9 Golden Globe-nominated Jewish shows to watch now on Netflix, Amazon and Sky!
Political protesters, time travellers, Orthodox feminists and secret murderers are all in the mix for recognition as digital platforms sweep up this year’s nominations...
The Trial of the Chicago 7
Aaron Sorkin’s star-studded drama, The Trial of the Chicago 7, is up for five awards at this year’s Golden Globes.
The star-studded film landed nominations for best motion picture, best supporting actor for Sacha Baron Cohen, best director and best screenplay for Sorkin and best original song for Hear My Voice.
The Trial of the Chicago 7 follows the real-life peaceful protests that turned violent at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
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Seven organisers of the protest – including Abbie Hoffman (played by Baron Cohen), Jerry Rubin (Jeremy Strong) and Tom Hayden (Eddie Redmayne) – were convicted of conspiracy to incite a riot.
The Trial of the Chicago 7 is available now on Netflix
Mank
Leading the pack with the most Golden Globe nominations is Mank, a biographical drama about screenwriter Herman J Mankiewicz as he grapples to finish the screenplay of Orson Welles’ classic, Citizen Kane.
The film picked up six nominations, including for lead actor Gary Oldman, alongside best motion picture, best screenplay, best supporting actress for Amanda Seyfried, best original score and best director (David Fincher).
Mank is available now on Netflix
The Queen’s Gambit
Writer and director Scott Frank’s chess drama, The Queen’s Gambit, is up against The Undoing and Unorthodox for best television limited series, while Anya Taylor-Joy received a nod for best actress.
Based on the novel by Walter Tevis, the Netflix drama is a coming-of-age story that explores the true cost of genius.
Abandoned and entrusted to a Kentucky orphanage in the late 1950s, a young Beth Harmon (Taylor-Joy) discovers an astonishing talent for chess while developing an addiction to tranquilisers provided by the state as a sedative for the children.
Haunted by her personal demons and fuelled by a cocktail of narcotics and obsession, Beth transforms into an impressively skilled and glamorous outcast while determined to conquer the traditional boundaries established in the male-dominated world of competitive chess.
Frank co-created the critically-acclaimed series with Allan Scott.
The Queen’s Gambit is available now on Netflix
The Undoing
Adapted from author Jean Hanff Korelitz’s suspenseful thriller, You Should Have Known, The Undoing has picked up four Golden Globe nominations.
Sky Atlantic’s gripping drama, directed by Susanne Bier, will go head-to-head with Unorthodox for best limited series, while Nicole Kidman was nominated for best actress, Hugh Grant for best actor, and Donald Sutherland for best supporting actor.
The Undoing revolves around successful New York therapist Grace Fraser (Kidman), who is happily married with a son (Noah Jupe) and on the brink of publishing her first book.
But her seemingly perfect world is rocked by a violent death and when her husband Jonathan (played by Hugh Grant) goes missing, a chain of terrible revelations emerges.
The Undoing is available via Sky On Demand and Amazon Prime Video
Sign up for a 30-day free trial of Amazon Prime Video here
Borat Subsequent Moviefilm
Sacha Baron Cohen’s surprise sequel to his 2006 box office smash, which offers plenty of Jewish moments and a wry comment on antisemitism, has picked up three nods from the Globes, including for best motion picture.
Baron Cohen’s turn as Borat, a bumbling journalist from Kazakhstan, earned the British-born actor a nomination in the best actor category, while his co-star Maria Bakalova, who plays his daughter, was nominated for best actress following her critically-acclaimed breakout performance (and a memorable scene with former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani).
Borat is available now on Amazon Prime Video – sign up for a 30-day free trial here
Palm Springs
Time-looping romcom Palm Springs picked up two nominations, including for best picture, musical or comedy.
Andy Samberg notched a best actor nomination in the same category.
The much-anticipated film, directed by Max Barbakow and written by Andy Siara, follows carefree Nyles (Samberg) and reluctant maid of honour Sarah (How I Met Your Mother actress Cristin Milioti) who have a chance encounter at a wedding.
Things soon get complicated when the pair find themselves stuck in a time vortex, unable to escape the venue, themselves or each other.
Unorthodox
The hit Netflix drama based on the 2012 memoir by Deborah Feldman of the same name about a young woman leaving her Charedi Orthodox community, has achieved two nominations, including best limited series.
Israeli star Shira Haas, who learnt Yiddish for the role, was nominated for best actress in a limited series.
The drama revolves around Esty (Haas), who runs away from her arranged marriage and her strictly-Orthodox community in Brooklyn, and moves to Berlin, where she adapts to a secular life. But when husband Yanky (Amit Rahav) discovers she is pregnant, he embarks on a journey to find her.
Unorthodox is available to watch now on Netflix
Schitt’s Creek
The quirky comedy series, created by real-life father and son Eugene and Dan Levy, has garnered five Golden Globe nominations.
The show is up for best television series – musical or comedy, as well as for Eugene Levy, for best actor; Catherine O’Hara, lead actress; Dan Levy, supporting actor; and Annie Murphy, supporting actress.
Schitt’s Creek revolves around video store magnate Johnny Rose (Eugene) and his grown-up son David (played by Dan), alongside wife and former soap star Moira (O’Hara) and daughter Alexis (Murphy).
The Roses lose their fortune after being defrauded and are forced to rebuild their lives with their sole asset: a small town named Schitt’s Creek they bought as a joke.
All six series of Schitt’s Creek are available to watch now on Netflix
Hunters
Al Pacino has picked up a nomination for best actor in Amazon Prime Video’s controversial Holocaust drama, Hunters.
Created by David Weil and recently renewed for a second series, Hunters is set in 1970s New York, with Al Pacino starring as Meyer Offerman, the head of a vigilante group that embarks on a bloody quest to assassinate Nazis living in their midst. The starry cast also includes Logan Lerman, Jerrika Hinton and Josh Radnor.
Weil explained the series was “a love letter to my grandmother”, having been inspired by the stories told to him by his Holocaust survivor relative, Sarah Weil, although some of the depictions of revenge-seeking Jews did not sit well with Holocaust educators.
The Auschwitz Memorial and Museum called the show “dangerous”, while the head of the USC Shoah Foundation Institute said survivors “sought justice, not revenge”.
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- Golden Globe
- Netflix
- Amazon
- Sky
- Arts
- Kosher Culture
- Feature
- Features
- The Trial of the Chicago 7
- Aaron Sorkin
- Sacha Baron Cohen
- Abbie Hoffman
- Jerry Rubin
- Herman J Mankiewicz
- Mank
- Citizen Kane
- The Queen’s Gambit
- Scott Frank
- Anya Taylor-Joy
- Walter Travis
- Jean Hanff Korelit
- Susanne Bier
- Nicole Kidman
- Hugh Grant
- Sky Atlantic
- Amazon Prime Video
- Donald Sutherland
- Borat Subsequent Moviefilm
- Max Barbakow
- Palm Springs
- Andy Samberg
- Deborah Feldman
- Shira Haas
- Unorthodox
- Schitt’s Creek
- Eugene Levy
- Dan Levy
- Al Pacino
- Hunters
- David Weil
- Logan Lerman
- Jerrika Hinton
- josh radnor
- Film and TV
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By Brigit Grant
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By Laurent Vaughan - Senior Associate (Bishop & Sewell Solicitors)
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By Laurent Vaughan - Senior Associate (Bishop & Sewell Solicitors)
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By Laurent Vaughan - Senior Associate (Bishop & Sewell Solicitors)
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By Laurent Vaughan - Senior Associate (Bishop & Sewell Solicitors)