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Full list of nominees
Best Picture
The Big Short: A portrait of the "weirdos" who profited from the 2008 financial collapse, based on the bestselling book by Michael Lewis. Read our review of The Big Short
A scene from Adam McKay's The Big Short Photo: Paramount Pictures
Brooklyn: Saoirse Ronan stars as a young woman forced to move from 1950s rural Ireland to New York, in Nick Hornby’s adaptation of Colm Tóibín’s coming-of-age novel. It's an outsider for this year's Best Picture Oscar, but it did pick up the Outstanding British Film award at the Baftas. Read our review of Brooklyn
Saoirse Ronan and Emory Cohen in Brooklyn
Bridge of Spies: Steven Spielberg’s stylish Cold War thriller is loosely inspired by 1960 U-2 incident, in which a US pilot was shot down over Soviet airspace, leading to a tense exchange of prisoners on Berlin’s Glienicke Bridge. Tom Hanks stars as the American lawyer defending Mark Rylance’s Russian spy. Read our review of Bridge of Spies
Tom Hanks in Bridge of Spies Photo: DreamWorks/Twentieth Century Fox
Mad Max: Fury Road: In George Miller’s antipodean dystopia, water is scarce and petrol is king. This long-awaited follow-up to his classic Eighties action/sci-fi trilogy stars Tom Hardy as the grizzled Max, but Charlize Theron steals the show as one-armed truck driver Imperator Furiosa. Read our review of Mad Max: Fury Road
Tom Hardy in Mad Max: Fury Road Photo: Warner Bros
The Martian: Based on Andy Weir's cult self-published novel, Steven Spielberg's sci-fi survival romp stars Matt Damon as a surprisingly chipper stranded astronaut. Read our review of The Martian
Matt Damon in The Martian Photo: Twentieth Century Fox
The Revenant: In this gritty period endurance drama, which picked up Best Picture awards at both the Baftas and the Golden Globes, Leonardo DiCaprio plays a 19th century fur-trapper lost in a frozen wilderness. Read our review of The Revenant
Leonardo DiCaprio in The Revenant
Room: Brie Larson plays a brutalised mother, imprisoned in a garden shed with her 5-year-old son. The film, like the best-selling novel it is based on, is disturbing and compelling in equal measure. Read our review of Room
Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay in Room
Spotlight - Winner!: This gripping dramatisation of The Boston Globe’s investigation into child abuse in the Catholic Church stars Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo. The film’s down-the-line style is clearly inspired by another journalistic classic, 1976 Oscar-winner All The President’s Men. Read our review of Spotlight
Michael Keaton, Liev Schreiber, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, John Slattery and Brian d'Arcy James in Spotlight
Best Actor
Bryan Cranston – Trumbo: The Breaking Bad star plays blacklisted Hollywood screenwriter Dalton Trumbo in this McCarthy-era biopic. Read our review of Trumbo
Bryan Cranston in Trumbo
Matt Damon – The Martian: Stranded on the red planet with a diminishing supply of food and water, Matt Damon’s botanist-turned-astronaut somehow manages to keep his sense of humour.
Matt Damon in The Martian
Leonardo DiCaprio – The Revenant - Winner!: Five-time Oscar nominee DiCaprio clearly had his eyes on an award when he chose this role. Playing a 19th-century huntsman, he endured punishing sub-zero temperatures and ate raw buffalo liver while shooting the film. He's already been rewarded for his efforts, having scooped up Best Actor trophies at this year's Baftas and Golden Globes.
Michael Fassbender – Steve Jobs: Fassbender’s unflattering portrayal of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs was met with widespread critical acclaim, but failed to find an audience at the box office. Read our review of Steve Jobs
Michael Fassbender in Steve Jobs
Eddie Redmayne – The Danish Girl: Redmayne plays the title role in this sensitive portrait of Lili Elbe, a transgender Danish painter who was one of the earliest patients to undergo sex reassignment surgery. Read our review of The Danish Girl
Best Actress
Cate Blanchett – Carol: Playing the eponymous Carol, an unhappy, divorcing woman who falls instantly in love with Rooney Mara’s department store assistant, Blanchett is an exquisite mass of contradictions. Read our review of Carol
Brie Larson – Room - Winner!: Rising indie queen Brie Larson plays a woman kidnapped and forced to raise her child in a single room, in this adaptation of the best-selling novel by Emma Donoghue. Larson took home Best Actress awards from the Golden Globes and Baftas earlier this year.
