Thursday, 22 January 2026

Best Supporting Actor 2025: Delroy Lindo in Sinners

Delroy Lindo received his first Oscar nomination for portraying Delta Slim in Sinners.

It is never a bad sight to see a terrific character actor get their due, though Lindo's due should've already happened for 2020, but regardless, a supporting performance getting a supporting actor nomination is a nice touch, which this is very much a traditional supporting performance. Lindo's part is relatively small in the scheme of the film, though essential for the spirit of the film, as the local musician/legend/busker/drunk just in the area where the two brothers Smoke/Stack (Michael B. Jordan) are planning on setting up their new juke joint, and he seems ideal for the evenings entertainment as a piano player. Lindo first appears as the charismatic side of the brothers Stack, and their cousin Sammie (Miles Caton), a fledgling musician, go about recruiting Lindo's Delta Slim in his busking spot at the railroad tracks. Lindo makes use of the character actor creed in making a big impact in a short amount of time and in this instance creating the many shades that make up Delta Slim. As we first get the harmonica playing musician where Lindo brings that generous performers vibe inviting you in to listen. Lindo brings a naturalistic comedic timing in acknowledging his particular fame with a slight self-deprecating yet at the same time prideful smile. Both the legend and the drunk. Potentially a scary drunk even when Sammie suggests playing near his spot, and Lindo’s snap delivery of threat, suddenly gives a different shade of a man desperate to keep what he has and knows how to use violence to keep it. That quick snap has a definite history of a life of fighting. 

When Stack offers him the job, you get a great contrast within Lindo’s performance where he declines, naming his current job to last him to the end of his life, there’s a quiet pathos in every word Lindo brings that offers such sincere, yet in its way both painful yet comforted acceptance of his final lot in life, contrasting that his the pitch perfect comical light in his eyes when he sees the special Irish beers he has waiting for him if he takes the job, which he does. On the ride over, we are granted the truth of Slim as explains his past where he and a friend were pulled into a police station for vagrancy, that ended up being a bit fortunate as it was for a gig. Lindo explains with a cautionary nostalgia of the past, before segueing naturally to full on nostalgia and joy with a bit of sadness as he explains the success of the day and even messing with his hosts by changing the tempo. The story continues though as he explains his friend tried to go off to start a church with their earnings, where Lindo’s face fills with such a natural and years of burdened dread as he explains that this led to the lynching of his friend. The story is horrible as it is, in Lindo’s eyes you see the whole sense of the pain of the life of Delta Slim, and in turn how much he has to hold onto the bits of joy, in his drink and in his music he can find. 

In the actual night of music, Lindo is frequently in the background of scenes however he makes his marks whenever he can with quick perfectly delivered asides on the night. We do get a more pivotal moment of his words of wisdom about the magic they have in their musical talent, which Lindo delivers with such honest directness of a man who wholly believes in that gift and the sense of warmth and care as he essentially passes his mantle onto the younger man. When the vampires show up, Lindo is quite great in offering essential comic relief in his reactions when dealing with one of the first turned with his appropriately humorous suspicious lines against the possible vampire, then his exceptional delivery of “I think I shat myself” which is a perfectly executed button on the scene after the vampire reveals itself in all its horror. With the setup of the vampires outside and the survivors, including Slim, on the inside we set up towards the climax, which on rewatch still stands as unfortunately the weakest part of the film. Thankfully we do get one focused Lindo bit as the survivors try the Thing test, but with garlic, which Slim struggles to keep down, not due to vampirism but due to alcohol. Lindo’s physical work is remarkable in finding just the right sounds as he goes from possible beast to as we hear him more clearly as just a guy with too many things in his gut that his gut doesn’t want in there. Sadly the final confrontation doesn’t give Lindo too much meat to chew on. There is a mild setup where Slim proclaims he will sacrifice himself for everyone else if it comes to that, which Lindo delivers with a nice bit of assuring warmth when it is needed most. But when the moment comes, and Slim suddenly opens his veins to distract the vampires, in terms of pacing it is so fast Lindo is given little real estate to sell the moment. It falls a bit into a certain “I guess time to commit suicide” trope used that just stretches credulity. I’ll say the film tries to lay the groundwork, yet I still didn’t believe it, and maybe more so annoys me because it robs Lindo of a potential more interesting exit. Having said that, this is a strong genuinely supporting performance from a remarkable character actor. Yes it does look easy, but that only speaks to the considerable talents of Lindo. Lindo breathes real life into Slim, amplifies every little moment he is given, and manages to naturally bring so much heart, humor and pathos in his brief screentime. 

