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‘Sinners’ Should Win Best Picture. It’s Not Even Close.

March 12, 2026
'Sinners' Should Win Best Picture. It's Not Even Close.

And then there were two—frontrunners.

Esquire behindthescenes of a film set featuring actors and a camera crew

Ryan Coogler'sSinnersis themost nominated(16) film in Oscar history.Paul Thomas Anderson'sOne Battle After Another, such are the Oscars-so-white ways of Hollywood, is still touted as the favorite for Best Picture.

Nonetheless,Sinnersshould win the Oscar for Best Picture. And the race shouldn't even be close.

Apologies for the ample spoilers ahead.

OBAA, a dark comedy and action thriller set in a fictional California town, begins with a focus on Bob Ferguson (Leonardo DiCaprio), a member of a revolutionary group called the French 75, and his partner Perfidia Beverly Hills (Teyana Taylor), a Black woman. It opens with the group raiding an immigration detention center. In the process, Perfidia, who's characterized as domineering and insatiable in her sexual appetite, humiliates Colonel Lockjaw (Sean Penn), strife that sets off Lockjaw's psychosexual obsession with her, desire replete with a tryst. Perfidia becomes pregnant, and Bob trades the life of a leftist revolutionary for fatherhood. In the film's long prologue, Perfidia abandons her new family, is caught, snitches on her comrades, and gets ghost.

The second half of the film picks up when their daughter, Willa (Chase Infiniti), is a teenager. Lockjaw, who's been offered the chance to join a cabal of powerful Christian nationalists, starts hunting Willa to test his paternity of her and the attendant risks to his dreams of leveled-up white supremacy.

two men in period clothing standing beside a vintage car

Before the PTA acolytes blaspheme me a hater: Kudos for directing the performances of Deandre (Regina Hall), who along with Willa, are Black characters distant from satire. Kudos for Sensei Sergio St. Carlos (Benicio del Toro), who's a calming force on the film and funny without straining for laughs. Kudos to Penn for disappearing into the role of the racist officer, one conflicted with unforgettable idiosyncrasies. Kudos to the pulse-gunning action of the film's last third. Kudos to Anderson for dramatizing a secret society of prominent white men who echo the Epstein files.

Critics have hailedOBAAas a "deeply humanist story of rebellion." Proclaim "there is nothing trivial in [PTA's] portrait of shattered lives and relationships and of an American society shaken to its core." But I found those claims to be untrue. The film is undeserving of the Oscar for Best Picture, most of all because its portrayal of Black people is somewhere between insidiously problematic and flagrantly anti-Black.

The most glaring example is Perfidia (this ain't me knocking Taylor or her prodigious talent but a critique of the role), who's sexualized to the point that I wondered whether she should be read as satirical. While Black women, too, contain multitudes, her hypersexuality seems grounded in the stereotype of a promiscuous Black woman (never to be divorced from the virtuous white woman) and appears aimed at titillation rather than some other essential story function. Perfidia is also presented as a woman who's at least a second-generation revolutionary, and aren't revolutionaries people of principle? It was tough for me to buy that a legacy revolutionary would snitch with the quickness on her coconspirators, if at all. The "no snitching" dictum in Black culture is rooted in a legitimate mistrust of the justice system. That Perfidia and others in the group go from radicals to state informants in the time it takes a grenade to blow maligns the integrity of Black resistance.

Perfidia also abandons her infant—"You realize I put myself first, right?" she tells Bob on her way out—a decision I judged against the extensive discourse on a so-called crisis of broken Black families. Plus, Perfidia is the only member of the group who murders someone during their missions. And whom does she kill? A Black security guard.

The lone Black male member of the French 75 is Laredo (Wood Harris). Laredo has almost no lines, but Anderson saw fit to depict a moment in which he kisses Mae (Alana Haim) and says, "Regular working white girl. Now do your thing," before sending her off to a bank job. A cringe line that seems meant to reify the trite trope of Black men objectifying and coveting white women.

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The problematic portrayal of Blackness extends to Junglepussy (Shayna McHayle), who jumps on a bank teller's counter during that same lethal mission and declares her code name. While McHayle uses Junglepussy as her rap moniker, it's telling that Anderson chose not only to keep the name for her character but to have her trumpet it—and that her moniker is the lone one borrowed from real life. Not to mention that Bob, the man in an interracial relationship with a Black woman, is christened "Ghetto Pat," which is a hella curious handle, ain't it, given the long history of Black people being maligned as "ghetto"?

