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The Best Actor Oscar Race Is Up For Grabs After Michael B. Jordan’s Upset Over Timothée Chalamet At The Actor Awards

@rockmarooned Published March 2, 2026, 4:30 p.m. ET Where to Stream: Sinners (2025) Powered by Reelgood More On: Oscars 2026 Is ‘The Secret Agent’ Movie Based On a True Story? Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Song Sung Blue’ on Peacock, Where Kate Hudson and Hugh Jackman Deliver an Ebullient Tribute to a Tribute to Neil Diamond New Movies on Streaming: ‘Marty Supreme,’ ‘Is This Thing On?’ + more Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Marty Supreme’ on VOD, a Dangerous Timothee Chalamet-Josh Safdie Joint That’ll Make You Feel Alive If there’s one Oscar category that’s felt consistently sewn up going into the ceremony for the majority of the past, wow, 30 years or so, it’s Best Actor. There have been surprises, for sure; in 2021, for example, the telecast held the award for last, presuming an emotional posthumous victory for Chadwick Boseman to close out the show… only to find that Anthony Hopkins was the actual winner (and not even at the ceremony in person!). Even last year, Adrien Brody’s victory for The Brutalist was hardly a sure thing (and his first win for The Pianist was even less expected). But it’s rare that, with less than two weeks to go until the Oscars, almost all of the nominees seem like they have some kind of a path to victory. And for pretty much the entirety of the 2010s, the hyped-up frontwinner walked away with the award.

This year’s up-for-grabs status was confirmed by the weekend’s Actor Awards, where SAG/AFTRA handed their Best Actor trophy to Michael B. Jordan for his dual role as twin brothers in Sinners. It’s a great choice; Jordan has been consistently excellent but not overexposed since becoming a major movie star, doing particularly great work for frequent collaborator Ryan Coogler. Jordan is also not exactly the conventional-wisdom choice for the Oscar. For a while, that was Timothée Chalamet, who won a Golden Globe for Marty Supreme and, though the Globes have no overlap with Academy membership and are also a huge joke, has been campaigning like hell for months with a fervor worthy of his character.

One might assume a final face-off between Jordan and Chalamet, who also happen to be two of the biggest box-office stars under 50. But there are other nominees who can’t be counted out either, with plenty of comparisons to past winners. It’s also an unusually strong category with five excellent choices, which has not always been the case in recent years. Let’s sort through the list and who each win might recall.

Leonardo DiCaprio, One Battle After Another

Past Winner Precedent: Anthony Hopkins, The Father

Strangely, DiCaprio seems to be the one nominee no one is predicting for the win. On one hand, it makes sense; he got through his Chalamet years and eventually emerged with his Oscar, for The Revenant. On the other, since when does the Academy avoid giving a beloved performer multiple awards? Frances McDormand has three. Emma Stone has two. Tom Hanks won two years in a row! And Anthony Hopkins won multiple decades apart, for a movie far fewer people saw than One Battle After Another. There was no narrative-driven reason to give Hopkins the award; his legacy was assured. But people really loved the performance, so that was that. That would also be how DiCaprio could win for One Battle After Another, and honestly, if I were in the Academy, it’s one I’d be highly tempted to vote for because I just plain loved DiCaprio in angry burnout mode, flopping around looking for a phone charger and raging against his radical compatriots and being a dick to his daughter’s friends. It completes his unofficial American Buffoon Trilogy following Once Upon a Time in Hollywood and Killers of the Flower Moon, and it’s the most touching performance of the three by far. But for whatever reason, this is one of the few categories where Anderson’s film isn’t seen as competitive; DiCaprio winning would be a true shocker.

Past Winner Precedent: Nicolas Cage, Leaving Las Vegas

When nominations were first announced, pundits seemed to think Hawke was the dark-horse spoiler for Chalamet – the veteran who could swoop in and upset the inge-dude through sheer force of filmography. (Hawke and Chalamet are both on their third acting nomination, but Hawke has been around for 40 years.) That narrative seems to have dissipated a bit now that Hawke’s wins have been limited to critics’ groups. But sometimes a critics’ fave playing a gregarious alcoholic can pull through; just look at Nic Cage in Leaving Las Vegas! OK, so that was 30 years ago and widely predicted, but stranger things have happened!

Wagner Moura, The Secret Agent

Past Winner Precedent: Adrien Brody, The Pianist

Chalamet’s fellow Golden Globes winner (Marty Supreme was classified as a comedy, while The Secret Agent was over in drama) is the least famous of this bunch by far, and tied with Jordan for the least-nominated. Yet sometimes that works in an actor’s favor; Adrien Brody beat out an astonishing group of Daniel Day-Lewis, Jack Nicholson, Nicolas Cage, and Michael Caine. The fact that he was the only first-time nominee – really the only non-globally-famous nominee – helped him stand out. Moura does actually have some global fame; he’s won a bunch of awards in his native Brazil, and the Academy is increasingly international, on top of which the Golden Globes did boost his profile. Also, as with Marty Supreme, this is the high-profile category where the movie in question might have the best shot.

Michael B. Jordan, Sinners

Past Winner Precedent: Tom Hanks, Forrest Gump

Jordan gave a charismatic performance with a high degree of technical difficulty (technically, it’s two performances!) in one of the most beloved movies of the year, so it’s not surprising that he’d stay in contention even as later-season contenders have emerged. That’s what unexpectedly ties Jordan to Tom Hanks in Forrest Gump even though the characters are wildly disparate. (They’re all southerners, though!) He’s also got some Jack Nicholson energy in the way he uses his natural movie-star charisma to nonetheless create distinctive characters. So why isn’t he the flat-out frontrunner? I wonder if Sinners will be seen as more of a technical achievement belonging to Ryan Coogler and his below-the-line crew rather than an actors’ showcase. Also, quite unlike Hanks in 1994, this is Jordan’s first nomination, and a certain amount of pointless time-testing seems to be in play for male performers. Speaking of which…

Timothée Chalamet, Marty Supreme

Past Winner Precedent: Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant

Full circle: Chalamet comes across like a new DiCaprio, in that he graduated from teenage roles for impressive directors to box-office bankability while maintaining plenty of artistic cred. He’s actually ahead of DiCaprio in the Oscar department, with three nominations by the age of 30; by this point, Leo only had two. Here’s the rub: He didn’t win until nomination number five, perhaps indicative of a weird Academy bias where under-30 women can win Best Actress without much objection (see Mikey Madison, Jennifer Lawrence and Emma Stone), but the male winners tend to be veterans. In fact, Brody in The Pianist is the only Best Actor winner under 30. Ever. (And he was about a month shy.) Chalamet would be the second-youngest winner ever. Does Chalamet want it too much, did some Marty Supreme-related controversy cause an enthusiasm shortfall as the season went on, or is he still on the faster-than-Leo track to win? It’s a nailbiter for the nominees, but a refreshing change of pace for awards-watchers that it feels truly unclear less than two weeks out.

Jesse Hassenger (@rockmarooned) is a writer living in Brooklyn podcasting at www.sportsalcohol.com. He’s a regular contributor to The A.V. Club, Polygon, and The Guardian, among others.

Read original at New York Post

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