golden globes 2025

Where to Watch Every Golden Globes 2025 Winner

From movies like Emilia Pérez and Conclave to shows including Baby Reindeer and The Penguin, here’s how to watch the night’s biggest winners.
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Courtesy of Netflix.

“The point of making art is not to win an award,” host Nikki Glaser quipped at the start of Golden Globes 2025. “The point of making art is to start a tequila brand so popular that you never have to make art again.”

Lucrative side-businesses or not, many of the 2025 Golden Globes winners have bright, trophy-filled pasts and—potentially—futures. Films like The Brutalist and Emilia Pérez just surged ahead in the Oscars race with multiple wins, including Adrien Brody for best actor in a motion picture drama and Zoe Saldaña for best supporting actress. And TV shows, including Shōgun and Baby Reindeer, followed their Emmys dominance earlier this year with some additional hardware. Now that the red carpet has closed and the awards have been bestowed, here’s how to stream all the major Golden Globe winners—and revisit which awards went to which titles.

A Different Man (Rentable)

WINNER: Best Male Actor, Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy (Sebastian Stan)

Director: Aaron Schimberg

Cast: Sebastian Stan, Adam Pearson, Renate Reinsve

Stan entered Golden Globes 2025 as a double nominee for his roles in A Different Man and The Apprentice—both performances he acknowledged in his impassioned acceptance speech. In his Globe-winning film, Stan plays Edward, an aspiring actor living with neurofibromatosis. In the movie, which was acquired by A24 after premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, Edward undergoes an experimental procedure in order to undo his genetic condition—only to meet a fellow thespian (Pearson, an actor living with neurofibromatosis in real life) who not only embraces his diagnosis, but flourishes with it. —Savannah Walsh

A Real Pain (in Theaters)

WINNER: Male Actor, Supporting Role in a Film (Kieran Culkin)

Director: Jesse Eisenberg

Cast: Jesse Eisenberg, Kieran Culkin, Will Sharpe, Jennifer Grey

Culkin has been steamrolling through award season, picking up his second career Golden Globe for playing the irreverent and lost Benji in A Real Pain. “My wife and I did this shot of tequila with Mario Lopez,” quipped Culkin. “Definitely feeling it.” His costar Jesse Eisenberg, however, went home empty handed at the Globes, though he is still very much in the awards conversation, as his screenplay for A Real Pain continues to garner attention from awards bodies like the Critics Choice Awards, the Independent Spirit Awards, and, most recently, the National Society of Film Critics, where it was named best screenplay of the year. —Chris Murphy

Challengers (Rentable)

WINNER: Best Score (Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross)

Director: Luca Guadagnino

Cast: Zendaya, Josh O’Connor, Mike Faist

While Zendaya didn’t wind up taking home the best actress in a musical or comedy trophy for her fierce performance as a tennis coach caught in the middle of a menagerie a trois, Challengers did receive some Globes love for its pulsing, EDM-infused score composed by The Social Network Oscar winners Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross. Now that the Challengers score has officially made the Oscars shortlist, it’s quite possible that the former Nine Inch Nails bandmates may become two-time Oscar winners. —C.M.

Conclave (in Theaters)

WINNER: Best Screenplay (Peter Straughan)

Director: Edward Berger

Cast: Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, Isabella Rossellini

Conclave proved to be quite “pope-ular” at the Golden Globes—at least as far as jokes went. Host Nikki Glaser poked fun at her favorite film of the year by playfully ribbing star Stanley Tucci and even singing a musical mashup dedicated to Berger’s papal film by way of Wicked. But the buzzy papacy movie starring Globes nominees Ralph Fiennes and Isabella Rossellini wasn’t merely the butt of the joke—writer Peter Straughan took home the trophy for best screenplay over stiff competition from Anora and Globes favorite Emilia Pérez, keeping it very much in the conversation as awards season continues. —C.M.

