Posted in 2020-2029, Awards Season, Oscars, Ranking

98th Academy Awards: Best Picture Nominees ranked

It is time once again for Hollywood to mark its biggest night and bring this year’s awards season to a close with the 98th Academy Awards. In what was another wide-ranging and entertaining year for cinema, ten films are battling it out for the biggest prize of the night and to etch their name onto one of those golden trophies and into the history books. We have a moving family drama, a politically charged thriller, a moving and powerful drama based on the life of the greatest writer who ever lived, a wonderful interpretation of a classic novel, and a genre-defying supernatural horror.

Without further ado, here is my ranking of these films from worst to best, starting with…

10. The Secret Agent

Whenever I begin compiling this list, I am always on the lookout for a film that stands out as one that should not be in contention for the top prize. While no film in this year’s crop stands out as truly awful, this slow-burning political thriller from Kleber Mendonça Filho is comfortably the one I enjoyed least. It stands as an interesting companion piece to last year’s Oscar-winning I’m Still Here, focusing on a time when Brazil was being ruled by a military dictatorship, as a former professor (played by Wagner Moura) finds himself with a target on his back.

You might think that with a title like The Secret Agent, the film would channel the spirit of a certain British secret agent, but the film eschews that in favour of patiently exploring the brutality of what can happen when a country is being ruled with an iron fist, and when you get on the wrong side of certain people. Undeniably topical given the world we live in, and while Moura gives an excellent performance, the film takes a long time before the plot really gets into motion, and with a 2-hour and 40-minute run-time, the pacing suffers as a result.

9. Train Dreams

In 2024, Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar co-wrote the brilliant Sing Sing, a powerful and thought-provoking look at life inside prison and the power of the arts that prisoners used to find new purpose. For their follow-up, with Bentley taking Kwedar’s place in the director’s chair, he takes us back to the late 19th/early 20th century for an equally contemplative and moving story of one man’s journey through the world as he tries to make a living as a logger, while taking care of his wife (Felicity Jones) and young child.

Filled with absolutely gorgeous cinematography, the film’s pacing is a little too leisurely, but it’s a showcase for Joel Edgerton, who turns in what might be the performance of his career. He can consider himself mighty unlucky that he wasn’t recognised with a nomination for Best Actor.

 

8. F1

review

By far, this is the film in this year’s line-up that will have definitely raised the most eyebrows. The Academy tends to include a film that has seen box-office success here, if for no other reason than to coax general audiences to watch the ceremony. Of all those box office juggernauts, this was the one to stand on the podium and leave the likes of Avatar: Fire and Ash to (deservedly) fall by the wayside.

After wowing critics and audiences alike and going a long way toward preserving the theatrical experience as we know it with Top Gun: Maverick, Joseph Kosinski shifted gears, swapping jet planes for high-powered F1 cars and trading one A-lister for another. His commitment to practical filmmaking by attaching cameras to these high-powered cars is commendable, and the film is undeniably pulsating and thrilling to watch, even if you’ve never seen an F1 race in your life or have not the slightest interest in the sport. It could do very well in some of the below-the-line craft categories, but it is ultimately a bit too by-the-numbers and formulaic to truly rise above its competitors to be in pole position to win that coveted Best Picture statue.

 

7. Bugonia

If there is one thing you can be guaranteed of before going into any film directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, it’s that the film you’re about to watch is unabashedly eccentric and weird. Very few filmmakers in Hollywood are making films like him, and all the better for it. These concepts and ideas could easily turn into catastrophic misfires were they to fall into the wrong hands. Yet, the Greek auteur makes these wacky concepts work and has enjoyed a very fruitful and productive collaborative relationship with Emma Stone, with this marking their fourth project together, as the film delves into the minds of two conspiracy theorists who become convinced that the CEO (another incredible performance by Stone) of a major corporation is secretly an alien and hatch a plan to abduct her.

An English-language remake of 2003’s Save the Green Planet, the film offers a fascinating examination of how one can get lost in the rabbit hole of conspiracy theories, while also rebuking the catastrophic impact that capitalist society, humanity, and rampant consumerism have on the environment of the planet we live on, with an absolutely wild ending that will have your jaw on the floor. One only knows what kind of off-the-wall, insane concept Lanthimos will turn his attention to next.

