NEW YORK (AP) â An emotional plea by Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi and moving words from Ryan Coogler on the violence in Minneapolis stirred a National Board of Review Awards ceremony Tuesday in which Paul Thomas Andersonâs âOne Battle After Anotherâ was again crowned the best film of the year.
Coming two days after Sundayâs Golden Globes, the annual, untelevised New York gala, held in the cavernous midtown banquet all Cipriani 42nd Street and hosted by Willie Geist, played out as a more intimate and frank-spoken alternative.
The winners themselves were already announced, so the night was always going to belong to âOne Battle After Another.â The National Board of review, a group that is made up of film enthusiasts and dates to 1909, not only named it 2025âs best film but awarded the best actor prize to Leonardo DiCaprio, best director to Anderson, best supporting actor to Benicio Del Toro and breakthrough performer to Chase Infiniti.
Yet in an ongoing parade of awards for âOne Battle After Another,â its night at the NBRs still stood out. The surprise presenter of the movieâs best film award was Martin Scorsese, who praised âthe audacityâ of Andersonâs narratives and the accomplishment of his latest.
âLike all great films, it canât really be compared to anything else,â Scorsese said. âIt stands alone. Itâs a great American film.â
Anderson, trying to take in the wealth of honors, attempted to describe what â One Battle After Another,â his father-daughter tale of revolution, might represent. His answer came in pointing out his own daughter, sitting at his table.
âI donât know what our movie is about, but I do know itâs about loving your kids,â Anderson said.
For many of the honorees, the world outside the starry banquet weighed heavily. Cooglerâs speech was among the nightâs most poignant. The âSinnersâ director was honored for his screenplay for the vampire thriller and was introduced by the filmâs star, longtime collaborator Michael B. Jordan.
Both were honored 13 years earlier by the board for their first movie together, â Fruitvale Station.â Recalling that film, based on the true story of the 2009 killing of Oscar Grant by a Bay Area Rapid Transit police officer in Oakland, California, Coogler turned to the recent fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good by an immigration enforcement agent in Minneapolis.
âI was young and naive, and I thought the movie was going to change the world and make it so you didnât see people executed by civil service on camera anymore,â Coogler said. âI was proven wrong again and again. And itâs tough to be here and not think about Minnesota.â
âI canât be here and not think about Renee,â Coogler added.
Still, the ceremonyâs most powerful words came from Panahi, the dissident Iranian filmmaker who for nearly two decades worked clandestinely in his native country while being placed under house arrest and jailed. Panahiâs latest, â It Was Just an Accident,â was awarded best international film.
The movie, inspired by Panahi's own imprisonment, is a revenge drama about stopping the cycle of violence and oppression in Iran. On Tuesday the death toll from a nationwide crackdown on demonstrators in that country surpassed 2,500, according to activists.
âAs we stand here, the state of Iran is gunning down protesters and a savage massacre continues blatantly on the streets of Iran,â Panahi said. âToday the real scene is not on screens but on the streets of Iran. The Islamic Republic has caused a bloodbath to delay its collapse.â
âThis is no longer a metaphor,â he continued. âThis is not a story. This is not a film. This is a reality written with bullets day after day.â
Panahi called on the film community to speak out and âuse any voice and any platform you have.â
âToday, cinema has the power to stand by defenseless people,â Panahi said. âLetâs stand by them.â
Panahiâs remarks, delivered through an interpreter, shook the audience. And when the next award went to Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar, for adapted screenplay for their plaintive Pacific Northwest period drama âTrain Dreams,â the filmmakers seemed to cut short their speech, which was partially about how making the movie and then promoting it through awards season meant sacrificing time with their young children.
âWhen the world is kind of burning down, it can feel frivolous at times,â Bentley said. âI just want to say thank you most of all to Mr. Panahi for reminding us for what we can do with the medium and why it can be worth doing.â
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