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Friday, January 23, 2026

Have an Arctic Blast! Here's where to stream Oscars' Best Picture nominees in your cozy home.


Staying at home this winter weekend? TBR has rounded up the Top 10 Best Picture Oscar nominees and where you can watch and stream them so you can enjoy from the comfort of home during the Arctic Blast of 2026.

THE 10 BEST PICTURE NOMINEES

SINNERS


This stylish vampire movie sucked up a record-breaking 16 Oscar nominations, the most of any film ever. Ryan Coogler’s (Black Panther, Fruitvale Station) slow-burn story leads to a barn-burner of a finale.

Where to watch: HBO Max or VOD to rent/buy

Nominated for: Best picture, director, actor, supporting actor, supporting actress, original screenplay, production design, costume design, cinematography, editing, makeup and hairstyling, sound, visual effects, score, song, casting.




ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER


With 13 nominations, Paul Thomas Anderson (There Will Be Blood, Boogie Nights) delivers one of the best sustained pieces of filmmaking — ever. It felt like one hour. At full volume, it’s about defying fascism and racism, but in quiet moments, it's a tender father-daughter story. Somehow it is both a thunderous thriller and intimate drama, switching gears with comic precision.

Where to watch: HBO Max or 
VOD to rent/buy

Nominated for: Best picture, director, actor, supporting actor, supporting actress, adapted screenplay, production design, cinematography, editing, sound, score, casting.





SENTIMENTAL VALUE


Director Joachim Trier’s (The Worst Person in the World) helms this Norwegian family drama with an exceptional ensemble cast. It is slow, character-rich and moving. The subtitles are free.

Where to watch: 
VOD to rent/buy

Nominated for: Best picture, director, actress, supporting actor, supporting actress (2), original screenplay, editing, international feature.





H
AMNET

Director-writer Chloe Zhao's (Nomadland) adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s novel about Shakespeare’s son, Hamnet, earned eight Oscar nominations. This is not simply a film that “makes you cry.” It is a full sensory passage through love, family and mourning that ultimately opens into something rare and transcendent. Quite poetically, the theater is alive with power here. Hamnet is a story of loss that somehow bursts with life. A reminder that from unbearable grief can come lasting beauty. 

Where to watch: Currently in theaters, which is a must for this one.

Nominated for: Best picture, director (Chloé Zhao), actress (Jessie Buckley), adapted screenplay, casting, costume design, production design, original score.





FRANKENSTEIN

Director Guillermo del Toro’s (Shape of Water, Pans Labyrinth) sumptuous gothic take on Mary Shelley’s classic is alive in distinct design, and ranks as a major contender in all the craft categories.

Where to watch: Netflix

Nominated for: Best picture, supporting actor (Jacob Elordi), adapted screenplay, production design, costume design, cinematography, makeup and hairstyling, sound, score.






TRAIN DREAMS


Director Clint Bentley (Sing Sing, Jockey) brings us the story of logger Robert (Joel Edgerton), a would-be-forgotten everyman. More than telling this man's story, Bentley is intent on celebrating a life even if it’s a quiet one. This lyrical period piece blends breathtaking visuals with heartfelt storytelling.

Where to watch: Netflix

Nominated for: Best picture, adapted screenplay, cinematography, original song.





BUGONIA


Yorgos Lanthimos (Poor Things, The Favourite) reunites a third time with Emma Stone for a surreal journey that’s as funny as it is alien.

Where to watch: Peacock or VOD to rent/buy

Nominated for: Best picture, actress (Emma Stone), adapted screenplay, original score.





THE SECRET AGENT


A Brazilian political thriller with a powerful central performance by Wagner Moura. It has earned multiple nominations and has a leg up on all the international feature nominees.

Where to watch: In theaters now.

Nominated for: Best picture, best international feature, best actor (Wagner Moura), casting.





MARTY SUPREME


A24’s hyped hit starring Timothée Chalamet either impressed or exhausted the academy to gather nine nominations across acting, technical and major categories.