34 comments:

Jonathan Williams said...

Louis: Thoughts on the Masters of the Universe trailer.

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Unless you're reviewing Caton with O'Connell, any other upgrades.

Deiner said...

Great review Louis. I was very surprised when he received the nomination this morning, I wasn't expecting it, but if they were going to single out one of the Sinners' actors in the Supporting category, I'm glad it was him and not Miles Caton, who is great, but definitely a lead.

When I watched the movie I thought he gave a fun performance, but he didn't immediately stood out to me as an awards contender. Nevertheless, his delivery of "oh, he busy, huh?" always cracks me up.

Matt Mustin said...

Haven't seen this yet (I'm gonna be saying that a lot) but great to see him finally get recognized. His snub for Da 5 Bloods is pretty inexplicable.

Michael McCarthy said...

Ughhhh, fine

1. Skarsgård
2. Penn
3. Del Toro
4. Elordi
5. Lindo

Michael McCarthy said...

I will say, despite my adoration for the film, I wasn’t quite as big on Caton as most seemed to be. I do hope Mosaku gets bumped to a 4.5 though.

Michael McCarthy said...

I will say, despite my adoration for the film, I wasn’t quite as big on Caton as most seemed to be. I do hope Mosaku gets bumped to a 4.5 though.

Mitchell Murray said...

Hey Everyone! Hope you guys are well. It's been a busy couple of months "por mi y mi amor". But I wanted to revisit this community for awards season, and see how everyone is. Wish you all the best with everything your doing.

As for supporting actor...

1) Penn
2) Elordi
3) Skarsgard
4) Lindo
5) Del Toro

I have seen OBAA & Frankenstein. Sinners I might be able to see this weekend. Sentimental Value I'm not sure. Its close between Penn and Elordi for me, but I almost see the former as a Mark Ruffalo ala "Poor Things" nomination. Which is to say, an actor who typically is an over-actor and/or excessively mannered, finds the perfect role to exploit those tendencies in a outrageous, hilarious fashion. But I can see it going either way, as Elordi's performance is simply marvellous.

Harris Marlowe said...

Part of me wonders if Jordan will get "merely" a 4.5.

1. Elordi
2. Skarsgard
3. Penn
4. Del Toro
5. Lindo

Harris Marlowe said...

Louis: If you were higher on The Rock's performance the first time you saw it, what rating would he have hypothetically gotten then?

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

Rooting for Mosaku, who is already a 4.5 for me due to how devastating the delivery of her final "oh no" is.

Louis Morgan said...

Jonathan:

Looks like a pretty generic rendition other than the setup which just looks a little strange with comedy that didn’t seem like it was working or combined all that naturally with the rest of the trailer. Here’s hoping it ends up being like Dungeons and Dragons HAT, where it will actually be fun and creative. Not a great first look though.

Luke:

Mosaku a 4.5, who like Lindo makes the most of what she has.

Definitely not for Caton who I feel exactly the same about. Comes to life in the musical performances, delivers on the fear of his character, but thought he was stiff with some of the more emotional moments, like the one where he thinks Stack is dead I found his work in the moment particularly underwhelming.

Harris:

No, I always felt the same about his work.

J96 said...

Louis, Best Picture Double Features?

A said...

Really happy about Lindo's nomination.

1. Skarsgård
2. Elordi
3. Penn
4. del Toro
5. Lindo

Bryan L. said...

1. Skarsgard
2. Elordi
3. Penn
4. Del Toro
5. Lindo

Lucas Saavedra said...

1. Skarsgard
2. Elordi
3. Penn
4. Del Toro
5. Lindo

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: What are your thoughts on the rest of the cast of Sinners, apart from O'Connell?

