Annal:1995 Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama
From AwardAnnals
Results of the Golden Globe Award in the year 1995. For a ranked list of films, try an honor roll:
- 1995 Golden Globe-Drama winner
- 1995 Oscar-Picture winner
- 1995 Saturn-Fantasy winner
- 1995 BAFTA-Film nominee
- 1995 MTV-Movie nominee
- Score: 42.45
The Academy Award winner for Best Picture, Best Director Robert Zemeckis, and Best Actor Tom Hanks, this unlikely story of a slow-witted but good-hearted man somehow at the center of the pivotal events of the 20th century is a funny and heartwarming epic. Hanks plays the title character, a shy Southern boy in love with his childhood best friend (Robin Wright) who finds that his ability to run fast takes him places. As an All-Star football player he meets John F. Kennedy; as a soldier in Vietnam he’s a war hero; and as a world champion Ping-Pong player he’s hailed…
- 1995 Edgar–Video winner
- 1995 MTV-Movie winner
- 1995 Saturn-Action winner
- 1994 Cannes Palme d’Or
- 1995 BAFTA-Film nominee
- 1995 Golden Globe-Drama nominee
- 1995 Oscar-Picture nominee
- Score: 58.45
With the knockout one-two punch of 1992’s Reservoir Dogs and 1994’s Pulp Fiction writer-director Quentin Tarantino stunned the filmmaking world, exploding into prominence as a cinematic heavyweight contender. But Pulp Fiction was more than just the follow-up to an impressive first feature, or the winner of the Palme d’Or at Cannes Film Festival, or a script stuffed with the sort of juicy bubblegum dialogue actors just love to chew, or the vehicle that reestablished John Travolta on the A-list, or the relatively low-budget ($8 million)…
- 1995 BAFTA-Film nominee
- 1995 Golden Globe-Drama nominee
- 1995 Oscar-Picture nominee
- Score: 18.45
This vigorously entertaining film, sharply directed by Robert Redford from Paul Attanasio’s brilliant screenplay, is based on the game-show scandals of the 1950s, when TV quiz shows were rigged to attract higher ratings and lucrative sponsorships. The fact-based story focuses on the quiz show Twenty-One and popular contestant Charles Van Doren (Ralph Fiennes), a charming, well-bred intellectual who agreed to win the game by using answers supplied by the show’s producers. This unfair advantage turned Van Doren into a prototypical media darling at the…
- 1995 Golden Globe-Drama nominee
- Score: 6.45
A box-office hit when released in 1994, this sprawling, frequently overwrought familial melodrama may get sillier as its plot progresses, but it’s the kind of lusty, character-based epic that Hollywood should attempt more often. It’s also an unabashedly flattering star vehicle for Brad Pitt as Tristan—the rebellious middle son of a fiercely independent Montana rancher and military veteran (Anthony Hopkins)—who is routinely at odds with his more responsible older brother, Alfred (Aidan Quinn), and younger brother, Samuel (Henry Thomas). From the battlefields of…
- 1995 Golden Globe-Drama nominee
- Score: 6.45
This film is an intelligent examination of an easygoing doctor (Liam Neeson at his teddy bear best) and his discovery of Nell (Oscar nominee Jodie Foster), a woman who was raised in the woods with no human contact except her speech-impaired mother. The movie covers a familiar “fish out of water” story unlocking Nell’s soul (by deciphering her incomprehensible language) and then taking her into the modern world. What makes Nell special is the earnest work by Neeson, Natasha Richardson (as an uptight psychologist), and a rich, small array of supporting…

