Oscars 2021: The winners' list in full

In case you missed it!

Author: James WhitePublished 26th Apr 2021

The 2021 Oscars – or the 93rd Academy Awards, to give them their full, official title – were handed out on Sunday night, with history made more than once. Most notably, Nomadland director Chloé Zhao became the first Asian woman to lift the directing trophy, while Minari's Youn Yuh-jung was named the second Asian woman to win for acting.

With a producing team that included Steven Soderbergh, this year's ceremony looked to eschew the Zoompocalypse that has afflicted so many award events this year (and lots of our lives). The physical, in-person aspect was back as much as possible.

The event was hosted mostly at LA's Union Station (with some moments at the ceremony's usual haunt of the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, eerily empty), and had the vibe of a nightclub more than a traditional gong show. Mostly, it was about the makers and performers.

The speeches were allowed to run as long as needed, and there was a pleasing focus on talking up those nominated rather than long clip packages about certain films or random movie-adjacent subjects. It was inclusive, diverse and felt refreshing if still slightly strange thanks to the necessary safety protocols, but took an unusual left turn when the Best Picture award was given out before the main acting categories.

Brits did well, with Emerald Fennell scoring Best Screenplay for Promising Young Woman and Daniel Kaluuya taking home Best Supporting Actor, while making his poor mum blush while talking about his parents having sex.

There were a lot of expected winners – Soul triumphed again, the Ma Rainey's Black Bottom team got more awards for their hair, make-up and costuming efforts, while Nomadland was the Best Picture, even if it didn't quite win everything that it might have.

Here is the full list of winners:

Best Picture

Nomadland – Winner

The Father

Judas And The Black Messiah

Mank

Minari

Promising Young Woman

Sound Of Metal

The Trial Of The Chicago 7

Best Director

Chloé Zhao - Nomadland – Winner

Thomas Vinterberg - Another Round

David Fincher - Mank

Lee Isaac Chung - Minari

Emerald Fennell - Promising Young Woman

Best Actress

Frances McDormand - Nomadland – Winner

Viola Davis - Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

Andra Day - The United States V. Billie Holiday

Vanessa Kirby - Pieces Of A Woman

Carey Mulligan - Promising Young Woman

Best Actor

Anthony Hopkins - The Father – Winner

Riz Ahmed - Sound Of Metal

Chadwick Boseman - Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

Gary Oldman - Mank

Steven Yeun - Minari

Best Supporting Actress

Yuh-Jung Youn - Minari – Winner

Maria Bakalova - Borat Subsequent Moviefilm

Glenn Close - Hillbilly Elegy

Olivia Colman - The Father

Amanda Seyfried - Mank

Best Supporting Actor

Daniel Kaluuya - Judas And The Black Messiah – Winner

Sacha Baron Cohen - The Trial Of The Chicago 7

Leslie Odom Jr. - One Night In Miami

Paul Raci - Sound Of Metal

Lakeith Stanfield - Judas And The Black Messiah

Best Adapted Screenplay

The Father - Christopher Hampton, Florian Zeller - Winner

Borat Subsequent Moviefilm - Peter Baynham, Sacha Baron Cohen, Jena Friedman, Anthony Hines, Lee Kern, Dan Mazer, Nina Pedrad, Erica Rivinoja, Dan Swimer

Nomadland - Chloé Zhao

One Night In Miami - Kemp Powers

The White Tiger - Ramin Bahrani

Best Original Screenplay

Promising Young Woman - Emerald Fennell – Winner

Judas And The Black Messiah - Will Berson, Shaka King, Keith Lucas, Kenneth Lucas

