Oscars 2026: Full breakdown and highlights from the 98th Academy Awards

The 98th Academy Awards unfolded at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles with a fairly middling sense of competitive tension that had defined the entire awards season, as the Warner Bros’ champions — Paul Thomas Anderson’s sprawling political thriller One Battle After Another and Ryan Coogler’s genre-bending Southern gothic Sinners— arrived as the ceremony as the two dominant forces and turned the Oscars into a head-to-head contest that ultimately shaped nearly every major headline of the night.

By the end of the evening, Anderson’s One Battle After Another emerged as the night’s largest winner with six Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Film Editing, Best Casting, and Best Supporting Actor, in a sweep that reflected the film’s steady accumulation of industry support through the precursor circuit and confirmed Anderson’s long-awaited coronation after decades of nominations without a directing win.


Also read | Oscars 2026: Winners, surprises and full results from the 98th Academy Awards

Producer Sara Murphy and Paul Thomas Anderson, winner of the Oscars for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Director for ‘One Battle After Another’, which won the Oscar for Best Picture, pose together in the Oscars photo room at the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles

Producer Sara Murphy and Paul Thomas Anderson, winner of the Oscars for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Director for ‘One Battle After Another’, which won the Oscar for Best Picture, pose together in the Oscars photo room at the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles
| Photo Credit:
REUTERS

The Oscars race that led to this victory unfolded over months of industry awards that largely favored Anderson’s film, especially after it secured key precursors such as the Producers Guild Award, Directors Guild Award and BAFTA victories that historically correlate with the Best Picture outcome, though the momentum never hardened into inevitability because Coogler’s Sinners remained the season’s most visible cultural phenomenon and arrived with a record-breaking 16 nominations, the largest tally ever achieved by a single film in Academy history.

Though Sinners did not take home the top prize, its presence shaped the ceremony in another way through Michael B. Jordan’s Best Actor victory, which capped a late-season surge that began when he won a major industry acting prize weeks before the Oscars and turned what had looked like a Timothée Chalamet-favoured race into a glorious upset. Jordan’s win formed the centerpiece of the film’s four-Oscar haul, which also included Best Original Screenplay for Coogler, Best Original Score for Ludwig Göransson, and a historic Best Cinematography win for Autumn Durald Arkapaw.

Warner Bros., which backed both One Battle After Another and Sinners, tied the record for most Oscars won by a single studio in one ceremony with eleven total victories, a milestone that a has arrived during period of financial uncertainty and corporate restructuring for the studio.

(L-R) Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, Misty Copeland, Miles Caton, Brittany Howard, Raphael Saadiq and Raphael Thomas perform the song “I Lied To You” from ‘Sinners’ onstage during the 98th Oscars at Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles

(L-R) Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, Misty Copeland, Miles Caton, Brittany Howard, Raphael Saadiq and Raphael Thomas perform the song “I Lied To You” from ‘Sinners’ onstage during the 98th Oscars at Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

Another major acting milestone came when Jessie Buckley won Best Actress for Hamnet, Chloé Zhao’s adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s novel about the death of Shakespeare’s young son. And in the supporting categories, the Academy awarded Sean Penn for Anderson’s film and Amy Madigan for Zach Creggers’ Weapons, the latter performance marking a huge stride forward for horror being represented at the Academy Awards. Buckley’s win made her the first Irish performer to capture the category, while Madigan’s victory arrived four decades after her first nomination, one of the longest waits between nomination and win in the Academy’s acting history.

The ceremony also produced several technical and craft-category storylines that broadened the night beyond the two dominant contenders, including three design wins for Guillermo del Toro’s gothic spectacle Frankenstein, as well as a sole wins for Joseph Kosinski’s F1and James Cameron’s Avatar: Fire & Ash. Animation delivered one of the evening’s most culturally resonant moments when the Netflix-backed KPop Demon Hunters won Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for the track “Golden,” which became the first K-pop song ever to receive the Academy Award.

Rei Ami, EJAE, and Audrey Nuna from ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ perform on stage during the Oscars show at the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles

Rei Ami, EJAE, and Audrey Nuna from ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ perform on stage during the Oscars show at the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood, Los Angeles
| Photo Credit:
REUTERS

Joachim Trier finally claimed the long-awaited International Feature prize for Sentimental Value, while the night left several admired Best Picture nominees — including the brilliant The Secret Agent, along with Train Dreams, Bugonia, and Marty Supreme — to slip out of the Dolby Theatre empty-handed.

Elsewhere on the winners list, Mr. Nobody Against Putin captured Best Documentary Feature, and the Live-Action Short category produced an unusual tie between The Singers and Two People Exchanging Saliva.

