Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Alternate Best Actor 2025: Joel Edgerton in Train Dreams

Joel Edgerton did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Robert Grainier in Train Dreams. 

Train Dreams tells the life story of a logger who lived from the late 19th century to the mid 20th century. 

I return to the very talented Joel Edgerton interestingly in another role that Robert Duvall probably would’ve knocked out of the park. As Edgerton plays Robert Grainier a man representing history, though not historical but really could be any number of men of the period, who were part of the creation of America as we know it however no one would pay 25 cents to walk in the rooms where he grew up, no children would be named after him, though someone might plagiarize the Assassination of Jesse James to describe the character. Edgerton is constructing a man of a specific time but a specific one in which in many ways must still be universal. Something he achieves frankly with such remarkable ease in terms of the conception of his performance. Edgerton is one of those actors where you’d never think he’s Australian as Robert in reality, in fact you wouldn’t even second guess him as just being this logger. A logger who began his life as a train orphan sent into the west and finding a life for himself largely isolated within himself as he goes about his work as a logger. Edgerton’s work is able to embody silence so potently where he never simply is on the screen and importantly there is the life of the character within the silences. Where Edgerton’s performance alludes to a man already living with an innate sadness as the abandoned child, not as a man overwhelmed by this emotion but one who regardless lives with it. 

The importance of Edgerton’s performance in many ways is the lack of importance of it. Edgerton fashions nothing within Robert to make Robert any more or less than he is. Edgerton instead does not create any semblance of quirk or eccentricity, he is just any old man in so many ways and the way Edgerton can embody and make that compelling is what is the greatness of this performance. Because Edgerton seeks only to present life, and within that, even though technically he doing an accent, technically he is doing much in terms of the physicality of the role, particularly the way Robert is so often turned in towards himself in terms of his body language and so often looks down rather than up, speaks much about who is is as a man isolated in the world, none of it feels like a bit of effort from the performer. Edgerton makes the most essential success in this performance which is simply existing as the man. Never is there a question of performance, he is just this man, and that is the essential truth that needs to exist so we can then just follow Robert in his journey. Edgerton never gets in the way of seeing the man as he is within each moment of it and there is the fundamental great success of this performance from his starting point. 

Edgerton’s performance wears a difficult life, his eyes begin with a weariness, not one that needs to grow and speaks to where the man has already come from and the work he has already done in the dangerous work he performs as a man. With an early traumatic event coming while Robert is on a bridge building crew and a group of men go about casually murdering one of the Chinese workers. Edgerton’s performance in the scene is a pivotal establishment of the observing man as in his eyes we do see the concern even in his ask of “what’s he done?”, however at the same time a man unable to break a general complacency as the murder happens in front him. Edgerton’s reaction in the moment and thereafter showing the haunting vision of the crime still being worn in Robert’s eyes as he must now live with regardless of what he does with his life. Contrasting that an early light comes in the form of his eventual wife Gladys (Felicity Jones) who makes advances towards Robert far more than Robert does towards her. What Edgerton captures with Jones isn’t this red hot sort of romance, but rather a very poignant calm connection between the two. Where Edgerton just exudes a greater comfort, speaking a few more lines than usual, and within those lines Edgerton emphasizes a degree of growth of the man reaching out a bit more by being awoken by his wife. There’s a natural sincerity in their chemistry that makes their connection and initial life together as they make a log cabin home near a river, that powerfully illustrates the importance of being taken away from isolation even more so than love. 

Robert must return to his logging job every year far from Gladys where Edgerton is able to artfully yet quietly reflect the often harsh elements, not in big reactions but little ones that convey the constant threat of death. An element that Edgerton doesn’t portray as a debilitating fear but rather a subdued awareness of the nature of the space. Within this time we see him react to a few people, particularly explosive expert Arn Peeples (William H. Macy), where we get just a bit of camaraderie between them. Edgerton’s performance is notable in his reaching out to the older man with an earnest interest in what he has to say and more importantly an earnest wish to make connection with him. Edgerton, something he does consistently throughout, is putting just enough on a given moment of bringing us quietly within his mental space. Particularly in moments such as seeing a dead man’s boots placed into a tree, where within Edgerton’s performance you see in his eyes how much these losses do follow him, yet within that expression there is also just the quiet resilience of keeping that path. This is even to the point of Arn’s own death from a random fallen branch, where Robert stays with him in his final moments, which Edgerton is able to emphasize the empathy in Robert’s watching and listening but also the powerful sense of a man being unable to know what to say or how to really understand the man’s death. 

The respite being consistently for Robert with his wife and eventually his daughter as well. Where Edgerton brings the beauty of the simplicity of the joys in spending time with both of them and finding the pain of separating from them. Making it so when a massive forest fire ravages his home while Robert is away it is absolutely devastating. And what we see is the true power of his performance, because as much as Edgerton quietly carries the film through so much of it, when he raises his voice it has such a tremendous weight to it. In this instance portraying the penetrating anguish as he looks for his wife and daughter within the ashes of his home. Edgerton’s eyes filled specifically with such a pain of the man being lost and alone as he wanders around the graveyard of his life. Edgerton having one of his most verbal moments as he looks upon the image of the Chinese man who haunts him, where Edgerton’s delivery which is apologetic but with the terrible sadness as he states that his wife and daughter were too much a cost for the “payment” of his past failure. Only finding any respite between frequent visits from local shopkeep Ignatius Jack (Nathaniel Arcand) and finding stray dogs. Edgerton is incredibly moving in creating the small steps away from the sorrow. A sorrow he never entirely loses but finding a man having moments of connections when he can. Finding in particular his interactions with the dogs having a poignancy of a lonely man finding some relief for his isolation.

