee Steinfeld, The Edge of Seventeen -Nominee,Best Performance By An Actress In a Motion Picture, Musical/Comedy

We first noticed Hailee Steinfeld in the Coen Brothers’ True Grit, all of 13 years old and standing her own opposite acting giants like Jeff Bridges, Josh Brolin and Matt Damon. In writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig’s The Edge of Seventeen she offers a bravura performance of a different kind, exploring and exposing the emotional chaos of a very smart, very bright teenager in the punishing universe of high school.
  • Golden Globe Awards

Annette Bening, 20th Century Women -Nominee, Best Performance By An Actress In a Motion Picture, Musical/Comedy

“I was 19 at the time this story takes place in Southern California, so (…) when I read the script was the first time I had read something that was placed where I was from, first of all. ”, Annette Bening shared with us, talking about the road that took her to Dorothea, mater familias of a very peculiar kind of improvised family, in 1979 Santa Barbara, CA in writer-director Mike Mills’ film.