 

6. One Battle After Another

review

Of all the films that came out in 2025, perhaps no other film tapped into the zeitgeist and showcased the politically charged world we inhabit more than the latest film from Paul Thomas Anderson, which is likely to be the one that ends his long wait for Oscar glory in several categories, as it is the clear frontrunner for the Best Picture trophy.

A film that truly lives up to its name, it expertly walks the fine line between a politically-charged thriller which excoriates some of those most poisonous ideologies we see in the world today, while also balancing an unexpected amount of humour, in the form of Leo DiCaprio’s stoner/revolutionary, desperately trying to save his daughter (an outstanding Chase Infiniti) from the vile Colonel Lockjaw. PTA films have often been very hit or miss for me, and while this is certainly a step up from Licorice Pizza, to my mind, it’s not quite the masterpiece some people are hailing it as, though given how much it speaks to the time we’re living through, it is easy to see why it is odds on to win the biggest prize of the night.

 

5. Sentimental Value

After scoring two richly deserved Oscar nominations (Original Screenplay and International Feature) for the concluding chapter in his Oslo trilogy, The Worst Person in the World, Joachim Trier did not rest on his laurels, and his latest film has deservedly received wider recognition than his previous films. While not a direct sequel to Worst Person, Sentimental Value very much continues in the same vein, not least since it reunited him with Renate Reinsve to tell the moving story of an actress and her sister who, amid their father’s efforts to reconcile with them, offer Reinsve’s Nora a chance to star in his big comeback film.

A deeply resonant exploration of those complicated family dynamics and the generational trauma of familal struggle that can have a lasting impact on one’s life well into adulthood, and of the sometimes complicated relationships we have with them. Reinsve and Stellan Skarsgard are both exceptional as the father and daughter grappling with their choices in life, with excellent supporting work from Elle Fanning and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, all of whom have received deserved Oscar nominations for their performances.

 

4. Marty Supreme

review

When working in collaboration with his brother Benny, Josh Safdie knew a thing or two about putting audiences’ anxiety through the wringer, with their films Good Time and Uncut Gems. After striking out on his own, Josh’s first film as a solo director very much picks up where he left off with this enthralling, fast-paced story of one young man with big dreams and an ambition to be the best American professional table tennis player to have ever lived.

Setting aside some of his recent and extremely distasteful comments about ballet and opera, the fact that the film surpassed Everything Everywhere All at Once to become A24’s highest-grossing film of all time says a lot about Chalamet’s popularity as an actor, though that will have taken a hit since he made those comments. But credit where credit is due, as he once again turns in an extraordinary performance. By all accounts, Marty is a man so narcissistic, rude, and condescending that he gives us Martins a very bad name. He is so unlikeable, it would make you wish someone on screen would hurl several of those table tennis balls at him. Yet, despite these dreadful qualities, you want to root for him as he tries to hustle his way to the very top, and the film leaves you breathless after its 150-minute run time. Whoever knew table tennis could be so exhilarating?

3. Hamnet 

review

After winning multiple Oscars in 2021 for Nomadland, you could hardly blame Chloé Zhao for wanting to try her hand in the big and vast sandpit that is the Marvel Cinematic Universe for the under-appreciated Eternals. Even when in the confines of the MCU, her films have had a distinct feel to them, with the exploration of the humanity of those on the fringes of society. She continues this trajectory in a moving and devastating fashion in this fictionalised story of how the greatest writer to have ever lived used the most unimaginably harrowing circumstances to write his magnum opus.

Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley are a powerhouse pair on screen with sublime chemistry. Their love blazes like a wildfire, but is then severely tested when tragedy strikes. The film also serves as a powerful reminder of art’s power and how we, as humans, can use it to overcome our grief when someone we love has departed this world. Mescal was mighty unlucky to not get a nomination, but the film belongs to Buckley, and her (soon-to-be Oscar-winning) performance will snap your heart into a thousand pieces.

 

2. Frankenstein

 

review

The mere mention of the name Frankenstein undoubtedly brings to mind the image of an unnatural creation brought to life by a mad scientist who believes he has the power over life and death. It should come as no surprise that, since the 1931 adaptation of Mary Shelley’s classic novel had a significant influence on Guillermo del Toro during his childhood in Mexico, the visionary director has been trying to bring his own version of this story to the screen since 2007. Fortunately, after his successful collaboration with Netflix, which earned him another Oscar for his remarkable reimagining of “Pinocchio,” he received backing from the streaming service to realise his vision for Frankenstein, with immaculate results.

