The Golden Globe Award for Best English-Language Foreign Film was a Golden Globe Award created in 1948 and discontinued after 1973.
The award was split from Best Foreign Film, which was dedicated to films not in the English language; as the organisation behind the Golden Globes, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (Hollywood Foreign Correspondents Association when the award was first created) is based in the United States, the Best English-Language Foreign Film category was dedicated to films in English from any other country, whether they had English as an official language or not.
All of the winners have been British films, with the exception of 1967's The Fox, which was a Canadian production; the 1968 winner, Romeo and Juliet, was a co-production between the United Kingdom and Italy.
[1] It is also invariably mentioned prominently in the obituaries of a producer, a director, or an actor who was associated with the film.
[2] Uri Zohar Koji Senno Nobuaki Shirai