Deep into the action of the film, Sergio quips to Bob, "I've got a little Latino Harriet Tubman thing going on." What was the point of having Sergio, a Mexican man, turn one of Black history's most iconic figures into a punchline, when he could've mentioned someone like Manuel Luis del Fierro, the Mexican who protected an absconding slave from kidnappers in 1850?

OBAAportends itself a film about a government that has devolved into an authoritarian regime and its relentless persecution of immigrants, about humanity and the measures the people employ to fight oppression. But it's hollow on those subjects. Beyond showing Bob half-watchingThe Battle of Algiersat home, Anderson shortchanges the history of revolutionary social movements. Politics are treated with a flippancy that undermines the import of radical action and the people who dare it—the pure antithesis of the message we need now. How could it do anything but fall short of satirizing a regime that has proved near boundless in its violence and corruption and blatant bigotries, that treats contrition as anathema. And if satire ain't its aim, I can abide even less its antagonism toward my people, not to mention how it trivializes resistance. Plus, the film recapitulates Hollywood's familiar message: The battle for the fate of America, often synonymous with the fate of the world, is at base a battle between white men, struggles that evermore foreordain a great white savior.

Sinners, the genre-bending horror thriller set in Jim Crow–era Mississippi, centers Blackness. It begins with Sammie (Miles Caton), a young blues-loving sharecropper from Mississippi being recruited by his twin cousins Smoke and Stack (both Michael B. Jordan) to play their brand-new juke joint. On the juke joint's first night, white vampires surround it and prey on the patrons, setting off a battle for lives and souls.

Before anybody gets to accusing me of overt bias: Critics contend thatSinners's "moments of tragedy and violence are never dwelled upon properly." Argue it's a "messy picture that throws the kitchen sink at the genre, and yet, somehow, often misses." But I view the film as a triumph for its deliberative treatment of violence. For how it coheres into a story that explores African folklore and the healing power of culture; Black freedom and self-determination; love of family and community; with how it models resisting injustice.

WhileOBAApostures at it,Sinnersis radical in that there are no white saviors, in that Black people are not the stock sidekicks of courageous white people but heroes at the heart of the film. In fact most of its white characters, including all who first surround the juke joint to prey on its patrons, are depicted as hostile to the Black community (as well as the Asian characters and the mixed woman who are its denizens). Like the character of Mary (Hailee Steinfeld), who, though she professes to love Stack, enters a veritable sanctuary for Black folks against warnings. Mary becomes the vampires' first victim, which is also to say their first coconspirator. Like the husband of married vampires who's a Klan member before he's bitten. Like the Klansman who sold the twins the barn that became their juke joint and returns the next day to slaughter all present. And yet, somehow,Sinnersis so soulful that the lead vampire, Remmick (Jack O'Connell), is imbued with more humanity than most of the Black characters inOBAA.

This article appeared in the April/May 2026 issue of Esquiresubscribe

Then there's the fact thatSinnersis just all-around extraordinary movie-making. There's the originality of Coogler's Oscar-nominated screenplay. There's Ludwig Göransson's superb Oscar-nominated score. There's the sublime one-shot scene in which Sammie's singing conjures a journey (in which African times past, present, and future exist all at once) that not only sets the stakes for the main characters but, as Coogler has explained, features "ancestor spirits from both the past and the future" of Black music: African drummers, an electric guitarist, a hip-hop DJ and dancer, even Chinese opera dancers. There's the indelible Oscar-nominated performance of Michael B. Jordan, a man who became two humans, each intimately connected and miraculously distinct.

Damn the naysayers, there is only one—worthiest.

Coogler'sBlack Panther, which was also nominated for Best Picture, became not just a blockbuster but a cultural touchstone. This time, without the help of a superhero franchise, one of Hollywood's finest auteurs has done it again: delivered a transcendent work of art that is at once ingenious, an astute story about America, and a paean to his people. Which is why, come Oscar Sunday, when an A-lister announces the last award, iswearfogod, there better be a whole lot of ecstatic Black folks bounding onto that stage.

