Five top moments from the Oscars

The Academy Awards ceremony was rife with impressive performances, quippy one-liners, high fashion and tearful acceptance speeches
Paul Thomas Anderson and Sara Murphy with cast and crew accepting the best picture award for ‘One Battle After Another’ during the 98th Oscars at Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on Sunday. Photos: AFP

This year’s Oscars saw One Battle After Another cap its outstanding awards season by taking home the night’s top prize for best picture, as Sinners also won big.

It was a particularly competitive night rife with impressive performances, quippy one-liners, high fashion on the red carpet and tearful acceptance speeches.

Here’s a rundown of the night’s highlights:

Musical moments… and a rare tie

The night’s first musical number recreated an extraordinary scene from vampire horror flick Sinners, a montage that traces the history of Black music from West Africa to the Delta Blues to hip-hop.

Actor Miles Caton led other castmates in the rendition of I Lied to You, joined by other A-list performers such as ballerina Misty Copeland − who danced despite recently undergoing a hip replacement.

Later on, the three singers from the fictional girl group HUNTR/X from KPop Demon Hunters belted out a rendition of Golden.

South Korean-US singer Ejae posing with the Oscar for best music (original song) for Golden from the animated film KPop Demon Hunters.

The smash hit then got its flowers, taking home the prize for best original song and becoming the first K-pop song to win the category.

The Oscars audience also witnessed a rare tie: two films won the prize for best live-action short, Two People Exchanging Saliva and The Singers.

“You just ruined 22 million Oscar pools,” said O’Brien, after waiting for the double acceptance speeches to end.

Politics take the stage

As he presented the award for best international film, past winner Javier Bardem made a statement: “No to war and Free Palestine.”

Norwegian family dramedy Sentimental Value won the prize.

In his speech, film-maker Joachim Trier paraphrased African-American author James Baldwin, who he said “makes us remember that all adults are responsible for all children”.

“Let’s not vote for politicians who don’t take this seriously into account.”

Danish-Norwegian film director and writer Joachim Trier accepting the award for Best International Feature Film for Sentimental Value.

Top winner Paul Thomas Anderson said he made One Battle After Another − the top winner with six prizes − for his kids as an apology “for the housekeeping mess that we left in this world we’re handing off to them”.

“But also with the encouragement that they will be the generation that hopefully brings us some common sense and decency,” he said.

And Pavel Talankin, the co-director and protagonist of Mr Nobody Against Putin, said the world should “stop all of these wars now”.

Farewell to the greats

A lengthy In Memoriam segment was given ample airtime after a year that took a number of film legends with it.

Billy Crystal − himself a veteran Oscars host − delivered a heartfelt tribute to his late friend and regular collaborator Rob Reiner, who was murdered along with his wife at their Los Angeles home late last year.

A crew of people Reiner famously worked with, including Meg Ryan, then appeared onstage.

A who’s who of some of Hollywood’s heaviest hitters who died in the last year were also honored, including Diane Keaton, Catherine O’Hara and Robert Redford.

The 83-year-old icon Barbra Streisand sang for her friend Redford, delivering a few bars from The Way We Were for her co-star in the film of the same name.

“Bob had real backbone, on and off the screen,” said Streisand. “I called him an intellectual cowboy who blazed his own trail.”

Promo opportunity

The Oscars were broadcast by the network ABC, which is owned by Disney, and organisers took the opportunity to advertise the studio’s upcoming films.

While presenting awards, Sigourney Weaver and Pedro Pascal − stars of this year’s Star Wars film The Mandalorian & Grogu − performed a bit that featured Grogu (also known as Baby Yoda) in the audience.

US actress Sigourney Weaver and Chilean-US actor Pedro Pascal.

And Vogue doyenne Anna Wintour alongside Oscar winner Anne Hathaway delivered a humorous sketch that doubled as promo for the forthcoming The Devil Wears Prada 2, to be released this spring.

Marvel cinematic universe stars Chris Evans and Robert Downey Jr also reunited onstage ahead of the release of Avengers: Doomsday later this year.

Conan’s jokes

Host Conan O’Brien nodded to politics and pulled a few punches, some with global appeal and a few one-liners for the insiders.

“It’s great to be back hosting the Oscars. Last year, when I hosted, Los Angeles was on fire. But this year, everything’s going great,” he joked, pausing for effect.

O’Brien also had a pointed industry remark for Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos: “It’s his first time in a theatre.”

US comedian host Conan O’Brien performing onstage during the Oscars ceremony.

He also alluded to the Jeffrey Epstein drama.

“It’s the first time since 2012 that there are no British actors nominated for best actor or best actress,” O’Brien said. “A British spokesperson said: ‘Yeah, well, at least we arrest our paedophiles’.”

Marty Supreme star Timothée Chalamet, who left empty-handed, also got a notable roast, as O’Brien took shots at the actor who recently disparaged ballet and opera.

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