While everyone has been trying to pinpoint who will win Best Lead Actor and Actress at the 2026 Academy Awards, some fans have been more focused on the race for Best Director. The award itself is rich in history, and there have been some incredible wins in recent years, such as Christopher Nolan finally winning for his work on Oppenheimer. He could even be in line for another nomination and maybe another win for his work directing The Odyssey this summer. There have been some shocking wins and losses in the Best Director category over the years, including John Madden winning for Shakespeare in Love in 1999, in a year when many felt Steven Spielberg should have claimed gold for Saving Private Ryan. Even Kathryn Bigelow winning for The Hurt Locker came as a surprise, especially considering that James Cameron’s Avatar came out the same year.
This year’s roster of talent competing for Best Director is as strong as it’s ever been, with Ryan Coogler earning his first nomination for his work directing the critically acclaimed vampire horror hit, Sinners. Previous winner of the award, Chloé Zhao, has also been recognized for her work directing Hamnet, the historical epic starring Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley. Josh Safdie has earned his first nomination for directing Marty Supreme, the Timothée Chalamet-starring ping pong biopic brought to the big screen by A24. Paul Thomas Anderson has earned his fourth Best Directing Oscar for helming One Battle After Another, and Joachim Trier has been recognized for directing Sentimental Value. The Academy decided to give the award to Paul Thomas Anderson for directing One Battle After Another, which surprisingly marks the legendary filmmaker’s first-ever Academy Award for Best Director, and his second Oscar ever after winning Best Adapted Screenplay earlier in the night.
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Collider Exclusive · Oscar Best Picture Quiz Which Oscar Best Picture Is Your Perfect Movie? Parasite · Everything Everywhere · Oppenheimer · Birdman · No Country
Five Oscar Best Picture winners. Five completely different visions of what cinema can be — and what it can do to you. One of them is the film that was made for the way your mind works. Ten questions will figure out which one.
🪜Parasite
🌀Everything Everywhere
☢️Oppenheimer
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🐦Birdman
🪙No Country for Old Men
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01
What kind of film experience do you actually want? The best movies don’t just entertain — they leave something behind.
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02
Which idea grabs you most in a film? Great films are driven by a central obsession. What’s yours?
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03
How do you like your story told? Form is content. The way a story is shaped changes what it means.
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04
What makes a truly great antagonist? The opposition defines the protagonist. What kind of opposition fascinates you?
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05
What do you want from a film’s ending? The final note is the one that lingers. What do you want it to sound like?
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06
Which setting pulls you in most? Where a film takes place shapes everything — mood, stakes, what’s even possible.
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07
What cinematic craft impresses you most? Every great film has a signature — a technical or artistic element that makes it unmistakable.
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08
What kind of main character do you root for? The protagonist is the lens. Who you choose to follow says something about you.
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09
How do you feel about a film that takes its time? Pace is a choice. Some films sprint; others let tension accumulate slowly, deliberately.
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10
What do you want to feel walking out of the cinema? The best films leave a mark. What kind of mark do you want?
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The Academy Has Decided Your Perfect Film Is…
Your answers have pointed to one Oscar Best Picture winner above all others. This is the film that was made for the way your mind works.
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Parasite
You are drawn to films that operate on multiple levels simultaneously — that begin in one genre and quietly, brilliantly migrate into another. Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite is a film about class, desire, and the architecture of inequality that manages to be darkly funny, deeply suspenseful, and genuinely shocking across a single extraordinary running time. Your instinct is for cinema that hides its true intentions until the moment it’s ready to reveal them. Parasite is exactly that — a film that rewards close attention and punishes assumptions, right up to its devastating final image.
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Everything Everywhere All at Once
You want it all — and this film gives you all of it. The Daniels’ Everything Everywhere All at Once is one of the most maximalist films ever made: action comedy, multiverse sci-fi, family drama, existential crisis, and a genuinely earned emotional core that sneaks up on you amid the chaos. You are someone who responds to ambition, who doesn’t want cinema to choose between being entertaining and being meaningful. This film refuses that choice entirely. It is overwhelming by design, and its overwhelming nature is precisely the point — because the feeling of being crushed by infinite possibility is exactly what it’s about.
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Oppenheimer
You are drawn to cinema on a grand scale — films that understand history not as a backdrop but as a force, and that place their characters inside that force and watch what happens. Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer is a film about the terrifying gap between what we can do and what we should do, told with the full weight of one of the most consequential moments in human history behind it. You want your films to feel important without feeling self-important — to earn their ambition through sheer craft and the gravity of their subject. Oppenheimer does exactly that. It is enormous, complicated, and refuses easy comfort.
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Birdman
You are drawn to films that foreground their own construction — that make the how of the filmmaking part of the what it’s about. Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman, shot to appear as a single continuous take, is cinema examining itself through the cracked mirror of a fading actor’s ego. You respond to formal daring, to the feeling that a film is doing something that probably shouldn’t be possible. Michael Keaton’s performance and Emmanuel Lubezki’s restless camera create something genuinely unlike anything else — a film that is simultaneously about creativity, relevance, self-destruction, and the impossibility of ever truly knowing if your work means anything at all.
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No Country for Old Men
You are drawn to cinema that trusts silence, that refuses to explain itself, and that treats dread as a form of meaning. The Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men is a film about the arrival of a new kind of evil — implacable, arbitrary, and utterly indifferent to the moral frameworks we use to make sense of the world. It is one of the most formally controlled films ever made, and its controlled restraint is what makes it so terrifying. You want your films to haunt you, not comfort you. You are not interested in resolution if resolution would be dishonest. No Country for Old Men is honest in a way that most cinema never dares to be.
Aaron Eckhart has played a wide array of roles in his 30+ year career. How many of these movies do you know?
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Who Will Be Nominated for Best Director in 2027?
It’s too early to know who will be nominated for Best Director in 2027, but there are a few favorites who are likely to be recognized. Early word is that Phil Lord and Christopher Miller will earn a nomination for their work directing Project Hail Mary, and Steven Spielberg could easily earn a nod for his return to sci-fi with Disclosure Day. Denis Villeneuve will also likely be recognized for directing the third Dune movie later this year. Other potential nominees will become clearer throughout the year as more films are released.
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Stay tuned to Collider for more updates and coverage of the 2026 Oscars.
[Editor’s note: The following contains spoilers for Marshals.]
Summary
Greg Yaitanes directed episodes of ‘Yellowstone’ spin-off ‘Marshals’ and ‘Dutton Ranch,’ as the universe expands on CBS and Paramount+.
‘Marshals’ stars Luke Grimes as Kayce Dutton, a widowed marshal mixing Navy SEAL tactics with cowboy justice and grounded action.
Yaitanes has also directed episodes of the upcoming TV series ‘Lucky,’ starring Anya Taylor-Joy and Drew Starkey, and ‘Spider-Noir’ with Nicolas Cage.
Director Greg Yaitanes has entered the Yellowstone universe by putting his stamp on episodes of the CBS series Marshals, which has already been picked up for Season 2, and the upcoming Paramount+ series Dutton Ranch. In Marshals, a widowed Kayce Dutton (Luke Grimes) joins an elite unit of U.S. Marshals, headed by his former Navy SEAL buddy Cal (Logan Marshall-Green), combining his tactical training with his cowboy skills in bringing range justice to Montana. While over on Dutton Ranch, Beth Dutton (Kelly Reilly) and Rip Wheeler (Cole Hauser) will continue their journey of survival, no doubt with plenty of chaos and drama surrounding them.
