Five Golden Globe–winning Netflix movies to stream right now

The 2026 Golden Globe Awards just wrapped up, and once again, Netflix looked super comfortable in that ballroom. Between emotional acceptance speeches and many surprise wins, the internet collectively screamed about who was robbed, and three Netflix titles took home trophies this year, which is a reminder that the platform is still very much shaping awards season.

But the thing about these award shows is, once the ceremony ends, the same question always hits. What should you actually watch now? And no, we are not depending on trailers alone. Something you can press play on tonight and know you are watching a film that has already passed the industry’s toughest test.

And that’s also the fun part about digging into Netflix’s back catalogue. Because beyond the latest winners, there is a whole new world of movies that have already made their Golden Globes mark in previous years.

To save you from the trouble of scrolling, we have picked the five best Golden Glove winners for you. If you are in the mood to catch up properly, here are five Netflix movies to binge.

Five Golden Globe–winning movies to stream on Netflix:

Men (Alex Garland, 2022)

This film starts with a woman named Harper, who, after her husband’s sudden death, heads to a remote countryside manor to heal. But peace is the last thing waiting for her there. The village looks beautiful at first, with its endless green fields and stone houses, the perfect setting for whom we are rooting for Harper to be. But then she meets the locals, and all of them seem just slightly… wrong. And the more Harper tries to understand what is going on, the more the place turns on her. Men is not a simple horror film, in case you are wondering.

Jessie Buckley is leading the film and carries the entire weight of the film on her face. And Rory Kinnear? He plays almost every single man Harper meets, and it is absolutely disturbing. The film won her a Golden Globe for Best Actress, and you will see why.

I’m Thinking of Ending Things (Charlie Kaufman, 2020)

Just as specific as its name, the film starts as a road trip for Lucy to meet her boyfriend’s parents. But the longer they drive, the weirder it gets. The conversations feel… stuck. And the girl, who may or may not be named Lucy, starts wondering what exactly she is doing there. I’m Thinking of Ending Things plays with time, identity, and memory in a way that will leave you reeling.

Toni Collette and Jesse Plemons give two of the most unbelievable performances you will ever see in a dinner scene. And it is directed by Charlie Kaufman, so you have a slight idea of what’s coming your way. The movie won Best Screenplay at the Golden Globes, and watching it feels like falling into someone else’s mind.

I Am Mother (Grant Sputore, 2019)

After an extinction event, a teenage girl is raised underground by a robot named Mother. She is told the outside world is still unsafe. But one day, a wounded stranger shows up at the door. And before you know it, everything she knows starts to crack. I Am Mother is a sci-fi film, but it gets so cold and clinical at times that the emotions push through and twist the whole story.

Clara Rugaard has done a great job playing the girl stuck between two versions of reality. Hilary Swank walks in like a glitch in the system, and you will not be able to trust anything after that. The film won the Golden Globe for Best Science Fiction Film, and it deserves it for how it reinvents the genre with only three characters and one steel hallway.

The King (David Michôd, 2019)

The King is a story of Prince Hal, who does not want the crown. All he wants to do is drink and fight, and he avoids the throne like it is poison. But when his father dies, he becomes King Henry V whether he is ready or not. But if you are wondering whether The King is just a historical drama, allow us to shed more light on it. This movie is about what power does to someone who never asked for it.

Timothée Chalamet, who just won a Golden Globe, is phenomenal in a role that is nothing like what you expect from him. Robert Pattinson shows up with a French accent that works, and the scenes between them are unforgettable. The film won the Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Drama, and Chalamet’s performance, heavy with loneliness and rage, was perfect for the role.

Bones and All (Luca Guadagnino, 2022)

To end things with the film that won the Golden Globe for Best Romantic Drama. Two people meet and fall in love on the margins of society. The problem? They both have a hunger that cannot be explained, and it has already ruined their lives. Bones and All is a road movie which is a love story and a horror tale woven into one. But instead of shocking you, the film asks whether people like them can ever have a future or if love always comes with an expiration date.

Taylor Russell plays it with such aching stillness that you almost forget what she is capable of. Timothée Chalamet, again, disappears into someone broken and untamed. You watch it thinking it is about horror, but it stays with you because of how gently it handles pain.

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