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Restaurants struggling to stay profitable as costs squeeze already slim margins

March 12, 2026
Restaurants struggling to stay profitable as costs squeeze already slim margins

Many restaurant owners are working to keep menu prices down even as rising costs eat into already slim profit margins, according to two new industry reports.

Scripps News

Americans are dining out less as affordability concerns grow. Combined with rising costs across food, labor, rent and technology, restaurants are feeling the impact.

New reports from the National Restaurant Association and the James Beard Foundation show restaurant owners say managing margins is a constant challenge as prices of multiple products have increased.

Restaurant owner John Simmons is among those who have seen profits slip.

"It added a couple points to my food costs which, that equates to tens of thousands of dollars," he said.

RELATED STORY |Inflation steady in February, but Iran war threatens higher prices

He is not alone. 42 percent of restaurants said they weren't profitable last year.

Chad Moutray, chief economist for the National Restaurant Association, said rising costs are hitting restaurants from multiple directions. "Well, we've seen overall labor and food costs go up 35% since the pandemic," he said "But it's not just those costs. We've seen insurance and taxes and everything else go up, utility costs, et cetera."

"Those extra costs have really eaten into the bottom line," he added.

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The solution isn't as simple as raising menu prices. According to the James Beard Foundation's report, establishments that raised prices by more than 10 percent were most likely to lose customers and then made lower profits.

Anne McBride, vice president of impact at the James Beard Foundation, said restaurants have reached a tipping point with customers.

"Chefs and operators feel that they can no longer pass on any additional increasing costs to their customers. We really hit a spot where consumers, diners, cannot pay any more at restaurants than they already are," she said.

Labor is another top concern, with 49 percent of restaurant operators reporting some level of staffing shortage. That trend could continue as operators look to cut costs.

RELATED STORY |Gas at $3.53 a gallon: Are EVs more affordable?

McBride said restaurants are restructuring to address the challenge.

"Restaurants are dressing labor shortages by being ruthless in their business structure and looking at, you know, our how many people need to be on the floor at any given time, how many People need to in the kitchen."

According to the latest jobs report, restaurants and bars lost nearly 30,000 jobs in February.

One big silver lining: according to the James Beard Foundation's report, nearly 3 in 4 restaurant operators are optimistic about business for this year.

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Marvel superheroes, 'Bridesmaids' cast to assemble on Oscars telecast

March 12, 2026
Marvel superheroes, 'Bridesmaids' cast to assemble on Oscars telecast

Marvel movie stars will assemble at the98th Academy Awardson March 15, along with the stars of "Bridesmaids."

USA TODAY

Producers of Sunday's Oscars show (ABC and Hulu, 7 ET/4 PT), hosted byConan O'Brien, revealed the onstage return of the movie casts during a news conference on March 11.

"There's going to be a huge reunion," executive producer Raj Kapoor said of the 2011 comedy"Bridesmaids,"starringRose Byrne,Kristen Wiig,Maya RudolphandMelissa McCarthy. "There have been rumors. We're excited to announce there's going to be a 'Bridesmaids' reunion that's going to be very special."

Executive producer Katy Mullan announced that there will be"a Marvel reunion for superhero fans."

USA TODAY Movie Meter:Help select the film of the year!

Conan O'Brien helps with the red carpet rollout for the 98th Oscars on Wednesday, March 11.

"So there will be superstars and superheroes," Mullan added, but didn't specify which superheroes would respond to the call for Oscars action.

On the topic of Oscar appearances, Mullan said somewhat cryptically that there would be an "extraterrestrial on stage" without confirming whether it would be the alien star of "E.T."

"But you can figure that out," Mullan added.

<p style=Oscars are here! See which actors, directors and films are nominated for the 98th Academy Awards, to be handed out live March 15 and broadcast on ABC and Hulu.

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Oscars 2026 – The top nominees in photos

Oscars are here! See which actors, directors and films are nominated for the 98th Academy Awards, to be handed out live March 15 and broadcast on ABC and Hulu.

Will the Oscars get political in the monologue?

Obviously, there will be overt political statements made from the podium and on the red carpet during and before the Oscars. But O'Brien, who was affected by and acknowledged the Los Angeles fires as 2025 host, said he would walk a careful line.