Calvin Law said...

Completely agree with your reservations on the film's third act specifically, but I definitely thought Lindo glided through them with ease. Him and O'Connell are my MVPs of the film (Mosaku is great as well, glad to see her now a 4.5 too).

Also glad to see you didn't think too highly of Sandler either.

Calvin Law said...

And balance has finally been restored with a rightful Oscar nom, though it indeed should be his second - Ahmed/Boseman/Hopkins/Lindo/Yeun really would've been a generationally great lineup.

Calvin Law said...

Louis: who do you think was the 6th place in all the major categories? If I had to guess -

Director: probably Lanthimos or del Toro.

Actor: Plemons (those voting tallies were probably very close between him, Hawke and Moura)

Actress: Infiniti

Supporting Actor: Mescal, though I wonder if category confusion hurt him at all.

Supporting Actress: actually think it was A'zion, considering how abysmally Wicked flopped overall

Original Screenplay: maybe personal bias but I have a feeling The Secret Agent came very close here to getting in.

Adapted Screenplay: ... I have really no clue but whatever it was, was probably way behind the final 5.

Tim said...

i was not surprised in the slightest to see him get the nomination, despite the lack of precursors. Watching the film i immediately could tell, this is the sort of role designed to get a Supporting Actor nod. And let's be real, few people deserve that more then Delroy.


I completely disagree about the The Thing scene though. I found that way too much, i expected him to start laughing hysterically and say "I was just fuckin with ya guys" while opening another beer, that's how he played that!

Marcus said...

Love seeing Lindo get this recognition.

1. Skarsgård
2. Elordi
3. Penn
4. Del Toro
5. Lindo

Matt Mustin said...

Louis: Thoughts on Coogler's direction?

Louis Morgan said...

Matt:

Coogler’s direction is likely his most confident of his career where he does have the grasp of “okay I’m taking you on a journey” to the audience. Where there is a precision in terms of crafting the world of the film whether that is the cinematography, production design, score or the performance. Everything is pushing you into this specific time but also the style he is crafting. Just the confidence really of the early shot of the two twins in a way, while technically a tricky shot anyways due to the twins aspect, but sitting on the moment to basically drench us into the time and space really is great. And for the first half of the film Coogler excels in easing us so strikingly into his world, into this people so tangibly. When the horror aspect enters, Coogler’s work is also striking, though slight criticism would be there are occasionally the standard horror choice like the jump scare sound when Remmick appears in the house, but there’s a lot of effective choices in creating the unnerving quality of the vampires with their own style that contrasts from the opening style but also rests within it in a way where they feel as the same part of the film still. In the second half we have of course the “I lied to you” scene, which again is a big swing that didn’t work for me where I wasn’t caught in the rhythm and the forming of the new seemed slightly silly to me. I’m glad so many love it. Contrasting that the other musical sequences though show a striking command of using the camera to go with the rhythm of the scenes in a very impressive way which only builds the atmosphere that much more. The action I think is most where there is a sense of autopilot. There are some good moments, some standard ones, and again the whole final fight feels a bit rushed. Still has some moments but where Coogler’s grip just isn’t as assured or inspired as the first half. And I’ll say as much as he’s my 5 in this lineup, still a very strong nominee.

J96:

Bugonia/10 Cloverfield Lane
F1/Grand Prix
Hamnet/Shakespeare In Love
Marty Supreme/The Hustler
One Battle After Another/Running On Empty
The Secret Agent/Army of Shadows
Sentimental Value/Autumn Sonata
Sinners/Prince of Darkness
Train Dreams/The New Land

Lucas:

Steinfeld - (Her performance essentially is about owning her sexuality in a way that she necessarily did onscreen before and she certainly succeeds in that sense. With her very earthy, for the lack of a better word, delivery that just is filled with such a confident lust, along with an easy sense of her degree of past with the twins. Contrasting that are her evil scenes which she owns with amplomb even if these moments are brief. I wouldn’t say it adds up to too much beyond that but she’s good with what she has.)

Lawson - (I think she’s fine but doesn’t really make much beyond a fairly surface impression. She’s fine but not much more than that.)