Minari - Lee Isaac Chung

Sound Of Metal - Abraham Marder, Darius Marder, Derek Cianfrance

The Trial Of The Chicago 7 - Aaron Sorkin

Best Costume Design

Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom - Winner

Emma

Mank

Mulan

Pinocchio

Best Original Score

Soul – Winner

Da 5 Bloods

Mank

Minari

News Of The World

Best Sound

Sound Of Metal – Winner

Greyhound

Mank

News Of The World

Soul

Best Animated Feature Film

Soul – Winner

Onward

Over The Moon

Shaun The Sheep Movie: Farmageddon

Wolfwalkers

Best Cinematography

Mank – Winner

Judas And The Black Messiah

News Of The World

Nomadland

The Trial Of The Chicago 7

Best Documentary Feature

My Octopus Teacher – Winner

Collective

Crip Camp

The Mole Agent

Best Film Editing

Sound Of Metal – Winner

The Father

Nomadland

Promising Young Woman

The Trial Of The Chicago 7

Best International Feature Film

Another Round - Denmark – Winner

Better Days - Hong Kong

Collective - Romania

The Man Who Sold His Skin - Tunisia

Quo Vadis, Aida?- Bosnia and Herzegovina

Best Makeup And Hairstyling

Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom – Winner

Emma

Hillbilly Elegy

Mank

Pinocchio

Best Original Song

Fight For You - Judas And The Black Messiah – Winner

Hear My Voice - The Trial Of The Chicago 7

Húsavík - Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga

Io Si - Seen - The Life Ahead

Speak Now - One Night In Miami

Best Production Design

Mank – Winner

The Father

Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

News of the World

Tenet

Best Visual Effects

Tenet Winner

Love And Monsters

The Midnight Sky

Mulan

The One And Only Ivan

Best Live Action Short Film

Two Distant Strangers – Winner

Feeling Through

The Letter Room

The Present

White Eye

Best Documentary Short Subject

Colette – Winner

A Concerto Is A Conversation

Do Not Split

Hunger Ward

A Love Song for Latasha

Best Animated Short Film

If Anything Happens I Love You – Winner

Burrow

Genius Loci

Opera

Yes-People

This article originally appeared on Empire Online.

Scroll through to see which films were postponed due to the pandemic:

No Time To Die

No Time To Die was supposed to be released on 10th April 2020, and was the first major film release to be pushed back due to the Coronavirus. Releasing a statement on Twitter, film bosses explained, 'MGM, Universal and Bond producers, Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, announced today that after careful consideration and thorough evaluation of the global theatrical marketplace, the release of NO TIME TO DIE will be postponed until November 2020.'


However in October, it was later revealed the film would be put back until April 2021. In January 2021, the film was confirmed to have a release date of October 2021, and was later released in cinemas in the UK on 30th September 2021.

A Quiet Place: Part II

Director John Krasinski confirmed on 12th March 2020 that the sequel to his critically acclaimed film would not be released on 19th March 2020 as planned. He wrote on his social media pages, 'To all our A Quiet Place fans, one of the things I'm most proud of is that people have said our movie is one you have to see all together. Well due to the ever-changing circumstances of what's going on in the world around us, now is clearly not the right time to do that.


'As insanely excited as we are for all of you to see this movie... I'm gonna wait to release the film til we CAN all see it together! So here's to our group movie date! See you soon! #AQuiet Place Part 2...Take 2. JK.'


The sequel was eventually released on 3rd June 2021.

F9

The ninth film in the Fast & Furious franchise was pushed back from its original release date of May 2020 to 2nd April 2021, and then 28th May 2021. The official release date was later 25th June 2021.


At the time, a statement from film bosses read, 'To our family of Fast fans everywhere, we feel all the love and the anticipation you have for the next chapter in our saga. That's why it's especially tough to let you know that we have to move the release date of the film. It's become clear that it won't be possible for all of our fans around the world to see the film this May.'

Black Widow

The Scarlett Johansson-led Marvel film was due to be released in May 2020, but Disney made the decision to put it back to 7th May 2021. It was then released on 9th July 2021 in cinemas and on Disney+ with a premium fee.

Antlers

Produced by Guillermo Del Toro, the horror film starring Keri Russell and Jesse Plemons was set to be released on 17th April, however had to be given a new release date of 29th October 2021.

Ghostbusters: Afterlife

Sony announced on 30th March that they had decided to push back the release of their Ghostbusters sequel starring Paul Rudd and Stranger Things' Finn Wolfhard from 10th July 2020 to 5th March 2021, and later moved it again to 11th November 2021. The film also featured original cast members Bill Murray, Sigourney Weaver and Dan Aykroyd.

Morbius

Morbius, starring Jared Leto, is a film about a biochemist who becomes a vampire. It's a spin-off to Tom Hardy's Venom film and also has connections with Tom Holland's Spider-Man franchise. It was set to be released on 31st July 2020, but was pushed back to 19th March 2021, later being pushed again to 28th January 2022.

Venom: Let There Be Carnage

Speaking of Venom... The sequel to the 2018 hit would have been released on 2nd October 2020, but didn't actually see the light of day until 24th September 2021.

The Batman

Robert Pattinson's iteration of Batman was released on 4th March 2022, having originally been scheduled for 25th June 2021.

The King's Man

A prequel to Kingsman and its sequel, The King's Man was originally scheduled for release on 18th September 2020 but instead saw its cinematic release on 22nd December 2021.

West Side Story

Steven Spielberg's remake of the classic musical was originally slated for 18th December 2020, but wasn't actually released in cinemas until 24th September 2021.

Read more:

Downtown Abbey bosses confirm release date for movie sequel

BAFTAs 2021: The full list of winners 🏆

All the details we know so far about Disney's upcoming live-action remakes

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