We follow Robert then as an aging man including one more trip to a logging expedition where Edgerton is almost silent in this sequence, yet amazing work in providing the way that Robert is even more lost than before. Including a moment where he speaks to another former fellow logger talking about Arn, where the older man can’t tie his shoes nor even remember that Arn died. Edgerton’s reactions in these moments are so subdued yet heartbreaking in his reactions of empathy towards the man but while also being struck at seeing his potential future if he were to keep coming back as a logger who no longer has a place on the jobs. Leaving Robert instead as providing essentially a local taxi service via wagon where Edgerton projects in his physical manner so effectively the detachment to his customers even when he’s directly speaking to them. That is until he takes a forest service worker Claire (Kerry Condon) where he finally has a longer conversation. Initially just from her more brazen personality where she leads the conversation where Edgerton’s great in the shyness of his work that grants years of not being the focus of conversation or even having someone to converse with in such an open way. Which eventually leads to a more poignant discussion between the two on their mutual losses including Robert finally talking about having lost his family. 

Edgerton is masterful in this scene bringing such a weighted sense of the life the man has lived in every word, the painful sorrow in every word as he speaks about the pain of his loss at times being too much. There is so much within it that he lets out just a bit, but the amount that we can see in his eyes is almost more than he can bear. Just the way in Edgerton’s voice just a bit, as he doesn’t even entirely lose his composure is so heartbreaking, because you do know the years have past, the nature of the man is to keep it inside, yet the emotions we see still are so raw and honest in every moment of Edgerton’s performance. Love also Edgerton’s consideration of Claire’s words about her own loss and the importance of every little thing. Edgerton’s great because it isn’t a simple comfort, just consideration and attempting to find that meaning in his eyes of man lost. Yet there is something as powerful in his minor chuckle at the idea of him being a hermit in the woods and being of some kind of importance. A meaning though that is Robert’s focus as we follow him in his remaining years. Visiting a phony freak show that promises answers with Edgerton’s quiet breakdown carrying remarkable punctuation of man struggling at the lack of one. The moment of looking at himself in the mirror Edgerton is amazing as you see the man surprised at the years represented by his own face and a man lost even within himself in a way. Contrasting that however is the film’s final scene where he takes a plane ride and while observing the size of the world below him, Edgerton’s reaction is that comfort in the way and even contentment. It is only a reaction yet speaks volumes of the native tongue of silence for Robert. Edgerton delivers an a masterclass in subtlety built upon not noise rather on hushed tones and often silence. Finding so much nuance, so much texture and so much soul in every second we spend with the type of man who wouldn’t be noted by history but is reflective of the history of so many lives. 

Tuesday, 10 February 2026

Alternate Best Actor 2025: David Strathairn in A Little Prayer

David Strathairn did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Bill in A Little Prayer. 

A Little Prayer follows a father as he has to deal with knowledge of his adult son’s infidelities. 

David Strathairn had a low key but actually fairly remarkable 2025, although in part from two of those films, including this one’s, delayed releases, regardless making the most of three very different roles. Whether that is playing the game show producer who sees his gamble go astray in The Luckiest Man in America, a role that would’ve been easy to play simplistic jerk note but Strathairn found quite a bit of complication within that part, as well as even his work in Zootopia 2. Strathairn was not just cashing a VO paycheck with that, giving his all to really put the lynx in a billionaire villain lynx for all that it was worth. But his most remarkable work is his extremely low key performance in in this film as the patriarch of a seemingly close knit family with his reenactor wife, Venida (Celia Weston), his son David (Will Pullen) whom he runs the family business with and his daughter-in-law Tammy (Jane Levy). Strathairn in the early scenes brings a nice ease of place and exudes very much the history of his Bill. Which is just a man who lives for his family and has been through some things but we just sense someone who is seemingly mostly at ease with his life. Strathairn brings this innate subdued warmth about him, particularly in his interactions early on with Tammy where he shows just a genuine care for her. 

Strathairn’s performance then becomes one of the leads though within an observational place as we follow Bill within his workplace and notices his son acting a bit strangely with one of their employees. Strathairn does a lot with his eyes here in conveying the thoughts that Bill is going through and does bring something really in basically any glance. Completely conveying the determination that his son is sleeping around on his wife. Strathairn’s reaction initially I think manages to say a great deal because the reaction isn’t of extreme horror rather of this quiet disappointment in the realization. And within the realization Strathairn has a degree of exasperation in his eyes of not a man fed up with his son but rather too much of an awareness of the failings of his son, or at least to a degree that he is aware of. So when he attempts an initial attempt to talk to David about his behavior, Strathairn’s delivery is very modest but very earnest. There’s less of trying to punish his son as he converses with him and more so trying to talk to him in regards to what he sees as the value of Tammy in the family. Unfortunately the conversation goes nowhere as David shuts it down by saying it is none of Bill’s business, and Strathairn’s quiet defeat is a defeat of years of dealing with a son who seemingly rejects his father’s advice on a consistent basis. 

We follow Bill then as he tries to uncover more information about what his son has been doing and unfortunately for him this eventually leads to a conversation with the woman his son is having the affair with which only reveals that David is even worse than he thought as she reveals that David also was verbally and physically abusive towards her. Strathairn’s reactionary work is incredibly moving because you see within his quiet distress there’s such pain and more than a bit of shame that David is his son. Strathairn carefully not presents this as a reaction of superiority rather just the sense of being lost, not lost for words how his son could be such a bad person but rather lost how he could raise such a son. Well this is going concurrently Tammy also having figured out David’s infidelity chose to abort their child, and eventually Tammy and Bill meetup to discuss the situation by spending the day together. This is the best scene in the film as both Strathairn and Levy are great together. 