Miller - (Quite effective in just the quick bit of character we get from him as the gentle giant sort of guy where you get a quick sense of his history with the twins with a combination of a humorous annoyance and intrigue. Then is quite good in playing the creepy note where that earlier warm friendliness now has this degree of detachment where you know he’s just not quite right.)

Li - (Largely there to need to sell the big moment and less than strategic choice. She’s effective though in building the sense of distress and dread to earn the moment emotionally, showing exactly where she’s coming from in her sense of horror before unleashing a vicious rage.)

Guy - (Having just rewatched it, he’s really stiff. Every line does feel like he’s reading them off of something and you don’t really get too much internalized pathos or connection. I get the casting but he’s not a natural.)

Louis Morgan said...

Calvin:

Director: Del Toro as Frankenstein really didn't underperform by much.

Actor: Plemons pretty easily I think given he was the only real miss for Bugonia.

Actress: Infiniti, who think got pushed out due to the size of her role comparatively.

Supporting Actor: Mescal without a doubt. I do think the fraud might've contributed as well, though I'm sure the top five were tight no matter what. And yes Skarsgard is maybe more severe, however in the US he's a character actor, where Mescal is leading man so maybe that was easier to accept for voters. It was a silly choice to put Mescal there anyways, which I feel like was mainly due to speculation about Shakespeare's role in the novel and not the actual film.

Supporting Actress: Yes A'zion, voters were clearly saying a hard no to Wicked given that costume snub in favor of CGI loincloths, and Marty was obviously well liked overall.

Original: Secret Agent I think makes more sense than Sorry Baby, given its Casting/Moura nominations.

Adapted: Probably Wake Up Dead Man at a great distance.

Louis Morgan said...

J96:

And Edward Scissorhands for Frankenstein.

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: What are your extended thoughts on Wunmi Mosaku in Sinners?

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

As ridiculous as it was to campaign Mescal into Supporting, I'm not sure who he would have knocked out had he been campaigned Lead (maybe Hawke?). I also think many voters were just less likely to put him or Infiniti #1 on their ballots, there just seems to have been a much more genuine swell of passion for Lindo and Hudson at the right time.

Perfectionist said...

Tahmeed: I think he could have easily knocked out Hawke. I think at the end of the day, it was indeed the category thing, for why they didn't nominate him. Seems like they endorsed Robert’s argument, that nominating one of the era’s premier lead actors, who also functions unmistakably as a lead in the film itself, as “supporting” is just BS.

Anonymous said...

Louis: with Mosaku now a 4.5, yet Madigan placed above her in your personal ranking ... has Madigan too been upgraded to a 4.5?

Louis Morgan said...

Lucas:

Mosaku - (Her performance is very much the heart of the film and I think essentially in terms of selling the supernatural. She's so good in her first scene in managing to combine the sense of heartbreak of the past but with this convincing warmth of someone who still holds value in life and what was. She's the one who has to deliver all the exposition and she does it with absolute conviction, and an emotional power. There's a lot to every word where you see her fundamental distress that goes beyond life in a way in the prison the vampires represent. Mosaku offering really emotion to every bit of the words that technically are there to just give you background but she makes them sing. And like Lindo I think her exit is rushed, but she manages to bring the immediacy in her work in showing the emotional distress but also care and conviction in her steadfastness in rather dying than becoming trapped in her own skin.)

Louis Morgan said...

Anonymous:

I made the ranking before I rewatched the film.

Tony Kim said...

Louis: Thoughts and ratings on Saul Williams, Peter Dreimanis, Lola Kirke, and Yao in Sinners?

Louis Morgan said...

Tony:

Williams - (Manages to not overplay the stereotype even if it is in the stereotype regardless. He hits the note but not to hard, so he's convincing albeit in a limited way.)

Dreimanis & Kirke - (Deliver on the musical scenes, then are just one side of the standard racist though they deliver on that without overdoing, and then are creepy in their overt vampiric southern hospitality.)

Yao - (Convincing enough in just being straightforward in creating enough of a sense of life of his shopkeep and then also creepy in his whole casually detached friendliness.)