Emilia Pérez (Netflix)

WINNER: Best Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy; Non-English Language Film; Female Actor, Supporting Role, Motion Picture (Zoe Saldaña); Original Song, Motion Picture (“El Mal,” Music and Lyrics by: Clément Ducol, Camille, and Jacques Audiard)

Director: Jacques Audiard

Cast: Karla Sofía Gascón, Zoe Saldaña, Selena Gomez, Édgar Ramírez

Heading into the night, Audiard’s surrealist musical was the Globes’ most-nominated film of the year, so it was no surprise that Emilia Pérez scooped up four honors at Sunday’s ceremony. The film follows a foreboding cartel boss (Gascón), who enlists a tenacious defense attorney (Saldaña) to help her achieve her desired gender transition in exchange for a hefty sum. As Emilia transitions, she leaves behind her former life, with a wife (Gomez) and family in the rearview mirror. Years later, the ramifications of the deal become abundantly clear, often playing out via fantastical musical numbers. —S.W.

Flow (in Theaters)

WINNER: Best Animated Feature

Director: Gints Zilbalodis

The little Latvian film that could, Flow defied the odds at the Globes and beat out heavy hitters like Inside Out 2 and The Wild Robot for best animated film. The dialogue-free children’s fable follows a black cat whose home is devastated by a great flood and must find refuge on a boat headed to a strange new world. “This is a first time that film from Latvia has been here,” said director Gints Zilbalodis. “This is huge for us.” —C.M.

I’m Still Here (in Theaters)

WINNER: Female Actor, Motion Picture, Drama (Fernanda Torres)

Director: Walter Salles

Cast: Fernanda Torres, Fernanda Montenegro, Selton Mello

The Cannes-winning Brazilian actor bested the likes of Nicole Kidman and Angelina Jolie to win a Globe for her leading performance in Salles’s lauded biopic. Torres stars in the film alongside Montenegro, her real-life mother, who plays the older version of Eunice, her character in the movie. Until this year, Montenegro had been the only Brazilian actress to ever be nominated at the Globes; her recognition came 25 years ago. “This is proof that art can endure through life even in difficult moments,” Torres said after paying tribute to her mother. —S.W.

The Brutalist (in Theaters)

WINNER: Best Motion Picture, Drama; Best Director (Brady Corbet); Best Male Actor, Motion Picture, Drama (Adrien Brody)

Director: Brady Corbet

Cast: Adrien Brody, Guy Pearce, Felicity Jones, Joe Alwyn

“No one was asking for a three-and-a-half-hour film about a mid-century designer on 70 milimeter [film],” Corbet said on the Globes stage. Yet the awards body fully embraced his intermission-necessitated epic, bestowing it with three of the night’s biggest awards. Both Corbet and Brody became first-time Globe winners for the sweeping tale of Brody’s László Tóth, a Hungarian architect who comes to America after surviving the Holocaust, where he’s enlisted for the biggest project of his career. —S.W.

The Substance (Mubi)

WINNER: Female Actor, Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy (Demi Moore)

Director: Coralie Fargeat

Cast: Demi Moore, Margaret Qualley, Dennis Quaid

While delivering the biggest Globes speech of the night, Moore reflected on the real-life resonance of her role as an aging actress who goes to disturbing lengths to preserve her youthful relevance in The Substance. “Thirty years ago, I had a producer tell me that I was a ‘popcorn actress.’ At that time, I made that to mean that this wasn’t something I was allowed to have,” Moore said of her newfound awards recognition. “I could do movies that were successful, that made a lot of money, but I couldn’t be acknowledged. I bought in, and I believed that.” But just when the 62-year-old actor had thought “maybe I’d done what I was supposed to do,” a lifeline emerged in the form of Fargeat’s body-horror dark comedy. “As I was at kind of a low point, I had this magical, bold, courageous, out-of-the-box, absolutely bonkers script come across my desk called The Substance,” said Moore. “And the universe told me, ‘You’re not done.’” —S.W.