One of the evening’s most talked-about stretches arrived before the first envelope had even been opened, when host Conan O’Brien launched the ceremony with a pre-recorded introduction that folded several nominees into a roaming parody sequence anchored around Amy Madigan’s feral matriarch from the thriller Weapons, with O’Brien appearing in drag as the character Aunt Gladys and sprinting through a series of film worlds before bursting onto the Dolby Theatre stage while pursued by a swarm of children, a sketch that moved through the demon-hunting pop fantasia of KPop Demon Hunters and the juke-joint blues world of Sinners before resolving with the host breathlessly addressing the crowd.

Host Conan O'Brien, dressed as the character Gladys Lilly from ‘Weapons’ is chased by children during the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles

Host Conan O’Brien, dressed as the character Gladys Lilly from ‘Weapons’ is chased by children during the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles
| Photo Credit:
AP

O’Brien then settled into a monologue that mixed deadpan absurdity with topical satire, declaring himself the “last human host” of the ceremony as he riffed on the encroaching presence of artificial intelligence in film production while turning repeatedly toward Timothée Chalamet, whose recent comments dismissing ballet and opera as fading art forms had already sparked a mini-culture war across performing-arts circles; the comedian suggested heightened security in the theater might have something to do with angry opera singers before delivering the punch line that “they’re just mad you left out jazz,” a jab that the camera caught Chalamet laughing through while seated in the audience beside Kylie Jenner.

Beyond the scripted comedy, the ceremony produced a series of spontaneous viral moments that spread across social media feeds in real time, including the appearance of Brazilian actor Wagner Moura, nominated for Best Actor for The Secret Agent, whose smoldering close-ups during the broadcast became a minor internet event as fans clipped and circulated reaction shots despite the category ultimately going to Michael B. Jordan.

A fan holds a mask of Brazilian actor Wagner Moura, nominated for an Oscar for Best Actor for his role in ‘The Secret Agent,’ during a gathering at a bar to watch the awards show, in Rio de Janeiro

A fan holds a mask of Brazilian actor Wagner Moura, nominated for an Oscar for Best Actor for his role in ‘The Secret Agent,’ during a gathering at a bar to watch the awards show, in Rio de Janeiro
| Photo Credit:
AP

Political barbs threaded through the routine as well, with O’Brien and former-host Jimmy Kimmel taking aim at the uneasy cultural moment surrounding the current U.S. political climate and the Trump administration while framing the night as a reminder of cinema’s collective spirit during “chaotic, frightening times,”. Though, Javier Bardem used the brief sliver of stage time the orchestra had not yet claimed to slip in a call for no war and a free Palestine, which made him the only person across three hours of cinema’s biggest night willing to say the quiet part out loud.

However, it seems the 98th Academy Awards’ finest moment unfolded on the red carpet when Iranian veteran Jafar Panahi noticed David O. Leary beside him and produced a split-second double take so perfectly legible that Twitter immediately crowned it the best that the night had produced.

Here is a full list of the Oscars 2026 nominees:

BEST PICTURE

One Battle After Another (WINNER)

Hamnet

Sinners

Sentimental Value

Marty Supreme

Frankenstein

Bugonia

The Secret Agent

Train Dreams

F1

BEST DIRECTOR

Paul Thomas Anderson — One Battle After Another (WINNER)

Joachim Trier — Sentimental Value

Ryan Coogler — Sinners

Chloé Zhao — Hamnet

Josh Safdie — Marty Supreme

BEST ACTRESS

Jessie Buckley — Hamnet (WINNER)

Renate Reinsve — Sentimental Value

Rose Byrne — If I Had Legs I’d Kick You

Emma Stone — Bugonia

Kate Hudson — Song Sung Blue

BEST ACTOR

Timothée Chalamet — Marty Supreme

Leonardo DiCaprio — One Battle After Another

Michael B. Jordan — Sinners (WINNER)

Wagner Moura — The Secret Agent

Ethan Hawke — Blue Moon

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Teyana Taylor — One Battle After Another

Amy Madigan — Weapons (WINNER)

Wunmi Mosaku — Sinners

Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas — Sentimental Value

Elle Fanning — Sentimental Value

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Stellan Skarsgård — Sentimental Value

Benicio Del Toro — One Battle After Another

Jacob Elordi — Frankenstein

Delroy Lindo — Sinners

Sean Penn — One Battle After Another (WINNER)

BEST CASTING

Sinners — Francine Maisler

One Battle After Another — Cassandra Kulukundis (WINNER)

Hamnet — Nina Gold

Marty Supreme — Jennifer Venditti

The Secret Agent — Gabriel Domingues

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

One Battle After Another — Paul Thomas Anderson (WINNER)