Collider recently got the opportunity to chat one-on-one with Yaitanes (Presumed Innocent, House of the Dragon, House) about coming into the world of Yellowstone as a big fan, and how the spin-offs/sequels are most similar and different from not just the original series but each other. During the interview, he talked about reuniting with Quarry star Marshall-Green while directing the first two episodes of Marshals, why he’s drawn to the character of Kayce Dutton, how he felt about the way Monica’s death was handled, the challenges of shooting the big action sequence in episode two of Marshals, why Dutton Ranch felt like a season of Yellowstone, and whether there could be crossovers with the Dutton family in the future.
We also got to discuss how far into Season 2 development they’d gotten on Quarry before the plug was pulled on the series, his time on Banshee, what most impressed him about working with Anya Taylor-Joy on her upcoming Apple TV series Lucky, and why working with Nicolas Cage on the Spider-Noir TV series was a dream come true that he hopes to repeat if there’s a second season.
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‘Marshals’ Marked a Reunion for Actor Logan Marshall-Green and Director Greg Yaitanes, After Making ‘Quarry’ Together
“We would all do another season in a heartbeat.”
Logan Marshall-Green as Mac leaning his elbow on the top of a car in QuarryImage via Cinemax
Collider: I love that you’re reuniting with Logan Marshall-Green by directing episodes of Marshals, but it also reminds me of how salty I am that we never got more episodes of Quarry. Have you gotten over that fact?
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GREG YAITANES: We wrote Season 2, and we were on track for Season 2. For a variety of reasons, it didn’t move forward, which was gut-wrenching. We had the scripts. We had a great arc. We just lost Tom Noonan a few weeks ago. The great thing is that it’s a show you could pick up 10 years later with that character. There’s no expiration date. The novels actually are around now, in terms of Logan’s age. Now, Logan’s on a smash TV show, so getting him would be impossible. I had lunch with (co-creator) Michael Fuller, yesterday, actually. It was supposed to be me and (co-creator) Graham [Gordy] and Michael, and Graham’s travel changed, so we didn’t get to have lunch with them. But we’re still in touch. We would all do another season in a heartbeat. It would be perfect. Every single person involved would do it. That said, it was really lovely to see Logan on Marshals and be able to get the opportunity to work with him again.
You said that the scripts were written for Season 2 of Quarry. Were there things that you had been looking forward to getting to do with the second season?
YAITANES: Oh, my God, it was a great season. It was going to be great. The specifics, I don’t remember all the details, but we did have a writers’ room, we wrote the scripts, and we had versions of all the scripts for the season. And then, right in the middle of the process, that’s when we got word that we weren’t moving forward. It was disappointing. But what’s nice is that, 10 years later, I’m on Zooms and people still bring it up. It is meaningful that it had an impact.
Was Season 2 going to have the same tone and vibe, or was it going to be bigger in any way?
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YAITANES: It was going to be a pretty direct continuation of where we were. I think we were going to pick up a year later. There was a great story to be had.
It makes me feel lucky that I got a complete four-season story for Banshee. I wonder if that could even happen now.
YAITANES: It was a great time to tell that story the way we told it and how we cast it and a number of things that we did would be almost impossible today. There was a great article written about everything that conspired to have Cinemax not quite work out. It really bummed us all out because I really thought that could have been a great network for high and elevated pulp. I don’t know how it would have survived all the various things that are going on in the industry today. But back then, when they were making The Knick and Quarry and Banshee and Outcast and Strike Back, I just kept imagining that this would be a seven-day-a-week, two-shows-a-night of incredible programming. That would have been something I would have died to have had as a network when I was a teenager.
Even Warrior.
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YAITANES: Can’t forget Warrior.
All those shows were so good. It felt like a channel that was just invented for my taste.
YAITANES: Someone someday will talk about it. It will be like ‘70s cinema for TV when they look back on all the great stuff that was on Cinemax at one time.
Luke Grimes leads the charge in this Dutton-verse sequel that is full of network potential.
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How did you end up directing Marshals? Was it because of Logan Marshall-Green, or was that a coincidence?
YAITANES: No. It was a long process. I met (executive producer) David Glasser at 101 about three years earlier, and we had wanted to work together. They wanted me to come do some of their shows, and I really wanted to do something from the ground up with them. And then, I was watching MobLand and realized that was also being produced by 101. I wrote David, and I think I just happened to be in his head at the right moment, at the right time, and I got the call to take a look at Marshals and see if I’d be interested. I was an insane fan of Yellowstone. I had watched all the prequels and I had watched the other series, all in real time, week to week, so I knew the world. I got the material and showed up for a meeting relatively quickly. Spencer Hudnut was really great to collaborate with. Everything just vibed on the call. It was three years in the making.
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‘Marshals’ Director Greg Yaitanes Was Drawn to the Soulful Nature of Kayce Dutton
“I loved working with Luke [Grimes].”
What do you find most interesting about Kayce Dutton as a character at the center of this story?
YAITANES: I also did a block of Dutton Ranch, right after I finished Marshals. When I read it, I didn’t know it was a broadcast pilot. That’s how good I thought the material was. It had such humanity and breathing and just the room to explore themes. I felt like it was a great father-son story when I read the script, and that’s what brought me to it. I thought, wherever Yellowstone was going, this was the continuation because it played like that. When I found out it was broadcast, I hadn’t done broadcast TV for 15 years, since House, so I thought this was a great way to reenter that space again, to a place where I cut my teeth and built things. Kayce is such a soulful character. I don’t know or remember what season and episode it was, but his walkabout episode sold me, as a man trying to work through what he’s carrying. I was really interested.
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My first question when I got the scripts, as I was reading them, was, “How are they going to undo Kayce’s happy ending?” He really had a beautiful finish at the end of Yellowstone proper. And I was really moved to see, “Okay, life has gone in another direction.” I almost feel like [episode two] is really the pilot, and [the pilot] was the bridge between Yellowstone and Marshals. [Episode two] is really the show you’re going to be watching. I directed that episode, as well. I loved working with Luke [Grimes]. And then, to have Logan as your wingman, there’s such a deep bench with the cast. Tatanka [Means], I brought from Banshee. He was on Banshee when his dad passed, who was also on Banshee. It was great. I loved working with Spencer, and we had a lovely shorthand.
Fans of Yellowstone definitely seem to feel a certain way about Monica’s death. Were there conversations about how to handle that?
YAITANES: This is why it didn’t strike me as a pilot. There was no exposition about Monica’s death in the pilot. It was exactly what it would be like a year or two after the death of the character. You would be talking about the circumstances around it versus talking about the thing. What was really important was that we had her picture for the protest, and she was lovely to give us permission for that. That was a really critical piece to that scene. That’s what I thought that scene was about.
It feels like there could have been an episode that included Monica and would have shown us what happened to her. It was interesting to see that it was not handled that way.
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YAITANES: Yeah, that’s all Spencer. Those conversations definitely preceded me. Immediately, being a single dad to a son, which was something I could personally connect to, having been a single dad at various times in my life, I felt that the way it was handled and the humanity in which it was handled was really beautiful, and I wanted to be part of it.
Things get heated in the latest Dutton drama as Kayce deals with old family secrets.
