SAG Throws Wrinkle Into Oscar Race, Gives Actor Awards to ‘Sinners,’ Michael B. Jordan

The 32nd Actor Awards Presented by SAG-AFTRA, handed out March 1 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles and live-streamed on Netflix, re-framed some of the conventional awards-season thinking with two weeks to go before the Academy Awards.

Formerly known as the SAG Awards before this year, and the Actor Awards are presented by the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, the entertainment industry’s largest voting bloc.

The top prize of Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture went to Warner’s Sinners, which also saw Michael B. Jordan take home Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role.

Jordan’s win came as something of a surprise as he hadn’t won any of the major precursor awards before this. Timothée Chalamet had emerged as the heavy Oscar favorite for his role in A24’s Marty Supreme after wins at the Golden Globes and Critics Choice Awards. His loss at the Feb. 22 British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs) wasn’t seen as a blow to his Oscar chances because the winner there wasn’t up for the Academy Award, but missing out on the Actor Awards adds some suspense to the race. On the Kalshi online prediction market, Chalamet’s Oscar odds dropped from 78% before the BAFTAs to 43% within minutes of the Actors ceremony concluding, while Jordan’s odds jumped from around 3% in late January to 39%.  (Chalamet did win the SAG Award last year for playing Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown without going on to win the Oscar, which may have influenced this year’s voters).

The win for the Sinners cast does give the film some Best Picture momentum heading into the Oscars, though Warner’s One Battle After Another is still seen as the heavy favorite, hovering around 81% on Kalshi (down from 85% at the end of February). Sinners sits at around 17%, up from about 10% the day before the Actor ceremony.

However, the ensemble win does shore up the likelihood that Sinners casting director Francine Maisler takes home the first Oscar for Best Casting. Kalshi taps Sinners as a 73% favorite in that category, with One Battle at 28%. It also makes Ryan Coogler the first director to helm two ensemble-winning films, with 2018’s Black Panther being the other.

Following a slew of wins earlier in the awards season, One Battle most recently picked up best picture-equivalent honors at the BAFTAs and the Feb. 28 Producers Guild of America Awards, while Paul Thomas Anderson won the top prize at the Director’s Guild of America Feb. 7.

Among the other film categories at the Actor Awards, Jessie Buckley won Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role for Universal’s Hamnet, continuing her awards winning streak and pushing her Kalshi odds of an Oscar win to 95%.

One Battle’s Sean Penn won the Actor for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role, which when paired with his BAFTA win in the equivalent category last week makes him a solid favorite for the Best Supporting Oscar award (76% on Kalshi). And Amy Madigan of Warner’s Weapons won the Actor for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role; she won the equivalent trophy at the Critics Choice Awards but not the Golden Globes or BAFTAs. Best Supporting Actress is considered the closest race among the four performance Oscars, with Madigan now jumping ahead at 39% on Kalshi, compared with 30% for One Battle’s Teyana Taylor (the Golden Globes winner), and 23% for Sinners’ Wunmi Mosaku (the BAFTA winner).

Final Oscar voting began Feb. 26 and runs through March 5, with the 98th Academy Awards ceremony taking place March 15.

The Actor for Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture went to Paramount’s Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning. An Oscar for Best Stunt Design will be introduced at the 100th Academy Awards in 2028 (covering 2027 films).

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

On the TV side, Apple TV’s “The Studio” picked up more hardware, winning Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series, Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series for Seth Rogen, and Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series for Catherine O’Hara, a posthumous honor following her death Jan. 30.

HBO Max’s “The Pitt” won Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series, while Noah Wyle won Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series.

Capping off a good night for Warner Bros. Discovery IP, which won in seven of the 15 categories between film and TV, HBO’s “The Last of Us” won Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Television Series.

Netflix properties grabbed two Actors, with Owen Cooper of Adolescence winning Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series, and Keri Russell winning Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series for the third season of “The Diplomat.”

Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series went to Michelle Williams for FX’s Dying for Sex on Hulu.

Rounding out the festivities, Harrison Ford was given the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award.

‘Sinners,’ ‘One Battle After Another’ Lead 98th Academy Award Nominations

The Jan. 22 nominations for the 98th Academy Awards saw Sinners set a record for most nominations for a film with 16, while early awards-season favorite One Battle After Another nabbed 13.

