Oscar statuette ©AMPAS


2025 (98th Annual Awards)
Winners Only

Listed below are the Academy Award winners for the year 2025 (non-winning nominations have been omitted from this list). Click on the name of a film, person or song in the list to display more information about that film, person or song Or, click on a year in the column on the right to display the winners from that year.

Best Picture

Winner markerOne Battle After Another, A Ghoulardi Film Company Production; Warner Bros. Adam Somner, Sara Murphy and Paul Thomas Anderson, Producers.

Actor in a Leading Role

Winner markerMichael B. Jordan in Sinners, A Proximity Media Production; Warner Bros.

Actress in a Leading Role

Winner markerJessie Buckley in Hamnet, A Hera Pictures/Neal Street/Amblin Entertainment in assoc. with Book of Shadows Production; Focus Features.

Actor in a Supporting Role

Winner markerSean Penn in One Battle After Another, A Ghoulardi Film Company Production; Warner Bros.

Actress in a Supporting Role

Winner markerAmy Madigan in Weapons, Warner Bros.

Directing

Winner markerOne Battle After Another, A Ghoulardi Film Company Production; Warner Bros. Paul Thomas Anderson.

Animated Feature Film

Winner markerKPop Demon Hunters, Netflix. Maggie Kang, Chris Appelhans and Michelle L.M. Wong.

Casting

Winner markerOne Battle After Another, A Ghoulardi Film Company Production; Warner Bros. Cassandra Kulukundis.

Cinematography

Winner markerSinners, A Proximity Media Production; Warner Bros. Autumn Durald Arkapaw.

Costume Design

Winner markerFrankenstein, A Netflix/Double Dare You/Demilo Films/Bluegrass 7 Production; Netflix. Kate Hawley.

Documentary

(Feature)

Winner markerMr. Nobody Against Putin, A PINK Production; PINK. David Borenstein, Pavel Talankin, Helle Faber and Alžběta Karásková.

(Short Subject)

Winner markerAll the Empty Rooms, Netflix. Joshua Seftel and Conall Jones.

Film Editing

Winner markerOne Battle After Another, A Ghoulardi Film Company Production; Warner Bros. Andy Jurgensen.

International Feature Film

Winner markerSentimental Value, A Mer Film/Eye Eye Pictures/MK/Lumen/Zentropa/ Komplizen Film/BBC Film Production; Neon. (Norway)

Makeup and Hairstyling

Winner markerFrankenstein, A Netflix/Double Dare You/Demilo Films/Bluegrass 7 Production; Netflix. Mike Hill, Jordan Samuel and Cliona Furey.

Music

(Original Score)

Winner markerSinners, A Proximity Media Production; Warner Bros. Ludwig Goransson.

(Original Song)

Winner markerGolden from KPop Demon Hunters, Netflix. Music and lyric by EJAE, Mark Sonnenblick, Joong Gyu Kwak, Yu Han Lee, Hee Dong Nam, Jeong Hoon Seon and Teddy Park.

Production Design

Winner markerFrankenstein, A Netflix/Double Dare You/Demilo Films/Bluegrass 7 Production; Netflix. Production design by Tamara Deverell; set decoration by Shane Vieau.

Short Films

(Animated)

Winner markerThe Girl Who Cried Pearls, National Film Board of Canada. Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski.

(Live Action)

Winner markerThe Singers, Netflix. Sam A. Davis and Jack Piatt.
Winner markerTwo People Exchanging Saliva, Canal+/The New Yorker. Alexandre Singh and Natalie Musteata.

Sound

Winner markerF1, An Apple Original Films/Monolith Pictures/Jerry Bruckheimer/Plan B Entertainment/Dawn Apollo Films Production; Apple. Gareth John, Al Nelson, Gwendolyn Yates Whittle, Gary A. Rizzo and Juan Peralta.

Visual Effects

Winner markerAvatar: Fire and Ash, Walt Disney. Joe Letteri, Richard Baneham, Eric Saindon and Daniel Barrett.

Writing

(Adapted Screenplay)

Winner markerOne Battle After Another, A Ghoulardi Film Company Production; Warner Bros. Written by Paul Thomas Anderson.

(Original Screenplay)

Winner markerSinners, A Proximity Media Production; Warner Bros. Written by Ryan Coogler.

Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award

Winner markerDolly Parton

Honorary Award

Winner markerDebbie Allen [Statuette]
Winner markerTom Cruise [Statuette]
Winner markerWynn Thomas [Statuette]

Scientific and Technical Award

(Scientific and Engineering Award)

Winner markerTo Jamie Caliri and Dyami Caliri for the design, engineering and continuing development of the Dragonframe software suite. Dragonframe represents an expertly designed suite of integrated tools that has transformed stop-motion animation, eliminating fragmented, error-prone methods while enabling precision at scale.

