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‘KPop Demon Hunters,’ Amy Madigan, Sean Penn win early awards at Oscars

2026-03-16 - 01:04

Amy Madigan poses with the award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for ‘Weapons’ during the the 98th annual Academy Awards ceremony at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, California, USA, 15 March 2026. EPA/ LOS ANGELES: Amy Madigan who starred in ‘Weapons’, Sean Penn — who played an obsessed military officer in ‘One Battle After Another’ — and the hit animated film ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ won some of the first Academy Awards on Sunday as Hollywood’s annual celebration got underway. The 75-year-old Madigan, who played the wacky Aunt Gladys, appeared thrilled as she took the stage in the Dolby Theatre to accept her trophy for best supporting actress. She earned the award 40 years after her first Oscar nomination. In her remarks, Madigan thanked “Weapons” director Zach Cregger. “He just wrote a dream part and he just let me grab it by the throat,” Madigan said. Sean Penn seen during the UK premiere of ‘One Battle After Another’ in London. (EPA Images pic) Hollywood veteran Sean Penn won his third acting Oscar on Sunday for his supporting role as an obsessed military officer in the political thriller “One Battle After Another.” Penn, 65, plays Colonel Steven Lockjaw, a white nationalist who is in love with a Black revolutionary while hating everything she and her family stand for. He “flexes his muscles, grits his teeth, and growls his lines, but somehow threads the needle between truth and caricature,” Brian Tallerico wrote in his review on rogerebert.com. Penn previously won best actor for “Mystic River” in 2004 and “Milk” in 2009. Friends with director Paul Thomas Anderson since the 1990s, he had only worked with him once before, in “Licorice Pizza.” “Because of Paul’s movie, I’m in a stage of liking acting,” he told W magazine. “But I’ve always got carpentry to fall back on. And surfing.” This year’s other supporting actor nominees were Benicio Del Toro, also for “One Battle After Another,” Stellan Skarsgård for “Sentimental Value,” Delroy Lindo for “Sinners,” and Jacob Elordi for “Frankenstein.” “KPop Demon Hunters,” a Netflix movie that became a global phenomenon, was named best animated feature. Host Conan O’Brien opened the show by joking that he was honoured to be “the last human host” of the awards at a time when Hollywood is worried about artificial intelligence taking over jobs. On a serious note, O’Brien said he hoped the show would offer a sense of optimism. He noted that nominees hailed from 31 countries on six continents. “Let us celebrate not because we think all is well but because we work and hope for better,” O’Brien said. The glitzy celebration, Hollywood’s most over-the-top gala of the year, took place as the U.S. wages war on Iran. Security was tight in and around the ceremony. Organizers said they were working closely with the FBI and Los Angeles police after a federal warning of a possible Iranian threat against California, though authorities have cited no specific or credible danger to the Academy Awards. Attendees had to cross through several traffic checkpoints and go through metal detectors to make their way to the Dolby Theatre. The ceremony featured an unusually unpredictable best picture race between vampire story “Sinners,” with a record 16 nominations, and the darkly comic thriller “One Battle After Another.” The show was televised live on Walt Disney’s ABC and streamed on Hulu. The ceremony masked the unease in the film business over where movies are being made as studios chase tax incentives and lower costs elsewhere in the US and overseas, weakening Hollywood’s grip on production. Warner Bros, the studio behind “One Battle” and “Sinners,” is in the process of being sold to Paramount Skydance in a deal that will narrow the ranks of major film distributors. A media watchdog group, Free Press, circulated a roving billboard around Hollywood over the weekend airing its opposition to the merger. Workers in front of and behind the camera are worried artificial intelligence will limit job opportunities and stifle creativity and risk-taking. A potential for surprises This year’s awards contest held an unusually high potential for surprises. The race for best actor is an especially unpredictable one, pitting Timothée Chalamet against Leonardo DiCaprio and Michael B. Jordan. Chalamet had been considered a frontrunner for his acclaimed performance as a ping-pong hustler in “Marty Supreme,” but his prospects seemed to dim over an awards-season campaign featuring a streetwear line and a giant blimp and remarks dismissing ballet and opera. “One Battle After Another,” starring DiCaprio as a one-time political radical now parenting a teenager, was seen as the frontrunner for best picture after stacking up trophy after trophy at recent ceremonies. But “Sinners,” a celebration of blues music and Black culture in the Segregation-era US South starring Jordan, made a late surge with a win this month at the Actor Awards. Winners of the gold Oscar statuettes are chosen by the roughly 10,000 actors, producers, directors and ‍film craftspeople who make up the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The Academy took steps this year to try to ensure voters have actually watched the movies they are voting on. The online balloting system for the first time tracks whether a voter has streamed each movie. Voters, however, can check a box to say they watched the movie elsewhere outside the Academy website.

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