"What's happening in the world will be reflected in the show," he said. "My job as host is to walk this thin line between entertaining people and also acknowledging some of the realities. So it's a dance that goes on until the show begins."

O'Brien showed his whimsical side on the Oscars red carpet before the news conference, reclining comically on the rolled-up carpet. In rapidly changing political times, O'Brien says he and his team of writers have to move fast.

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"It's still evolving," O'Brien said of the monologue. "Jokes from two months ago are irrelevant now. And there might be things that happen this week that will find their way into the show."

'Sinners' will have a musical tribute, along with 'KPop Demon Hunters'

Smoke (Michael B. Jordan, center), flanked by brother Stack (also Jordan) and pal Cornbread (Omar Benson Miller), is wary of uninvited guests in the period horror film "Sinners."

The Ryan Coogler-directed film "Sinners,"the most-nominated film in Oscars history with 16(includingbest picture), will have a mega-sized musical tribute during the show. The expanded performance of the nominated song "I Lied to You," performed by Miles Caton and Raphael Saadiq, will feature costumes, choreographer Aakomon Jones, the "Sinners" cast and ballet dancer Misty Copeland.

"We've kind of blown it up, with the lovely Misty Copeland making an appearance," said Kapoor. "It's the most-nominated film and has a beautiful music story."

The animated movie "KPop Demon Hunters," and the HUNTR/X performance by Rei Ami, EJAE and Audrey Nuna of the Oscar-nominated song "Golden," will allow for a celebration of Korean culture during the show.

"There will be authentic Korean drummers and singers and choreography," said Kapoor. "We're telling global stories with global impact and doing things in a really different way."

The "Golden" song performance has been arranged by Mandy Moore,who choreographed the Taylor Swift Eras Tour. Moore promised a performance aided by an array of gold flags.

"I kept having this visual of these beautiful gold flags ... that should rise as (the singers) hit the stage," said Moore. "My job is to create this visual. We're going to see how it all goes on camera."

Look out for trees on the Oscars stage

The 2026 Oscars set will feature actual trees, production designer Misty Buckley promised, "which is really exciting."

"We're really leaning into that human and nature theme with big, beautiful, bold modern forms as well," Buckley said.

Kapoor said the overall theme of the show will be "humanity. Everything you see in the show is inspired by human touch and creativity."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Oscars show to reunite Marvel superheroes, 'Bridesmaids' cast

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Iran tells world to get ready for oil at $200 a barrel as it fires on merchant ships

March 12, 2026
Iran tells world to get ready for oil at $200 a barrel as it fires on merchant ships

By Parisa Hafezi, Alexander Cornwell and Bo Erickson

Reuters

DUBAI/TEL AVIV/WASHINGTON, March 11 (Reuters) - Iran said the world should be ready for oil at $200 a barrel as its forces hit merchant ships on Wednesday and the International Energy Agency recommended a massive release of strategic reserves to dampen one of the worst oil shocks since the 1970s.

The war unleashed with joint U.S. and Israeli airstrikes nearly two weeks ago has so far killed around 2,000 people, mostly Iranians ‌and Lebanese, as it has spread into Lebanon and thrown global energy markets and transport into chaos.

Despite what the Pentagon has described as the most intense airstrikes since the start of the war, Iran also fired at Israel and targets ‌across the Middle East on Wednesday, demonstrating it can still fight back.

On Wednesday, three vessels were reported to have been hit in Gulf waters as Iran's Revolutionary Guards said their forces had fired on ships in the Gulf that had disobeyed their orders.

U.S. President Donald Trump, who has not committed to a timeline for military operations, ​suggested on Wednesday he was not yet ready to call an end to the war.

At a rally in Kentucky, he said "we won" the war, but the United States didn't want to have to go back every two years.

"We don't want to leave early, do we?" he said. "We got to finish the job."

Trump said U.S. forces had knocked out 58 Iranian naval ships and that oil prices would come down and told reporters in Washington that Iran was "pretty much at the end of the line."

"Doesn't mean we're going to end it immediately, but ... They've got no navy, they've got no air force, they've got no anti-air traffic anything. They have no systems of control. We're just riding free range over that country," he said.

STRATEGIC STRAIT

Trump said the U.S. would now "look very strongly" at the Strait of Hormuz, adding: "The straits are in great shape. We've knocked out all ‌of their boats. They have some missiles, but not very many."

