ONE Battle After Another” triumphed at the Oscars on Sunday, winning six awards, including the coveted best picture statuette, besting “Sinners” in a thrilling finale to one of the most competitive awards seasons in recent years.

Director Paul Thomas Anderson personally won three Oscars, the first of his career, for his political thriller that tackles the hot-button issues of immigration raids and white supremacy.

“You make a guy work really hard for one of these,” he said to laughter as he accepted the award for best director.

 “I wrote this movie for my kids to say sorry for the housekeeping mess that we left in this world we’re handing off to them,” he said after collecting the best adapted screenplay prize. “But also with the encouragement that they will be the generation that hopefully brings us some common sense and decency

“One Battle” tells the story of a pot-addled ex-revolutionary, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, who struggles to remember passphrases in a battle of wits against the terrifying Colonel Lockjaw, played by best supporting actor winner Sean Penn. The film also won best editing and the inaugural award for casting.

Anderson is one of the greatest auteurs of contemporary US cinema, but until Sunday had never won an Oscar, despite 11 previous nominations for acclaimed films including “There Will Be Blood” and “Boogie Nights.”

‘Sinners’ wins four

Ryan Coogler’s “Sinners”, a bluesy vampire fable that offers a meditation on America’s difficult racial history, had come into the evening with a record-tying 16 nominations. It left with four awards, including best original screenplay for Coogler and best actor for Michael B Jordan, who plays gangster twin brothers Smoke and Stack seeking their fortune in the segregated South.

Jordan told reporters backstage that he had created detailed journals to flesh out the backstories of both roles in order to clearly express “those nuances between the two”.

Other prizes were best score for Ludwig Goransson and best cinematography for Autumn Durald Arkapaw, the first time a woman won in that category. Coogler called his writing award “an incredible honour” and told journalists he credited a creative writing professor for his success. Both “One Battle” and “Sinners” were produced by Warner Bros Studio, which was the subject of an intense bidding war between Paramount and Netflix. The studio claimed 12 of the 24 awards on offer on Sunday. In perhaps the least surprising award of the evening, Jessie Buckley won best actress for her portrayal of William Shakespeare’s heartbroken wife Agnes navigating the loss of their son in “Hamnet”.

AFP

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