What is so remarkable is the way they are able to create such a unique yet winning chemistry with one another. Which isn’t romantic yet is filled with such a sense of warmth and Strathairn’s great in showing how her presence in a way seems to illuminate and inspire the best of Bill. Creating the important sense of additional motivation in Bill initially to fix the relationship because within Strathairn’s performance you see the strong uncomplicated love for Tammy that Bill no doubt would want to have for his son, yet his son’s deep flaw can never allow for such simplicity. Strathairn finds such poignant chemistry with Levy in their conversation where he actually ends up advising her to leave. In Strathairn’s delivery there is a powerful combination of conviction of his sentiment of every word as the right thing but with the underlying burden of knowing this will end the relationship with someone he has come to deeply care for. An element that only becomes all the more painful when Tammy admits her connection with Bill as a “kindred spirit” and Strathairn’s reaction to this “confession” is heartbreaking because you see in his calm yet still devastated expression of someone feeling every bit of this loss that is only amplified by seeing that her love for him has been as great for him. It is a beautifully rendered scene by both actors where they create such a state of pure sincerity where all the complications involving David is still weighing on both, yet the direct honesty of the real affection between the two makes it far from just a moment of mutual suffering. It is with that specific shared spark of joy that leaves such a memorable impression so naturally realized by both actors as a true connection. While this whole performance is naturally realized by the talents of Strathairn, a performer who is always a welcome presence and hopefully we get a few more filmmakers to utilize this in the upcoming years. 

Monday, 9 February 2026

Alternate Best Actor 2025: Paul Mescal in Hamnet

Paul Mescal did not receive an Oscar nomination, despite being nominated for a SAG and a BAFTA, for portraying William Shakespeare in Hamnet.

Hamnet follows the life of Shakespeare through the relationship with his wife Agnes (Jessie Buckley). Paul Mescal takes on the role of the bard in decidedly different terms than the more lighthearted depiction by Joseph Fiennes in Shakespeare in Love. This version attempts a more realistic, only within limits, depiction of Shakespeare and really in part his come up as a writer, though the ambitions of such are specifically within the context of his relationship with his wife and family with any focus on sort of what we know Shakespeare as being relatively limited till the third act of the film. Mescal fittingly doesn’t give importance to his Will, and what I mean by that is that there is no presentation of Shakespeare as a legend in the making. Rather we find him initially as a latin tutor who doesn’t exactly take his position all too seriously. And the nature of the structure of the film is Mescal essentially depicts different phases of the man’s life, because there are consistent though unstated time jumps throughout the film. This opening Mescal brings a sort of flighty quality of the ambitious young man stuck in a place where such ambition seems to fall upon mostly deaf ears if not even the direct ire of his rather strict and humorless father. Mescal effectively brings more so a boyish energy in these moments, an impishness really in creating the degree of immaturity of Shakespeare at this time and really leaving much room to grow as a man. 

His initial scenes with Agnes Mescal bring that same quality and his fascination with her is largely that initially. Where he creates the intrigue with her and is drawn into her unique qualities as a person, as this seeming connecting point with nature…atlhough I will say watching the film again that particular aspect only became more halfbaked if not a bit silly at times. Will brings his own value within the relationship as we get very directly his storytelling ability as he recounts the tale of Orpheus’s descent into the underworld. Mescal is truly great in this scene because for this scene he becomes a great storyteller and shows a preview of the storyteller that Shakespeare will become with his own material. Mescal reciting the tale though is captivating by managing to bring this very particular pace and rhythm as to entrance the audience into the particular tragedy of this story. Mescal has that particular ability here to emphasize a pause or a word that just brings together the emotion of the story and not just the plot of it. Making it so Mescal lets you feel the tragedy of Orpheus as he creates even the particular pace to build towards the climax of the piece and make you feel the impact of Orpheus's loss. It’s a standout moment for Mescal and suggests the greatness of Shakespeare before he has become great. 

We have our first kind of jump in time when Will impregnates Agnes, which even within that Mescal’s effective in bringing moments of immaturity though with the poetic license such as his delivery of having no ability for waiting, but afterwards with a quiet conviction of the man who will stand by his action to take Agnes as his wife. Where we get the first step to then just the playful married couple which is a very short segment, however Mescal’s good in playing Will, even as he’s going off to London to make a name for himself is still in the newlywed sort of state in his ease of excitement with wife and just a clear sense of love for her. Where we get another jump where it is now Will, Agnes and their three children including the young twins of Hamnet (Jacobi Jupe) and Judith. Mescal again changes his presence a bit to now very much the more mature dad. We still get the spark of mischief when playing with the kids, however there is a greater sense of emotional maturity. Mescal’s pivotal scene with Jupe expresses this beautifully as he brings first this quiet delivery of a father very seriously tasking his son with being mature himself, before breaking and his repeated “will you be brave” where he so wonderfully changes to the fun loving father just wanting to play with his son. An element reinforced in his scene with Agnes discussing where they will live in the future, where she’s adamant to stay in the country meanwhile Will’s destiny is in the city. Mescal’s very subdued work illustrates the greater maturity of Will at this point with an honestly quieter sense of romance, where the warmth is still there but the emphasis now is on the contemplation of the future.