In addition to Best Picture, Sinners was nominated for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for Ryan Coogler, Best Actor for Michael B. Jordan, Best Supporting Actor for Delroy Lindo, Best Supporting Actress for Wunmi Mosaku, Best Original Song for “I Lied to You,” Best Original Score for Ludwig Göransson, as well as Cinematography, Costume Design, Film editing, Makeup and Hairstyling, Production Design, Sound, Visual Effects, and for the new category of Achievement in Casting.

Many industry pundits had been predicting Sinners, released by Warner Bros., could set the record with at least 15 noms thanks to the new Casting category, but the film managed to reset the bar without needing it, thanks to the nom for Lindo, which was considered a bit of a surprise.

The previous record had been 14 nominations, shared by 1950’s All About Eve, 1997’s Titanic and 2016’s La La Land. The record for most wins is 11, shared by Titanic, 1959’s Ben-Hur and 2003’s The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.

The 13 nominations for One Battle After Another, also from Warner, came in 12 categories, and include Best Picture, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay for Paul Thomas Anderson, Best Actor for Leonardo DiCaprio, Best Supporting Actor for Sean Penn and Benicio Del Toro, Best Supporting Actress for Teyana Taylor, Original Score for Jonny Greenwood, as well as Casting, Cinematography, Film editing, Production Design and Sound.

The film is coming off Best Picture wins at the Critics Choice Awards and Golden Globes and is the heavy favorite to take the Academy Award as well, with Anderson also expected to win his first directing Oscar.

The other Best Picture nominees are Hamnet, Marty Supreme, F1: The MovieFrankenstein, Bugonia, The Secret Agent, Sentimental Value and Train Dreams.

Three films scored nine nominations: Netflix’s Frankenstein from director Guillermo del Toro’s; A24’s Mary Supreme starring Timothée Chalamet; and Neon’s Sentimental Value, which also scored a Best International Feature nomination. Focus Features’ Hamnet, directed by Chloé Zhao, earned eight nominations. No other picture had more than four.

In the studio tally, Warner led with 30 total nominations, followed by Neon with 18, Netflix with 16, Focus Features with 13, A24 with 11, Apple with six, and Disney with four. No other distributor had more than two.

Winners will be announced March 15 at the Oscars ceremony hosted by Conan O’Brien, taking place at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, airing on ABC and live-streaming on Hulu.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

98th Academy Awards Nominations

 

Best Motion Picture of the Year

  • Bugonia (Focus Features)
  • F1: The Movie (Apple)
  • Frankenstein (Netflix)
  • Hamnet (Focus Features)
  • Marty Supreme (A24)
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.)
  • The Secret Agent (Neon)
  • Sentimental Value (Neon)
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.)
  • Train Dreams (Netflix)

 

Best Animated Feature Film of the Year

  • Arco (Neon)
  • Elio (Disney)
  • KPop Demon Hunters (Netflix)
  • Little Amélie or the Character of Rain (GKIDS)
  • Zootopia 2 (Disney)

 

Best International Feature Film of the Year

  • The Secret Agent (Brazil)
  • It Was Just an Accident (France)
  • Sentimental Value (Norway)
  • Sirāt (Spain)
  • The Voice of Hind Rajab (Tunisia)

 

Best Documentary Feature Film

  • The Alabama Solution (HBO Documentary Films)
  • Come See Me in the Good Light (Apple)
  • Cutting Through Rocks (Gandom Films)
  • Mr. Nobody Against Putin (PINK)
  • The Perfect Neighbor (Netflix)

 

Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role

  • Timothée Chalamet — Marty Supreme (A24)
  • Leonardo DiCaprio — One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.)
  • Ethan Hawke — Blue Moon (Sony Pictures Classics)
  • Michael B. Jordan — Sinners (Warner Bros.)
  • Wagner Moura  — The Secret Agent (Neon)

 

Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role

  • Jessie Buckley — Hamnet (Focus Features)
  • Rose Byrne — If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (A24)
  • Kate Hudson — Song Sung Blue (Focus Features)
  • Renate Reinsve — Sentimental Value (Neon)
  • Emma Stone — Bugonia (Focus Features)

 

Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role

  • Benicio Del Toro — One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.)
  • Jacob Elordi — Frankenstein (Netflix)
  • Delroy Lindo — Sinners (Warner Bros.)
  • Sean Penn — One Battle after Another (Warner Bros.)
  • Stellan Skarsgård — Sentimental Value (Neon)

 

Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role

  • Elle Fanning — Sentimental Value (Neon)
  • Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas — Sentimental Value (Neon)
  • Amy Madigan — Weapons (Warner Bros.)
  • Wunmi Mosaku — Sinners (Warner Bros.)
  • Teyana Taylor — One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.)

