
Golden Globes 2025: Here’s the full list of nominees
The Hindu
Jacques Audiard’s audacious musical “Emilia Pérez” leads nominations to the 82nd Golden Globes, scoring 10 nods
Jacques Audiard’s musical “Emilia Pérez,” about a Mexican drug lord who undergoes gender-affirming surgery, led nominations to the 82nd Golden Globes on Monday (December 9, 2024), scoring 10 nods to lead it over other contenders like the musical smash “Wicked,” the papal thriller “Conclave” and the postwar epic “The Brutalist.”
Indian filmmaker Payal Kapadia and her debut feature “All We Imagine As Light” have secured two nominations. The nominations are in the categories of Best Motion Picture - Non-English Language and Best Director - Motion Picture for Kapadia.
The nominations for the Globes, which will be televised by CBS and streamed on Paramount+ on Jan. 6, 2025, were announced on Monday morning by Mindy Kaling and Morris Chestnut.
The embattled Globes, no longer presented by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, are still in comeback mode after years of scandal and organizational upheaval. Zendaya, Timothée Chalamet, Angelina Jolie, Daniel Craig, Denzel Washington, Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Glen Powell and Selena Gomez all scored nominations.
Here is the complete list of nominations:
(Watch this space on Jan. 6, 2025, 6.30 am onwards for winners)

In a few days, there would be a burst of greetings. They would resonate with different wavelengths of emotion and effort. Simple and insincere. Simple but sincere. Complex yet insincere. Complex and sincere. That last category would encompass physical greeting cards that come at some price to the sender, the cost more hidden than revealed. These are customised and handcrafted cards; if the reader fancies sending them when 2026 dawns, they might want to pick the brains of these two residents of Chennai, one a corporate professional and the other yet to outgrow the school uniform

‘Pharma’ series review: Despite strong performances and solid premise, the narrative misses the mark
Pharma offers strong performances but falters in storytelling, making it a passable watch despite its intriguing premise.

The Kochi Biennale is evolving, better, I love it. There have been problems in the past but they it seems to have been ironed out. For me, the atmosphere, the fact of getting younger artists doing work, showing them, getting the involvement of the local people… it is the biggest asset, the People’s Biennale part of it. This Biennale has a great atmosphere and It is a feeling of having succeeded, everybody is feeling a sense of achievement… so that’s it is quite good!