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Have you thought about the parallels between Quarry and Marshals? You have these characters at the center of both stories that have been to war, they’ve had to kill people, they’ve had violence affect and ripple through their lives, and they’re also more likely to be quiet and internal. They seem like kindred spirits in a lot of ways. Is that something that was even on your mind?
YAITANES: There’s definitely a theme and a pattern to the things that I’m attracted to, which is quiet, internal men, carrying a lot and trying to navigate things with the tools they were given, and always striving for better.
Something that runs through Banshee and Marshals are these intertwined communities. With Banshee, we had the Amish community, and with Marshals, you have the reservation. What do you find most interesting about that aspect of the story?
YAITANES: We’re not pandering to anybody. That’s just what makes the world lived-in. If you watched all six seasons, or Season 5A and 5B, of Yellowstone, then you’re going to come loaded with a certain amount of information. And if you’re not, you’re going to catch up. You can enter this show having never watched one Taylor Sheridan show. And if you have, it will be a richer experience, but you will not be dinged for not having been there. In fact, what’s exciting is that this is an entry point for people to then go discover Yellowstone, which makes me thrilled. If they like this enough to want to know more about Kayce, then you have six seasons of a prequel waiting for you.
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Real Navy SEAL Consultants Work as Advisors for the Story and the Action Sequences in ‘Marshals’
“At every point, you have a guide for how to do things.”
Luke Grimes as Kayce Dutton riding on a horse next to Logan Marshall-Green in CBS’ MarshalsImage via CBS
You’ve shot action sequences and violence for the screen, and particularly in Quarry and Banshee, the action had a very realistic feel to it, as far as the toll it can take. How different was it to do action sequences for Marshals, for a broadcast network TV series? You have a very complex action sequence in episode two.
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YAITANES: I loved planning that. Michael Friedman was my second unit director on that, and he’s intimately familiar with the Sheridan universe, in terms of Lioness and Landman, and every other thing he touches. So, having him in my corner was a great collaboration on that. I really studied Yellowstone and the studio has a really helpful document of the pillars of the things that make Yellowstone, Yellowstone, that they kept for the prequels and they branched out. At every point, you have a guide for how to do things. What I always appreciate about the violence and the action is that it’s grounded. It’s not overly stylized.
Banshee was highly stylized and pulpy. Everything in Yellowstone is grounded and comes from a real place. People get punched and hurt. My favorite part of the action is that we get to tap into the Navy SEAL background to Kayce. That allows for all this tactical work. We have real Navy SEALs there. Ryan Sangster was our advisor, and he’s great. I would just say, “What would they do? How would they come up on the trailer or the zone of death? How would they go about it?” We would approach it like, “Okay, this is really happening. Where would your guys be?” And he’d be like, “Well, I’d have a person there, and I’d have a thing here, and I’d make sure of this.” And I was like, “Great, that’s what we’re doing.”
That scene goes from horses to a big shootout and then back to Kayce being back on a horse.
YAITANES: That was so fun. I wanted it to be like Raiders of the Lost Ark. When I was showing people what I wanted it to be, that sequence had to be as fun as something out of Raiders. I definitely got out of the grounded and made it a little more pop and fun for that sequence because it had to be. You can’t have Kayce chasing an SUV [on a horse] and not have a good time with it. It was so cool.
Did you feel like you had the time you needed to shoot all of that?
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YAITANES: Nope. One of the shocks was just coming from my streaming schedule back to my broadcast schedule. That said, because of shows like Banshee, I’m really good at being able to matrix the units and the work so that the sum of the parts is greater than you could expect. We were incredibly strategic. Anytime Luke wasn’t in the zone of death scene, he was on horseback with the other unit. We were trading him and moving around and had blocked out the day in a very strategic way. It was two days, that whole sequence. Everything you saw was shot over two days, sunup to sundown.
It was so interesting to have that sequence end with him shooting the guy that’s already dying. It’s a moment that brings you back to the reality of what Kayce is dealing with, after the exciting action sequence ends.
YAITANES: Yeah, it gets real. He’s a complicated character. He’s got a badge, but he’s still exacting his own form of justice. It keeps the audience perfectly destabilized for what Kayce might do. You can’t fully understand him, which I appreciate. That moment particularly grabbed me. When I read these scripts – I read the first two when I took my meetings – those were the kinds of things that pulled me right in.
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‘Marshals’ and ‘Dutton Ranch’ Each Draw From ‘Yellowstone’ in Completely Different Ways
“[‘Dutton Ranch’] has the best parts of what I loved about ‘Yellowstone.’”
Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton lounging in a grassy meadow with Cole Hauser as Rip in Yellowstone Season 5Image via Paramount Network
You talked about also directing episodes of Dutton Ranch. Are you just all-in on the world of Yellowstone now?
YAITANES: I was halfway through shooting on Marshals, and Glasser was like, “Hey, you’ve done the down and dirty, scrappy version of Yellowstone. Come do our other show.” That was a completely different, but equally rewarding experience. I loved Kelly [Reilly] and Cole [Hauser] and Annette [Bening] and Ed [Harris] and everybody. That cast is just so terrific. I had time. It’s artful. It’s just a different kind of show. It’s much more of a drama and a soap. It has the best parts of what I loved about Yellowstone. Each one was Yellowstone in completely different ways, but each completely honest to the original series. My entry point into the Sheridan universe was starting with Yellowstone and then branching out. I really appreciate David Glasser’s taste. I watched The Agency. I watched MobLand. I watched them all. I’m interested in working with people of good taste.
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What did you see as the biggest similarities and differences between the two shows, Marshals and Dutton Ranch?
YAITANES: The biggest similarity is that I’m following each of the surviving siblings of the original series. When you get into the ranch portion of each show, you’re on common ground. That’s what they have in common. And then, how we’re dealing with the human drama and the vulnerability is Yellowstone in both shows. The themes that everybody’s working with, like how everybody deals with their inner torment and how they exorcise it is different for Beth than it is for Kayce. They’re equally compelling offshoots of the original.
Which episodes did you direct for Dutton Ranch?
YAITANES: I did the second block. I did episodes three and four. Christina Voros did the opening two and the end two. It was really fun. It was a lovely invitation. Dutton Ranch has more continuity of crew from the original series. There was something fun about trying to create Yellowstone without a lot of the same craftspeople. Michael, David, and some other people came in to really give us a boot camp on what Yellowstone is and how to execute on it.
The next chapter of the Yellowstone universe has reportedly wrapped filming.
I spoke to Luke Grimes recently, and we were talked about how it would be cool to see Kayce and Beth together again at some point, and he said that he didn’t know if it would work better to bring her into Marshals or to send him over to Dutton Ranch.
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YAITANES: That’s a really good question. We talked about that a lot because each wanted to be on the other show. I feel like Kayce should go to Dutton Ranch. That feels like something that I would lose my shit over as a fan. That would be pretty cool. I just don’t know, in the world of what Marshals is, if Beth coming in would fit into that quite as well. Kayce would just naturally fold into Dutton Ranch because there’s a tonal similarity to the original Yellowstone. A lot of the people involved with Dutton Ranch really felt like they were making Yellowstone Season 6. Marshals is much more genre and guns-forward and those kinds of cool things.
Director Greg Yaitanes Is Excited for Viewers To See the Upcoming Apple TV Series ‘Lucky,’ Starring Anya Taylor-Joy
“When I got the call about that, I was all over it.”
