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Collier’s Cuts Oscar Predictions for 2026

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Leonardo Dicaprio takes a case from Benicio del Toro in Oscar-nominee One Battle After Another.

It’s appropriate for a film that builds to a desperate, outnumbered standoff: For the 2026 Oscar award predictions, it will be Sinners against everybody.

Who’s Going to Win Come Oscar Night 2026?

Ryan Coogler’s masterful film is already a record holder, garnering 16 total nominations. That means it will compete in all but one of the categories in which it theoretically could’ve been nominated — and, with the film raking in trophies at precursor awards, it should be considered a contender in nearly every field.

That includes most of the top awards. The Best Picture race has turned into a sprint between Sinners and One Battle After Another, as Paul Thomas Anderson’s comedy-thriller has emerged as this year’s other top contender.

While the respected auteur shouldn’t be considered a lock (nearly nothing is this year), he’s widely expected to take his first Best Directing prize. Coogler, who also wrote Sinners, is much more likely to claim Best Original Screenplay. (That leaves Best Adapted Screenplay, the rare Sinners-free category, to One Battle — although there’s a small chance that Hamnet could play spoiler.)

The Acting Races Are More Competitive Than Usual

On many an Oscar night, one competitor or another has so handily dominated awards season that an Academy coronation is all but inevitable. This year is an exception, with three fairly competitive races — and one that may be closer than it appears.

That last race: Best Actress, widely expected to be a win for Jessie Buckley, the powerhouse performer who stars in Hamnet. This is as safe a bet as you’re likely to make this year … though Rose Byrne, of If I Had Legs I’d Kick You, has stolen a few trophies from Buckley along the way. Don’t be stunned if Byrne nabs an Oscar — but if you’re filling out a pool, pick Buckley.

In Best Actor, Timothée Chalamet was widely expected to earn his first trophy for Marty Supreme until Sinners star Michael B. Jordan took home the prize at last week’s Actor Awards. The Academy’s largest voting bloc consists of actors, many of whom overlap with the Actor Awards voters, so that could be a bellwether. This one is close.

Best Supporting Actress is also tight, as Weapons scene-stealer Amy Madigan has claimed a number of precursor prizes; the Academy loves rewarding a comeback from a long-beloved star. Teyana Taylor, of One Battle, and Wunmi Mosaku, who gave the most memorable of many great supporting performers in Sinners, could also claim the prize. In Best Supporting Actor, two-time winner Sean Penn is favored by many for his unhinged turn in One Battle — though both Stellan Skarsgård, of Sentimental Value, and Sinners favorite Delroy Lindo are in the race.

Okay — There Are a Few Sure Things

Further down the ballot, a few races look fairly certain. Expect Sinners to take the inaugural Best Casting award, based on its formidable ensemble. Frankenstein, a much admired picture that likely won’t break through in any major category, will likely nab Best Costume Design as something of a kind gesture from the Academy; it’ll probably take Best Makeup and Hairstyling, too. Surprise Best Picture nominee F1 has no chance at the top award, but it’ll likely (and justifiably) win Best Sound.

And expect a Golden night: KPop Demon Hunters will probably win Best Animated Feature, and the ubiquitous title track is a favorite for Best Original Song (though, as always, Sinners could pull an upset).

Below, find our predictions in every category. While we fully expect more misses than the average year, we’re pretty confident that these answers will help you win the pool at your Oscar party … unless you’ve got a real cinephile sitting across the couch. (Or another TABLE reader.)

Our 2026 Oscar Predictions

  • Best Picture — Sinners
  • Best Director — Paul Thomas Anderson, One Battle After Another
  • Best Actress — Jessie Buckley, Hamnet
  • Best Actor — Michael B. Jordan, Sinners
  • Best Supporting Actress — Amy Madigan, Weapons
  • Best Supporting Actor — Stellan Skarsgard, Sentimental Value
  • Best Adapted Screenplay — One Battle After Another
  • Best Original Screenplay — Sinners
  • Best Casting — Sinners
  • Best Cinematography — Train Dreams
  • Best Costume Design — Frankenstein
  • Best Film Editing — One Battle After Another
  • Best Makeup and Hairstyling — Frankenstein
  • Best Production Design — Sinners
  • Best Score — Sinners
  • Best Song — Golden, KPop Demon Hunters
  • Best Sound — F1
  • Best Visual Effects — Avatar: Fire and Ash
  • Best Animated Feature — KPop Demon Hunters
  • Best Documentary Feature — The Perfect Neighbor
  • Best International Film — The Secret Agent
  • Best Animated Short — Butterfly
  • Best Documentary Short — All the Empty Rooms
  • Best Live-Action Short — A Friend of Dorothy

Story by Sean Collier
Featured Photo Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures, One Battle After Another

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Oscar Cocktails for 2026’s Best Picture Nominees

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A dark table full of cocktails in short and tall glasses arranged with fruit garnishes and a mudslide in the middle.

