Golden Globes 2018 TV Predictions: Who will win?

The only thing predictable about the Golden Globes is, yes, that they will be unpredictable. The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. has shown a pattern of celebrating newcomers (FX’s Atlanta triumphed last year in its first season) as well as international productions (AMC’s limited series The Night Manager dominated the category, even against FX’s The People V. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story.) But with heavy-hitters on the awards circuit in the hunt this year, some races are impossibly close to call.

That said, here are our best guesses for who will be rewarded at the 75th Annual Golden Globes ceremony.

The Handmaid’s Tale is the favourite to win, although The Crown (right) may surprise us all. Photo: Hulu/Netflix

Best Television Series: Drama

Last year’s winner, The Crown is back for another run at the top prize, but this time it faces some serious competition in reigning Emmy champion The Handmaid’s Tale, the dystopian drama.

Though The Crown is still coasting on the glowing reviews for its second season, it will be hard for voters to resist making a political statement by anointing Handmaid’s, and continuing the time-honoured tradition of crowning shows in their first season (The Affair, Mr. Robot, Homeland).

As for the other contenders, HFPA voters have often nominated Game Of Thrones, but it’s never taken the top prize. (Maybe they’re waiting for the final season?) And Stranger Things and This Is Us may well win the popular vote, but aren’t likely to be elected here.

Prediction: The Handmaid’s Tale

Golden Globes

No one is doubting that this is Sterling K. Brown’s year. Photo: NBC

Best Actor In A Drama

This is Sterling K. Brown’s race to lose. It’s his second trip to the ceremony (he lost supporting actor last year for American Crime Story to Hugh Laurie as part of the Night Manager sweep), and voters will want to make sure he doesn’t go home empty-handed this time.

Bob Odenkirk (Better Call Saul) and Liev Schreiber (Ray Donovan) have both been nominated multiple times for the role, but never won. And newcomers to the race Freddie Highmore (The Good Doctor) and Jason Bateman (Ozark) can’t compete with Brown’s career-defining moment in time.

Prediction: Sterling K. Brown, This Is Us

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Irish actress Caitriona Balfe (of Outlander) has an international appeal. Photo: Starz

Best Actress In A Drama

Once again, this race has a clear front-runner: Elisabeth Moss for her searing performance as Offred/June in The Handmaid’s Tale. The Emmy winner is already well-known to HFPA voters; she has a Globe for her work in the first iteration of Top Of The Lake, though she never won for Mad Men. She’ll likely follow in the footsteps of fresh(wo)man wins the likes of Claire Foy (The Crown), Taraji P. Henson (Empire), and Ruth Wilson (The Affair).

Moss is the one woman who can dethrone the Queen (um, I mean Foy) – and the international appeal of Irish Caitriona Balfe (Outlander) and surprise Aussie nominee Katherine Langford (13 Reasons Why). Maggie Gyllenhaal will have to comfort herself with those rave reviews – and her win back in 2014 for The Honourable Woman.

Prediction: Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid’s Tale

Rachel Brosnahan stars as Midge Maisel in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Photo: Amazon

Best Television Series: Musical Or Comedy

Last year’s winner Atlanta is out of contention this year (its second season won’t debut until next year), and with the exception of Black-ish, the rest of the lineup is new to the race: Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Master Of None, SMILF and Will & Grace (as a revival). Particularly in this category, the Globes have a habit of crowning first-year series (Atlanta, Transparent, Mozart In The Jungle), which favours both Mrs. Maisel and SMILF.

Prediction: The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Will six-time nominee Eric McCormack finally win this year? Photo: AFP

Best Actor In A Comedy

Here, too, last year’s winner isn’t in contention (see you next year, Donald Glover), which leaves Anthony Anderson (Black-ish) as the only holdover from the 2017 ballot. So it’s a bit of a toss-up: six-time nominee Eric McCormack, reprising as Will Truman in the revival of Will & Grace, or second-time Master Of None nominee Aziz Ansari, who lost the prize back in 2015 to Mozart In The Jungle star Gael Garcia Bernal. They’re vying against surprise nominee Kevin Bacon, for I Love Dick, and William H. Macy, who was last nominated for his Shameless role in 2014. The edge goes to McCormack, giving the voters a way to reward a show often-nominated, but never crowned.