Del Toro harbours the utmost respect for the source material, but puts his own stamp on it, proving that there aren’t many directors better equipped to tackle stories about finding humanity in creatures of the monstrous variety. A cast firing on all cylinders, with an Oscar-worthy performance by Jacob Elordi as the misunderstood creature, and filled to the brim with beautiful cinematography, incredible production design and immaculate costumes, this is one of the Mexican auteur’s finest accomplishments. No easy feat when you consider his distinguished filmography.

 

1. Sinners 

review

Even with the additional category of Casting being added to this year’s ceremony for the first time, the fact that Ryan Coogler’s genre-defying magnum opus (which released last April let’s not forget) has surpassed the nominations record jointly held by La La Land, Titanic and All About Eve (14 each) to become the most nominated film of all time with 16 nominations speaks volumes to the extraordinary brilliance of Ryan Coogler’s magnum opus and how much it resonated with the Academy members and the wider public alike.

Coogler deserves immense credit not only for the significant deal he struck with Warner Bros. to get the film made, but also for making a wholly unique and original film, unconnected to any existing franchise or IP. It combines supernatural horror with a pointed examination of the racist history of the Deep South and a joyous celebration of blues music that blurs the lines between past, present, and future, all of which just so happen to feature vampires. Irrespective of whether it wins the top prize at the Oscars, wins a bunch of awards, or goes home empty-handed (which it will not), Coogler has created a film that reminds us why we go to the cinema to watch films on the biggest screen we can. I sincerely hope that if Paramount’s acquisition of Warner Bros goes through, they take note of films like this. This art form needs films like this to be made, and visionaries like Coogler to make them.

 

Could/should have been nominated…

And there you have it! That completes my ranking of the ten films competing for this year’s Best Picture awards. Though as always, I like to imagine what could have been to make this year’s crop even more of a stronger line-up of films. So with that in mind, if I had a ballot, I would remove The Secret Agent and Train Dreams and in their place I would nominate:

No Other Choice  For over 20 years, Park Chan-wook has made an indelible contribution to cinema and never is this more apparent than with his latest film, a deliciously black comedy about one man’s increasingly desperate attempts to find work after he is let go by his long-time employer. In this increasingly cutthroat capitalist society we live in, its omission in this year’s awards race across the board is truly head-scratching.

Weapons – Horror usually has a tough time getting a look-in at the Oscars due to the Academy’s genre bias. Yet there are signs this could be changing, with The Substance last year and now Sinners this year. We saw Zach Creggar’s sophomore feature get a deserved nomination for Amy Madigan’s unforgettable performance, but such was the impact this film had, grossing $270m on a $38m budget and becoming a hugely talked about film, I would have liked to have seen it get more love at the Academy in some of the above the line categories like Original Screenplay, and especially in some of the below the line categories, not least Hair and Makeup.

Posted in 2020-2029, Ranking

Best Films of 2025

Another 12 months of cinema have come and gone, and it was undeniably a captivating year for cinema. There was the usual mix of superheroes, live-action remakes, reboots, and sequels. However, there were also plenty of original films with the potential to contend for awards in 2026. Before we dive into the madness of awards season, let’s take a look at the best films of 2025, in my opinion.

For a film to be eligible for inclusion on this list, I must have seen it within the calendar year of 2025. While I always strive to include films listed as 2025 releases on IMDb, some don’t receive a UK-wide release until well into the year. Furthermore, some films don’t get a wide release until 2026, but since I caught these at the London Film Festival, they are eligible for inclusion. Additionally, I haven’t watched every single film released in 2025, so if there’s a film you think should be included here, please let me know.

One more disclaimer. I haven’t reviewed every film here, but grades do not determine the rankings. This is my chance to celebrate the films that resonated with me the most over the last year. As usual, before we get into the main list, I do have some honourable mentions, films that I enjoyed but didn’t make the top 10:

Roofman (review). Every once in a while comes a film based on a true story, which seems completely implausible, that it couldn’t possibly be true. Yet, Derek Ciafrance’s hilarious film about the most polite criminal ever, who robs stores by cutting a hole in the roof to steal cash, and then evades police by hiding in a Toys R Us store, really has to be seen to be believed.

