Jacob Elordi is Australia's big hope at the Golden Globes after scoring two nominations overnight for the 83rd iteration of the film and television awards.
Elordi was nominated for best performance by a male actor in a supporting role in a film for his turn as the creature in Guillermo del Toro's retelling of Frankenstein.
The 28-year-old Australian also scored a nod for best male actor in a limited series, anthology series or movie made for television for his role as Dorrigo Evans in the Australian miniseries The Narrow Road to the Deep North.
Rose Byrne was also nominated for her best female actor in a film — musical or comedy for her role in the comedy/drama If I Had I Legs I'd Kick You.
The role has already won her the Silver Bear award for best leading performance at the 2025 Berlin International Film Festival.
Another Aussie, Joel Edgerton, is up for best male actor in a drama film for his leading role in the film Train Dreams.
Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another topped the nominations with nine including for its cast — Leonardo DiCaprio, Teyana Taylor, Sean Penn and Chase Infiniti — along with nods for Anderson's screenplay and direction.
It is competing in the Globes' category for comedy and musicals.
Close on its heels was Joachim Trier's Sentimental Value, a Norwegian family drama about a filmmaking family.
The Neon release's eight nominations included nods for four of its actors: Stellan Skarsgård, Renate Reinsve, Elle Fanning and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas.
The Globe nominations, a tattered but persistent rite in Hollywood, are coming on the heels of the a potentially seismic shift in entertainment.
On Friday, Netflix struck a deal to buy Warner Bros Discovery for $US72 billion ($A108bn).
If approved, the deal would reshape Hollywood and put one of its most storied movie studios in the hands of the streaming giant.
Both companies are prominent in this year's awards season. Along with One Battle After Another, Warner Bros has Sinners, Ryan Coogler's acclaimed vampire hit.
It was nominated for seven awards by the Globes, including box office achievement.
Netflix's contenders include Noah Baumbach's Jay Kelly, Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein and the streaming smash hit, KPop Demon Hunters.
As the Globes continue to transition out of their scandal-plagued past, there's one notable change this year.
For the first time, the Globes are giving a best podcast trophy.
The inaugural nominees are Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard, Call Her Daddy, Good Hang With Amy Poehler, The Mel Robbins Podcast, SmartLess and NPR's Up First.
After a series of controversies for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the group that previously put on the ceremony, the Globes were sold in 2023 to Todd Boehly's Eldridge Industries and Dick Clark Productions, a part of Penske Media.
A new, larger voting body of more than 300 people now vote on the awards, which moved from NBC to CBS on a shorter, less expensive deal.
Helen Mirren will receive the Cecil B. DeMille Award in a separate prime-time special while Sex and the City star Sarah Jessica Parker will be honoured with the Carol Burnett Award.
ABC with wires