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Sadly, the Oscars ultimately belonged to One Battle After Another, Paul Thomas Anderson’s political thriller, which led all films with six wins, including Best Picture and Best Director.For Sinners, the haul was four trophies, and that number obscures how close the film came to the biggest prizes. The wins that did come were decisive, however. Ryan Coogler took Best Original Screenplay for his first career Oscar, Ludwig Gรถransson won Best Original Score, and Autumn Durald Arkapaw made history by becoming the first woman to win Best Cinematography. Finally, Michael B. Jordan won Best Actor for his dual performance as Smoke and Stack. This was Jordan’s first career Academy Award nomination, and his victory put him in a select group of performers that, across nearly a century of Oscar history, has almost no members.
Michael B. Jordan Is the First Best Actor to Win for a Horror Performance This Century

The last time the Academy awarded its Best Actor prize to a performer in a horror film, Anthony Hopkins collected the trophy at the 64th Academy Awards in 1992 for his portrayal of Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs. That win stood for 34 years as a lone island in a category that has otherwise maintained a firm wall between prestigious acting recognition and genre filmmaking. In fact, Jordan’s victory at the 98th Academy Awards is only the third time in the award’s 97-year history that a male performer has taken Best Actor for a horror role. Beyond Hopkins, at the 5th Academy Awards in 1932, Fredric March won Best Actor for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, sharing the prize with Wallace Beery in what became a landmark in genre recognition.