Wicked (in Theaters)

WINNER: Cinematic and Box Office Achievement

Director: Jon M. Chu

Cast: Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande, Jonathan Bailey, Jeff Goldblum, Michelle Yeoh

Wicked’s night wasn’t entirely magical, with both Erivo and Grande coming up short in their respective categories, and the film falling to Globes favorite Emilia Pérez for best musical or comedy. However, Jon M. Chu’s musical blockbuster followed in Barbie’s footsteps and reigned supreme in the newly created Golden Globe category cinematic and box office achievement—and could very well still go on to Oscar glory. While accepting the award, Chu highlighted the importance of telling feel-good stories at a time like this. “In a time where pessimism and cynicism rule the planet, we can still make art that is a radical act of optimism,” he said. “That is empowerment and that is joy.” —C.M.

Baby Reindeer (Netflix)

WINNER: Best TV Limited Series, Anthology Series, or Motion Picture Made for Television; Female Actor, Supporting Role, TV (Jessica Gunning)

Baby Reindeer, Netflix’s sleeper hit juggernaut about a Scottish comedian’s brush with an obsessive stalker, continues to dominate awards season. Richard Gadd’s series picked up two Globes, for best TV limited series and female actor in a supporting role. Although Gadd himself was passed over for Colin Farrell, he didn’t seemed too chuffed about that while accepting the trophy for limited series. “The Rock’s there. This is crazy,” he said, looking at Dwayne Johnson. “Honestly, I grew up with you, man. This is nuts.” —C.M.

Hacks (Max)

WINNER: Best Comedy Series; Female Actor, TV Series, Musical or Comedy (Jean Smart)

It was a great night to be a hack. Jean Smart took home her second Golden Globe for best actress in a comedy series and, in a repeat from the Emmys, Hacks bested The Bear for best comedy series. During his acceptance speech, co-creator Paul W. Downs revealed that the fourth season of the acclaimed comedy is currently in production, so it’s only a matter of time before we see what becomes of Deborah Vance’s return to late night. —C.M.

Shōgun (FX/Hulu)

WINNER: Best TV Series, Drama; Male Actor, TV Series, Drama (Hiroyuki Sanada); Female Actor, TV Series, Drama (Anna Sawai); Male Actor, Supporting Role, TV (Tadanobu Asano)

It was a clean sweep for the Japanese epic, which won all four categories in which its blockbuster first season was nominated. After an impressive haul at the Emmys earlier this year—and becoming the most popular show in FX network history based on global streaming totals—the series is poised to return for a second season. Not much is known plot-wise about the follow-up, but Hiroyuki Sanada has reportedly signed on to reprise his role as military dictator Lord Yoshii Toranaga for another installment. —S.W.

The Bear (FX/Hulu)

WINNER: Best Male Actor, TV Series, Musical or Comedy (Jeremy Allen White)

White, who is currently shooting his Bruce Springsteen biopic, was MIA when he won his latest Golden Globe. That’s the third honor in a row for the actor, who has been named the best male actor in a TV series comedy for every season that his show has been on the air. This year, it was presenter Jennifer Coolidge who accepted the honor on his behalf. —S.W.

The Penguin (Max)

WINNER: Best Male Actor, Limited Series, Anthology Series, or Motion Picture Made for Television (Colin Farrell)

“I guess it’s prosthetics from here on out,” Farrell quipped after winning the Globe for his physically transformative performance in the Batman spinoff. After joking that he had “no one to thank” and “did it all by myself” in what was a “raw, pared-down performance,” Farrell earnestly praised the show’s make-up and prosthetic team, including makeup artist Michael Marino, for turning him into notorious Gotham gangster Oswald Cobblepot. —S.W.

True Detective: Night Country (Max)

WINNER: Female Actor, Lead Role, Limited Series, Anthology Series, or Motion Picture Made for Television (Jodie Foster)

In a TV category chock full of movie stars like Cate Blanchett, Kate Winslet, and Naomi Watts, it was fellow A-lister Jodie Foster who prevailed. The two-time Oscar winner won her fifth Golden Globe for portraying Detective Liz Danvers in the fourth installment of HBO’s True Detective series, helmed by Issa López. After the success of Night Country, Lopez recently inked an overall deal with HBO and will return to craft season five of the anthology series. —C.M.


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