Where to watch: In theaters now. 

Nominated for: Best picture, actor (Timothée Chalamet), director (Josh Safdie), adapted screenplay, casting, costume design, cinematography, editing, production design.






F1


I’m not sure why the F1 this fun popcorn movie is in the top ten, but voters must agree that it’s high-octane and visually stunning, delivering on spectacle in an old-fashioned, Top Gun kind of way. It's on track to win editing and sound.

Where to watch: Apple TV or 
VOD to rent/buy

Nominated for: Best picture, editing, sound, visual effects.





Bonus: Best Documentary Features worth streaming right now

If you love peek-behind-the-scenes or secret camera footage, these nominees deliver gripping real life drama:


The Perfect Neighbor

Uses police bodycam footage to examine the killing of Ajike Ownes and the laws and biases at play.

Where to watch: Netflix




The Alabama Solution

Explores a troubling prison system through secretly recorded footage by incarcerated men.

Where to watch: HBO Max




Mr. Nobody Against Putin

A Russian teacher captures how propaganda and patriotism are instilled in children during wartime.

Where to watch: VOD to rent/buy





Come See Me in the Good Light


An intimate portrait of an artist at work set against political unrest.

Where to watch: Apple TV or VOD to rent/buy









Monday, January 19, 2026

To be or not to be; who gets Oscar noms this Thursday?


It’s almost time to dust off that movie watch list. Deep-picks Danielle Brooks (The Color Purple), Lewis Pullman (Thunderbolts) and the Academy announce its Oscars nominees across all categories Thursday morning, but you don’t have to wait around for the envelope. With a track record of 82.7% accuracy at predicting nominees, here are my picks for an Oscar race that’s poised to shower One Battle After Another, Sinners, Hamnet, Frankenstein and plenty more with love. It’s a year full of vampires, zombies, monsters and demon slayers and somehow I still have a few monster favorites.


Some things to watch for: 24% of Oscar voters live outside the U.S., sequels from Wicked to Avatar will have a bad morning and voters just love Guillermo del Toro. And Sinners may be the most nominated film in all of history if it gets to 15, given it definitely will take a nomination in a new category, Best Casting in addition to almost all categories. The record for the most Oscar nominations for a film in one year is 14 (All About Eve (1950), Titanic (1997), and La La Land (2016). Nominations for the 98th Academy Awards will be announced on Thursday, January 22, 2026, at 5:30 a.m. PT (8:30 a.m. ET).

The nominees will be:


Best Picture

  1. Bugonia

  2. Frankenstein

  3. Hamnet

  4. It Was Just an Accident 

  5. Marty Supreme

  6. One Battle After Another

  7. Sentimental Value

  8. Sinners

  9. The Secret Agent

  10. Train Dreams

Surprise: Weapons
Shocker: F1


Best Director

  1. Ryan Coogler (Sinners)

  2. Jafar Panahi (It Was Just an Accident)

  3. Guillermo del Toro (Frankenstein)

  4. Paul Thomas Anderson (One Battle After Another)

  5. Chloe Zhao (Hamnet)

Surprise: Josh Safdie (Marty Supreme)

Shocker: Joachim Trier (Sentimental Value)



Best Actor

  1. Timothee Chalamet (Marty Supreme)

  2. Leonardo DiCaprio (One Battle After Another)

  3. Michael B. Jordan (Sinners)

  4. Wagner Moura (The Secret Agent)

  5. Jesse Plemens (Bugonia)

Surprise: Ethan Hawk (BlueMoon) or Joel Edgerton (Train Dreams)
Shocker: Dwayne Johnson (The Smashing Machine)



Best Actress

  1. Jessie Buckley (Hamnet)

  2. Rose Byrne (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You)

  3. Chase Infiniti (One Battle After Another)

  4. Renate Reinsve (Sentimental Value)

  5. Emma Stone (Bugonia)

Surprise: Kate Hudson (Song Sung Blue)
Shocker: Eva Victor (Sorry, Baby)



