One Battle After Another dominates Oscars
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Director Paul Thomas Anderson and the cast and crew celebrate as they accept the Oscar for Best Picture for One Battle After Another during the Oscars show on March 15.
PHOTO: REUTERS
LOS ANGELES – One Battle After Another triumphed at the Oscars on March 15, winning six awards, including the coveted Best Picture statuette, besting Sinners in a thrilling finale to one of the most competitive awards seasons in recent years.
American director Paul Thomas Anderson won three Oscars, the first of his career, for his political thriller that tackles the hot-button issues of immigration raids and white supremacy.
“You make a guy work really hard for one of these,” he said to laughter as he accepted the award for Best Director.
After collecting the Best Adapted Screenplay prize, he said: “I wrote this movie for my kids to say sorry for the housekeeping mess that we left in this world we’re handing off to them.
“But also with the encouragement that they will be the generation that hopefully brings us some common sense and decency.”
American director Paul Thomas Anderson personally won three Oscars, the first of his career.
PHOTO: EPA
One Battle tells the story of a drug-addled former revolutionary, played by American actor Leonardo DiCaprio, who struggles to remember passphrases in a battle of wits against the terrifying Colonel Lockjaw, played by Best Supporting Actor winner Sean Penn.
The film also won Best Editing and the inaugural award for casting.
Anderson is one of the greatest auteurs of contemporary US cinema. Until March 15, he had never won an Oscar, despite 11 previous nominations for acclaimed films including There Will Be Blood (2007) and Boogie Nights (1997).
Sinners wins four
American film-maker Ryan Coogler’s Sinners, a bluesy vampire fable that offers a meditation on the US’ difficult racial history, had come into the evening with a record 16 nominations.
It left with four awards, including Best Original Screenplay for Coogler and Best Actor for Michael B. Jordan, who plays gangster twin brothers Smoke and Stack seeking their fortune in the segregated South.
Jordan told reporters backstage that he had created detailed journals to flesh out the backstories of both roles to clearly express “those nuances between the two”.
US actor Michael B. Jordan, winner of the Best Actor Award for Sinners.
PHOTO: EPA
Other prizes were Best Score for Ludwig Goransson and Best Cinematography for Autumn Durald Arkapaw, the first time a woman had won in that category.
Coogler called his writing award an incredible honour and told journalists he credited a creative writing professor for his success.
One Battle and Sinners were produced by Warner Bros. Studio, which was the subject of an intense bidding war between Paramount and Netflix.
The studio claimed 12 of the 24 awards on offer on March 15.
In perhaps the least surprising award of the evening, Jessie Buckley won Best Actress for her portrayal of English playwright William Shakespeare’s heartbroken wife navigating the loss of their son in Hamnet.
Buckley told journalists backstage that it felt “crazy” to win the award on what is Mother’s Day back in her native Ireland.
“What a gift to get to explore motherhood through this incredible mother that Agnes is,” she said.
Jessie Buckley poses with the Oscar for Best Actress for Hamnet on March 15.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Amy Madigan took home the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her turn as a demented witch in the horror film Weapons.
The veteran performer, who scooped the Actors Award two weeks ago, said: “I was in the shower last night, and I thought, ‘Well, this must be a special day, because I’m shaving my legs.’”
Amy Madigan took home the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her turn as a demented witch in horror film Weapons.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Norwegian family drama Sentimental Value was named Best International Feature.
KPop Demon Hunters won for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for Golden.
Poignant tributes
Veteran host Conan O’Brien kept proceedings light and funny, with his signature blend of zany satire.
That included a swipe at allies of US President Donald Trump, who had so objected to Puerto Rican artiste Bad Bunny being the star of the Super Bowl half-time show that they had put on their own.
“I should warn you tonight could get political, okay?” he told Tinseltown’s biggest names. “And if that makes you uncomfortable, there’s an alternate Oscars being hosted by Kid Rock.”
Host Conan O'Brien speaks onstage during the 98th Oscars at Dolby Theatre on March 15.
PHOTO: AFP
A lengthy In Memoriam segment paid emotional tribute to American director Rob Reiner, who was stabbed to death in his home in December 2025, and American actor Robert Redford, which included a rare stage performance from American singer-actress Barbra Streisand.
American actor Billy Crystal, whom Reiner cast opposite actress Meg Ryan in When Harry Met Sally (1989), said Reiner’s effect on Hollywood was immeasurable.
“Rob’s movies will last for lifetimes because they were about what makes us laugh and cry and what we aspire to be: far better in his eyes, far kinder, far funnier and far more human,” he said.
Streisand, 83, who played opposite Redford in the 1973 classic The Way We Were, said she had loved the man who affectionately called her “Babs”.
“He was a brilliant, subtle actor,” she said. “Bob had real backbone, on and off the screen. I called him an intellectual cowboy who blazed his own trail. I miss him now more than ever.” AFP
Oscar winners
Best Picture: One Battle After Another
Best Director: Paul Thomas Anderson, One Battle After Another
Best Actor: Michael B. Jordan, Sinners
Best Actress: Jessie Buckley, Hamnet
Best Supporting Actor: Sean Penn, One Battle After Another
Best Supporting Actress: Amy Madigan, Weapons
Best Original Screenplay: Ryan Coogler, Sinners
Best Adapted Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson, One Battle After Another
Best International Feature Film: Sentimental Value (Norway)
Best Animated Feature: KPop Demon Hunters
Best Documentary Feature: Mr Nobody Against Putin


