‘One Battle After Another’ wins Oscar for Best Picture

The film bags six trophies while Sinners takes home four

Published Mon, Mar 16, 2026 · 11:53 AM — Updated Mon, Mar 16, 2026 · 04:09 PM
    • Director Paul Thomas Anderson and cast members celebrate as they accept the Oscar for Best Picture for "One Battle after Another" at the 98th Academy Awards.
    • Director Paul Thomas Anderson and cast members celebrate as they accept the Oscar for Best Picture for "One Battle after Another" at the 98th Academy Awards. PHOTO: REUTERS

    [LOS ANGELES] One Battle After Another took home the best picture prize at the Academy Awards on Sunday (Mar 15), delivering a long-awaited win for veteran film-maker Paul Thomas Anderson.

    The Warner Bros Discovery film, about a washed-up revolutionary seeking to rescue his daughter from his former nemesis, was the favourite among Oscars forecasters and bookmakers going into Sunday’s awards.

    It features memorable character turns by actors, including Leonardo DiCaprio as a pot-smoking anarchist in retirement, and Sean Penn, who plays a white supremacist military officer. Penn won the prize for best supporting actor at the ceremony, which was held at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

    Anderson’s prior films include 2007’s There Will Be Blood and 1997’s Boogie Nights. He had been nominated 11 times before by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, but had never won an Oscar.

    He also picked up trophies for best director and best adapted screenplay for One Battle After Another, which features scenes of paramilitary forces guarding immigrant detention centres.

    “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,” Anderson said in accepting the screenplay prize. “But also, with the encouragement that they will be the generation that hopefully brings us some common sense and decency.”

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    The annual ceremony is Hollywood’s big opportunity to celebrate itself in front of a large TV audience, showcasing its best films, top stars and finest movie makers.

    Another Warner Bros film, Sinners, garnered 16 nominations going into Sunday’s ceremony, the most ever in the history of the Oscars. The film, from director Ryan Coogler, is a unique take on the horror genre, featuring musical numbers and a plot involving racism in 1930s Mississippi. Michael B Jordan won the best actor prize for portraying twin brothers in the film.

    Coogler, who first won acclaim for the independent film Fruitvale Station, has directed big-budget pictures such as Creed and Black Panther. He took home the trophy for best original screenplay at Sunday’s ceremony.

    Autumn Durald Arkapaw won the best cinematography award for Sinners, making her the first woman to earn that prize. The picture also won for best score. 

    Jessie Buckley took home the best actress trophy for portraying William Shakespeare’s wife in the Focus Features film Hamnet

    ‘Golden’, seen here performed by Rei Ami, Ejae, and Audrey Nuna from KPop Demon Hunters, became the first K-pop song to win an Oscar. It won for best original song. PHOTO: REUTERS

    Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters won best animated film. The musical about a female singing group who battle supernatural foes is the most-watched film ever on the streaming service. Its success prompted the company to later release it in theatres. Golden, from the film, won best original song.

    Amy Madigan won best supporting actress for her role as creepy Aunt Gladys in the Warner Bros horror film Weapons, marking her first Oscar after previously being nominated for 1985’s Twice in a Lifetime. 

    The show opened with a video segment starring host Conan O’Brien, dressed as Madigan’s character, being chased through scenes from several of the nominated films.

    In his opening monologue, O’Brien joked about artificial intelligence. “I’m honoured to be the last human host of the Oscars,” he said.

    And he took a shot at the streaming TV leader. “Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos is here... and it’s his first time in a theatre,” O’Brien quipped.

    The “In Memoriam” segment, which honours movie makers lost in the past year, included extended tributes to actor-directors Rob Reiner and Robert Redford. 

    The event once again aired on Walt Disney’s ABC broadcast network and Hulu streaming service. 

    Given the ongoing fighting in the Middle East, the Oscars were held with the highest level of security ever, including a 1.6 km police buffer around the theatre, officials said. There were only a few demonstrators outside that perimeter on Sunday afternoon, mostly protesting the fighting in Gaza and war in general.

    Politics also seeped into the show. Actor Javier Bardem said “no to war and free Palestine”, before handing out the trophy for best international film to Norway’s Sentimental Value.

    Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel, presenting the awards for documentary films, said: “There are some countries whose leaders don’t support free speech. I’m not at liberty to say which. Let’s just leave it at North Korea and CBS.”

    Some changes accompanied this year’s ceremony. The academy began requiring its members to watch all nominated films before voting in a particular category.

    A new award, for achievement in film casting, was handed out for the first time. Cassandra Kulukundis won for One Battle After Another. BLOOMBERG

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