Anya Taylor Joy uses her lighter to illuminate her surroundings in LuckyImage via Apple TV
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With what I’ve seen of Lucky, that’s another project that looks badass, but this time with a woman, with Anya Taylor-Joy, at the center of it. What drew you to that? What do you love about that character and what she brings to the role?
YAITANES: I’ve wanted to work with Anya since I saw The Witch, and it was Jonathan Tropper again, so when I got the call about that, I was all over it. I got to meet Cassie Pappas, who was showrunning with Jonathan. It was just a great character. And then, my daughter is obsessed with Drew Starkey, from watching Outer Banks. It was Annette [Bening] again and Clifton Collins, and our collaboration was 30 years in the making. And it was Timothy Olyphant and Aunjanue [Ellis-Taylor]. It was a deep bench of great actors in an L.A. crime story. The bench is so deep on that show. It was very similar to how I felt on Presumed Innocent. I’d just go to work every day and look at who was going to be working with who, and it was just exciting to know what I was going to get to do with these pairings. Everybody on the callsheet was a great actor, so watching them work together was a pleasure.
What most impressed you about Anya Taylor-Joy and the work that she does in the series?
YAITANES: It’s really good. I directed episodes two and three of Lucky, which was almost like doing part two of the pilot. It’s a very continuous, interesting story that has got a lot of complexity to it. Anya is great at bringing that kind of nuance and humanity. There’s also something other and unknowable about her that makes me always lean into what she’s doing and what she might be thinking. Just to get to see her every day and be able to craft that performance with her was such a treat.
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Her face and her eyes are just incredible. I feel like they do so much work.
YAITANES: Anytime, anywhere that she ever does something else, I’m there.
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Directing Episodes of the Prime Video Series ‘Spider-Noir’ Was a Dream Come True for Greg Yaitanes
“I am such a noir nut.”
Nicolas Cage pointing a gun down at someone in Spider-NoirImage via Prime Video
It’s interesting that you did episodes of Spider-Noir because that feels like a bit different of a project for you. What were the challenges specific to doing that series?
YAITANES: I am such a noir nut that when it came up to the plate, my film school self was all over it. I just ate up noir and it heavily influenced my early work. To be able to dial into and be able to create something that was in the spirit of that was awesome. And then, Nic [Cage] is incredible. I collected comic books from 13 to 18, and then a bit in my 20s. Comic books were truly my escape. There were four different Spider-Man comics, and every week I could get a Spider-Man fix. To imagine that I, who went as Spider-Man for Halloween or played Spider-Man when we would do imaginary play, could go back in time to my 14-year-old comic book-reading self that I would be directing a Spider-Man TV show, I’d think that I was a pretty lucky guy at that point. I really won.
Nic Cage seems like somebody who is just a big kid who doesn’t know how to not have fun.
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YAITANES: He’s a big kid. He brought that energy. He was off-book for every episode. He was the first to set. He was the kindest to everybody. He was just terrific. He would just give you great ideas. He could take direction beautifully. He was just a dream. I have literally been watching him since before high school. I had to fangirl him at the beginning. I showed him that my wife has the original painting that became the poster for Valley Girl. I got my fangirling out of the way at the beginning.
He seems totally down for that, though.
YAITANES: He’s down. He’s so funny. We were between takes, and I was like, “Did you ever go to Japan to make commercials?” And he was like, “Oh, my God!” and he got his phone to show them to us and was cracking up with us. He’s in on all of it.
Cage is “a spider pretending to be a person” in the upcoming live-action series.
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Do you feel like you’ve gotten your fill of noir, or do you feel like you need to do more now because of that?
YAITANES: Oh, my God, if that show has a second season, I’m going to be the first to raise my hand and go back. Every day, I had a great time. I came home from work so excited. I did the final two episodes, so they’re pretty spectacular. I cannot wait for everybody to see it.
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Release Date
2026 – 2026
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Showrunner
Spencer Hudnut
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Writers
Spencer Hudnut, Tom Mularz, Dana Greenblatt
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Marshals airs on CBS and is available to stream on Paramount+.
Taylor Sheridan has built such a sprawling TV empire at this point that every new show arrives with a certain assumption baked in: it is probably going to hang around for a while. That is especially true when the project in question is loaded with names like Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell, and tied, however loosely, to the larger Yellowstone orbit. You hear “new Sheridan series” and instinctively think long rollout, lots of episodes, and a season built to dominate the conversation for months. That is not really what The Madison is doing.
Instead, Sheridan’s latest Western-flavored drama is wrapping up almost as quickly as it began. The Madison will conclude its six-episode first season on March 21, 2026, just one week after premiering its first batch of episodes on Paramount+. Alongside Pfeiffer and Russell, the cast of The Madison includes Patrick J. Adams as Russell McIntosh, Elle Chapman as Paige McIntosh, Matthew Fox as Paul Clyburn, Beau Garrett as Abigail Reese, Amiah Miller as Bridgette Reese, Ben Schnetzer as Van Davis, Kevin Zegers as Cade Harris, Rebecca Spence as Liliana Weeks, Alaina Pollack as Macy, Danielle Vasinova as Kestrel Harris, and Will Arnett as Dr. Phil Yorn.
Last night, the Academy Awards were doled out to an array of worthy artists. What do you know about the 98-year history of this tradition?
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Is ‘The Madison’ Worth Watching?
Collider’s review stated while The Madison boasts a strong ensemble cast, the series ultimately belongs to Pfeiffer, whose performance anchors Taylor Sheridan’s most emotionally introspective television project to date. As Stacy Clyburn, Pfeiffer portrays a grieving matriarch navigating the aftermath of a devastating family tragedy, delivering a performance that is both restrained and quietly devastating.
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The Madison‘s solid ensemble cast puts a lot of pressure on leading lady Pfeiffer — until you remember this is Pfeiffer we’re talking about. She’s nothing short of astounding in The Madison, with her performance as a grieving matriarch undoubtedly putting Stacy Clyburn up there with Yellowstone‘s John Dutton (Kevin Costner) and Landman‘s Tommy Norris (Billy Bob Thornton) in the hall of fame of great Sheridan characters. The Emmys have historically not rewarded Sheridan and his small-screen projects, but if Pfeiffer isn’t at least considered for a Best Lead Actress nomination, then that may be a bigger tragedy than the show is centered around.
Hollywood heavyweights lit up our TV screens as they celebrated acclaimed cinematic achievements at the 2026 Academy Awards.
But as celebrities gathered inside Los Angeles’ Dolby Theatre on Sunday, March 15, many of the night’s most enthralling moments happened while the cameras weren’t rolling.
From rapturous applause for personal favorites to intimate conversations during commercial breaks, our brightest stars didn’t hesitate to let their hair down — and Us Weekly was there to witness it all.
Cute couples, including the front row’s Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner, spread the love by cuddling up to one another before extending happy vibes to fans who approached them for selfies. Elsewhere, leading ladies caught up with each other both at the bar and among the seats, with the likes of Emma Stone, Kate Hudson, Zoe Saldaña and Michael B. Jordan’s mom, Donna Jordan, all engrossed in animated conversations.
Awards season officially came to an end with the 2026 Oscars delivering an unforgettable ceremony. Hollywood’s brightest stars traveled to the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood on Sunday, March 15, to take a break from the heavy news surrounding the world and try to celebrate the best in movies. “If I can be serious for just […]
Additionally, as films were recognized for their individual talents, celebrities enthusiastically showed their support, rising from the seats and applauding despite their peers remaining seated.
