The awards aren't the only story, and here, in chronological order, are my top 10 moments from this year's Globes.
Despite being intrinsically American, American Sniper might actually appeal to a certain section of the political spectrum, says Paloma Sharma.
'The way the winners react and the speeches they deliver.' 'That is where the fun happens, when the actors and other winners let down their guard, challenge the system, talk about issues that should matter to us,' says Aseem Chhabra.
'They are perhaps the only night when the stars, those celestial seraphs, become as vulnerable, as doggedly human, as the rest of us.'
The Revenant is a devastating, visually jawdropping film that, for all its sins of tedium, makes up with scale what it lacks in artfulness, feels Raja Sen.
'The biggest disappointment at the Berlinale is the very small representation of Indian films.'
Raja Sen's favourite bits from what was, overall, a glitzy but forgettable awards show.
It is a film worth watching and recommending and loving, like a novel you can't wait to lend to friends you care about.
'A close look at the time-lines tells you that exactly as the back-channel negotiations were in their most crucial stage, "somebody" was planning the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai,' says Shekhar Gupta questioning Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri's account of a peace deal with India.
Raja Sen lists his favourite moments.
Heartfelt, sharp, aware, bright, and sincere, these are the best speeches from the show.
'Single life is pretty good. I like the attention. If I feel lonely, I just call my mom and she sleeps in my bed,' Kalki Koechlin tells Rediff.com contributor Paloma Sharma.