Oscars 2026 as it happened: One Battle After Another wins best picture, Michael B. Jordan is best actor
The 98th Academy Awards saw One Battle After Another win big with six awards, Sinners followed with four, including best actor for Michael B. Jordan. Jessie Buckley took home best actress for Hamnet

But One Battle After Another, the favourite coming in, won six Oscars, including best director and best adapted screenplay for Anderson, the Oscars’ first trophy for best casting and best supporting actor for an absent Sean Penn.
Arkapow, only the fourth female cinematographer ever nominated, won the award in a long-awaited triumph for women behind the camera.
“I really want all the women in the room to stand up,” said Arkapaw. “Because I don’t feel like I get here without you guys.”

And Jordan, one of Hollywood’s most liked leading men, won best actor in one of the night’s closest races. The Dolby Theatre rose to its feet in the most thunderous applause of the night.
Jessie Buckley won best actress for her performance as Agnes Shakespeare in Hamnet, making her the first Irish performer to ever win in the category. At an Oscars where no other acting award seemed a sure thing, Buckley cruised into Sunday’s Oscars at the Dolby Theatre as the overwhelming favourite.
“It’s Mother’s Day in the UK,” said Buckley on the stage. “I would like to dedicate this to the beautiful chaos of a mother’s heart.”

KPop and Frankenstein win for Netflix
On Netflix, KPop Demon Hunters became a cultural phenomenon and the streaming platform’s biggest hit. It has more than 325 million views and counting.
“This is for Korea and Koreans everywhere,” said co-director Maggie Kang.

Amy Madigan won best supporting actress for her performance in the horror thriller Weapons, a win that came 40 years after the 75-year-old actor was first nominated, in 1986, for Twice in a Lifetime. Letting out a giant laugh as she hit the stage, Madigan exclaimed, “This is great!”
O’Brien presides over a ceremony shadowed by politics
Hosting for the second time, O’Brien began the Dolby Theatre show, alluding to “chaotic and frightening times”. But he argued that the current geopolitical climate made the Oscars all the more resonant as a globally unifying force.
“We pay tribute tonight, not just to film, but to the ideals of global artistry, collaboration, patience, resilience and that rarest of qualities today – optimism,” O’Brien said. “We’re going to celebrate. Not because we think all is well, but because we work, and hope, for better.”
Throughout the show, O’Brien hit several targets, like Timothée Chalamet for his diss of opera and ballet. But the ceremony seldom was not shadowed by politics, whether in references to changes under US President Donald Trump or the recently launched war in Iran.

“All adults are responsible for all children,” he said. “Let’s not vote for politicians that don’t take this seriously into account.”
Presenter Jimmy Kimmel, whose late-night show last year was suspended after comments he made about Charlie Kirk’s killing, was among the most blunt.
“There are some countries that don’t support free speech,” said Kimmel. “I’m not at liberty to say which. Let’s just leave it at North Korea and CBS.”
Shortly after, Mr. Nobody Against Putin, a film about a Russian primary school teacher who documents his students’ indoctrination to support Russia’s war with Ukraine, won best documentary.
Theatrical looks to best streaming, again
The night’s final award again did not go to a streaming release; Apple’s Coda remains the only streaming film to achieve that distinction.
Some of O’Brien’s best digs came at the expense of the streamers. Netflix chief Ted Sarandos, he joked, was in a theatre for the first time. The host also lamented the lack of nominees for Amazon MGM: “Why isn’t the website I order toilet paper from winning more Oscars?”
“I’m honoured to be the last human host of the Academy Awards,” said O’Brien. “Next year it’s going to be a Waymo in a tux.”
More stories
Reporting by Agence-France Presse, Associated Press, Reuters and other agencies