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Keep scrolling to learn what Us saw first-hand while inside at the 2026 Oscars:
Leonardo DiCaprio Beamed While Chatting to Gwyneth Paltrow
Gwyneth Paltrow and Leonardo DiCaprioKevin Winter/Getty Images
Longtime friends Leonardo DiCaprio and Gwyneth Paltrow caught up in the auditorium, with the One Battle After Another actor seen holding Paltrow’s hand as the pair chatted.
Paltrow, who has caught up with DiCaprio on several occasions throughout this awards season, said on the “Call Her Daddy” podcast in 2023 that he tried to make out with her “back in the day.” She noted at the time that despite their connection, their dynamic never turned romantic.
Couples Who Packed on the PDA
Elle Fanning and Gus WennerMichael Tran / AFP
Elle Fanning and boyfriend Gus Wenner held hands and kissed before entering the theatre, Rose Byrne and husband Bobby Cannavale held hands as they greeted guests, and Chalamet and Jenner cuddled up to one another in their seats throughout the evening.
Additionally, DiCaprio happily snacked on Skinny Pop popcorn while seated beside girlfriend Vittoria Ceretti, who looked equally as happy to join him at the event.
Kate Hudson and Emma Stone Couldn’t Wait to Catch Up
Emma Stone, Dave McCary, Demi Moore, Kate Hudson and Danny FujikawaRichard Harbaugh / The Academy via Getty Images
Hudson and Stone, who were seen snapping a star-studded front row selfie alongside Demi Moore and the pair’s respective partners, husband Dave McCary and fiancé Danny Fujikawa, were seen exiting the auditorium together, headed for the bar.
The pair then grabbed drinks before Hudson found her mom, Goldie Hawn and longtime partner Kurt Russell, and the trio enjoyed drinks and posing for photos together.
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Nicole Kidman Gushed About Her Children
Nicole Kidman stood beside her publicist inside Dolby Theatre’s main lobby where she enjoyed a glass of rosé and talked about her daughter with her team. The Babygirl star looked delighted, with a huge smile wrapped across her face and laughing between greetings with fans who approached her — including a solo Rita Wilson.
While speaking in the press room after KPop Demon Hunters won best original song for “Golden,” one of the song’s performers, Ejae, discussed how the group’s acceptance speech was interrupted by music during the live show. She told members of the press, “They cut us off with the music, but I wanted to thank Rei Ami and Audrey [Nuna]. They killed it with their singing, and they’re just incredible people, and I love them so much.”
Jacob Elordi Loved Having His Mom by His Side
Jacob Elordi and Channing TatumEmma McIntyre/Getty Images
Jacob Elordi was seen enjoying a drink with his mom, Melissa Elordi, in the lobby bar, with a security guard asking fellow guests to avoid filming the pair. The Wuthering Heights star later introduced her to other guests, hugging Melissa at one stage, before walking over to Stellan Skarsgård to hug him. Elordi was also seen shaking hands with Channing Tatum later.
Emma Stone Caught Up With ‘Bugonia’ Costar Alicia Silverstone
Stone and Alicia Silverstone shared a sweet hug at the bar before chatting to the bartender together and ordering drinks. Stone was then seen grabbing glasses of champagne to give to the Clueless star before introducing her to Felicity Huffman and bringing her into the fun.
Nick Jonas Rushed Back to His Seat
Nick Jonas and Priyanka Chopra JonasMike Coppola/Getty Images
At one stage, Nick Jonas, who attended the Oscars with wife Priyanka Chopra Jonas, rushed through the lobby with two waters held in his hands. The musician looked to be on a mission and Chopra was not with him.
Gwyneth Paltrow Reconnected With Her ‘Great Expectations’ Costar Ethan Hawke
Inside the auditorium, Paltrow was seen chatting to Ethan Hawke, who starred alongside her in 1998’s Great Expectations. The pair looked happy to be there together, smiling as they spoke.
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‘One Battle After Another’ Cast Loved Those KPop Hand Lights
Chase InfinitiPatrick T. Fallon / AFP
Chase Infiniti and Teyana Taylor were seen holding the glow lights provided to Oscars guests during the KPop Demon Hunters’ cast performance of “Golden.” Infiniti was seen standing up out of her seat as she waved her light around.
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Chase Infiniti Cheered on One Battle After Another’s Wins
Infiniti jumped out of her seat and yelled in support of One Battle After Another when it won the best film editing award.
Celebrities Got Into Deep Conversations
Leonardo DiCaprio and Michael B. JordanKevin Winter/Getty Images
Michael B. Jordan’s mom, Donna, was seen in a heart-to-heart with Saldaña as the actress sat in her seat and appeared very emotional. Michael, meanwhile, was seen in a long hug with DiCaprio before the pair spoke in depth. At one stage, Michael rested his head on DiCaprio’s chest before DiCaprio’s One Battle After Another costar Benicio del Toro joined the duo to hug Michael himself, shake his hand, and pose for photos with them.
Emma Stone’s Husband Watched Baseball on His Phone
Kirsten Dunst, who was seen dancing her way out of the theatre once the ceremony had wrapped, asked Stone’s husband, McCary, what he was watching on his phone before he revealed it was baseball.
Fans are trying to figure out what’s really going on between streamer Tylil James and his estranged girlfriend, Kae Critch. The internet is buzzing after Tylil shared a new photo with Kae, leaving social media users wondering whether the couple has rekindled their relationship following their public drama late last year.
Tylil James and Kae Critch Pose Together In New Photo
On Sunday, March 15, Tylil James shared a selfie on social media featuring Kae Critch, sparking speculation that the two may be back together. In the photo, Tylil holds his phone for a mirror selfie while Kae stands behind him with her arms wrapped around his body. She rests her head on him as the couple shows off their matching eye patches. The cozy snapshot quickly caught fans’ attention, especially since many believed the pair had split months earlier.
Social Media Reacts
The Shade Room Teens’ comment section quickly filled with reactions after Tylil posted the photo. While some users defended Kae for giving the relationship another chance, others questioned whether getting back together after the couple’s past issues was the right move.
Instagram user @itsyagirlyanaaa wrote, “I thought-“
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Another Instagram user @lifewitheshiaaa wrote, “At least hope she cheat back if she not gone leave 😂😂😂”
While Instagram user @krissyxraee wrote, “let’s not act like y’all didn’t double back on a n**** before 🥴”
Instagram user @ms.yasminsimone wrote, “Chileee anyways”
Another Instagram user @luvlycee wrote, “y’all normalize being a 🐥 a little tewww much”
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While Instagram user @shyywayy_ wrote, “she should’ve told him not to post her if she was gone get back with him… we’d be a private relationship 😭💁🏽♀️”
Instagram user @robinantoinette_ wrote, “You Ain’t Wrong Queen”
Another Instagram user @nogramzari wrote, “How you let him cheat and take him back must be your only n*** -Latto”
While Instagram user @niirosee wrote, “This is why I stay out of ppl business 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂”
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Kae Critch Previously Said She Was Single After Cheating Controversy
Tylil’s latest post surprised many fans who believed the relationship had ended after a cheating controversy involving the streamer. In December 2025, singer Jourdin Pauline went online with allegations that she had been sexually assaulted by Tylil James following the 2025 Streamer Awards. Tylil denied the allegations at the time, saying the interaction between the two was consensual. However, he admitted the situation became tense after he received a call from Kae Kritch while he and Pauline were together.Amid the backlash, Tylil later took to Instagram Stories to apologize to Kae and publicly expressed his love for her. Shortly after, Kae appeared to distance herself from the situation, posting on her own Instagram Story, “I am NOT in a relationship.”
