"Better a fallen rocket than never a burst of light."
~ Tom Stoppard, The Invention of Love

Monday, March 16, 2026

2026 Oscar Awards

Okay, here’s the thing. I saw the writing on the wall earlier this awards season. And I know all the BS that’s happened in Oscars past. I’d prepared myself to expect Sinners to get far less than it deserved. But then Wunmi Mosaku and Ryan Coogler won at the BAFTAs, and Michael B. Jordan and the cast won at the Actor Awards. And I started to let myself hope.

And listen, I’m thrilled for every award Sinners got. Ryan Coogler’s win for Best Original Screenplay was so well deserved—I was hand flapping just like I did every time I watched the trailer for Black Panther! Best Original Score was an obvious choice, and I thought Ludwig Göransson gave a really lovely speech. Really stoked for Autumn Durald Arkapaw’s win for Best Cinematography, because the film was gorgeously shot—I’d guessed from her speech, and just from my recollections of Oscar history, that she was the first woman to win that award, and the historic nature of it was just gravy. And I was so happy Michael B. Jordan took home Best Leading Actor for his tremendous performance(s), and his heartfelt speech made me emotional.

But it’s fitting that, as the night went on and things kept going One Battle After Another’s way, that Get Out came to mind. I thought about Ryan Coogler following Jordan Peele, and I thought about how Peele had also been recognized for his brilliant writing but not his stellar direction. It wasn’t until after the ceremony that I looked it up and discovered they’re the only two Black writers who’ve won Best Original Screenplay (there have been a handful for Best Adapted Screenplay, though.) And there’s still never been a Black person who’s won Best Director.

I enjoyed One Battle After Another more than I thought I might. In my rankings of the Best Picture nominees, it’s probably solidly in the middle. But it certainly wasn’t the Best Picture to me, and so it felt like another year of Hollywood doing what it does. As such, maybe it’s silly to feel disappointed by that. The whole Sinners crew knows what they accomplished, and they don’t need Hollywood to tell them. But it’d be nice to see some respect put on their name.

I know this is different than my usual post-Oscars write-up. I’ll just add that I didn’t spend the whole night going “Sinners or bust!” I was happy to see Jessie Buckley win Best Leading Actress, and Frankenstein cleaned up in the design categories. I really liked Sentimental Value, so it was nice to see it take home Best International Feature. There were some amusing bits, especially a sketch between host Conan O’Brien and Sterling K. Brown, delivering a rewritten Casablanca for the “half-watching the movie while distracted by their phones” crowd. The opener, where O’Brien was chased through this year’s nominees by the kids from Weapons, was also a lot of fun, and I loved the jokes about how it was the CEO of Netflix’s first time inside a theatre. The Moulin Rouge! references between Ewan McGregor and Nicole Kidman were delightful when they presented Best Picture.

 

Sunday, March 15, 2026

2026 Oscars: Personal Nominations

My other annual pre-Oscars post. If it was up to me, this is who I would’ve nominated in each of my main categories!

Best Leading Actor – Several shakeups in this category. It was a strong year for leading actors, and it took me a while to work my way down to just five—good problem to have!

Timothée Chalamet (Marty Supreme)

Michael B. Jordan (Sinners)

Robert Pattinson (Mickey 17) – Pattinson really, really should’ve gotten nominated for these performances, so good!

Jesse Plemons (Bugonia) – Fantastic performance, equal parts ridiculous, menacing, and affecting.

Tonatiuh (Kiss of the Spider Woman) – Stellar! Tonatiuh is just wonderful as Molina. (I know they’re non-binary—I wound up putting them in this category mainly because it was easier to free a slot for him here compared to Best Leading Actress.)

Best Leading Actress – Just one change here, and it was a toughie. I knew I had to fit Cynthia Erivo’s excellent performance in there, but the original nominees were all so great! Somebody needed to go—apologies to Rose Byrne, who was still excellent. I also wished I could’ve fit in Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane, but there was simply no more room.

Jessie Buckley (Hamnet)

Cynthia Erivo (Wicked: For Good) – Even though I thought Part One was the better film, Erivo remains fantastic in For Good. Her performance on “No Good Deed,” oh my god!

Kate Hudson (Song Sung Blue)

Renate Reinsve (Sentimental Value)

Emma Stone (Bugonia)

Best Supporting Actor – Another single change. Let it be known that Diego Luna and Jonathan Bailey both gave great supporting performances this year too, but I was objective enough not to shoehorn them in. (Not to mention, I also loved Joel Fry in American Sweatshop! I can admit that’s not a Best Supporting Actor-caliber role, though.)

Miles Caton (Sinners) – An exquisite film debut!

Benicio del Toro (One Battle at a Time)

Jacob Elordi (Frankenstein)

Delroy Lindo (Sinners)

Stellan Skarsgård (Sentimental Value)

Best Supporting Actress – Even though this was a pretty solid category to start with, I made a number of changes here. There were just too many great supporting actress performances to pick from!

Margaret Qualley (Blue Moon) – I thought she played beautifully off of Ethan Hawke in this movie!

Mia Goth (Frankenstein) – A nicely layered performance that revealed itself more and more as the film went on.

Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas (Sentimental Value)

Wunmi Mosaku (Sinners)

Ariana Grande (Wicked: For Good) – A matched set with Erivo—do not separate!

Best Director – A couple changes to this one. Apparently, I’m on my “directors from non-English-speaking countries making English-language films” agenda!

Frankenstein – I really wanted this one. Guillermo del Toro’s direction was sublime!

Hamnet

Mickey 17 – Nobody is out here doing it like Bong Joon Ho, and that’s a fact!

Sentimental Value

Sinners

Best Original Screenplay – The only category where I didn’t change a thing! Pretty solid—a mitigating factor, though, is that I just didn’t see very many movies with original screenplays this year.

Blue Moon

If I Had Legs I’d Kick You

Marty Supreme

Sentimental Value

Sinners

Best Adapted Screenplay – A few changes. Still banging on the Mickey 17 drum, as you can see.

Bugonia

Frankenstein

Hamnet

Knives Out: Wake Up Dead Man – Loved this script! Another winner for the series.

Mickey 17 – Absolutely wild and off-the-wall, but in a way that I still really care about Mickey and Nasha.

Best Cinematography – A couple changes to this one. I had to do a double take when I checked the nomination list and realized Hamnet isn’t up for this award! I’d been thinking it was.

Frankenstein

Hamnet – Gorgeous. So well done.

Sentimental Value – The camera work really contributes to the story here, right from the opening montage.

Sinners

Train Dreams

Best Picture – Ten movies always seems like a lot, but the slots fill up fast. Overall, pretty decent lineup this year—still, this is what I would’ve picked.

Bugonia

Frankenstein

Hamnet

It Was Just an Accident – Just a really interesting film. I’m still thinking about it!

Knives Out: Wake Up Dead Man – Great characters, excellent mystery, wonderful exploration of the themes.

Marty Supreme

Mickey 17 – Of the movies that didn’t get any Oscar love this year, this is the one that surprised me the most. I know it came out a while back, but come on!

One Battle After Another

Sentimental Value

Sinners