Golden Globes 2026: Turbulence, Hushed Politics, and the Winners
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Estimated reading time: 5 minutes
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Key takeaways
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- One Battle After Another dominates, earning four Globes including Best Musical or Comedy and Best Director for Paul Thomas Anderson.
- Hamnet wins Best Drama; Jessie Buckley takes Best Actress for the film’s imagined tragedy.
- Marty Supreme propels Timothée Chalamet to his first Globe in musical/comedy.
- The Globes maintain a tense, largely apolitical vibe amid a fraught political moment.
- The Guardian uses the moment to highlight pressures on independent journalism and the need for support.
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Table of Contents
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- One Battle After Another triumph
- Hamnet drama win
- Marty Supreme and Timothée Chalamet
- Rose Byrne’s performance
- The Secret Agent win
- Context and critique
- Support Guardian journalism
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One Battle After Another crowns four Globes, including Best Musical or Comedy and Best Director
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Paul Thomas Anderson’s counterculture epic One Battle After Another dominates the ceremony, winning four Globes and signaling a peak of American indie-tinged artistry. The film secures Best Musical or Comedy and Anderson takes Best Director—the kind of achievement that cements a director’s status as one of America’s most ambitious contemporary filmmakers. The piece also notes Teyana Taylor as Best Supporting Actress for her standout presence.
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Hamnet wins Best Drama; Jessie Buckley shines as Agnes
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Chloé Zhao’s romantic, mythic vision Hamnet earns Best Drama, with Jessie Buckley taking Best Actress for her portrayal of Shakespeare’s wife. The film is described as a folk myth rather than strict history, its grief fueling Shakespeare’s Hamlet in an inventive, emotional way.
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Marty Supreme and Timothée Chalamet
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Josh Safdie’s deliriously kinetic Marty Supreme wins Timothée Chalamet the Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy, delivering a vigorous, energetic performance that fits the film’s adrenaline-fueled style.
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Rose Byrne in If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
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Rose Byrne’s jittery, high-anxiety turn earns Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical, underscoring 2026’s uneasy mood and the award ceremony’s tendency to reward provocative performances amid political tension.
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The Secret Agent wins Best Non-English Language Film; Wagner Moura leads drama
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Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent is recognized as Best Non-English Language Film, while Wagner Moura is named Best Actor in a Drama for his lead performance. The win highlights a year of intense global cinema within a politically charged moment.
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Context and critique: Globes amid controversy
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The Guardian notes ongoing debates about membership diversity and past bribery scandals but argues the results still map onto the Oscar race, while acknowledging a climate of fear and resistance among filmmakers facing a Trump-era atmosphere.
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Guardian independence and a fundraising appeal
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In a timely appeal, the Guardian emphasizes its independence from billionaire and corporate ownership and invites readers to support essential journalism with recurring contributions, noting benefits like ad-free reading and premium app access.
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