Now, months later, Tylil’s latest post has social media users questioning whether the couple has quietly reconciled.
Cameras spotted the longtime Hollywood stars deep in conversation during the ceremony, sparking speculation online.
The lively exchange came despite DiCaprio attending the event with his Italian girlfriend, model Vittoria Ceretti, and it wasn’t long before viewers began dissecting the moment frame by frame.
Leonardo DiCaprio Spotted In Animated Chat With Gwyneth Paltrow At Oscars
ZUMAPRESS.com / MEGA
During a break at the Academy Awards, Leonardo DiCaprio was seen chatting closely with Paltrow inside the Dolby Theatre, where the ceremony is held each year.
According to the Daily Mail, the interaction appeared friendly and animated. Observers noticed the two actors leaning toward each other while laughing and speaking intently, creating a moment that quickly spread across social media.
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At one point, DiCaprio even held Paltrow’s hand during the exchange, prompting further curiosity among viewers watching the ceremony unfold.
The actress, who is married to television producer Brad Falchuk, appeared to gently pull her hand away before the conversation continued.
Moments later, DiCaprio returned to his seat alongside Ceretti, who attended the ceremony as his date for the evening.
DiCaprio Once Tried To Romance Gwyneth Paltrow Years Ago
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While the Oscars interaction surprised fans, Paltrow previously revealed that the pair’s connection actually dates back decades.
During a 2023 appearance on the podcast “Call Her Daddy,” the “Marty Supreme” star shared that Leonardo DiCaprio had attempted to pursue her romantically earlier in their careers.
“Nope, never made out with Leo,” Paltrow said while reflecting on the moment. According to the 53-year-old, she chose not to explore the possibility of dating the “Titanic” star.
“He tried back in the day. But he was already, like, you know, he was very loose with the goods from when he was 19,” Paltrow revealed.
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The revelation resurfaced after their Oscars interaction began circulating online, with many fans recalling Paltrow’s earlier comments about turning him down.
Leonardo DiCaprio Attends Oscars With Longtime Girlfriend Vittoria Ceretti
OConnor-Arroyo / AFF-USA.com / MEGA
Despite the attention surrounding his exchange with Paltrow, DiCaprio spent the evening beside his beautiful partner, whom he has been dating since 2023.
The Italian model has become a regular presence alongside the actor at high-profile events, and their relationship has drawn particular interest because it appears to challenge a long-running internet joke about DiCaprio’s dating history.
For years, fans have speculated about the Hollywood star’s tendency to date younger partners and move on before they reach their mid-20s. Ceretti, however, has remained in a relationship with him for nearly three years.
The couple arrived together at the Academy Awards, with Ceretti later sitting beside him during the broadcast inside the theater.
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DiCaprio was nominated for Best Actor, though the award ultimately went to Michael B. Jordan.
DiCaprio’s New Look Sparks Buzz On Oscars Red Carpet
MediaPunch / AdMedia / MEGA
Even before the ceremony began, Leonardo DiCaprio had already become a major talking point online because of his appearance on the red carpet.
The film producer debuted noticeably darker hair and a bold mustache while posing for photographers in a classic black tuxedo.
The facial hair immediately caught viewers’ attention, with many comparing it to the signature look often worn by Pedro Pascal, who arrived at the ceremony clean-shaven.
Some fans jokingly suggested that Pascal had somehow passed the mustache along to DiCaprio for the evening.
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“Leonardo DiCaprio stole Pedro Pascal’s mustache and the ceremony hasn’t even started yet, I’m not ready,” one viewer wrote on social media per the Daily Mail.
Another user reacted to the look with a short comment that quickly gained traction online, noting, “porn stache.”
As photos from the red carpet continued circulating, social media users shared more mixed reactions to DiCaprio’s new look.
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One fan joked about the coincidence between Pascal’s clean-shaven appearance and DiCaprio’s mustache, writing, “Pedro Pascal gave his mustache to Leonardo DiCaprio! #Oscars.”
Another observer pointed out the contrast more directly, posting, “Leonardo DiCaprio has a mustache, and Pedro Pascal is clean-shaven.”
Others took a more humorous approach to describing the transformation, with one user saying the actor looked “the most chopped he ever chopped.”
Another viewer compared the new style to comedian Shane Gillis, while one fan offered a tongue-in-cheek compliment by writing, “He’s actually attractive for an old man.”
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Still, plenty of viewers praised the actor’s red carpet presence. One admirer wrote that “Leonardo DiCaprio owns the red carpet – classic black tux, bow tie, and that bold mustache giving major leading-man swagger. Timeless yet fresh; he’s ready to take home the gold.”
It’s awards season! It’s the time of year when millions of people tune in to watch the Oscars and see their favorite artists get awarded for their work in some of the best movies of the year. As an homage to the Academy Awards, it’s only fitting to look back at some of the previous top-performing films that have set records for having the most nominations in Oscar history. Titanic, The Shape of Water, and The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring are just some included in the list of movies that have received the most Oscar nominations.
While not all of these films were able to win as many prestigious prizes as the nominations would have you believe, they are still easily considered some of the most iconic and greatest films of all time. It is also worth noting that other notable films, such as The King’s Speech, The Revenant, and A Streetcar Named Desire are among those that have received 12 nominations but have not been included in the list.
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25
‘Gladiator’ (2000)
12 Nominations (and 5 Wins)
Nomination
Recipient
Best Picture
Douglas Wick, David Franzoni, Branko Lustig
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Best Actor
Russell Crowe
Best Supporting Actor
Joaquin Phoenix
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Best Director
Ridley Scott
Best Original Screenplay
David Franzoni, John Logan, and William Nicholson
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Best Cinematography
John Mathieson
Best Costume Design
Janty Yates
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Best Film Editing
Pietro Scalia
Best Original Score
Hans Zimmer
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Best Sound
Scott Millan, Bob Beemer, Ken Weston
Best Visual Effects
John Nelson, Neil Corbould, Tim Burke, and Rob Harvey
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Best Art Direction
Arthur Max, Crispin Sallis
Russell Crowe as Maximus preparing for battle during an early scene in Gladiator (2000)Image via DreamWorks Distribution LLC
The first Best Picture winner for a film released in the 21st century, Gladiator provided a glorious scale and production to the ruthless world of gladiatorial combat that wowed the Academy and cemented itself as an action epic classic. Its Best Picture victory varies greatly compared to the winners of recent years, finding much more success in the below-the-line technical categories while still taking home the big prize at the end of the day.
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Its path to victory certainly wasn’t easy, beating out heavy hitters like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Traffic. Still, there is a sense of brilliance and exceptional prowess from Ridley Scott’s massive cinematic epic that left an impact with audience voters, spearheading the 21st century with a bombastic, highly engaging epic that still holds up tremendously to this day. Ironically, the film’s sequel, Gladiator II, would also be nominated for Best Costume Design 24 years later, paralleling one of the awards that the original film won.