Prediction: Eric McCormack, Will & Grace

Best Actress In A Comedy

The Globes love their ingenues: Witness past winners Rachel Bloom (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend) and Gina Rodriguez (Jane The Virgin).

Which bodes well for Rachel Brosnahan (Marvelous Mrs. Maisel), auteur Frankie Shaw (SMILF), and Alison Brie (GLOW) – and, you could argue, Pamela Adlon, whose nod for Better Things marks her debut at the Globes. Insecure star Issa Rae is the only returning nominee from last year’s ballot; Tracee Ellis Ross (Black-ish), who won last year, didn’t make the cut this time out. Critics have called Brosnahan’s performance “winning,” and chances are, it will be indeed.

Prediction: Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Big Little Lies is expected to sweep in the limited series category. Photo: HBO

Best Limited Series/TV Movie

This isn’t quite a rematch of the Emmy race in the same category: the HFPA recognised The Sinner and Top Of The Lake: China Girl in place of Genius and The Night Of (nommed last year). But the true contest is at the top of the ticket, with three star-studded projects vying for the prize: HBO’s Big Little Lies (which triumphed at the Emmys) opposite Feud: Bette And Joan and Fargo which won the category for its first season. The HBO limited series earned the most nominations at this year’s Globes, with six overall – which makes it a clear favourite here.

Prediction: Big Little Lies

Ewan McGregor plays the dual role of Stussy brothers in Fargo. Photo: FX

Best Actor In A Limited Series/TV Movie

Three of the contenders – Robert De Niro (The Wizard Of Lies), Ewan McGregor (Fargo), and Geoffrey Rush (Genius) – vied in this category at the Emmy Awards, and lost to Riz Ahmed (The Night Of). So who has the momentum? Voters have a tendency of rewarding movie stars for doing TV in this category: last year’s winner Tom Hiddleston (The Night Manager), Oscar Isaac (Show Me A Hero), Billy Bob Thornton (Fargo). Also in contention are stars Jude Law (The Young Pope) and Kyle MacLachlan (Twin Peaks). De Niro uncannily embodied Bernie Madoff in the HBO movie, but McGregor had the added challenge of playing twins.

Prediction: Ewan McGregor, Fargo

Best Actress In A Limited Series/TV Movie

Substitute Jessica Biel (for The Sinner) for Carrie Coon (Fargo) and Felicity Huffman (American Crime), and you have the Emmy race all over again – surely the fiercest, given the star power and indelible performances delivered by Big Little Lies stars and executive producers Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon, alongside Feud: Bette And Joan leading ladies Susan Sarandon and Jessica Lange. Kidman already owns three Globes (for To Die For, Moulin Rouge! and The Hours) – look for her to claim her fourth trophy.

Prediction: Nicole Kidman, Big Little Lies

Best Supporting Actor In A Series/Limited Series/TV Movie

Just as The Night Manager swept the limited series categories, odds are Big Little Lies will do the same here. Alexander Skarsgard is the favourite to add another trophy to his collection (alongside his Emmy) for his work as the abusive husband in the HBO limited series. But he’ll have to fend off popular favourite David Harbour, the reluctant hero of Stranger Things. Christian Slater already owns a Globe for Mr. Robot (he won for the first season); Fargo’s David Thewlis and Feud’s Alfred Molina round out the category.

Prediction: Alexander Skarsgard, Big Little Lies

Another actress from Big Little Lies who is expected to win is Laura Dern. Photo: HBO

Best Supporting Actress In A Series/Limited Series/TV Movie

Three words: Big Little Lies. But will that mean the trophy goes to Laura Dern or Shailene Woodley? Dern’s only other nod dates back to 1992’s Rambling Rose; Woodley was nommed for 2011’s The Descendants. Dern won the Emmy, but this mishmash category pits the Lies castmates against Ann Dowd, who won for Handmaid’s in the supporting actress in a drama race, while Chrissy Metz is a repeat nominee for This Is Us and Michelle Pfeiffer (Wizard Of Lies) has a long Globes history, including a win in 1990 for The Fabulous Baker Boys.

Prediction: Laura Dern, Big Little Lies – Reuters/ Debra Birnbaum

Catch the live broadcast of the 75th Annual Golden Globe Awards on Jan 8 at 9am on Blue Ant Entertainment (HyppTV Ch 616).

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