Best Supporting Actor

  1. Benicio Del Toro (One Battle After Another)

  2. Jacob Elordi (Frankenstein)

  3. Paul Mescal (Hamnet)

  4. Sean Penn (One Battle After Another)

  5. Stellan Skarsgard (Sentimental Value)

Surprise: Adam Sandler (Jay Kelly)
Shocker: Miles Canton (Sinners)



Best Supporting Actress

  1. Odessa A'zion (Marty Supreme)

  2. Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas (Sentimental Value)

  3. Amy Madigan (Weapons)

  4. Wuni Mosaku (Sinners)

  5. Teyana Taylor (One Battle After Another)

Surprise: Ariana Grande (Wicked: For Good)

Shocker: Elle Fanning (Sentimental Value)


Best Original Screenplay

  1. It Was Just An Accident

  2. Marty Supreme

  3. Sentimental Value

  4. Sinners

  5. Weapons


Best Adapted Screenplay

  1. Bugonia

  2. Frankenstein

  3. Hamnet

  4. One Battle After Another

  5. Train Dreams


Best Animated Feature

  1. Arco

  2. K-Pop Demon Hunters

  3. Demon Slayer

  4. Little Amélie or the Character of Rain

  5. Zootopia 2




Best Casting

  1. Hamnet

  2. Marty Supreme

  3. One Battler After Another

  4. Sinners

  5. Sirat



Best International Feature

  1. It Was Just An Accident (France), Neon

  2. No Other Choice (South Korea), Neon

  3. Sentimental Value (Norway), Neon

  4. Sirat (Spain), Neon

  5. The Secret Agent (Brazil), Neon


Best Documentary

  1. 2000 Meters to Andriivka, PBS

  2. The Alabama Solution, HBO

  3. Apocalypse in the Tropics, Netflix

  4. My Undesirable Friends, No distribution

  5. The Perfect Neighbour, Netflix


Best Cinematography

  1. Frankenstein

  2. Hamnet

  3. One Battle After Another

  4. Sinners

  5. Train Dreams



Best Production Design

  1. Avatar: Fire & Ash

  2. Frankenstein

  3. Hamnet

  4. Marty Supreme

  5. Sinners


Best Film Editing

  1. F1

  2. Hamnet

  3. Marty Supreme

  4. One Battle After Another

  5. Sinners


Best Score

  1. Frankenstein

  2. Hamnet

  3. One Battle After Another

  4. Sinners

  5. Sirat



Best Song

  1. Dear Me (Diane Warren: Relentless)

  2. Dream as One (Avatar: Fire & Ash)

  3. I Lied to You (Sinners)

  4. The Girl in the Bubble (Wicked: For Good)

  5. Train Dreams (Train Dreams)



Best Sound

  1. F1

  2. Frankenstein

  3. One Battle After Another

  4. Sinners

  5. Sirat


Best Costume

  1. Frankenstein

  2. Hamnet

  3. Hedda

  4. Sinners

  5. Wicked: for Good


Best Visual Effects

  1. Avatar: Fire and Ash

  2. F1

  3. Frankenstein

  4. Sinners

  5. Lost Bus


Best Documentary Short

  1. All the Empty Rooms

  2. All the Walls Came Down

  3. Armed Only with a Camera

  4. Cashing Out

  5. The Devil is Busy


Best Animated Short

  1. Autokar

  2. Butterfly (Papillon)

  3. Cardboard

  4. Eiru

  5. The Girl Who Cried Pearls


Best Live Action Short

  1. Ado

  2. Amerla

  3. Beyond Silence

  4. Butterfly on a Wheel

  5. The Boy with White Skin


Best Makeup & Hairstyling

  1. Frankenstein

  2. Kokuho

  3. Sinners

  4. The Smashing Machine

  5. Wicked: for Good



Sunday, January 11, 2026

5 Things To Watch For During Tonight's Golden Globes (and who will win)


The Golden Globes are a show that has always been a little questionable in purpose, intentionally messy in execution and yet somehow impossible to quit. For years, it hovered in the background as something you flipped to during NFL playoffs just to see gave a drunk speech. This year, withh a can't-miss host and a genuinely wild slate of nominees, the Globes might actually deserve your full attention again.