A future that becomes cloudy when while Will is away Judith falls ill, almost dies, followed by Hamnet also falling ill and dying. Mescal’s performance isn’t the one accentuated in these scenes but he’s still great in delivering the gravity of the loss from what we do see him. We see the initial reaction of pain and he is heartbreaking in bringing that so tangibly to life in these moments. The third act though takes Will again away from his family seemingly living within his grief on his own as he’s putting on one of his most famous plays named Hamnet. Where we get two similar scenes, one amazing one less so. The first being the scene of the actors playing Hamlet and Ophelia the off to the nunnery speech, where Mescal’s incredible in his work as he’s pacing about and continuing to ask them to play it “again”. His delivery of again, his expression, is filled with so much complicated emotion as we see the pain of his loss, the frustrations with his life, and most importantly the rage of the world. Where Mescal is outstanding in his own delivery of the speech to the actors. As I love that Mescal is able to deliver it as the meaning not so much as it is in the play but as it represents Will in this moment. Where there is some anger of the director struggling with his actors, but even more so the rage against the world which the speech represents in itself as Hamlet notes the pathetic state of man. Mescal doesn’t become Hamlet in the moment, he is Shakespeare in the moment, completely conveying his emotional state behind the words so powerfully. 

Needlessly doubling down the film immediately has Will alone where he recites “To be or Not to Be” as he seemingly contemplates suicide at the docks of London. I say needlessly because the previous scene I think made essentially the same point more naturally, more efficiently and more effectively, using a less frequently spoken part of Hamlet, meanwhile this is arguably Shakespeare’s most famous. Having said this I hang none of this at Mescal’s door, and while not as powerful as his previous scene, Mescal still delivers on the speech by again playing as the writer reflecting on his work rather than Hamlet, here less rage and just pure sorrow into the words that reflect upon death. Although I’d argue his less "substantive" in terms of Hamlet’s text work as the “ghost” when we finally see the production, it also better serves the idea. Where Mescal combines the sense of genuine emotion and performative emotion, delivers this quiet grief stricken darkness to the ghost as he delivers his message to Hamlet on stage. Mescal conveying in the moment the burden to be caught within this state of death and really in the painful state of grief. While not the focus of the final moments, Mescal’s reactions are pivotal as he reacts to the crowd and really his wife’s reaction to the end of Hamlet…well forgetting Fortinbras and all that but I digress. My joke aside, Mescal is great in the way it is less of a cure but rather the grief is there but intertwined with hope. Hope in his eyes that he and Agnes will find any closures and catharsis in this attempt at a reflection of their loss. Mescal finding just the right subdued even meekness in the man only carefully looking up to see if he has made the connection. Although Mescal became an afterthought within the praise of the film, though I think in part due to the misguided category fraud, it is unfortunate as his performances is essential to the film. First in creating the jumps in time, where we don't see the steps, yet Mescal makes each phase feel natural from the last in creating detail and nuance in the life of Shakespeare here presented with a purposeful vagueness at times. Mescal never feels vague, and even champions the film's most overt moments in terms of referencing the bard. And while I do have mixed feelings on the two most overt uses of the words before the ending, none of those feelings come from Mescal who always finds the power in the words but power not from Shakespeare as a literary legend but from Will as a man. 

Saturday, 7 February 2026

Alternate Best Actor 2025

 And the Nominees Were Not:

Lee Byung-hun in No Other Choice

Jesse Plemons in Bugonia

Joel Edgerton in Train Dreams

David Jonsson in The Long Walk

Paul Mescal in Hamnet

Feel free to predict these five, those five or both.

Robert Aramayo in I Swear

Josh O'Connor in Wake Up Dead Man

Dylan O'Brien in Twinless

David Strathairn in A Little Prayer

Frank Dillane in Urchin

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2025: Results

5. William H. Macy in Train Dreams - Macy delivers an impressive transformative turn that represents his film's time and place with such poignancy.

Best Scene: Reflection on the trees.
4. Tyler Okonma in Marty Supreme - Okonma delivers such a wonderfully charismatic performance that sings through his chemistry with Chalamet. 

Best Scene: The hustle.
3. Russell Crowe in Nuremberg - Crowe elevates every bit of his film he can in presenting the evil of a man who believes himself above traditional moralities. 

Best Scene: Tale of his uncle.
2. Jacobi Jupe in Hamnet - Jupe gives a heartbreaking and endearing performance as he manages to deliver a child's earnestness with an adult's emotional conviction. 

Best Scene: Cheating death.
1. Jack O'Connell in Sinners - O'Connell delivers a truly great villainous turn where he manages to be truly menacing, rather funny, quite charismatic, wonderfully musical and even finds a bit of pathos in his vampire. 