(Technical Achievement Award)

Winner markerTo Brent Bell for the research and development of safe, reliable and effective small lead-free pyrotechnic devices used extensively in motion picture productions throughout the world. Brent Bell at De La Mare Engineering, Inc. successfully modernized the industry standard for bullet hits by engineering a high-output, lead-free product line through extensive chemical research and the development of specialized and precise manufacturing processes.
Winner markerTo Josef Köhler for developing the first small lead-free pyrotechnic devices available at scale. Josef Köhler Pyrotechnics set a critical precedent by overcoming significant chemical engineering hurdles to provide the film industry with a non-toxic, low-flash alternative that preserved the use of practical bullet hits while meeting rigorous new European safety and environmental standards.
Winner markerTo Ian Medwell for developing small lead-free pyrotechnic devices used extensively for motion picture production throughout the United Kingdom. Sterling Pyrotechnics’ high-performance, lead-free alternative to traditional squibs provides the film industry with a non-toxic, repeatable solution for practical bullet effects that maintains technical compatibility with legacy devices.
Winner markerTo Andrea Weidlich, for her research on layered materials and implementation of the layering operators and BSDFs in Wētā FX’s Manuka renderer. Weidlich’s research and the methods underlying Manuka’s layered material system have been influential across the visual effects industry and have allowed Wētā FX to raise the bar for photorealism.
Winner markerTo Luca Fascione for the initial design and development of the layered materials system at Wētā FX. The Manuka renderer’s efficient and flexible system for layering materials has unlocked workflows that have allowed Wētā FX to scale to ever-larger productions while giving artists both creative freedom and physical accuracy.
Winner markerTo Vincent Dedun and Emmanuel Turquin for the design, architecture and engineering, and to Jonathan Moulin for the design and creative vision of Lama at Industrial Light & Magic. Lama provides an artist-friendly approach to composing materials built from layers representing distinct physical phenomena. Its modular, carefully curated design allows look development artists to create unique, physically plausible appearances without writing shader code. Its ease of use has expanded and accelerated shading workflows at Industrial Light & Magic and led to broader industry adoption via its inclusion in Pixar’s RenderMan.
Winner markerTo Josh Bainbridge and Nathan Walster for the design, architecture and engineering of the layered shading system at Framestore. Framestore’s layered shading system was among the first to enable its users to generate novel, realistic appearances in a modular workflow by combining material layers in a physically plausible fashion. Its development has enabled Framestore to deliver diverse looks across a broad creative catalog of filmmakers’ requirements.
Winner markerTo Bret St.Clair and Marc-Andre Davignon, for the design and engineering of the suite of brushing and patching tools, and to Pav Grochola and Edmond Boulet-Gilly, for the design and engineering of the Superdraw and Kismet linework tools. These tools at Sony Pictures Imageworks enabled the large-scale application of a wide variety of custom artistic styles across animated features that inspired the industry.
Winner markerTo Baptiste Van Opstal, Jeff Budsberg, Michael Losure, John Lanz and Eszter Offertaler for their contributions to the stylized animation toolset at DreamWorks Animation. From linework authoring and animation to novel brushing and stamping methods, this toolset facilitates the wide range of unique art styles and painterly effects seen across DreamWorks Animation films while providing artistic control at every stage of production.
Winner markerTo Benjamin Graf for the design, engineering and development of dxRevive Pro. dxRevive Pro has transformed modern dialog restoration practices, combining noise reduction, layered separation and resynthesis to achieve results that maintain the realism, continuity and the emotional fidelity of on-set performances thereby reducing the need for ADR in the postproduction process.
Winner markerTo John Ellwood for the innovative rules and heuristics underlying the metadata and timecode matching, and to Jeff Bloom for the groundbreaking waveform matching in the Titan auto-assembly software for digital audio. Titan pioneered the auto-assembly of digital audio, eliminating the need for sound editors to manually align their sessions, and stood as the benchmark for many subsequent systems.
Winner markerTo Marc Joel Specter for the design and development of the Kraken Dialogue Editors Toolkit, enabling precise audio assembly. With an intuitive user interface and transcription utility that provides audio asset management, enabling direct access to edit decision lists and audio session files, Kraken expedites the assembly of audio files while providing visual aids to find and resolve issues.
Winner markerTo Justin Webster for the design and engineering of Matchbox, a system for audio and video matching that enables auto-reconform. Providing detailed insight into differences between audio and video files, even in the absence of metadata, Matchbox enables rapid application of changes in post-production while preserving previous creative work.
Winner markerTo Paul Debevec for his pioneering work in high dynamic range, image-based lighting techniques. Debevec demonstrated the advantages of high dynamic range image-based lighting, and, through advocacy of the approach, led the industry to embrace new workflows. This has enabled artists to work more productively and improved the realism of computer graphics imagery in feature films.