Jacob Tremblay and Brie Larson in Room
Jennifer Lawrence – Joy: This is the third time Jennifer Lawrence has been nominated for an Oscar – she won for Silver Linings Playbook, but missed out on Winter’s Bone and American Hustle. Here she plays Joy Mangano, the broke single mother of two whose invention of the self-wringing Miracle Mop helped make her a millionaire 50 times over. Read our review of Joy
Jennifer Lawrence in Joy
Charlotte Rampling – 45 Years: Rampling gives a career-best performance in this chilling portrait of a marriage stretched to breaking -point, grappling with the closed-off former life of her husband (Tom Courtenay). Read our review of 45 Years
Charlotte Rampling in 45 Years
Saoirse Ronan – Brooklyn: Saoirse Ronan gives easily the most mature performance of her career as a young Irish woman persuaded to move to New York, and forced to choose between paramours on both sides of the Atlantic
Emory Cohen and Saoirse Ronan in Brooklyn
Best Supporting Actor
Christian Bale – The Big Short: In this satirical take on the 2007 financial crisis, Bale plays a genius hedge fund manager who earns a fortune by gambling on the collapse of the housing market. Watch the trailer for The Big Short
Christian Bale in The Big Short Photo: Paramount Pictures
Tom Hardy – The Revenant: Few actors can summon brooding, inarticulate violence as powerfully as Tom Hardy, as proven by his menacing turn as Fitzgerald, a hard-bitten 19th-century fur trapper, with a grudge against Leonardo DiCaprio’s Hugh Glass.
Tom Hardy in The Revenant
Mark Ruffalo - Spotlight: Ruffalo’s nuanced portrayal of a dogged Boston Globe reporter made the most of his gift for rumpled naturalism in Thomas McCarthy’s investigative drama. Read about the true story behind Spotlight
Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo in Spotlight Photo: Kerry Hayes
Mark Rylance – Bridge of Spies - Winner!: The renowned thesp was a mesmerising presence as the soft-spoken, inscrutable Russian spy defended by Tom Hanks in Steven Spielberg’s Cold War drama.
Mark Rylance and Tom Hanks in Bridge of Spies Photo: DreamWorks/20th Century Fox
Sylvester Stallone – Creed: Four decades he first stepped into the ring as Rocky Balboa, Stallone’s comeback performance an older, frailer Italian Stallion has won over audiences and critics alike. Read our review of Creed
Sylvester Stallone as Rocky Balboa in Creed Photo: Warner Bros
Best Supporting Actress
Jennifer Jason Leigh – The Hateful Eight: Leigh’s Daisy Domerghue is perhaps the most likeable character in Quentin Tarantino’s snowy Western – but that’s not saying much. Held captive by Kurt Russell’s Hangman, she soon proves herself as poisonous as her captors. Read our review of The Hateful Eight
J
ennifer Jason Leigh in The Hateful Eight Photo: Weinstein Company
Rooney Mara – Carol: More than holding her own against Blanchett, Rooney Mara is all doe-eyes and sullen lips as Carol’s maybe-girlfriend Therese Belivet.
Rooney Mara in Carol
Kate Winslet – Steve Jobs: Winslet effortlessly matches Michael Fassbender’s Steve Jobs as the Apple pioneer’s long-time confidante, Joanna Hoffman.
Kate Winslet and Michael Fassbender in Steve Jobs Photo: Rex Features
Alicia Vikander – The Danish Girl: - Winner! The Swedish actress was the breakout star of 2015 thanks to star turns in Ex Machina, Testament of Youth, The Man from UNCLE and this Tom Hooper-directed biopic. She played Gerda Wegener, an artist from Copenhagen whose husband is Lili Elbe, one of the first people to undergo sex reassignment surgery.
Alicia Vikander in The Danish Girl
Rachel McAdams – Spotlight: McAdams more than held her own alongside co-stars Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo in this gripping dramatisation of The Boston Globe’s investigation into child abuse in the Catholic Church.
Rachel McAdams in Spotlight
Best Director
Alejandro González Iñárritu – The Revenant - Winner!: Iñárritu, who won a Best Director Oscar in 2014 with Birdman, went more than $70 million over budget while shooting this frost-bitten period survival drama. To capture the film’s brutal landscape, he insisted on only filming in natural light.
Alejandro González Iñárritu directing Leonardo DiCaprio on the set of The Revenant
Lenny Abrahamson – Room: Abrahamson’s grim domestic thriller follows the outlines of Emma Donoghue’s Booker Prize-nominated novel, but (according to Telegraph film critic Tim Robey) fails to reproduce the book’s raw emotional power.
Tom McCarthy – Spotlight: McCarthy learned a lot about the power of realism while acting in The Wire, and put that knowledge to good use in this understated investigative drama.
Adam McKay – The Big Short: Anchorman director Adam McKay proved himself capable of a more serious kind of comedy with this dark financial satire, following a group of awkward hedge fund managers during the 2007 financial crisis.
George Miller – Mad Max: Fury Road: Thirty years after Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome, the 70-year-old Australian filmmaker returned to his diesel-fuelled dystopia for a nail-biting fourth instalment.