Despite Trump's words, there has been ⁠no sign that ships can safely sail through the strait, a now-blockaded channel along the Iranian coast that serves as a conduit for around a fifth of the world's oil. An Iranian military spokesperson said the strait was "undoubtedly" under Iran's control.

Trump said ships "should" transit through the strait but sources said Iran had deployed about a dozen mines in the channel, further complicating the blockade.

On Wednesday, the G7 group of nations - the ⁠United States, Canada, Japan, Italy, Britain, Germany and France - agreed to examine the option of providing escort for ships so they can navigate freely in the Gulf.

ABC News said the Federal Bureau of Investigation had warned of Iranian drones potentially striking the U.S. West Coast, although Trump said he was not worried that Iran might launch strikes on U.S. soil.

The State Department also warned that Iran and aligned militias may be planning to target U.S.-owned oil and energy infrastructure in Iraq and warned that militias had previously targeted hotels frequented by Americans.

U.S. and Israeli officials have said their aim is to end Iran's ​ability ​to use force beyond its borders and destroy its nuclear programme.Oil prices, which shot up earlier in the week to nearly $120 a barrel before settling back ​to around $90, rose nearly 5% on Wednesday amid renewed fears about supply disruption, while Wall Street's main ‌share indexes fell.

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The war has seen ports and cities in the Gulf states, as well as targets in Israel, hit by Iranian drone and missile barrages.

'LEGITIMATE TARGETS'

The U.S. military told Iranians to stay clear of ports with navy facilities, drawing a warning from Iran's military that if the ports were threatened, economic and trade centres in the region would be "legitimate targets".

With prices at the pumps already surging and Trump's Republican Party trailing badly in the polls ahead of midterm elections in November, oil prices have become an increasingly urgent element in the calculations behind the war.

The International Energy Agency, made up of major oil consuming nations, recommended releasing 400 million barrels from global strategic reserves to stabilise prices, the biggest such intervention in history, which was swiftly endorsed by Washington.

Trump said the IEA decision would "substantially reduce oil prices as we end this threat to America and the world."

U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said Trump had authorized the release of 172 million barrels from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve from next week.

The rate at which countries can release strategic reserves will vary and the amount released ‌would account for just a fraction of the supply through the Hormuz Strait.

Iranian officials made clear on Wednesday they intended to impose a prolonged economic shock.

"Get ​ready for oil to be $200 a barrel, because the oil price depends on regional security, which you have destabilised," Ebrahim Zolfaqari, spokesperson for Iran's military command, said ​in comments addressed to Washington.

After offices of a bank in Tehran were hit overnight, Zolfaqari said Iran would respond with attacks ​on banks that do business with the U.S. or Israel. People across the Middle East should stay 1,000 metres from banks, he added.

At sea, a Thai-flagged bulk carrier was set ablaze, forcing the evacuation of crew, ‌with three people reported missing and believed trapped in the engine room.

Two other ships, a Japanese-flagged container ​ship and a Marshall Islands-flagged bulk carrier, were also reported to have ​sustained damage from projectiles, bringing the number of merchant ships that have been hit since the war began to 14.

IRANIAN OFFICIAL SAYS MOJTABA KHAMENEI LIGHTLY WOUNDED

In Iran, huge crowds took to the streets for funerals for top commanders killed in airstrikes. They carried caskets and brandished flags and portraits of slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his son and successor, Mojtaba.

An Iranian official told Reuters Mojtaba Khamenei had been lightly wounded early in the war, when airstrikes killed his father, mother, wife ​and a son. He has not appeared in public or issued any direct message since the ‌war began.

Despite Trump's calls for Iranians to rise up, U.S. and Israeli hopes that Iran's system of clerical rule would be overthrown by popular protest have not been borne out.

Iran's police chief, Ahmadreza Radan, said on Wednesday anyone taking ​to the streets would be treated "as an enemy, not a protester. All our security forces have their fingers on the trigger".

(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Dubai, Alexander Cornwell in Tel Aviv and Bo Erickson in HEBRON, Kentucky, and Reuters ​bureaux; Writing by Peter Graff, James Mackenzie and David Brunnstrom; Editing by Sharon Singleton, Alex Richardson, Gareth Jones, Deepa Babington and Michael Perry)

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