Spoiler alert. Here’s what to expect.
 

1. Nikki Glaser will wildly entertain and mildly disappoint and that’s okay


Nikki Glaser set an absurdly high bar last year. Ratings went up, critics were happy and the show briefly avoided extinction. Long story. That bar is now so high there’s basically no way she tops it, whether she plays it safe or swings harder. But here’s the thing. She is still the best awards show host working right now and even her off night is better than most people’s career highlights.
 

2. Horror is officially having a monster year


This may be the first time serious awards categories are openly embracing horror in a big way. We’re talking a vampire film as a major drama frontrunner, a zombie/witch film dominating supporting actress chatter and an actual monster performance putting Jacob Elordi in the supporting actor conversation. Animated horror even shows up with K Pop Demon Hunters. 

Horrifying Predictions:

Wins for Sinners 
Best Motion Picture Drama
Best Original Score
Box Office Achievement
Maybe Michael B. Jordan, Best Actor, 

Wins for Weapons
Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture: Amy Madigan

Wins for K Pop Demon Hunters
Best Animated Feature
Best Original Song Golden


3. International films are everywhere and yes, you will be reading subtitles


Non-English language films are no longer confined to their own corner. The newer voting body has made it clear they are paying attention to global cinema and it shows. Expect to hear titles like Sentimental Value, The Secret Agent, It Was Just an Accident, No Other Choice and Sirāt popping up in major categories. 

Predicted winners:
The Secret Agent
Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama: Wagner Moura

Sentimental Value
Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture: Stellan Skarsgård

It Was Just an Accident
Best Non English Language Film
If you see the room stand, here's why: Director Jafar Panahi has faced repeated arrests and imprisonment by Iranian authorities over the years for his filmmaking and political stance making the film’s themes resonate directly with reality.



4. The speeches absolutely matter this year


The Globes are looser, funnier and less formal than the Oscars which is exactly why the speeches matter so much. Even though the Globes share zero voters with the Academy, it’s impossible not to read these moments as momentum setters. If you remember last year, you remember Demi Moore and how a great speech can launch an awards run. A bad one can stop it cold. One of the tightest races this year is Actress, with Oscar frontrunners split across drama and comedy here. This is the speech to watch if you want clues.

Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama: Jessie Buckley, Hamnet
Best Actress in a Motion Picture Comedy or Musical: Rose Byrne for If I Had Legs I’d Kick You



5. Warner Bros will clean up


Despite my personal love for Hamnet and how it should be the filmaker choice of the year in any race where it's not up against One Battle, this looks like a huge night for Warner Bros. They have heavyweight contenders across multiple categories and the math is on their side.

Predictions:

One Battle After Another (Warner Brothers)
Best Motion Picture Comedy or Musical
Best Director
Best Screenplay
Potential Supporting wins for Teyana Taylor and Benicio Del Toro

Sinners 
(Warner Brothers)
Best Motion Picture Drama
Best Original Score
Box Office Achievement

Those are the five film things, but I forgot...


6. Yes there’s a podcast award now, and there will be television awards too

There will also be a podcast award for the first time ever. SmartLess feels like the time-earned, popular favorite while Good Hang with Amy Poehler has longtime Globes love. Either way you can expect a bit that makes watching live worth it. 

As for TV, most winners will echo Emmy season with one twist. Rhea Seehorn enters the conversation for Pluribus and likely wins, and for show it's up against The Pitt in a very tight race.

The Ten Buck Preview: The Golden Globes are back to being a genuinely fun night. Pour something good, make NFL the flipping channel, and enjoy the chaos.