 

Achievement in Directing

  • Hamnet (Focus Features) — Chloé Zhao
  • Marty Supreme (A24) — Josh Safdie
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.) — Paul Thomas Anderson
  • Sentimental Value (Neon) — Joachim Trier
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.) — Ryan Coogler

 

Original Screenplay

  • Blue Moon (Sony Pictures Classics) — Written by Robert Kaplow
  • It Was Just an Accident (Neon) — Written by Jafar Panahi; Script Collaborators Nader Saïvar, Shadmehr Rastin, Mehdi Mahmoudian
  • Marty Supreme (A24) — Written by Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie
  • Sentimental Value (Neon) — Written by Eskil Vogt & Joachim Trier
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.) — Written by Ryan Coogler

 

Adapted Screenplay

  • Bugonia (Focus Features) — Screenplay by Will Tracy
  • Frankenstein (Netflix) — Written for the Screen by Guillermo del Toro
  • Hamnet (Focus Features) — Screenplay by Chloé Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.) — Written by Paul Thomas Anderson
  • Train Dreams (Netflix) — Screenplay by Clint Bentley & Greg Kwedar

 

Achievement in Casting

  • Hamnet (Focus Features) — Nina Gold
  • Marty Supreme (A24) — Jennifer Venditti
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.) — Cassandra Kulukundis
  • The Secret Agent (Neon) — Gabriel Domingues
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.) — Francine Maisler

 

Achievement in Cinematography

  • Frankenstein (Netflix) — Dan Laustsen
  • Marty Supreme (A24) — Darius Khondji
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.) — Michael Bauman
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.) — Autumn Durald Arkapaw
  • Train Dreams (Netflix) — Adolpho Veloso

 

Achievement in Costume Design

  • Avatar: Fire and Ash (Disney) — Deborah L. Scott
  • Frankenstein (Netflix) — Kate Hawley
  • Hamnet (Focus Features) — Malgosia Turzanska
  • Marty Supreme (A24) — Miyako Bellizzi
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.) — Ruth E. Carter

 

Achievement in Film Editing

  • F1: The Movie (Apple) — Stephen Mirrione
  • Marty Supreme (A24) — Ronald Bronstein and Josh Safdie
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.) — Andy Jurgensen
  • Sentimental Value (Neon) — Olivier Bugge Coutté
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.) — Michael P. Shawver

 

Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling

  • Frankenstein (Netflix)
  • Kokuho (GKIDS)
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.)
  • The Smashing Machine (A24)
  • The Ugly Stepsister (Independent Film Company/Shudder)

 

Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (Original Score)

  • Bugonia (Focus Features) — Jerskin Fendrix
  • Frankenstein (Netflix) — Alexandre Desplat
  • Hamnet (Focus Features) — Max Richter
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.) — Jonny Greenwood
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.) — Ludwig Göransson

 

Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures (Original Song)

  • “Dear Me” — Diane Warren: Relentless (MasterClass/
    Greenwich Entertainment)
  • “Golden” — KPop Demon Hunters (Netflix)
  • “I Lied to You” — Sinners (Warner Bros.)
  • “Sweet Dreams of Joy” — Viva Verdi! (Viva Verdi!)
  • “Train Dreams” — Train Dreams (Netflix)

 

Achievement in Production Design

  • Frankenstein (Netflix)
  • Hamnet (Focus Features)
  • Marty Supreme (A24)
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.)
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.)

 

Achievement in Sound

  • F1: The Movie (Apple)
  • Frankenstein (Netflix)
  • One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.)
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.)
  • Sirāt (Neon)

 

Achievement in Visual Effects

  • Avatar: Fire and Ash (Disney)
  • F1: The Movie (Apple)
  • Jurassic World Rebirth (Universal)
  • The Lost Bus (Apple)
  • Sinners (Warner Bros.)

