South Korean director Park Chan-wook hailed the “great honor” of seeing No Other Choice land three Golden Globe nominations on Monday, while using the moment to spotlight both the strength and the strain of his country’s film industry. The black comedy earned nods for best motion picture – musical or comedy, best non-English language motion picture and best male actor in a motion picture – musical or comedy for star Lee Byung-hun.
“I just heard that No Other Choice was nominated for three categories at the Golden Globes this morning. It is a great honor,” Park said in a statement released after the nominations, adding that he was deeply thankful that audiences worldwide had embraced the film and singling out Lee as a “precious friend.” Lee called his own nomination an “incredible honor” and said the story’s focus on people forced into impossible decisions hit him on both professional and personal levels.
The recognition marks a milestone for Korean cinema. No Other Choice is the first Korean feature ever nominated in a Golden Globes main best picture category, a sign that Korean-language films are moving from the periphery of awards season into its core. The film arrives at the Globes with strong momentum: it premiered in competition at Venice, won the Toronto International Film Festival’s People’s Choice Award for an international feature and serves as South Korea’s submission for the international feature Oscar.
Park’s satire follows Man-su, a laid-off paper industry specialist who begins targeting other jobseekers, twisting a story about career anxiety into a portrait of capitalism’s cruelty. In interviews around its festival run, Park has described being drawn to Donald E. Westlake’s novel The Ax because it allowed him to interlock an intimate family story with a sharp look at social pressures, then update it with contemporary worries about automation and AI.
Those choices land inside a film landscape he views with concern. Speaking at the Busan International Film Festival in September, Park said Korea’s theatrical business has been recovering “more slowly than other countries” since the pandemic and described the domestic industry as stuck in a slump. He said he hopes No Other Choice can play “even a small part” in helping cinemas climb out of that hole.
The Globes nominations arrive after the film became a rare local title to recoup its 17 billion won production budget through overseas presales before release and then top the Korean box office, a model some local analysts see as a survival template for mid-budget films. At the same time, the ceremony will highlight a wave of Korean work across categories, with hit animated feature KPop Demon Hunters also scoring three nominations, from best animated film to original song.
For Park, the Golden Globes nods cap a year in which No Other Choice has played as both a biting workplace comedy and a barometer of how far Korean filmmakers can go on the global awards stage while their home industry fights to regain its footing.





















































