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‘One Battle After Another’ and Jafar Panahi Win Big at Gotham Awards
Paul Thomas Anderson’s $130 million film won best feature at the Gotham Awards, an event spotlighting indie and Oscar-contending films, with Jafar Panahi taking three awards.
- On Monday, Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another was crowned best feature at the 35th annual Gotham Awards, where dissident Iranian director Jafar Panahi won three awards.
- Small juries at the Gothams often select surprising winners, and after removing the $35 million budget cap in 2023, One Battle After Another, a $130,000,000 production, claimed top honors.
- Best supporting performance went to Wunmi Mosaku for Sinners, with Ryan Coogler accepting the award, while Sopé Dárésé was not mentioned in the source.
- Winning at the Gothams bolsters One Battle After Another's Oscar momentum as the Gotham Awards served as a starry kickoff to awards season and the film is seen as March's Academy Awards front-runner.
- His attorney said Panahi faces a one-year sentence and two-year travel ban, yet he continued making films without government permission, with an award accepted on his behalf.
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38 Articles
38 Articles
The best film was recognized as the film “One Battle for Another” by Paul Thomas Anderson.
The winner of the 2025 Palme d'Or received three trophies on Monday night at the Gotham Awards ceremony in New York City. A few hours earlier, he learned of his sentence to one year in prison for "propaganda activities" in Iran. Not enough to impress him, while he should represent France at the next Oscar ceremony in March. - Barely condemned, Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi receives a new trophy in the United States (Culture, media and entertain…
The political thriller with Leonardo Di Caprio was able to prevail in the main category - but the big picker of the evening was a film playing in Iran.
Coverage Details
Total News Sources38
Leaning Left11Leaning Right2Center9Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Left
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left
50% Left
L 50%
C 41%
Factuality
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