Kpop Demon Hunters. As a complete stranger to the K-pop genre, I had no idea what to expect with this. Coming from the same studio as the makers of the incredible Spider-Verse films piqued my curiosity. With its brilliant animation, innovative story (a trio of badass demon hunters who moonlight as a girl group!) and certified banger of a soundtrack, what is not to love?

F1 (review). A fundamental job for any sports film is to pull the viewer in, regardless of whether they’re a devout follower or have never watched said sport before. After blowing audiences away with Top Gun: Maverick, Joseph Kosinski swaps fighter jets for F1 cars to deliver another electrifying and pulsating spectacle that hits the chequered flag with flying colours.

The Brutalist (review). Filmed in glorious VistaVision, with one of the most impactful opening scenes of the entire year, Brady Corbet’s 215-minute epic is a towering, ambitious and timely story about the struggles of the immigrant experience looking to fulfil the promise of the American Dream, with an incredible Oscar-winning performance by Adrien Brody.

I Swear. A film as British as they come, but I defy anyone who fails to be uplifted by this truly inspiring story of John Davidson, who, after being diagnosed with Tourette’s syndrome as a youngster in 1980s Scotland, grew up to become a campaigner and activist to raise awareness of the disorder, with around 300,000 children and adults in the UK estimated to live with the condition. In what could have come across as a caricature, Robert Aramayo’s performance as Davidson is anything but, capturing the man with warm sincerity as well as a great deal of humour.

Honourable mentions honoured. Now, here comes the top 10…

 

10. The Voice of Hind Rajab

Ever since the Israel-Palestine conflict broke out with the appalling attacks by Hamas on Israel on October 7 2023, it has been impossible to ignore the horrors that the Palestinian people have endured over the last two years, with the UN declaring in September that a genocide is being committed by Israel in Gaza, after famine was declared in August. This powerful dramatisation tells the true story of Red Crescent volunteers who, in January 2024, received an emergency phone call from a young girl in Gaza trapped in a car under fire. This is a film I haven’t stopped thinking about since I saw it at the 2025 London Film Festival. A harrowing and deeply upsetting, but vitally necessary watch. Free Palestine.

9. The Long Walk

review

In a year that saw numerous Stephen King adaptations, both on the big and small screen, Francis Lawrence’s adaptation of the first novel the legendary author wrote powered its way to taking the crown as the best King adaptation of the year and one of the best ever made. To say this film, about the struggles and enduring financial hardship in an authoritarian United States, is timely would be an understatement. Lawrence leans into his experience of crafting a film centred on a competition where only one person shall emerge victorious to craft a gripping and intense thriller, with incredible performances from Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson that will have you on the edge of your seat.

 

8. Thunderbolts*

review

Multiversal shenanigans have been in plentiful supply in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in recent years, with decidedly mixed results, but not the death of the MCU as some would have had you believe. Nevertheless, Thunderbolts* proved to be a refreshing and welcome change of pace to close out Phase Five, as it brought the franchise back down to earth with the fascinating story of a ragtag group of antiheroes forced to put aside their differences and work together to fight their common enemy. The film brought humour in the form of its central team of protagonists/antagonists (delete where appropriate), with personalities clashing just from being in the same room as one another, and was reminiscent of the gritty and grounded spy thriller found in the Captain America films. Not only that, but it also took the brave step of openly discussing mental health and the lasting impact that trauma can have on people forced to do bad things at some points in their lives.

7. Flow

Dialogue, a staple of the majority of films we see nowadays. However, it is not always necessary to tell a touching or powerful story about the devastation caused by a biblical-like apocalypse and the will to survive. Case in point, Gilts Zilbalodis’s beautiful film, made on a shoestring budget ($3.5million), defied expectations to win Best Animated Feature at the 97th Academy Awards, gazumping the likes of Disney and Dreamworks in the process. The little cat film that could, and did indeed, swim its way into the hearts of audiences everywhere.

