
Leonardo DiCaprio in a scene from One Battle After Another.Warner Bros. Pictures/via The Associated Press
Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another scored a leading nine nominations to the 83rd Golden Globe Awards on Monday, adding to the Oscar favourite’s momentum and handing Warner Bros. a victory amid Netflix’s acquisition deal.
In nominations announced Monday from Beverly Hills, California, One Battle After Another landed nominations for its cast – Leonardo DiCaprio, Teyana Taylor, Sean Penn and Chase Infiniti – along with nods for Anderson’s screenplay and direction. It’s competing in the Globes’ category for comedy and musicals.
Close on its heels was Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value, a Norwegian family drama about a filmmaking family. The Neon release’s eight nominations included nods for four of its actors: Stellan Skarsgård, Renate Reinsve, Elle Fanning and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas.
KPop Demon Hunters, the musical fantasy created by Korean-Canadian director Maggie Kang earned three Golden Globes nods, including one for best animated feature.
Netflix’s cultural juggernaut is also nominated for best cinematic and box office achievement, and its Billboard hit Golden is up for best original song.
The film will compete in the animation category against Toronto’s Domee Shi, who co-directed Pixar’s fantasy adventure film Elio.
Among this year’s other Canadian contenders, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg’s cringe comedy The Studio made a big splash, earning a nod for best comedy or musical series.
The Vancouver-born Rogen is also up for best actor in a TV musical or comedy for his role in the Apple TV Plus show as the frazzled boss of a struggling Hollywood studio, juggling corporate pressures with his dream of making genuinely good movies.
He’ll square off against fellow Canadian Martin Short, who got a nod for his role as a struggling theatre director in Disney Plus’ Only Murders in the Building for the fifth year in a row.
Rogen’s The Studio co-star, Toronto’s Catherine O’Hara, earned a nomination for best supporting actress on TV for her turn as a veteran studio executive navigating the fallout after being pushed out of her position.
Canadian-American actor Will Arnett became one of the first nominees for the Golden Globes’ inaugural best podcast award, earning a nod for his program Smartless, which he hosts with Jason Bateman and Sean Hayes.
Toronto’s Graham Yost got a nod for best drama series as executive producer of Apple TV Plus spy thriller Slow Horses.
The Globe nominations, a tattered but persistent rite in Hollywood, are coming on the heels of a potentially seismic shift in entertainment. On Friday, Netflix struck a deal to buy Warner Bros. Discovery for US$72-billion. If approved, the deal would reshape Hollywood and put one of its most storied movie studios in the hands of the streaming giant.
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Warner Bros., Netflix and the Golden Globes
Both companies are prominent in this year’s awards season. Along with One Battle After Another, Warner Bros. has Sinners, Ryan Coogler’s acclaimed vampire hit. It was nominated for seven awards by the Globes, including box office achievement, best actor for Michael B. Jordan and Coogler for best director.
Netflix’s contenders include Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly (which landed nods for George Clooney and Adam Sandler), Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein (five nominations) and the streaming smash hit, KPop Demon Hunters.

Michael B. Jordan and Omar Benson Miller in a scene from Sinners.Warner Bros. Pictures/via The Associated Press
The two studios led all others in nominations across film and television on Monday. Netflix landed 35 nominations, boosted by its expansive film slate and television nominees like the British limited series Adolescence (five nominations). Warner Bros. had 31 nominations, including 15 from HBO Max for series such as The White Lotus, the lead TV nominee with six.
The proposed deal for Warner Bros. has stoked concern throughout the industry that Netflix might devote one of the most theatrical-focused studios to streaming. Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos has pledged a theatrical commitment to many Warner releases, but the leading trade group for exhibitors has called the deal “an unprecedented threat.” On Sunday, U.S. President Donald Trump said the market share created by the merger “could be a problem,” and Paramount said Monday it was mounting a hostile bid for Warner Bros.
Neon shines on a bad day for Wicked: For Good
Yet the studio that triumphed on the movie side of the Globe nominations was Neon. The indie specialty film company has emerged as a dominant force in international releases, winning a string of Palme d’Or awards at the Cannes Film Festival. It earned 21 nominations Monday, including five of the six international film nominees.
Some of those nominations came at the expense of some high-profile studio films. Wicked: For Good was nominated for five awards, including two nods for its songs and acting nominations for Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande. But it was overlooked for an award it was presumed to be in contention for: best comedy or musical.

Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande during the premiere of Wicked: For Good in New York.Evan Agostini/The Canadian Press
The nominees instead were One Battle After Another, Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia, Josh Safdie’s Marty Supreme, Park Chan-wook’s No Other Choice (a Neon release) and a pair of Richard Linklater movies in Blue Moon and Nouvelle Vague.
In the drama category, Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet scored six nominations, including nods for its stars, Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal. It was nominated for best film, drama, along with Frankenstein and three Neon titles: The Secret Agent, Sentimental Value and It Was Just an Accident.
Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident, the acclaimed Iranian revenge drama, was nominated for a total of four awards. At different times, Panahi has often been imprisoned, put under house arrest and prohibited from leaving Iran by the Islamic Republic while making films over the past two decades. Earlier this month, while travelling outside of Iran with the film, he was sentenced to a year in prison and a new two-year travel ban.
Podcasters and A-listers mingle
As the Globes continue to transition out of their scandal-plagued past, there’s one notable change this year. For the first time, the Globes are giving a best podcast trophy. The inaugural nominees are Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard, Call Her Daddy, Good Hang With Amy Poehler, The Mel Robbins Podcast, SmartLess and NPR’s Up First.
Many of those nominees aren’t exactly outsiders to Hollywood. But they’ll mingle with a wide array of stars that the Globes, long known for packing their red carpet with A-listers, were sure to nominate.
Those include Timothee Chalamet, nominated for his performance in Marty Supreme, Jennifer Lawrence (Die My Love), Julia Roberts (After the Hunt), Tessa Thompson (Hedda), Jeremy Allen White (Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere), Emma Stone (Bugonia), Ethan Hawke (Blue Moon) and the two stars of The Smashing Machine, Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt.
Timothée Chalamet in a scene from Marty Supreme.A24/via The Associated Press
After a series of controversies for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the group that previously put on the ceremony, the Globes were sold in 2023 to Todd Boehly’s Eldridge Industries and Dick Clark Productions, a part of Penske Media. A new, larger voting body of more than 300 people now vote on the awards, which moved from NBC to CBS on a shorter, less expensive deal.
Nikki Glaser is returning as host to the Jan. 11 Globes, airing on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. This past January, Glaser won good reviews for her first time emceeing the ceremony. Ratings were essentially unchanged, slightly dipping to 9.3 million viewers, according to Nielsen, from 9.4 million in 2024.
Helen Mirren will receive the Cecil B. DeMille Award in a separate prime-time special airing Jan. 8. Sarah Jessica Parker will be honoured with the Carol Burnett Award.
with files from The Canadian Press