Best Scene: First attempt at entrance. 
Overall Ranking:
  1. Sean Penn in One Battle After Another
  2. Jack O'Connell in Sinners
  3. Jacobi Jupe in Hamnet  - 5
  4. Benicio del Toro in One Battle After Another
  5. Russell Crowe in Nuremberg
  6. Ralph Fiennes in 28 Years Later
  7. Tyler Okonma in Marty Supreme
  8. William H. Macy in Train Dreams
  9. John Leguizamo in Bob Trevino Likes It
  10. Delroy Lindo in Sinners
  11. James Raterman in One Battle After Another - 4.5
  12. Danny Huston in The Naked Gun
  13. David Bradley in Frankenstein
  14. Lewis Pullman in The Testament of Ann Lee
  15. Peter Mullan in I Swear
  16. Kevin O'Leary in Marty Supreme
  17. Kenny Rasmussen in The Plague
  18. Abel Ferrara in Marty Supreme
  19. Géza Röhrig in Marty Supreme
  20. Aidan Delbis in Bugonia
  21. Josh Brolin in Wake Up Dead Man
  22. Lee Sung-min in No Other Choice
  23. Joe Alwyn in Hamnet
  24. Noah Jupe in Hamnet
  25. Jeffrey Wright in Highest 2 Lowest
  26. Alexander Skarsgård in Pillion
  27. Daniel Craig in Wake Up Dead Man
  28. Andrew Scott in Blue Moon
  29. Ryusei Yokohama in Kokuho
  30. Conan O'Brien in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
  31. Leo Woodall in Nuremberg
  32. Will Patton in Train Dreams
  33. Jay Lycurgo in Steve
  34. Tom Burke in Black Bag
  35. Pedro Pascal in Freaky Tales
  36. Lewis Pullman in Thunderbolts
  37. Nicholas Hoult in Superman
  38. Christoph Waltz in Frankenstein
  39. Carlos Francisco in The Secret Agent
  40. Patrick Kennedy in Blue Moon
  41. David Strathairn in The Luckiest Man in America
  42. Charlie Plummer in The Long Walk
  43. Alden Ehrenreich in Weapons
  44. Tony Goldwyn in One Battle After Another 
  45. Ratso Sloman in Marty Supreme
  46. David Harbour in Thunderbolts
  47. Josh Brolin in Weapons
  48. John Hoogenakker in One Battle After Another 
  49. Liev Schreiber in Caught Stealing
  50. Bobby Cannavale in Blue Moon
  51. Chris Evans in The Materialists
  52. Ben Foster in Christy
  53. Andrew Garfield in After The Hunt
  54. Jonah Wren Phillips in Bring Her Back
  55. Joseph Quinn in Fantastic Four: The First Steps - 4
  56. Rupert Evans in Truth & Treason
  57. Akira Emoto in Rental Family
  58. Cha Seung-won in No Other Choice
  59. Vincent D'Onofrio in Caught Stealing
  60. Douglas Hodge in Pillion
  61. Kaiony Venâncio in The Secret Agent
  62. John Carroll Lynch in Sorry Baby
  63. Cary Christopher in Weapons
  64. Rolf Saxon in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  65. David Strathairn in Zootopia 2
  66. Kevin Durand in The Naked Gun
  67. Ben Mendelsohn in Freaky Tales
  68. Edi Gathegi in Superman
  69. Christian Slater in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
  70. Peter Dinklage in Roofman
  71. Luke Manley in Marty Supreme
  72. Nick Nolte in Die My Love
  73. Park Hee-soon in No Other Choice
  74. Koto Kawaguchi in Marty Supreme
  75. Tramell Tillman in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  76. Paul Walter Hauser in The Naked Gun
  77. Robert Aramayo in Palestine 36
  78. Skyler Gisondo in Superman
  79. Chad L. Coleman in Christy
  80. Tom Hanks in Freaky Tales
  81. Aaron Taylor-Johnson in 28 Years Later
  82. Jim Downey in One Battle After Another
  83. Omar Benson Miller in Sinners
  84. Nathaniel Arcand in Train Dreams
  85. Paul Rudd in Friendship
  86. Tut Nyuot in The Long Walk
  87. Joel Edgerton in The Plague
  88. Patrick Warburton in Zootopia 2
  89. John Catsimadtidis in Marty Supreme
  90. Christopher McDonald in Happy Gilmore 2
  91. Paul Grimstad in One Battle After Another
  92. Kayo Martin in The Plague
  93. Benedict Wong in Weapons 
  94. Ralph Colucci in Marty Supreme
  95. Bill Kelly in Christy
  96. ASAP Rocky in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
  97. Michael Cera in The Phoenician Scheme
  98. Eric Schweig in One Battle After Another
  99. Ebon Moss-Bachrach in Fantastic Four: The First Steps
  100. Garrett Wareing in The Long Walk
  101. Andy Samberg in Zootopia 2
  102. Ryan Bader in The Smashing Machine
  103. Penn Jillette in Marty Supreme
  104. Mark Hamill in The Life of Chuck
  105. George Gervin in Marty Supreme
  106. Gabriel Spahiu in Kontinental '25
  107. Daryl McCormack in Wake Up Dead Man
  108. Jon Bernthal in The Accountant 2
  109. Paul Schneider in Train Dreams
  110. Bas Rutten in The Smashing Machine
  111. Robério Diógenes in The Secret Agent
  112. Ahn Hyo-seop in KPop Demon Hunters
  113. Luke Ayres in Steve
  114. Joshua J Parker in Steve
  115. Araloyin Oshunremi in Steve
  116. Tut Nyuot in Steve
  117. Richard E. Grant in Nuremberg 
  118. Kevin Tighe in One Battle After Another
  119. Jay Ellis in Freaky Tales
  120. Yul Vazquez in The Lost Bus
  121. Chris Cooper in The History of Sound
  122. Lee Byung-hun in KPop Demon Hunters
  123. Takehiro Hira in Rental Family
  124. Pico Iyer in Marty Supreme
  125. Roney Villela in The Secret Agent
  126. Șerban Pavlu in Kontinental '25
  127. John Diehl in Train Dreams
  128. D.W. Moffett in One Battle After Another 
  129. Edvin Ryding in 28 Years Later
  130. Anthony Carrigan in Superman
  131. Wyatt Russell in Thunderbolts 
  132. Nathan Fillion in Superman
  133. Tom Hiddleston in The Life of Chuck
  134. Lukas Gage in Companion
  135. Lars Mikkelsen in Frankenstein
  136.  H. Jon Benjamin in Familiar Touch 
  137. Timothy Olyphant in Havoc
  138. Dennis Quaid in Sovereign 
  139. Benjamin Pajak in The Life of Chuck
  140. Christian Convery in The Monkey
  141. Jeffrey Wright in The Phoenician Scheme
  142. Steven Yeun in Mickey 17
  143. Simon Delaney in Blue Moon
  144. Soya Kurokawa in Kokuho
  145. Fisher Stevens in Song Sung Blue
  146. Cosmo Jarvis in Warfare
  147. Joseph Quinn in Warfare
  148. Jason Schwartzman in Mountainhead
  149. Pruitt Taylor Vince in Superman
  150. Min Tanaka in Kokuho
  151. Ken Watanabe in Kokuho
  152. Hudson Hensley in Song Sung Blue
  153. Shamier Anderson in The Luckiest Man in America
  154. Benedict Cumberbatch in The Phoenician Scheme
  155. Carl Lumbly in The Life of Chuck
  156. Bryan Hibbard in Christy
  157. Adonis TanÈ›a in Kontinental ’25
  158. Harrison Ford in Captain America: Brave New World
  159. Chiwetel Ejiofor in The Life of Chuck
  160. Jesper Christensen in Sentimental Value
  161. Pedro Pascal in The Materialists
  162. Amr Waked in Urchin
  163. Harris Dickinson in Urchin
  164. John Magaro in The Mastermind
  165. Griffin Dunne in Caught Stealing
  166. Aubry Dullin in Nouvelle Vague