 

Best Live-Action Short Film

  • Butcher’s Stain (Tel Aviv University Steve Tisch School of
    Film and Television)
  • A Friend of Dorothy
  • Jane Austen’s Period Drama
  • The Singers (Netflix)
  • Two People Exchanging Saliva (Canal+/The New Yorker)

 

Best Animated Short Film

  • Butterfly (Sacrebleu Productions)
  • Forevergreen
  • The Girl Who Cried Pearls (National Film Board of Canada)
  • Retirement Plan
  • The Three Sisters (Polydont Films/Rymanco Ventures)

 

Best Documentary Short Film

  • All the Empty Rooms (Netflix)
  • Armed Only with a Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud (HBO)
  • Children No More: ‘Were and Are Gone’ (Sky)
  • The Devil Is Busy (HBO)
  • Perfectly a Strangeness (Second Sight Pictures)

 

Academy Awards Signs Global Rights Deal With YouTube Beginning in 2029

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has signed a multiyear deal giving YouTube exclusive global rights to the Oscars from 2029 to 2033.

The agreement kicks off with the 101st Oscar ceremony and includes red carpet coverage, behind-the-scenes footage, Governors Ball access and more content available live and for free to more than 2 billion viewers around the world on YouTube, and to YouTube TV subscribers in the United States.

YouTube will help make the Oscars accessible to the Academy’s growing global audience through features such as closed captioning and audio tracks available in multiple languages.

The partnership will also include worldwide access for film fans to other Academy events and programs exclusively on the Oscars YouTube channel. This will include the Governors Awards, the Oscars Nominations Announcement, the Oscars Nominees Luncheon, the Student Academy Awards, the Scientific and Technical Awards, Academy member and filmmaker interviews, film education programs, podcasts and more.

In addition, the Google Arts & Culture initiative will help provide digital access to select Academy Museum exhibitions and programs and help to digitize components of the Academy Collection — the largest film-related collection in the world, with more than 52 million items — creating a hub for film fans that will be accessible from around the world.

“We are thrilled to enter into a multifaceted global partnership with YouTube to be the future home of the Oscars and our year-round Academy programming,” said Academy CEO Bill Kramer and Academy President Lynette Howell Taylor. “The Academy is an international organization, and this partnership will allow us to expand access to the work of the Academy to the largest worldwide audience possible — which will be beneficial for our Academy members and the film community. This collaboration will leverage YouTube’s vast reach and infuse the Oscars and other Academy programming with innovative opportunities for engagement while honoring our legacy. We will be able to celebrate cinema, inspire new generations of filmmakers and provide access to our film history on an unprecedented global scale.”

“The Oscars are one of our essential cultural institutions, honoring excellence in storytelling and artistry,” said Neal Mohan, CEO of YouTube. “Partnering with the Academy to bring this celebration of art and entertainment to viewers all over the world will inspire a new generation of creativity and film lovers while staying true to the Oscars’ storied legacy.”

The Academy’s domestic partnership for the Oscars will continue with Disney ABC through the 100th Oscars in 2028, as will the international partnership for the Oscars with Disney’s Buena Vista International.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

YouTube Reportedly Eyeing Academy Awards TV Distribution Rights

Google-owned streaming platform YouTube is reportedly interested in securing distribution rights to the annual Academy Awards honoring the best theatrical releases in the world.

The rights, which are currently held by Disney-owned ABC/Hulu through 2028, would come at a premium as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences seeks to up the monetary value of the annual Oscars telecast.

First reported by Bloomberg, the interest follows the expiration of an exclusive negotiating period between AMPAS and ABC without a deal.

This year’s event saw a 8% decline in ABC/Hulu viewership to 18 million, from the 19.5 million who watched in 2024.

YouTube is the current U.S. household TV media market leader with a 12.8% share of all household television viewership in June, ahead of Disney (10%), Netflix (8.3%), NBCUniversal (7.8%), Paramount (7.2%), Fox (6.9%) Warner Bros. Discovery (6.4%), Prime Video (3.7%), The Roku Channel (2.5%), Scripps (2%), Weigel Entertainment (1.3%), A+E (1.1%), Hallmark (1%) and AMC Networks (0.8%).

YouTube will exclusively live-stream the NFL’s week one game from São Paulo, Brazil, on Sept. 5 for free globally on YouTube, and on subscription-based YouTube TV in the United States as part of the league’s seven-year, $14 billion rights deal.

NBCUniversal’s Peacock live-streamed last year’s São Paulo NFL opener for a reported $105 million license fee.

