The Prague Post - 'Oppenheimer' tops Golden Globes on bittersweet night for 'Barbie'

EUR -
AED 4.264444
AFN 77.788577
ALL 96.715158
AMD 444.403847
ANG 2.078208
AOA 1064.656408
ARS 1576.039306
AUD 1.788577
AWG 2.09129
AZN 1.972523
BAM 1.965673
BBD 2.338747
BDT 141.450467
BGN 1.956671
BHD 0.437718
BIF 3425.013407
BMD 1.161021
BND 1.511492
BOB 8.024373
BRL 6.34092
BSD 1.161233
BTN 103.078736
BWP 15.632586
BYN 3.95396
BYR 22756.021279
BZD 2.33545
CAD 1.629611
CDF 2722.595642
CHF 0.929688
CLF 0.028444
CLP 1115.845774
CNY 8.288563
CNH 8.289623
COP 4557.868519
CRC 584.334955
CUC 1.161021
CUP 30.76707
CVE 110.732492
CZK 24.306392
DJF 206.336261
DKK 7.469014
DOP 73.31886
DZD 151.243057
EGP 55.338698
ERN 17.415322
ETB 169.746198
FJD 2.642427
FKP 0.871035
GBP 0.871207
GEL 3.14626
GGP 0.871035
GHS 13.932577
GIP 0.871035
GMD 83.59354
GNF 10073.022091
GTQ 8.894676
GYD 242.941274
HKD 9.02642
HNL 30.407214
HRK 7.534332
HTG 152.124078
HUF 391.643849
IDR 19272.956798
ILS 3.853313
IMP 0.871035
INR 103.067187
IQD 1520.938157
IRR 48835.461544
ISK 141.598024
JEP 0.871035
JMD 186.788186
JOD 0.823155
JPY 176.154245
KES 150.062468
KGS 101.53161
KHR 4667.306497
KMF 493.43352
KPW 1044.929933
KRW 1658.530345
KWD 0.356236
KYD 0.967664
KZT 627.190205
LAK 25191.268696
LBP 103969.47465
LKR 351.525617
LRD 212.52507
LSL 20.288804
LTL 3.428195
LVL 0.70229
LYD 6.310189
MAD 10.620445
MDL 19.508068
MGA 5218.791831
MKD 61.636315
MMK 2437.414374
MNT 4177.878853
MOP 9.298946
MRU 46.538751
MUR 52.80335
MVR 17.775208
MWK 2017.271874
MXN 21.480424
MYR 4.910888
MZN 74.189902
NAD 20.294338
NGN 1698.167873
NIO 42.505216
NOK 11.784676
NPR 164.92638
NZD 2.030128
OMR 0.44641
PAB 1.161243
PEN 3.98699
PGK 4.884128
PHP 67.547652
PKR 326.359825
PLN 4.261901
PYG 8174.056051
QAR 4.227391
RON 5.088526
RSD 117.143623
RUB 92.304047
RWF 1680.578612
SAR 4.354006
SBD 9.555836
SCR 16.72367
SDG 698.352926
SEK 11.071681
SGD 1.507174
SHP 0.871067
SLE 26.934167
SLL 24346.039668
SOS 663.524046
SRD 45.256497
STD 24030.800829
STN 24.86908
SVC 10.160031
SYP 15096.121005
SZL 20.288879
THB 37.91836
TJS 10.671446
TMT 4.063575
TND 3.399436
TOP 2.719229
TRY 48.552179
TTD 7.886612
TWD 35.62707
TZS 2850.51904
UAH 48.532785
UGX 4023.207472
USD 1.161021
UYU 46.664382
UZS 14112.216422
VES 224.14453
VND 30599.301981
VUV 141.738821
WST 3.252134
XAF 659.271178
XAG 0.022371
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.137718
XCG 2.092812
XDR 0.818215
XOF 656.554094
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.425927
ZAR 20.163773
ZMK 10450.588651
ZMW 26.213891
ZWL 373.848447
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    23.72

    -0.76%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    14.98

    -0.8%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    11.35

    +1.59%

  • GSK

    0.4600

    44.15

    +1.04%

  • RIO

    0.0600

    68.22

    +0.09%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    51.1

    +0.57%

  • AZN

    0.6100

    85.12

    +0.72%

  • NGG

    0.9500

    74.25

    +1.28%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    16.58

    +0.54%

  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    24

    -1.25%

  • RELX

    0.3000

    45.43

    +0.66%

  • BP

    -0.5900

    33.11

    -1.78%

  • BCC

    2.0400

    74.12

    +2.75%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    14.04

    -0.07%

  • BCE

    -0.8700

    23.33

    -3.73%

'Oppenheimer' tops Golden Globes on bittersweet night for 'Barbie'
'Oppenheimer' tops Golden Globes on bittersweet night for 'Barbie' / Photo: Robyn BECK - AFP

'Oppenheimer' tops Golden Globes on bittersweet night for 'Barbie'

"Oppenheimer," Christopher Nolan's drama about the inventor of the atomic bomb, topped the Golden Globes on Sunday -- but its fellow summer smash hit "Barbie" missed out on best comedy film honors to "Poor Things."