  167. Ralph Ineson in Fantastic Four: The First Steps
  168. Laurence Fishburne in The Amateur
  169. LaKeith Stanfield in Roofman
  170. Udo Kier in The Secret Agent
  171. Sam Worthington in Relay 
  172. Bill Camp in The Mastermind
  173. Bruno Dreyfürst  in Nouvelle Vague
  174. Øyvind Hesjedal Loven in Sentimental Value
  175. Daniel Dae Kim in KPop Demon Hunters
  176. Bill Lee in Eephus
  177. Akemnji Ndifornyen in The Ballad of Wallis Island
  178. Jim Belushi in Song Sung Blue
  179. Stephen Lang in Avatar: Fire and Ash
  180. Stavros Halkias in Bugonia - 3.5
  181. Tim Blake Nelson in The Testament of Ann Lee
  182. Tom Hanks in The Phoenician Scheme
  183. Bryan Cranston in The Phoenician Scheme
  184. Emory Cohen in Roofman
  185. Ted Williams in Marty Supreme
  186. Charles Melton in Warfare
  187. Louis Cancelmi in Sorry Baby
  188. Riz Ahmed in The Phoenician Scheme
  189. David Cale in The Testament of Ann Lee
  190. Michael Gandolfini in Warfare
  191. Will Poulter in Warfare
  192. Pierce Brosnan in Black Bag
  193. Jeremy Irons in Palestine 36
  194. Christopher Abbott in The Testament of Ann Lee
  195. Mathieur Almaric in The Phoenician Scheme
  196. Saul Williams in Sinners
  197. Daniel Zolghadri in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
  198. Simon Pegg in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  199. Michael Stuhlbarg in The Amateur
  200. Regé-Jean Page in Black Bag
  201. Richard Ayoade in The Phoenician Scheme
  202. Kamel El Basha in Palestine 36
  203. Ving Rhames in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  204. Yao in Sinners
  205. Harry Shearer in Spinal Tap II: The End Continues
  206. Pedro Pascal in Eddington
  207. John Douglas Thompson in Highest 2 Lowest
  208. Michael Shannon in Nuremberg
  209. Walton Goggins in The Luckiest Man in America
  210. Harvey Guillén in Companion
  211. Rob Reiner in Spinal Tap II: The End Continues
  212. Javier Bardem in F1
  213. Ke Huy Quan in Zootopia 2
  214. Holt McCallany in The Amateur
  215. Ben Mendelsohn in Roofman
  216. Forest Whitaker in Havoc
  217. Austin Butler in Eddington
  218. Ethan Slater in Wicked For Good
  219. Sebastian Stan in Thunderbolts
  220. Carl Lumbly in Captain America: Brave New World
  221. Henry Czerny in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  222. Austin Abrams in Weapons
  223. Paul Walter Hauser in Fantastic Four: The First Steps
  224. John Slattery in Nuremberg
  225. Liam Cunningham in Palestine 36
  226. David Wilmot in Hamnet
  227. Colman Domingo in The Running Man
  228. Tracy Letts in House of Dynamite
  229. Tobias Menzies in F1
  230. Michael Imperioli in Song Sung Blue
  231. Lucas Hedges in Sorry Baby
  232. Anders Danielsen Lie in Sentimental Value
  233. Ramy Youssef in Mountainhead 
  234. Jonathan Bailey in Wicked For Good
  235. Hadis Pakbaten in It Was Just An Accident
  236. Matt Smith in Caught Stealing 
  237. Mark Hamill in The Long Walk 
  238. Keith William Richards in Eephus
  239. Frederick Wiseman in Eephus
  240. Russell J. Gannon in Eephus
  241. Charles Dance in Frankenstein
  242. Jason Clarke in House of Dynamite
  243. Alex Jennings in Ballad of a Small Player
  244. Josh Brolin in The Running Man
  245. Chiwetel Ejiofor in Eleanor the Great
  246. Matthew Maher in Relay 
  247. Stephen Graham in Deliver Me From Nowhere
  248. Thomas Haden Church in Wake Up Dead Man
  249. Italo Martins in The Secret Agent
  250. Igor de Araújo in The Secret Agent
  251. Gabriel Leon in The Secret Agent 
  252. Ken Jeong in KPop Demon Hunters
  253. Ebrahim Azizi in It Was Just An Accident
  254. Paul Walter Hauser in Deliver Me From Nowhere
  255. Jeff Bridges in Tron Ares
  256. Daniel Zolghadri in Lurker
  257. Josh O'Connor in The History of Sound
  258. Jeremy Renner in Wake Up Dead Man
  259. David Dastmalchian in Dust Bunny
  260. Stephen Lang in Sisu: Road to Revenge
  261. Jeff Goldblum in Wicked For Good - 3
  262. Tim Blake Nelson in Captain America: Brave New World
  263. Buddy Guy in Sinners 
  264. Billy Crudup in Jay Kelly
  265. Jacob Batalon in Novocaine
  266. Daniel Ezra in The Running Man
  267. Manuel Gracia-Rulfo in Jurassic World Rebirth
  268. Giancarlo Esposito in Captain America: Brave New World
  269. Colin Hanks in Nuremberg
  270. Andrew Scott in Wake Up Dead Man
  271. Cosmo Jarvis in The Alto Knights
  272. Esai Morales in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  273. Rupert Friend in Companion
  274. Steve Carell in Mountainhead
  275. Billy Howle in Palestine 36
  276. Benny Safdie in Happy Gilmore 2
  277. Chris Addison in Spinal Tap II: The End Continues
  278. Mark O'Brien in Nuremberg 
  279. Chris Evans in Honey Don't
  280. Lee Pace in The Running Man
  281. Jared Harris in House of Dynamite
  282. Anthony Ramos in House of Dynamite
  283. Idris Elba in House of Dynamite
  284. Jim Broadbent in Jay Kelly
  285. Cliff Curtis in Avatar: Fire and Ash
  286. David Thewlis in Avatar: Fire and Ash
  287. Cory Michael Smith in Mountainhead
  288. Tom Bateman in Hedda  - 2.5
  289. Adam Sandler in Jay Kelly
  290. Bradley Cooper in Is This Thing On?
  291. Dean Winters in Highest 2 Lowest
  292. Michael Stuhlbarg in After The Hunt
  293. Mark Ruffalo in Mickey 17
  294. Rupert Friend in Jurassic World Rebirth
  295. Holt McCallany in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  296. Danny Ramirez in Captain America: Brave New World
  297. Colin O'Brien in The Monkey
  298. Bad Bunny in Caught Stealing
  299. Beck Bennett in Superman
  300. Bad Bunny in Happy Gilmore 2
  301. Jeremy Strong in Deliver Me From Nowhere
  302. French Stewart in Bob Trevino Like It
  303. Robert Morgan in The Accountant 2 
  304. Nick Offerman in Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
  305. Nick Offerman in The Life of Chuck
  306. Haley Joel Osment in Happy Gilmore 2
  307. Andy Samberg in The Roses
  308. Michael Cera in The Running Man
  309. Brendan Cowell in Avatar: Fire and Ash
  310. Will Pullen in A Little Prayer
  311. Ray Nicholson in Novocaine - 2
  312. Britain Dalton in Avatar: Fire and Ash
  313. Bruno Bichir in Kiss of the Spider Woman
  314. Gabriel Basso in House of Dynamite
  315. Samuel Bottomley in Anemone
  316. Jemaine Clement in Avatar: Fire And Ash
  317. Evan Peters in Tron: Ares
  318. Jack Champion in Avatar: Fire and Ash
  319. Charlie Day in Honey Don't - 1.5
  320. Asap Rocky in Highest 2 Lowest
  321. The Golfers in Happy Gilmore 2 
  322. Ben Stiller in Happy Gilmore 2 - 1
Next: 2025 Alternate Lead. 

