Entertainment
How to watch every 2025 Oscar Best Picture nominee
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
In another year of outrageous cinema, 10 films made the cut in the Academy’s eyes to earn spots on the Best Picture Oscar nominations list. We found narrowing the best movies of the year down to only 10 to be downright impossible, opting instead for a top 25 list, so it comes as no surprise that there are plenty of snubs this year (zero nominations for Challengers? Seriously?).
Even though we’re a little disappointed a few of our favorites didn’t make the list, the ones that managed to nab the nomination are certainly worth a watch.
2025 Oscar nominations: See the full list
If you’d like to get up to date on the best films of the year (at least by the Academy’s standards), we’ve rounded up how you can watch all 10. Queue ’em up for a movie marathon that’s sure to be phenomenal. We’ll update the details as more of the films make their way from the theater to the small screen.
Anora
Anora, winner of the Palme d’Or at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival and Mashable’s favorite film of the year, is a Cinderella story that doesn’t quite go the way you’d expect. “Anora is magnificently alive,” Mashable’s reviewer writes, adding that it’s “as bold as it is brilliant.” It’s no surprise to us that not only did it nab a Best Picture nomination at the 2025 Oscars, but also five more nominations, including Best Director, Best Lead Actress, Best Supporting Actor, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Film Editing.
What’s it about?
“In a star-making turn, Mikey Madison (Scream 5) stars as a sex worker whose professional relationship with a young Russian client swiftly swings into a quickie wedding in Vegas. But [Sean] Baker, who’s made a career out of compelling films centered on the rich inner lives of sex workers, isn’t offering a sloppy retread of Pretty Woman. When cronies come banging on the mansion door, it’s up to Anora to fight for the future she wants.” — Kristy Puchko, Film Editor
Read Mashable’s review of Anora.
How to watch it: Buy or rent on digital
Still in select theaters across the country, Anora is available to rent or purchase at online retailers like Prime Video and Apple TV+ as of Dec. 17. It will eventually be streaming on Hulu, though no date has been specified quite yet.
The Brutalist
“A towering paean to the American dream,” as our reviewer wrote, The Brutalist clocked in at number 17 on our list of the best films of 2024. Directed by Brady Corbet, it’s also one of the most prominently featured films this awards season, with 10 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture. It already nabbed the Golden Globe for the Best Picture – Drama category, and despite igniting fresh conversation around the use of AI, it’s a favorite to take home the Academy Award as well.
What’s it about?
“The film, arresting from its first frames, spends three-and-a-half engrossing hours on the tale of László Tóth (Adrien Brody), a fictitious Jewish Hungarian architect and survivor of the Holocaust, whose arrival in America yields both rigorous struggle and tempting opportunity. It embodies the kind of American epics no longer really made by Hollywood studios. All the while, the film also explores the fraught corners of post-World War II Jewish identity in the West.” — Siddhant Adlakha, Film Critic
Read Mashable’s review of The Brutalist.
How to watch it: See it in theaters
Currently, the only way you can watch The Brutalist is by heading to the theater. There’s no official digital or streaming release date, but we’ll update this list once the date is released. As an A24 film, we do expect it to eventually make its way to Max alongside other A24 theatrical releases.
A Complete Unknown
It’s hard to get excited over yet another biopic, but the reviews of A Complete Unknown — which sees Timothée Chalamet embrace his inner Bob Dylan — have been surprisingly positive. Not only has the Dylan biopic nabbed a nomination for Best Picture, but also Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Costume Design, and Best Sound. James Mangold is also nominated for Best Director, Chalamet for Best Lead Actor, and Edward Norton and Monica Barbaro for their supporting roles.
What’s it about?
A Complete Unknown follows Bob Dylan’s (Chalamet) rise to fame in the early ’60s, charting his beginnings as a folk singer in the New York music scene. “But once Dylan hits his groove, the film launches forward several years to 1965, when he’s an established megastar whose emerging interest in electric guitar threatens to outrage his fanbase at the Newport Folk Festival, and his early allies.” — KP
Read Mashable’s review of A Complete Unknown.
How to watch it: See it in theaters
Released on Christmas Day, A Complete Unknown is still floating around in theaters and has yet to make its digital debut. We’ll keep you updated on when you can purchase or rent the film online. It will eventually make its way to Hulu, alongside other Searchlight Pictures films, but the official streaming date is currently unknown.