Netflix currently live-streams the annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, while Roku streams the Grammy Awards.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

1970 Best Foreign Film Oscar Nominee ‘First Love’ Available on Blu-ray Combo Pack From MVD and VCI

The 1970 Best Foreign Film Academy Award nominee First Love is available on Blu-ray Disc (plus DVD) combo pack from MVD Entertainment Group and VCI Entertainment.

Available for the first time on Blu-ray with a new 4K-UHD Restoration from the original 35mm camera negatives, the internationally acclaimed film is based on a love story by Russian author Ivan Turgenev. The film is a bittersweet study of a 16-year-old boy who becomes infatuated with an impoverished princess during an era of social decay and impending revolution.

Special features include a 2025 commentary track by Rob Kelly, noted film historian, podcaster and artist; a 2025 featurette “From First Love to Lasting Art: John Moulder-Brown”; a 2025 featurette “Dominique Sanda: The Enigmatic Muse of Cinema”; a 2025 featurette “Maximilian Schell: The Quiet Titan”; a photo and poster gallery; a restored original theatrical trailer; and “Deep Passions — John Moulder-Brown on First Love,” a featurette with one of the stars.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

A24’s Oscar-Winning ‘The Brutalist’ to Stream on Max Starting May 16, Debut on HBO May 17

A24’s three-time Academy Award-winning drama The Brutalist will make its streaming debut on Max May 16. It will debut on HBO linear May 17 at 8 p.m. ET.

The Brutalist stars Academy Award-winner Adrien Brody, Academy Award-nominated Felicity Jones, Academy Award-nominated Guy Pearce, Joe Alwyn, Raffey Cassidy, Stacy Martin, Emma Laird, Isaach de Bankolé and Alessandro Nivola.

In the film, escaping post-war Europe, visionary architect László Toth arrives in America to rebuild his life, his work, and his marriage to his wife Erzsébet after being forced apart during wartime by shifting borders and regimes. On his own in a strange new country, László settles in Pennsylvania, where the wealthy and prominent industrialist Harrison Lee Van Buren recognizes his talent for building. But power and legacy come at a heavy cost.

Directed by Brady Corbet, The Brutalist is written by Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

Stunt Design Oscar to Debut at 100th Academy Awards

The Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences April 10 announced the creation of an annual competitive Academy Award for Achievement in Stunt Design, beginning with the 100th Academy Awards for films released in 2027. The ceremony will air in 2028.

“Since the early days of cinema, stunt design has been an integral part of filmmaking,” Academy CEO Bill Kramer and Academy President Janet Yang said in a statement. “We are proud to honor the innovative work of these technical and creative artists, and we congratulate them for their commitment and dedication in reaching this momentous occasion.”

Category rules for eligibility and voting for the inaugural award will be announced in 2027 with the complete 100th Academy Awards Rules. The specifics of the award’s presentation will be determined by the Academy’s Board of Governors and executive leadership at a future date.

More than 100 stunt professionals are members of the Academy’s Production and Technology Branch.

The last new award category created was Achievement in Casting, established in 2024 and beginning with the 98th Academy Awards for films released in 2025.

Calls for an Oscar for stunts have long been getting louder in Hollywood. The Screen Actors Guild since 2007 has had an award for Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture, with the most-recent recipient, for 2024, being Universal’s The Fall Guy.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

Disney+ Under Fire From Parents Group for Streaming ‘Anora’

Disney+ is getting blasted by a family watchdog group for streaming five-time Oscar winner Anora, the ‘R’-rated movie about a Brooklyn sex worker caught up in a quickie Las Vegas wedding to the spoiled son of a Russian oligarch.

The Best Picture-winning movie, directed by Sean Baker and starring Mikey Madison, among others, is available through the new Disney+ Hulu streaming bundle, which is currently being marketed at an introductory rate of $2.99 a month for four months. 

But Anora figures prominently on the platform’s home page, where the film is given this description: “Anora, a young woman from Brooklyn, gets her chance at a Cinderella story when she marries the son of an oligarch …”

The Parents Television and Media Council, which claims its mission is to “promote and restore responsibility and decency to the entertainment industry,” is warning parents Anora glamorizes prostitution, among other sins.

“Given the buzz around Anora stemming from the Oscars, we are warning parents about its disturbing premise,” Melissa Henson, VP of the Parents Television and Media Council, said in a statement.

Henson claims the movie deserves every ounce of its ‘R’ rating due to its graphic sex scenes, nudity, explicit language and drug use. She says the movie is definitely not appropriate for children or teens.