Director George Miller talks to Charlize Theron on the set of Mad Max: Fury Road
Best Picture
The Big Short: A portrait of the "weirdos" who profited from the 2008 financial collapse, based on the bestselling book by Michael Lewis. Read our review of The Big Short
A scene from Adam McKay's The Big Short Photo: Paramount Pictures
Brooklyn: Saoirse Ronan stars as a young woman forced to move from 1950s rural Ireland to New York, in Nick Hornby’s adaptation of Colm Tóibín’s coming-of-age novel. It's an outsider for this year's Best Picture Oscar, but it did pick up the Outstanding British Film award at the Baftas. Read our review of Brooklyn
Saoirse Ronan and Emory Cohen in Brooklyn
Bridge of Spies: Steven Spielberg’s stylish Cold War thriller is loosely inspired by 1960 U-2 incident, in which a US pilot was shot down over Soviet airspace, leading to a tense exchange of prisoners on Berlin’s Glienicke Bridge. Tom Hanks stars as the American lawyer defending Mark Rylance’s Russian spy. Read our review of Bridge of Spies
Tom Hanks in Bridge of Spies Photo: DreamWorks/Twentieth Century Fox
Mad Max: Fury Road: In George Miller’s antipodean dystopia, water is scarce and petrol is king. This long-awaited follow-up to his classic Eighties action/sci-fi trilogy stars Tom Hardy as the grizzled Max, but Charlize Theron steals the show as one-armed truck driver Imperator Furiosa. Read our review of Mad Max: Fury Road
Tom Hardy in Mad Max: Fury Road Photo: Warner Bros
The Martian: Based on Andy Weir's cult self-published novel, Steven Spielberg's sci-fi survival romp stars Matt Damon as a surprisingly chipper stranded astronaut. Read our review of The Martian
Matt Damon in The Martian Photo: Twentieth Century Fox
The Revenant: In this gritty period endurance drama, which picked up Best Picture awards at both the Baftas and the Golden Globes, Leonardo DiCaprio plays a 19th century fur-trapper lost in a frozen wilderness. Read our review of The Revenant
Leonardo DiCaprio in The Revenant
Room: Brie Larson plays a brutalised mother, imprisoned in a garden shed with her 5-year-old son. The film, like the best-selling novel it is based on, is disturbing and compelling in equal measure. Read our review of Room
Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay in Room
Spotlight - Winner!: This gripping dramatisation of The Boston Globe’s investigation into child abuse in the Catholic Church stars Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo. The film’s down-the-line style is clearly inspired by another journalistic classic, 1976 Oscar-winner All The President’s Men. Read our review of Spotlight
Michael Keaton, Liev Schreiber, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, John Slattery and Brian d'Arcy James in Spotlight
Best Actor
Bryan Cranston – Trumbo: The Breaking Bad star plays blacklisted Hollywood screenwriter Dalton Trumbo in this McCarthy-era biopic. Read our review of Trumbo
Bryan Cranston in Trumbo
Matt Damon – The Martian: Stranded on the red planet with a diminishing supply of food and water, Matt Damon’s botanist-turned-astronaut somehow manages to keep his sense of humour.
Matt Damon in The Martian
Leonardo DiCaprio – The Revenant - Winner!: Five-time Oscar nominee DiCaprio clearly had his eyes on an award when he chose this role. Playing a 19th-century huntsman, he endured punishing sub-zero temperatures and ate raw buffalo liver while shooting the film. He's already been rewarded for his efforts, having scooped up Best Actor trophies at this year's Baftas and Golden Globes.
Michael Fassbender – Steve Jobs: Fassbender’s unflattering portrayal of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs was met with widespread critical acclaim, but failed to find an audience at the box office. Read our review of Steve Jobs
Michael Fassbender in Steve Jobs
Eddie Redmayne – The Danish Girl: Redmayne plays the title role in this sensitive portrait of Lili Elbe, a transgender Danish painter who was one of the earliest patients to undergo sex reassignment surgery. Read our review of The Danish Girl
Best Actress
Cate Blanchett – Carol: Playing the eponymous Carol, an unhappy, divorcing woman who falls instantly in love with Rooney Mara’s department store assistant, Blanchett is an exquisite mass of contradictions. Read our review of Carol
Brie Larson – Room - Winner!: Rising indie queen Brie Larson plays a woman kidnapped and forced to raise her child in a single room, in this adaptation of the best-selling novel by Emma Donoghue. Larson took home Best Actress awards from the Golden Globes and Baftas earlier this year.