Conclave
Directed by Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front) and set amid the halls of the Vatican, the psychological thriller Conclave made our list of the best movies of 2024. Two-time Oscar nominee Ralph Fiennes leads a star-studded cast, which includes Stanley Tucci as Cardinal Bellini, John Lithgow as Cardinal Tremblay, Sergio Castellitto as Cardinal Tedesco, and Isabella Rossellini as Sister Agnes. It’s no surprise to us that the Vatican-set tale earned a nod for Best Picture at this year’s Oscars. It also scored nominations for Lead Actor, Supporting Actress, Adapted Screenplay, Costume Design, Original Score, Film Editing, and Production Design.
What’s it about?
“In the sacred halls of the Vatican, the Catholic church’s most revered leaders gather together for a series of secret votes to determine who among them will be God’s representative on Earth. And as dean of the conclave, Cardinal Thomas Lawrence (Fiennes) is tasked not only with keeping things running smoothly but also sussing out what skeletons lie in the closets of the contenders.” — KP
Read Mashable’s review of Conclave.
How to watch: Stream it on Peacock
As a Focus Features film, Conclave made its streaming debut on Peacock back in December. A Peacock Premium subscription will run you $7.99 per month with ads or $13.99 per month without ads. Of course, you can also rent or purchase the film at digital retailers like Prime Video for as low as $5.99.
Dune: Part Two
A pop culture phenomenon, Dune: Part Two dominated the box office in 2024 with over $714 million globally. The Denis Villeneuve-directed film — which brings back Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, and Stellan Skarsgård and adds Austin Butler, Florence Pugh, Christopher Walken, and Léa Seydoux — “swings bigger and often hits harder, soaring beyond even the epic highs of its predecessor,” according to Mashable’s Belen Edwards. It cracked the top 10 of our favorite films list of 2024 and has earned five Oscar nominations, including Best Picture.
What’s it about?
“Dune: Part Two continues the story of Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet), who finds himself among the planet Arrakis’ indigenous Fremen. There he becomes entangled in the impossible position of hoping to avenge the Harkonnens’ attack on his house, while also trying to avoid a future in which he unleashes holy war upon the universe.” — Belen Edwards, Entertainment Reporter
Read Mashable’s review of Dune: Part Two.
How to watch it: Stream it on Max or Netflix
The second installment of the sci-fi franchise started streaming on Max in May of 2024, alongside Dune: Part One. Max subscriptions start at $9.99 per month with ads. As of January 2025, Part Two is also available to stream on Netflix. Subscriptions start at just $7.99 per month with ads. You can also rent or purchase the film on Prime Video and other digital retailers for as low as $3.99.
Emilia Pérez
“Jacques Audiard’s gaudy, star-studded Cannes winner is stirring and surprisingly philosophical,” writes Adlakha. It stars Zoe Saldaña, Karla Sofía Gascón, Selena Gomez, and Adriana Paz in a musical transgender modern cartel saga. While it didn’t make our top films of 2024 list, it managed to score the most Oscar nominations of any film, including Best Picture, Director, Lead Actress, Supporting Actress, Adapted Screenplay, Cinematography, Original Score, Sound, Original Song (x2), Film Editing, International Feature Film, and Makeup and Hairstyling.
What’s it about?
“Emilia Pérez centers on the intertwining stories of four women in Mexico. Chief among them is transgender cartel leader Emilia (Gascón), who asks lawyer Rita (Saldaña) to help her fake her own death so she can undergo gender-affirming surgery and live as her true self.” — BE
Read Mashable’s review of Emilia Pérez.
How to watch it: Stream it on Netflix
Originally premiering at the Cannes Film Festival in June of 2024, Emilia Pérez made its streaming debut on Netflix back in November. The cheapest Netflix subscription will cost you $7.99 per month, but you’ll have to endure some ads along the way. Don’t want ads? The price jumps up to $17.99 per month instead.
I’m Still Here
In a surprise by the Academy, international feature I’m Still Here earned three Oscar nods, including Best Picture, after its star Fernanda Torres won the Golden Globe for her leading role. Based on Marcelo Rubens Paiva’s memoir of the same name, the Walter Salles-directed Brazilian drama has an impeccable 95 percent critic rating and 99 percent audience rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It’s the underdog of the Best Picture category.
What’s it about?
I’m Still Here follows the heartbreaking real-life story of Eunice Paiva (Torres), whose husband Rubens disappears at the hands of the Brazilian military dictatorship in the early 1970s. The lonely and frightening battle to learn the truth and keep her family together transforms her into an activist, lawyer, and hero.