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2025: Russell Crowe in Nuremberg

Russell Crowe did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Hermann Göring in Nuremberg.

Nuremberg follows the trial of the Nazi high command for crimes against humanity through the perspective of psychiatrist Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek).

Russell Crowe depicts the highest ranking Nazi still living Hermann Göring who goes about purposefully surrendering to the US allies. The piece is very much structured as Göring as the representative of the Nazi ideology to be examined and potentially taken down by crusading allied lawyers but more importantly as the scene partner for tête-à-tête of psychiatrist and evil patient in a not entirely unlike Hannibal Lecter kind of way. Although Crowe’s performance is not one that actually emphasizes the evil of the character and is far more interesting in his choices in very much presenting Göring as someone who intends to present himself as a respectable leader simply trying to run and protect his country as he sees fit. A performance that emphasizes the presence of the character, which Russell Crowe has a tremendous presence innately as a performer that isn’t the hardest for him to achieve. As we have from the first scenes between Crowe and Malek, who sadly is not up to snuff in any way shape or form and is overshadowed completely constantly here, Crowe’s performance does elevate the material consistently and makes scenes shine. As Crowe plays this almost jovial quality that doesn’t denote Göring as nice in anyway rather presenting someone who reacts to his confinement as some kind of bemusement to himself more than anything and treats the allies he sees around him including Kelley, as curiosities to him, particularly early on as he pretends not to speak English and Crowe’s whole performance is watching with a calculating and also somewhat degrading stare. 

When Göring reveals his English speaking to Kelley, Crowe’s work often is of this specific state of pretending to be far less than he is and is quite compelling in playing the elements of the character. As Crowe’s delivery of Göring’s claims of being unaware of the final solution, there’s a clever combination Crowe manages to pull of in his eyes and delivery where he manages to earnestly state the claim though with his eyes there’s always a sense of calculation waiting for people to believe his claims with the cunning of a politician and power player behind every false word. Crowe excels in creating the specific narcissism where even in the moments where it seems like he is sharing a mutual interest, like magic, or a mutual endeavor of exposing Rudolf Hess as a fraud, Crowe presents a specific quality that is less of real affection and more of an allowance for personal entertainment. Crowe never portraying direct and genuine warmth between himself and his new confidant, rather presenting a paternalistic quality of someone being amused by for him is essentially is a new underling. Crowe doesn’t soften Göring rather presents a man who believes himself to be in control of this specific situation by essentially pretending to be far less than he in terms of maliciousness but at the same time very much brandishing his intellectual skill at attempting to slip through the hangman’s noose through this particular form of subterfuge. 