Hamnet — Chloé Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell

Bugonia — Will Tracy

Train Dreams — Clint Bentley & Greg Kwedar

Frankenstein — Guillermo del Toro

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Sinners — Ryan Coogler (WINNER)

Sentimental Value — Joachim Trier & Eskil Vogt

It Was Just an Accident — Jafar Panahi

Marty Supreme — Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie

Blue Moon — Robert Kaplow

BEST FILM EDITING

One Battle After Another — Andy Jurgensen (WINNER)

Sinners — Michael P. Shawver

F1 — Stephen Mirrione

Marty Supreme — Ronald Bronstein

Sentimental Value — Olivier Bugge Coutté

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Sinners — Autumn Durald Arkapaw (WINNER)

One Battle After Another — Michael Bauman

Frankenstein — Dan Laustsen

Marty Supreme — Darius Khondji

Train Dreams — Adolpho Veloso

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

Frankenstein — Tamara Deverell (sets: Shane Vieau) (WINNER)

One Battle after Another — Florencia Martin ( sets: Anthony Carlino)

Sinners — Hannah Beachler (sets: Monique Champagne)

Hamnet — Fiona Crombie (sets: Alice Felton)

Marty Supreme — Jack Fisk (sets: Adam Willis)

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

Frankenstein — Kate Hawley (WINNER)

Avatar: Fire & Ash — Deborah L. Scott

Hamnet — Małgosia Turzańska

Sinners — Ruth E. Carter

Marty Supreme — Miyako Bellizzi

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

Sinners — Ludwig Göransson (WINNER)

One Battle After Another — Jonny Greenwood

Hamnet — Max Richter

Frankenstein — Alexandre Desplat

Bugonia — Jerskin Fendrix

BEST ORIGINAL SONG

“Golden” — KPop Demon Hunters (WINNER)

“I Lied to You” — Sinners

“Dear Me” — Diane Warren: Relentless

“Train Dreams” — Train Dreams

“Sweet Dreams Of Joy” — Viva Verdi!

BEST SOUND

F1 (Apple/Warner Bros) (WINNER)

Sinners (Warner Bros)

One Battle After Another (Warner Bros)

Frankenstein (Netflix)

Sirāt (NEON)

BEST MAKEUP & HAIRSTYLING

Kokuho (Kyoko Toyokawa, Naomi Hibino and Tadashi Nishimatsu)

Frankenstein (Mike Hill, Cliona Furey, Jordan Samuel) (WINNER)

Sinners (Ken Diaz, Mike Fontaine, Shunika Terry)

The Smashing Machine (Kazu Hiro, Glen Griffin, Bjoern Rehbein)

The Ugly Stepsister (Thomas Foldberg and Anne Cathrine Sauerberg)

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

Avatar: Fire and Ash (WINNER)

F1

Sinners

The Lost Bus

Jurassic World Rebirth

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

KPop Demon Hunters (WINNER)

Zootopia 2

Arco

Little Amélie or the Character of the Rain

Elio

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

The Alabama Solution — Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman

Come See Me in the Good Light — Ryan White, Jessica Hargrave, Tig Notaro and Stef Willen

Cutting through Rocks — Sara Khaki and Mohammadreza Eyni

Mr. Nobody Against Putin — David Borenstein, Pavel Talankin, Helle Faber and Alžběta Karásková (WINNER)

The Perfect Neighbor — Geeta Gandbhir, Alisa Payne, Nikon Kwantu and Sam Bisbee

BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE

Norway — Sentimental Value (WINNER)

Brazil — The Secret Agent

France — It Was Just an Accident

Spain — Sirāt

Tunisia — The Voice of Hind Rajab

BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT

Butcher’s Stain — Meyer Levinson-Blount and Oron Caspi

A Friend of Dorothy — Lee Knight and James Dean

Jane Austen’s Period Drama — Julia Aks and Steve Pinder

The Singers — Sam A. Davis and Jack Piatt (TIED WINNER)

Two People Exchanging Saliva — Alexandre Singh and Natalie Musteata(TIED WINNER)

BEST ANIMATED SHORT

Butterfly — Florence Miailhe and Ron Dyens

Forevergreen — Nathan Engelhardt and Jeremy Spears

The Girl Who Cried Pearls — Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski (WINNER)

Retirement Plan — John Kelly and Andrew Freedman

The Three Sisters — Konstantin Bronzit

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT

All the Empty Rooms — Joshua Seftel and Conall Jones(WINNER)

Armed Only with a Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud — Craig Renaud and Juan Arredondo

Children No More: “Were and Are Gone”— Hilla Medalia and Sheila Nevins

The Devil Is Busy — Christalyn Hampton and Geeta Gandbhir

Perfectly a Strangeness — Alison McAlpine