Jacob Tremblay and Brie Larson in Room
Jennifer Lawrence – Joy: This is the third time Jennifer Lawrence has been nominated for an Oscar – she won for Silver Linings Playbook, but missed out on Winter’s Bone and American Hustle. Here she plays Joy Mangano, the broke single mother of two whose invention of the self-wringing Miracle Mop helped make her a millionaire 50 times over. Read our review of Joy
Jennifer Lawrence in Joy
Charlotte Rampling – 45 Years: Rampling gives a career-best performance in this chilling portrait of a marriage stretched to breaking -point, grappling with the closed-off former life of her husband (Tom Courtenay). Read our review of 45 Years
Charlotte Rampling in 45 Years
Saoirse Ronan – Brooklyn: Saoirse Ronan gives easily the most mature performance of her career as a young Irish woman persuaded to move to New York, and forced to choose between paramours on both sides of the Atlantic
Emory Cohen and Saoirse Ronan in Brooklyn
Best Supporting Actor
Christian Bale – The Big Short: In this satirical take on the 2007 financial crisis, Bale plays a genius hedge fund manager who earns a fortune by gambling on the collapse of the housing market. Watch the trailer for The Big Short
Christian Bale in The Big Short Photo: Paramount Pictures
Tom Hardy – The Revenant: Few actors can summon brooding, inarticulate violence as powerfully as Tom Hardy, as proven by his menacing turn as Fitzgerald, a hard-bitten 19th-century fur trapper, with a grudge against Leonardo DiCaprio’s Hugh Glass.
Tom Hardy in The Revenant
Mark Ruffalo - Spotlight: Ruffalo’s nuanced portrayal of a dogged Boston Globe reporter made the most of his gift for rumpled naturalism in Thomas McCarthy’s investigative drama. Read about the true story behind Spotlight
Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo in Spotlight Photo: Kerry Hayes
Mark Rylance – Bridge of Spies - Winner!: The renowned thesp was a mesmerising presence as the soft-spoken, inscrutable Russian spy defended by Tom Hanks in Steven Spielberg’s Cold War drama.
Mark Rylance and Tom Hanks in Bridge of Spies Photo: DreamWorks/20th Century Fox
Sylvester Stallone – Creed: Four decades he first stepped into the ring as Rocky Balboa, Stallone’s comeback performance an older, frailer Italian Stallion has won over audiences and critics alike. Read our review of Creed
Sylvester Stallone as Rocky Balboa in Creed Photo: Warner Bros
Best Supporting Actress
Jennifer Jason Leigh – The Hateful Eight: Leigh’s Daisy Domerghue is perhaps the most likeable character in Quentin Tarantino’s snowy Western – but that’s not saying much. Held captive by Kurt Russell’s Hangman, she soon proves herself as poisonous as her captors. Read our review of The Hateful Eight
ennifer Jason Leigh in The Hateful Eight Photo: Weinstein Company
Rooney Mara – Carol: More than holding her own against Blanchett, Rooney Mara is all doe-eyes and sullen lips as Carol’s maybe-girlfriend Therese Belivet.
Rooney Mara in Carol
Kate Winslet – Steve Jobs: Winslet effortlessly matches Michael Fassbender’s Steve Jobs as the Apple pioneer’s long-time confidante, Joanna Hoffman.
Alicia Vikander – The Danish Girl: - Winner! The Swedish actress was the breakout star of 2015 thanks to star turns in Ex Machina, Testament of Youth, The Man from UNCLE and this Tom Hooper-directed biopic. She played Gerda Wegener, an artist from Copenhagen whose husband is Lili Elbe, one of the first people to undergo sex reassignment surgery.
Alicia Vikander in The Danish Girl
Rachel McAdams – Spotlight: McAdams more than held her own alongside co-stars Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo in this gripping dramatisation of The Boston Globe’s investigation into child abuse in the Catholic Church.
Rachel McAdams in Spotlight
Best Director
Alejandro González Iñárritu – The Revenant - Winner!: Iñárritu, who won a Best Director Oscar in 2014 with Birdman, went more than $70 million over budget while shooting this frost-bitten period survival drama. To capture the film’s brutal landscape, he insisted on only filming in natural light.
Alejandro González Iñárritu directing Leonardo DiCaprio on the set of The Revenant
Lenny Abrahamson – Room: Abrahamson’s grim domestic thriller follows the outlines of Emma Donoghue’s Booker Prize-nominated novel, but (according to Telegraph film critic Tim Robey) fails to reproduce the book’s raw emotional power.
Tom McCarthy – Spotlight: McCarthy learned a lot about the power of realism while acting in The Wire, and put that knowledge to good use in this understated investigative drama.
Adam McKay – The Big Short: Anchorman director Adam McKay proved himself capable of a more serious kind of comedy with this dark financial satire, following a group of awkward hedge fund managers during the 2007 financial crisis.
George Miller – Mad Max: Fury Road: Thirty years after Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome, the 70-year-old Australian filmmaker returned to his diesel-fuelled dystopia for a nail-biting fourth instalment.
Director George Miller talks to Charlize Theron on the set of Mad Max: Fury Road
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