Complete list of 2024 Golden Globe winners
Producer A24 has enjoyed a remarkable run in cinema and beyond. In less than ten years he has racked up fifty Oscar nominations and already claimed multiple trophies for best picture with Moonlight in 2017 and Everything Everywhere All at Once in the same year. His talent also shines on television where his series have become essential viewing. First Ramy alongside its sister show Mo, then Euphoria, and now Bronca are widely regarded as modern classics. The series have secured three Golden Globes, with wins for best miniseries, best actress for Ali Wong, and best actor for Steven Yeun, cementing their place in the canon of contemporary prestige television.
Lee Sung Jin stands out as the creator behind Bronca. The South Korean screenwriter has built a career on projects such as Bloody Girls, Silicon Valley, and Dave. What begins as a light anecdote evolves into a show marked by complexity, speed, and humor. Bronca blends action packed black comedy with intense drama while offering a nuanced, chiaroscuro portrait of the Asian American experience, and a sharp examination of class anxieties and personal failure.
The central tension in Bronca revolves around two very different lives that intersect over money worries and the friction between what seems justified and what remains unresolved. Danny Cho, portrayed by Steven Yeun, is an independent contractor wrestling with depression and guilt tied to his family’s decision to return to Korea. On the other side is Amy Liu, played by Ali Wong, a businesswoman whose father is Chinese and mother Vietnamese. She is on the verge of selling her houseplant business for ten million dollars, a move that would free her to spend more time with her husband George and their daughter June in a home she has redesigned. Yet the prospect does not bring the happiness one would expect.
Ongoing scenes traverse a cityscape that opens with a car crash in a dim parking lot and evolves into a long, spiraling chase through streets and rooftop encounters. The narrative threads weave in and out within a web of family ties and business networks, each twist testing loyalties and exposing vulnerabilities. Bronca invites viewers into a dynamic, unpredictable rhythm that rewards patience and attention to character beats as much as to plot twists.
The cast remains consistently strong, and the show places two formidable challenges at center stage. It asks for physical intensity in action sequences while demanding emotional resonance in moments of quiet confession. Yeun returns to a spiritual dimension in his performance, while Wong reveals the depth of pain in ways that land with surprising honesty. Bronca toggles between exuberant humor and intimate sorrow, keeping audiences guessing what will come next, and rewarding those who stay for the ride with a deeply human payoff.
As with other A24 projects, Bronca impresses with its crafted aesthetics. The production team features some of the studio’s brightest minds. Grace Yun leads production design with the same meticulous eye seen in projects like Priest First Reformation and Hereditary, ensuring spaces feel lived in and loaded with meaning. Larkin Seiple’s cinematography captures textures and light with a deliberate, almost tactile clarity, echoing the studio’s film work in Everything Everywhere All at Once. Music by The Haxan Cloak, also known as Bobby Krlic, threads mood through scenes in a way that nods to the studio’s horror roots while carving out a distinct tonal space for Bronca. The result is a visual and sonic tapestry that invites repeated viewing and steady appreciation for its craft. This collaboration stands as a reminder that A24’s voice travels well beyond the cinema, translating to television with the same care and attention to detail. The overall effect is a show that feels both contemporary and timeless, a standout in the crowded landscape of streaming television and a clear signal of the studio’s continued impact on American and Canadian audiences alike. [Citation: Industry press and awards coverage]”}{