 

6. Predator: Badlands

Since taking the reins of the franchise with 2022’s Prey, Dan Trachtenberg has breathed new life into a franchise that seemed to have been hunted down and put out of its misery following Predator (2018). We have seen Predators hunting humans for sport numerous times, so Trachtenberg makes a refreshing switch-up by framing it from the perspective of a young Yautja warrior, who, after being scorned and dismissed by his father due to being a runt, travels to an extremely hostile planet to embark on a hunt to defeat a deadly creature on an incredibly perilous planet to prove himself, while striking up an unlikely alliance with a severely damaged Weyland-Yutani android (Elle Fanning). Please keep these movies coming!

5. Weapons

review

I will be the first one to tell you I am not a horror fan. So, when a film in this genre really gets people talking, it compels me to go out of my comfort zone, and I am so glad I did because Zach Creggar’s sophomore feature more than lived up to the expectations I had set based on the chatter. The central and disturbing mystery hooks you in from the off, masterfully maintains the suspense and tension throughout, and builds to a crescendo in a third act that I will not be forgetting in a hurry. All the cast were firing on all cylinders, but the standouts were by far Amy Madigan’s Aunt Gladys (you will be inherently suspicious of anyone you meet called Gladys ever again) and Julia Garner as Justine Gandy, the poor teacher caught in the middle of this nightmare. Between this and the next film on this list, 2025 was an incredible year for Garner.

4. Fantastic Four: First Steps

review

Marvel’s First Family have had numerous attempts to do them justice on the big screen, yet every time an adaptation has been attempted, it has either been majorly flawed or just an outright disaster of gargantuanly Galactus-sized proportions. Yet, finally, with the team now back with their rightful owners at Marvel, fans got a film truly befitting of the team’s name. Impeccable chemistry between the team, a fun retro-futuristic setting away from the main MCU timeline, and a formidable threat in the shape of the planet-eating entity Galactus and his herald, the Silver Surfer (another excellent Julia Garner performance). Fantastic by name, fantastic by nature.

3. Hamnet 

review

Ever since the COVID pandemic hit, we have seen no shortage of films about the power of the arts, and indeed cinema, to act as a healing process in the face of adversity or devastating tragedy. Yet, what none of those other films did was to do so through the lens of Shakespeare and to explore the tragic backstory of his personal life that led him to write the play many consider to be his masterpiece, Hamlet. After dabbling with the machine of the MCU, Chloé Zhao once again proves that she is a master at finding the humanity of those who find themselves isolated from society, with brilliant and emotionally devastating performances from Paul Mescal and especially Jessie Buckley. A film that captures the unimaginable heartache no parents should have to endure, yet is simultaneously positively life-affirming at the timeless power of the arts as a mechanism to process our grief. To be or not to be, that is the question, indeed.

2. Frankenstein

review

Films about monsters and Guillermo del Toro have so often been a match made in cinematic heaven throughout the distinguished Mexican auteur’s career. It should therefore come as no surprise that an adaptation of Mary Shelley’s iconic novel has long been a passion project for him, and it is easy to see why, as the source material could not be more aligned with del Toro’s skills as a filmmaker. Del Toro magnificently channels his passion for Shelley’s work, while imprinting his own unique style on the dangers of hubris by humanity in the pursuit of scientific discovery and the perils of what can happen when people try to play God. Some of the most beautiful cinematography of the year, immaculate costumes and production design, and incredible performances from Oscar Isaac and a career-best from Jacob Elordi as the misunderstood Creature. The legend of Frankenstein is reborn for a brand new generation.

 

Drumroll, my favourite film of 2025 is..

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1. Sinners 

review

What is there to say about Ryan Coogler’s magnum opus that hasn’t already been said? The praise this movie has received ever since its release in April is fully justified, and for a film not based on any existing franchise or IP to have grossed $367m at the worldwide box office is an incredible achievement and speaks volumes to what can happen when filmmakers such as Coogler are given the space to realise their vision and to craft something truly special.

This is not just a vampire movie; it is so, so much more than that. It is a wondrous blend of genres, a celebration of blues music, the power of music to connect the past and the future (that scene is hands down the coolest scene of the entire year). As soon as I saw it in April, I knew right then and there that not only would it feature in this list, but that it would top the lot, and so it proved. Films like this are why we go to the cinema, and why it is imperative to see films on the big screen where they belong.

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And that brings the curtain down on my list of the best the big screen had to offer in 2025. Thank you for reading, especially if you read all the way through! What were your favourite films of 2025? Let me know in the comments below, or you can find me on the following platforms: BlueskyFacebook or Letterbox’d.