How to watch it: See it in theaters
I’m Still Here just made its theatrical debut on Jan. 17, 2025. That’s currently the only way to watch the film, although we’re expecting it to make its digital debut soon at retailers like Apple TV and Prime Video. Stay tuned.
Nickel Boys
Cracking the top three of our best films of the year list, Nickel Boys is an “exquisite, powerful adaptation” of Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name. As Adlakha writes in his review for Mashable, the moving film about a violent reform school in 1960s Florida is truly transformative. Thus, it is no surprise that it earned nominations for both Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay at this year’s Oscars.
Mashable Deals
What’s it about?
“The film, like the novel, follows 16-year-old Elwood Curtis (Ethan Herisse), a promising teen from Tallahassee who lives with his grandmother, Hattie (Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor), and navigates the Jim Crow-era South. On his way to a technical college for advanced classes, the high schooler finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, leading to false charges of theft and internment at the Nickel Academy, an isolated juvenile home on a sprawling estate that presents itself as a place of hard work and reform.
A young adherent of Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., Elwood’s idealism quickly clashes with Nickel’s harsh reality of segregation and corporal punishment. However, he also finds guidance and companionship in Turner (Brandon Wilson), a fellow student hailing from Houston whose more upbeat demeanor and slick survival tips exist in close proximity to his own fears of the school’s ruthless staff.” — SA
Read Mashable’s review of Nickel Boys.
How to watch it: Stream it on MGM+ beginning Feb. 28
An Amazon MGM Studios film, Nickel Boys is currently only available to watch in theaters. However, it is expected to make its streaming debut on MGM+ on Feb. 28. That gives you just enough time to watch it before the Academy Awards air on March 2. MGM+ offers a free seven-day trial, then costs $6.99 per month for subscribers. However, if you wish to watch Nickel Boys before the end of February, it will also be available to rent or purchase on digital soon — stay tuned.
The Substance
French filmmaker Coralie Fargeat’s The Substance earned spot number 15 on our list of the best movies of 2024, despite our divided staff. Part body horror romp and part Hollywood ageism satire, it stars Demi Moore, Margaret Qualley, and Dennis Quaid and is one of the most surprising hits of the year. Its gruesome imagery shocked and awed critics and managed to nab not only the Best Picture nomination at the Oscars but also four others — a big feat for a horror flick.
What’s it about?
“Demi Moore stars as Elisabeth Sparkle, an actress whose star is fading as she ages, and heartless Hollywood execs (exemplified by a shellfish-chomping Quaid) hunger for young beauties and fresh blood. So when a miracle drug allows her to split her life with a perky younger model of herself (Drive-Away Dolls‘ Qualley), she leaps at the chance. But the brutal cost it takes is ugly.” — KP
Read Mashable’s review of The Substance.
How to watch it: Stream it on Mubi
The Substance made its streaming debut on Mubi on Oct. 31, 2024, which is no surprise considering it’s a Mubi original film. A quality streaming service built for cinephiles, Mubi’s library is brimming with the best of international cinema. Subscriptions start at $14.99 per month, but you will get a seven-day free trial to test things out. You can also opt to rent or purchase The Substance from digital retailers like Prime Video and Apple TV for as low as $5.99.
Wicked
What’s there to say about Wicked that hasn’t already been said? It may not have made our list of the best films of 2024, but it did manage to earn the respect and admiration of the Academy with 10 nominations (including Best Picture). Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande star as the green-skinned, magically gifted Elphaba and her pink-loving polar opposite bestie Glinda in the film adaptation of the classic 2003 Broadway musical starring Idina Menzel and Kristin Chenoweth. If the 95 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes is any indication, audiences are loving it, although our own film critic writes that it’s “tainted by gray disillusionment, telegraphing the film’s climactic reveals.”
What’s it about?
An adaptation of the Tony award-winning Broadway musical, which is an adaptation of Gregory Maguire’s 1995 novel Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West, Wicked tells the backstory of the green-skinned, misunderstood Elphaba, aka the Wicked Witch of the West, as well as the popular and privileged Glinda the Good. The witches meet as students at Shiz University in the Land of Oz and embark on a journey from loathing to unexpectedly deep friendship. Part one of the two-part saga ultimately questions, “Are people born wicked? Or do they have wickedness thrust upon them?”
Read Mashable’s review of Wicked.
How to watch it: Buy it on digital
As of Dec. 31, Wicked is available to rent or purchase from digital retailers like Prime Video, Apple TV+, and Fandango at Home for $19.99 or $29.99. respectively. As a Universal Pictures film, we expect that it will eventually make its streaming debut on Peacock, but no official streaming date has been announced.
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