24
‘Mrs. Miniver’ (1942)
12 Nominations (and 6 Wins)
Nomination
Recipient
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Best Picture
Sidney Franklin
Best Director
William Wyler
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Best Actor
Walter Pidgeon
Best Actress
Greer Garson
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Best Supporting Actor
Henry Travers
Best Supporting Actress
Teresa Wright
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Dame May Whitty
Best Adapted Screenplay
George Froeschel, James Hilton, Claudine West, and Arthur Wimperis
Best Sound Recording
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Douglas Shearer
Best Cinematography, Black-and-White
Joseph Ruttenberg
Best Film Editing
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Harold F. Kress
Best Special Effects
A. Arnold Gillespie, Warren Newcombe, and Douglas Shearer
Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon in Mrs MiniverImage via MGM
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Mrs. Miniver was one of the most striking and effective romance movies of all time, and one that especially struck a chord with the world that was in the midst of a deadly World War. The film was able to shed light on the pain and difficulties of war impacting home life in a way rarely ever explored in film until then, a notion that made a massive impact on both worldwide audiences and the academy. On top of its massive showing at the Academy Awards, the film would also be highly lucrative at the box office, being the highest-grossing film of 1942, and a massive critical and financial success.
Mrs. Miniver made massive waves at the Academy Awards with its 12 nominations, largely driven by being the first of only a few films in history to earn 5 acting nominations, of which it would win 2 of the 4 categories. The film would also make a notable impact in Oscars history when Greer Garson gave the longest acceptance speech in Oscars history for winning Best Actress, speaking for 6 minutes and setting into motion the rule of cutting off acceptance speeches that went on for too long.
23
‘Dances With Wolves’ (1990)
12 Nominations (and 7 Wins)
Nomination
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Recipient
Best Picture
Jim Wilson and Kevin Costner
Best Director
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Kevin Costner
Best Actor
Kevin Costner
Best Supporting Actor
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Graham Greene
Best Supporting Actress
Mary McDonnell
Best Adapted Screenplay
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Michael Blake
Best Original Score
John Barry
Best Sound
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Jeffrey Perkins, Bill W. Benton, Gregory H. Watkins, and Russell Williams II
Best Art Direction
Jeffrey Beecroft and Lisa Dean
Best Costume Design
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Elsa Zamparelli
Best Cinematography
Dean Semler
Best Film Editing
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Neil Travis
John Dunbar keenling in the desert and looking to the distance in Dances with Wolves.Image via Orion Pictures
A massive-scale blockbuster Epic that would redefine the genre and breathe new life into it, Dances With Wolves combined the past and the present of Westerns to enchant audiences and the Academy alike for a resounding performance at the 63rd Academy Awards. The film’s massive scale and greatness as a technical marvel helped make it a massive success that made the most of the abilities of modern filmmaking to breathe new life into the past.
The majority of Dances With Wolves‘s success would relate to its below-the-line wins, nearly sweeping these awards with wins in Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Sound, and Best Score, all coming together with an emphatic win for Best Director. What makes its dominance at the awards so interesting is that, as time has passed, it is often in contention with the other major player of the awards season, Goodfellas, which has become equally acclaimed, if not more so than Dances With Wolves.
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22
‘Schindler’s List’ (1993)
12 Nominations (and 7 Wins)
Nomination
Recipient
Best Picture
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Steven Spielberg, Gerald R. Molen, and Branko Lustig
Best Director
Steven Spielberg
Best Actor
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Liam Neeson
Best Supporting Actor
Ralph Fiennes
Best Adapted Screenplay
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Steven Zaillian
Best Original Score
John Williams
Best Sound
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Andy Nelson, Steve Pederson, Scott Millan, and Ron Judkins
Best Art Direction
Allan Starski and Ewa Braun
Best Makeup
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Christina Smith, Matthew W. Mungle, and Judith A. Cory
Best Costume Design
Anna B. Sheppard
Best Cinematography
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Janusz Kamiński
Best Film Editing
Michael Kahn
Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson) holds an object and looks distraught in Schindler’s List (1993).Image via Universal Pictures
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The undeniable magnum opus from legendary director Steven Spielberg, Schindler’s List, perfectly balanced the director’s emotional strengths and humanist elements to create the ultimate tearjerker and World War II story. The harrowing and heartbreaking look at the atrocities and pain faced during the holocaust soon became the quintessential retelling of these events in the medium of film, further amplified by the top-notch filmmaking and exceptional craft on display.
Considering the fact that Schindler’s List has attained a powerful legacy in the over 30 years since its release as one of the greatest dramatic films of all time, it’s understandable that it would find itself dominating the 66th Academy Awards. It was certainly satisfying that it would also mark the long-awaited first Academy Award win for Spielberg, after an array of previous nominations for Best Director and Best Picture over the years. Although the film wouldn’t win every award it was nominated for, most notably losing out on Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor to Tom Hanks in Philadelphia and Tommy Lee Jones in The Fugitive, respectively.
21
‘My Fair Lady’ (1964)
12 Nominations (and 8 Wins)
Nomination
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Recipient
Best Picture
Jack L. Warner
Best Director
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George Cukor
Best Actor
Rex Harrison
Best Supporting Actor
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Stanley Holloway
Best Supporting Actress
Gladys Cooper
Best Adapted Screenplay
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Alan Jay Lerner
Best Original Score
André Previn
Best Sound
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George Groves
Best Art Direction, Color
Gene Allen, Cecil Beaton, and George James Hopkins
Best Cinematography, Color
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Harry Stradling
Best Costume Design, Color
Cecil Beaton
Best Film Editing
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William Ziegler
Professor Henry Higgins (Rex Harrison) offers Eliza Doolittle (Audrey Hepburn) a tray of food in My Fair LadyImage via Warner Bros. Pictures
There’s nothing that the Academy loves quite like a high-energy musical, with one of the most successful musicals in Academy history being musical comedy My Fair Lady. The nearly 3-hour-long film reprised a lot of elements from the original stage musical, even including actors like Rex Harrison reprising their roles, and made the most of the medium of film to elevate and evolve the musical energy and style. The film would go on to be one of the most acclaimed and successful movie musicals of all time, further cemented in its legacy by its massive returns at the Academy Awards.
Ironically, My Fair Lady would end up not being the most nominated musical of the 37th Academy Awards, with Mary Poppins (which will be talked about later in the list) earning 13 nominations. However, the film would beat out Mary Poppins when it came to wins, winning 8 Academy Awards over Mary Poppins‘ 5 wins and winning many more high-profile awards, such as Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actor.
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20
‘On the Waterfront’ (1954)
12 Nominations (and 8 Wins)
Best Picture
Sam Spiegel
Best Actor
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Marlon Brando
Best Supporting Actor
Lee J. Cobb
Best Supporting Actor
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Karl Malden
Best Supporting Actor
Rod Steiger
Best Supporting Actress
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Eva Marie Saint
Best Director
Elia Kazan
Best Original Screenplay
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Budd Schulberg
Best Cinematography, Black-and-White
Boris Kaufman
Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White
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Richard Day
Best Film Editing
Gene Milford
Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture
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Leonard Bernstein
A black and white shot of Marlon Brando sat down in On the Waterfront.Image via Columbia Pictures
Largely beloved and considered to be one of the defining films of the 50s, On the Waterfront is a masterful crime drama that still holds up brilliantly in the modern era, making waves when it was first released and being a hit at the Academy Awards. The film follows Terry Malloy (Marlon Brando), a kindhearted dockworker who wants to escape the harsh life of crime that he’s been wrapped up in, made worse when he witnesses the death of a friend. After falling in love with the friend’s sister, Terry attempts to do what he can to leave his life on the waterfront and expose his corrupt employers in the process.