Crowe only fully lets in on the character in a moment where he describes a relationship with a Jewish uncle who had invited his family into their home when he was young. Crowe first tells the story as though it is a bit of nostalgic remembrance before getting to the strange specifics that his mother was given the room near the uncle meanwhile his father was given a room with the servants in order for the uncle to have sex with his mother. Crowe’s minor yet pivotal switch in delivery stating that just because man may help does not mean they are your friend, has an incisive delivery. A delivery that speaks to a merciless man of war, and also alluding to a man with the real capability of the extreme antisemitism and atrocities his regime was responsible for. An idea only expanded upon when footage of the concentration camps incenses Kelley to directly confront Göring over his guilt and Crowe lifts the curtain on the man. Presenting just a cold resilience to criticism where anything he parries, Crowe with a confidence in his eyes and defiance in his voice always turns it around back at him with dishonest precedence. Leading to his cross-examine first by American lawyer Robert Jackson (Michael Shannon), who fumbles against Göring’s ability of obfuscation based on minor details. Crowe’s delivery of this scene, along with his physical approach where he almost sits as though he’s at a sofa, emphasizing the dismissive and controlling tone as man getting away with his crimes essentially by the small print. Only when British lawyer Sir David Maxwell Fyfe takes on the cross examination by essentially setting up that Göring would have to be a fool to not be aware and to get him to denounce Hitler do we see Göring fall. Crowe excels in this moment as well by bringing the fragility of the ego where we see the man unable to hide as he’d be a criminal one way or an idiot other, and accepting the former as the lesser of two evils to his deranged view. Crowe’s performance isn’t a big breakdown rather this quiet resignation of a man seeing that there’s no trick for him left other than in his death. Although this is hardly a great film, Crowe makes the most of what he has, even though a better script and a better co-star, this could’ve been a truly unforgettable turn, as is it is a very good one from a great actor. 

Friday, 6 February 2026

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2025: Jacobi Jupe in Hamnet

Jacobi Jupe did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Hamnet Shakespeare in Hamnet.

Jacobi Jupe plays the only son of William Shakespeare (Paul Mescal) and Agnes (Jessie Buckley), who is one of two twins along with his sister Judith. Jupe’s performance is a fairly brief one in the scheme of the film given so much is dealing with the death of his character. So for a kid he needs to make an impact pretty quickly while also hitting a very specific blend of needs which is pretty challenging as child performers go. As the first aspect is just being a believable child which Jupe isn’t only a believable child he’s also an incredibly endearing one. There’s just a spark in his performance where you get such a sweet sincerity about his character as we see him doing kid things like switching spots with his sister to try to trick their dad and just playing around with his parents. Jupe has a real charm that feels realistic to just a kid where there’s that sense of life about him. But being just a cute kid would be one accomplishment, an accomplishment which Jupe succeeds wholeheartedly, but there is more asked of him than that.
As we have a pivotal scene where his father is going back to London to continue working, and Jupe’s emotional nuance in his strained voice at recognizing his father is leaving is heartbreaking already but so much more. Jupe’s performance manages to convey in these emotional scenes, also one with his mother where she says she has a vision of him essentially on stage, a powerful combination between a degree of emotional maturity yet still filtered through wholly a child. Such as when his father asks if “he will be brave?” Jupe is equally convincing in his first affirmation, where we see him working through the sadness of not being able to see his father for a while combined though with the determination to be protector for the rest of the family, as he is when his father keeps asking in essentially leading to a father/son cuddle, where Jupe far more childish reaction of excitement of getting his father’s affection. Jupe is convincing in both moments but more importantly they do not feel disparate rather creating an honest complexity in his depiction of Hamnet. Jupe makes it hard not to love the sweetness of the kid but with that wish to also be strong.
So then when his sister comes down with a severe illness Jupe’s performance is rather astonishing. As again we get that uniquely potent combination of mature and the child. Portraying powerfully such genuine concern for his sister combined though with the inner strength in that little face of his that carries such a remarkable impact to it. So then when he has a scene where he literally asks to give his life for Judith, it is such a devastating moment because what Jupe manages to do is be a cute kid asking essentially for superpowers in the moment to save the day, while also conveying the gravity of the choice in the direct sincerity of his delivery as he offers himself for sacrifice to save his sister. An element that becomes all too true when Judith recovers but Hamnet comes down with the same fever. Jupe’s performance is frankly hard to watch in these scenes because he’s so convincing in delivering the harrowing visceral intensity of every bit of the sickness as he becomes deathly ill. Combining this with the sort of “out of body” scenes of him calling for his mother while he’s alone on a stage, Jupe’s work carries with it such emotional devastation. And that is technically almost the end of his performance except for a single silent moment at the end of the film, which is well performed in that silence, though more so a direction moment. What Jupe accomplishes in his screentime is such a tremendous impact and is what haunts the film. He isn’t just some random child and doesn’t accept essentially the cheat of the loss of a child, which is heartbreaking even without detail. Jupe creates detail, texture and emotional connection beyond just the idea. Making Hamnet such a winning presence, so when he is lost it is all the more painful, and within it finding this wonderful combination between the conviction of an adult and the levity of a child. He makes Hamnet far more than a name and gives him a remarkable life that makes you truly feel the depth of the tragedy of having it stolen so quickly and so mercilessly.