Read More
Here are the full list of Oscar winners at the 97th Academy Awards, which were handed out in Hollywood on Sunday.
ADVERTISEMENT
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT
"Anora" was the big winner of the night, with five Oscars: best picture, best director, best actress, best film editing and best original screenplay.
BEST PICTURE (Read more)
"Anora"
The story of a New York sex worker who gets a chance at a new life when she marries a wealthy Russian client on a whim, won five Academy Awards, including the coveted best picture Oscar.
BEST ACTRESS (Read more)
Mikey Madison,"Anora"
Mikey Madison claimed her first Academy Award, winning best actress for her role as a sex worker who marries the son of a Russian oligarch in the drama "Anora."
BEST ACTOR (Read more)
Adrien Brody,"The Brutalist"
Adrien Brody completed his return to the top of Hollywood's A-list, winning the second best actor Oscar of his career for his searing portrayal of a Hungarian architect who emigrates to America after World War II in "The Brutalist."
BEST DIRECTOR (Read more)
Sean Baker, "Anora"
Filmmaker Sean Baker won the Academy Award for best director for "Anora," a film about an exotic dancer and sex worker who has the chance of a Cinderella story when she marries the son of a Russian oligarch.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (Read more)
Zoe Saldana,"Emilia Perez"
Zoe Saldana won the Oscar for best supporting actress for her role as a Mexico City lawyer and fixer for a former drug lord in the crime drama and musical "Emilia Perez."
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (Read more)
Kieran Culkin, "A Real Pain"
Kieran Culkin won the award for playing a motor-mouthed American tourist in "A Real Pain."
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
"Anora"
"Anora," a story about a sex worker who gets a shot at a Cinderella story, landed the award for original screenplay and film editing.
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
"Conclave"
The papal intrigue film was written by British author-playwright Peter Straughan, based on the 2016 novel of the same name by British novelist Robert Harris.
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
"Flow"
The independent film "Flow" beat “The Wild Robot” for best animated feature film Oscar, securing the first Academy Award for Latvia and its Latvian director Gints Zilbalodis.
BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM
"In the Shadow of the Cypress"
Iranian filmmakers Shirin Sohani and Hossein Molayemi won their first Academy Award. It was also the second Iranian animated or live-action short film nominated at the Oscars and the first to win.
BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE
"I'm Still Here," Brazil
A Brazilian film about a family torn apart by the military dictatorship that ruled Brazil for more than two decades won the best international film.
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
"No Other Land"
The collaboration between Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers follows Palestinian activist Basel Adra as he risks arrest to document the destruction of his hometown, which Israeli soldiers are tearing down to use as a military training zone, at the southern edge of the West Bank.
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT
"The Only Girl in the Orchestra"
The short tell the story of trailblazer Orin O'Brien, who fell in love with classical music as a young teen and eventually became the first female musician hired full-time by the New York Philharmonic.
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
"The Brutalist"
First-time Academy Award nominee Daniel Blumberg took home the trophy for original score for “The Brutalist.”
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
"El Mal" from "Emilia Perez"
“El Mal” by Clement Ducol, Camille and Jacques Audiard has won the Oscar for best original song.
BEST SOUND
"Dune: Part Two"
“Dune: Part Two” won for both visual effects and sound, and its sandworm — arguably the star of the night — figured into multiple gags throughout the evening.
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
"Wicked"
The biggest box-office hit among the best picture nominees won awards for production design and costume design.
BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM
"I"m Not a Robot"
The award went to Victoria Warmerdam’s darkly comic tale about a woman trying to convince her computer that she is human. It is the second film released by magazine The New Yorker to be honored with an Oscar.
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
"The Brutalist"
Brady Corbet’s sprawling postwar epic “The Brutalist,” shot in VistaVision, won for its cinematography, by Lol Crawley.
BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
"The Substance"
Best makeup and hairstyling went to “The Substance" for its gory creations of beauty and body horror.
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
"Wicked"
Paul Tazewell became the first Black man to win an Oscar for costume design for his work on “Wicked.”
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
"Dune: Part Two"
“Dune: Part Two” won for both visual effects and sound, and its sandworm — arguably the star of the night — figured into multiple gags throughout the evening.
BEST FILM EDITING
"Anora"
"Anora," a story about a sex worker who gets a shot at a Cinderella story, landed the award for original screenplay and film editing.
Separately, Sing Tao News Corporation chairman Karson Choi Ka-tsan and his wife Irene Wang attended the Oscars night.
The couple, alongside Rolex Greater China CEO Maxim Lamarre and his wife, joined the annual gala.
(Staff reporter, Reuters and AFP)





+3



