On the Waterfront is one of the most influential and iconic crime dramas of all time, with its legacy and strengths still being felt in film today. It’s no wonder that the film had such an impact at the Academy Awards, not only taking home the big prize of Best Picture, but also taking home awards for Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, and Best Supporting Actress. The most notable win, however, is Brando’s win for Best Actor for his portrayal of Terry Malloy, a performance that is still in conversation as one of the greatest performances of all time.
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19
‘The English Patient’ (1996)
12 Nominations (and 9 Wins)
Best Picture
Saul Zaentz
Best Actor
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Ralph Fiennes
Best Actress
Kristin Scott Thomas
Best Supporting Actress
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Juliette Binoche
Best Director
Anthony Minghella
Best Adapted Screenplay
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Anthony Minghella
Best Cinematography
John Seale
Best Art Direction-Set Decoration
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Stuart Craig, Stephenie McMillan
Best Costume Design
Ann Roth
Best Sound
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Walter Murch, Mark Berger, David Parker, Christopher Newman
Best Film Editing
Walter Murch
Best Music, Original Dramatic Score
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Gabriel Yared
Image via Miramax
While the film has largely been forgotten by general audiences in the nearly 30 years since its release, The English Patient made a massive splash at the 69th Academy Awards, beating out the likes of Fargo and Jerry Maguire to win Best Picture. The film follows Hungarian map maker Count Almásy (Ralph Fiennes) on his assigned quest to chart the vast expanses of the Sahara Desert in the 1930s. However, the dangers and rise of World War II prove to throw Almásy into a world of danger, betrayal, and unexpected love.
The English Patient is emblematic and all-encompassing of a lot of the same conventions and trends that largely defined the most successful and Oscar-bait-y films of the late 20th century, making it far from shocking that the film found such massive success. While aspects of the film may not have aged the best in the decades since its release, it’s undeniable how much of an impact that The English Patient had on the academy when it released, helping it win Best Picture on top of Best Director, Best Supporting Actress, and Best Cinematography.
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18
‘Ben-Hur’ (1959)
12 Nominations (and 11 Wins)
Best Picture
Sam Zimbalist
Best Actor
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Charlton Heston
Best Supporting Actor
Hugh Griffith
Best Director
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William Wyler
Best Adapted Screenplay
Karl Tunberg
Best Cinematography, Color
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Robert Surtees
Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color
William A. Horning, Edward C. Carfagno, Hugh Hunt
Best Costume Design, Color
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Elizabeth Haffenden
Best Sound
Franklin Milton
Best Film Editing
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Ralph E. Winters, John D. Dunning
Best Effects, Special Effects
A. Arnold Gillespie, R.A. MacDonald, Milo B. Lory
Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture
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Miklós Rózsa
Charlton Heston as Ben-Hur steering white horses in a chariot race in ‘Ben-Hur’ (1959).Image via MGM
A massive spectacle that brought the gargantuan scale and weight of a real Colosseum arena to the big screen in a way that has never truly been accomplished before or since, Ben-Hur is a feat of filmmaking that was always going to win big at the Academy Awards. A remake of a classic film from the 1920s, the film sees Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston) being falsely accused by his childhood friend-turned-overlord, being banished and put into slavery while his family is made into prisoners. This acts as only the beginning of Ben-Hur’s quest for revenge, fighting through the ranks and making his name known in the process.
Ben-Hur was nominated for 12 out of 15 possible categories that it was eligible for, yet even more shocking was that it nearly swept every award it was nominated for, winning 11 out of its 12 nominations. Even after 65 years, this is still the tied record for the highest amount of awards that were won by a single film, cementing its status as one of the biggest Academy Award success stories of all time. No film in the future may surpass the heights that Ben-Hur first achieved in terms of wins, although several other films have earned more nominations.
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17
‘Emilia Perez’ (2024)
13 Nominations (and 2 Wins)
Nomination
Recipient
Best Picture
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Pascal Chaucheteux and Jacques Audiard
Best Director
Jacques Audiard
Best Actress
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Karla Sofía Gascón
Best Supporting Actress
Zoe Saldaña
Best Adapted Screenplay
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Jacques Audiard, Thomas Bidegain, Léa Mysius, Nicolas Livecchi
Best International Feature Film
Jacques Audiard
Best Original Score
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Clément Ducol and Camille
Best Original Song
Clément Ducol, Camille. And Jacques Audiard (“El Mal”)
Julia Floch Carbonel, Emmanuel Janvier, and Jean-Christophe Spadaccini
Best Film Editing
Juliette Welfling
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Selena Gomez as Jessi dancing at the center of a group of people in a darkened club with neon lightsImage via Netflix
One of the most controversial and divisive Best Picture nominees of recent memory, Emilia Perez has been somewhat of an unexpected phenomenon where it found massive acclaim among the industry and awards bodies and wildly mixed among critics and audiences. The musical crime film about a cartel leader faking their death so that they can undergo a gender transition was already largely contentious when it premiered at film festivals, only growing more divisive following its release, nominations, and recent controversies.
When it initially received 13 nominations, Emilia Perez was in the conversation to win Best Picture and take home an array of other awards, but following the waves of controversy, any momentum that the film had was squarely dashed into the dust. While it didn’t go home empty-handed, still winning the awards for Best Supporting Actress for Zoe Saldaña and Best Original Song for “El Mal”, it was beaten out in every other category, even losing the previously shoo-in Best International Feature to I’m Still Here.
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‘The Curious Case of Benjamin Button’ (2008)
13 Nominations (and 3 Wins)
Nomination
Recipient
Best Picture
Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall, and Ceán Chaffin
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Best Director
David Fincher
Best Actor
Brad Pitt
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Best Supporting Actress
Taraji P. Henson
Best Adapted Screenplay
Eric Roth and Robin Swicord
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Best Art Direction
Donald Graham Burt and Victor J. Zolfo
Best Cinematography
Claudio Miranda
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Best Costume Design
Jacqueline West
Best Film Editing
Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall
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Best Makeup
Greg Cannom
Best Original Score
Alexandre Desplat
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Best Sound Mixing
David Parker, Michael Semanick, Ren Klyce, and Mark Weingarten
Best Visual Effects
Eric Barba, Steve Preeg, Burt Dalton, and Craig Barron
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Image via Paramount Pictures
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is one of many masterful dramas to come from legendary director David Fincher. The film follows Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt), who lives an unusual life: he was born looking like an elderly man and appears to get younger and younger as the years go by. In the old folks’ home where he lives, he meets a young girl of the same age. As they fall in love, however, they know it is only a matter of time before Benjamin’s condition becomes a persistent complication that will jeopardize their future together.
It comes as no surprise that Fincher’s film has captured the hearts of many viewers and film critics. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button received 13 nominations out of the 26 possible categories and won three awards for Best Art Direction, Best Visual Effects, and Best Makeup. Interestingly and annoyingly, Academy frontrunner Cate Blanchett did not receive an Oscar nomination for her role as Daisy Fuller (adult version) in the film.