“With Hulu readily accessible to children through the Disney+ streaming platform, it’s imperative that parents know that this film will be within reach of their children,” Henson said.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

Coincidentally, at the 97th Oscars Anora director Sean Baker won four awards personally, tying the record for most individual wins in one year set by none other than Walt Disney at the 26th Oscar ceremony in 1954.

Oscar-Lauded ‘A Complete Unknown’ to Stream on Hulu Beginning March 27

Searchlight Pictures’ Academy Award-nominated Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown will start streaming on Hulu March 27.

The film has earned $127.4 million at the global box office.

Directed by Academy Award nominee James Mangold and starring Oscar nominee Timothée Chalamet, A Complete Unknown offers an intimate portrayal of Bob Dylan’s transformative years in the early 1960s. Chalamet stars and sings as Dylan, capturing his evolution from a burgeoning folk artist to a cultural icon. The film delves into Dylan’s relationships with contemporaries such as Woody Guthrie (Scoot McNairy), Joan Baez (Monica Barbaro), and Pete Seeger (Edward Norton), whose influence shaped his early sound and whose reaction to Dylan’s electric set at Newport became the stuff of legend. The film also stars Elle Fanning as Sylvie Russo and Boyd Holbrook as Johnny Cash.

Set in New York in 1961 against the backdrop of a vibrant music scene and tumultuous cultural upheaval, the film follows an enigmatic 19-year-old from Minnesota who arrives with his guitar and revolutionary talent, destined to change the course of American music. He forges intimate relationships with music icons of Greenwich Village on his meteoric rise, culminating in a groundbreaking and controversial performance that reverberates worldwide.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

Featuring live renditions of Dylan’s most celebrated songs, A Complete Unknown was nominated for eight Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Director (Mangold) and Best Actor (Chalamet) as well as six BAFTA Awards including Best Actor (Chalamet), Best Supporting Actor (Norton) and Best Picture, and three Golden Globe Awards nominations including Best Actor (Chalamet), Best Supporting Actor (Norton) and Best Drama Picture.  The film also received four SAG Awards nominations including for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, and a PGA and WGA Awards nomination. Mangold was nominated for the DGA Awards, his first DGA nod.

Conan O’Brien Returning to Host 2026 Oscars Broadcast, Live Stream

Emmy Award-winning television host, writer, producer and comedian Conan O’Brien is returning to host the 98th Oscars broadcast and concurrent live-stream on Hulu on March 15, 2026.

“The only reason I’m hosting the Oscars next year is that I want to hear Adrien Brody finish his speech,” O’Brien joked in a statement.

The former “Late Night” host made his first appearance as Oscars host earlier this month, in an event that was well-received within the industry and among viewers. ABC said this year’s event increased viewership to 19.7 million, from 19.5 million in 2024.

“Conan delivered an unforgettable performance at ‘The Oscars,’ and we’re honored to have him and the producing team back next year,” Craig Erwich, president of Disney Television Group, said in a statement. “Conan’s unique comedic style perfectly captured the moment, and I’m excited to have his talents back onstage next year to helm another indelible performance.”

Erwich joined Disney-owned Hulu in 2014 as head of content. The platform live streamed this year’s Oscars with some technical glitches — notably ending the streaming seconds before the final two awards were announced.

Emmy Award-winning live television event producers Raj Kapoor and Katy Mullan will return as the show’s executive producers for the third consecutive year, while Jeff Ross and Mike Sweeney will return as producers for a second time, and Sweeney will also serve as a writer.

The 97th Oscars earned 104.2 million total social interactions, ranking as the No. 1 most social TV program season-to-date, outperforming both The Grammy Awards (102.2 million interactions) and The Super Bowl (62.4 million) this season for the first time on record.

Subscribe HERE to the FREE Media Play News Daily Newsletter!

In addition to “Late Night With Conan O’Brien,” the comedian is best known for hosting “The Tonight Show With Conan O’Brien” and “Conan.” Before his more than two-decade hosting career, he served as a writer for “Saturday Night Live” and “The Simpsons.” Currently, O’Brien hosts the “Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend” podcast, the Max travel show “Conan O’Brien Must Go,” and has a supporting role in the feature film If I Had Legs I’d Kick You. He has won five Primetime Emmys and earned 31 nominations for his work.

From Around the Web