Text size:

"Oppenheimer" took five prizes including best drama, best director for Nolan, best score, as well as acting wins for Cillian Murphy and Robert Downey Jr.

Emma Thomas, the film's producer and Nolan's wife, said her husband's three-hour epic about "one of the darkest developments in our history" is "unlike anything anyone else is doing."

Murphy, who plays brilliant scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer, hailed his "visionary director," while Downey Jr, portraying the protagonist's bitter rival, praised the movie as a "masterpiece."

In winning best director, Nolan fended off Greta Gerwig, who helmed "Barbie" -- the other half of the "Barbenheimer" phenomenon that grossed a combined $2.4 billion last year at the box office.

Turning nostalgia for the beloved doll into a sharp satire about misogyny and female empowerment, "Barbie"' was the leading film heading into the night with nine nominations, but ended the gala with just two prizes.

It won the award for best song, for a tune written by Billie Eilish and her brother Finneas. And as the year's highest grossing movie, it claimed a newly created trophy for box office achievement.

"We would like to dedicate this to every single person on the planet who dressed up and went to the greatest place on Earth, the movie theaters," said Margot Robbie, the film's star and producer.

"Thank you to all the Barbies and Kens in front of and behind the screen," added Gerwig.

But "Barbie" surprisingly lost out on best comedy to "Poor Things" -- a surreal, sexy bildungsroman which also earned Emma Stone best actress for her no-holds-barred turn as Bella Baxter.

"Bella falls in love with life itself, rather than a person. She accepts the good and the bad in equal measure, and that really made me look at life differently," said Stone.

- 'Party' -

After an annus horribilis in which the industry was crippled by strikes, A-listers turned out in force to celebrate Sunday.

Stars who were unable to promote their movies during the months-long Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA) walkout used the occasion to make up for lost time on the Oscars campaign trail.

Along with movie stars like Leonardo DiCaprio, attendees included big names from the world of music such as Bruce Springsteen and Dua Lipa -- both nominated for best song -- and Taylor Swift representing her recent concert movie.

"The big difference between the Golden Globes and the NFL -- on the Golden Globes, fewer camera shots of Taylor Swift," joked host Jo Koy.

The ongoing hype surrounding "Barbenheimer," even months after the films' releases, is a welcome boon to the new owners of the high-profile but consistently scandal-dogged Golden Globes.

Private investors including US billionaire Todd Boehly purchased the awards after years of controversy and declining audiences, and have invested heavily in resetting a night once billed as "Hollywood's biggest party."

The Globes were boycotted by the industry after allegations of corruption and racism rose to the surface in 2021, and the show was taken off air entirely a year later.

Since then, the controversial group of Los Angeles-based foreign journalists that created the Globes 80 years ago has been disbanded, and a wider net of overseas critics was brought in to choose this year's winners.

"Golden Globes journalists, thanks for changing your game," said Downey Jr as he collected his prize.

- 'Historic' -

The Globes provide a timely boost for the Oscars. Nominations voting for the Academy Awards begins Thursday, with the Oscars taking place this year on March 10.

Indigenous actor Lily Gladstone won best actress in a drama for her role in Martin Scorsese's "Killers of the Flower Moon," delivering some of her emotional speech in the native language of the Blackfeet Nation.

"This is an historic win, it doesn't belong to just me," she said.

"This is for every little res kid."

Paul Giamatti and Da'Vine Joy Randolph bolstered their Oscars campaigns with wins for "The Holdovers," in which they starred as a curmudgeonly history teacher and cook of a 1970s prep school, respectively.

Best screenplay and best non-English language film went to French courtroom drama "Anatomy of a Fall."

That film's director and co-writer Justine Triet said she had assumed that "nobody is going to see this movie" about "a couple fighting, suicide, a dog vomiting... I mean, come on!"

"This movie is about the truth, the impossibility of catching it," she added.

Hayao Miyazaki's "The Boy and the Heron" won best animated film.

The Globes also honor television.

"Succession" dominated, claiming best drama series, and acting wins for stars Kieran Culkin, Sarah Snook and Matthew Macfadyen.

"The Bear" swept the comedy categories, while road-rage saga "Beef" did the same in limited series.

Past Globes host Ricky Gervais, who did not attend, won best stand-up comedy performance, a new category.

T.Kolar--TPP