The culmination of awards season calls for a celebration, and there’s no better way to toast the magic of the movies than with a cocktail inspired by the year’s biggest films. As the Best Picture nominees take center stage at the Oscars, we’re raising a glass to each standout story with recipes that capture their spirit with bold, dramatic flavors, sparkling showstoppers, and playful twists. Be sure to watch each of these films prior to the show then tune in March 15 at 7 p.m. with your tray of Best Picture cocktails to celebrate the winners.

Here’s a guide to How to Watch the Oscars this year.

A Cocktail for Each Oscar Best Picture Nominee 2026

Modelo French 75 for One Battle After Another

A person holds a match to a flute French 75 with a lemon twist and a bottle of Modelo in the background.

One Battle After Another is the high intensity action film starring Leonardo Dicaprio as a father whose daughter is being targeted by a military leader (Sean Penn). Between the films’ outstanding cast, stellar script, and immersive atmosphere, it’s one to watch again and again.

This film earns a total of 13 Oscar nominations. Its nominations include Actor in a Leading Role (Leonardo Dicaprio), two for Actor in a Supporting Role (Benicio del Toro and Sean Penn), Actress in a Supporting Role (Teyana Taylor), and Casting (Cassandra Kulukundis), Cinematography (Michael Bauman), Directing (Paul Thomas Anderson), Film Editing (Andy Jurgensen), Music Original Score (Jonny Greenwood), Production Design (Florencia Martin and Anthony Carlino), Sound (José Antonio GarcíaChristopher Scarabosio, and Tony Villaflor), Writing (Paul Thomas Anderson), and of course, Best Picture.

A Brazilian Caipirinha for The Secret Agent

A short glass with lime wedges at the bottom, a lot of ice, and a dried lime wheel on top.

Our next Best Picture nominee takes us on a thrilling adventure through Brazil and its Carnival celebration. The Secret Agent follows Marcelo (Wagner Moura) who is forced to go into hiding and escape the prying eyes focused on him. For this film, we showcase a Brazilian Caipirinha, the official cocktail of the country.

Sip on this refreshing drink as you watch The Secret Agent compete for Actor in a Leading Role (Wagner Moura), Casting (Gabriel Domingues), International Feature Film, and Best Picture nomination for producer Emilie Lesclaux.

Auxolith’s Honey Blood Orange Americano for Bugonia

A tall cocktail in red with a honey blood orange garnish over top of the glass and honey running down the sides of the glass as a golden bar spoon sits against it.

The world of Bugonia takes us inside the operations of the massive fictional corporation Auxolith when the CEO becomes captured by two conspiracy theorists. The whole movie is a battle of wits. You’ll find yourself wondering if the conspiracy theorists are right about the CEO being an alien hell-bent on destroying Earth…or if they’ve kidnapped an innocent woman. Yorgos Lanthimos makes his adaptation of this South Korean film using his favorite actors: Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, and Aidan Delbis.

Bugonia receives four nominations for Actress in a Leading Role (Emma Stone), Music Original Score (Jerskin Fendrix), Writing Adapted Screenplay (Will Tracy), and Best Picture.

Marty Supreme’s Orange Dirty Shirley Cocktail

An Orange Dirty Shirley Cocktail sits beside a spilled bucket of ping-pong balls with cherries and an orange wheel for garnish.

Any movie starring Timothée Chalamet is bound to be a hit but Marty Supreme surpassed expectations. We head back to the 1950s where Marty Mauser is determined to make something of himself, particularly as an international table tennis player. In his quest he gets himself into endless darkly hilarious trouble as the audience roots for the characters that surround him and seem to be most effected by his actions.

Nine nominations grace Marty Supreme, including Actor in a Leading Role (Timothée Chalamet), Casting (Jennifer Venditti), Cinematography (Darius Khondji), Costume Design (Miyako Bellizzi), Directing (Josh Safdie), Film Editing (Ronald Bronstein and Josh Safdie), Production Design (Jack Fisk and Adam Willis), Writing Original Screenplay (Ronald Bronstein and Josh Safdie), and Best Picture.

Frozen Frankenstein: White Chocolate Caramel Mudslide

A white chocolate caramel frozen mudslide in a tall glass with whipped cream on top and a white anatomical heart sculpture behind it.

The tale of Frankenstein has haunted libraries and screens for ages but with Guillermo del Toro‘s take we get a gothic daydream where the themes of abuse, grief, and ego come into play. Oscar Isaac in the role of Victor Frankenstein gives us a deeper look into this evil-geniuses brain. Even though Victor is often the hero, this new adaptation gives a better focus to his Creature (Jacob Elordi) and his love interest (Mia Goth).

The film has gained nominations for Actor in a Supporting Role (Jacob Elordi), Cinematography (Dan Laustsen), Costume Design (Kate Hawley), Makeup and Hairstyling (Mike HillJordan Samuel, and Cliona Furey), Music Original Score (Alexandre Desplat), Production Design (Tamara Deverell and Shane Vieau), Sound (Greg ChapmanNathan RobitailleNelson FerreiraChristian Cooke, and Brad Zoern), Writing Adapted Screenplay (Guillermo del Toro), and Best Picture.

Sinners’ Beet the Devil Cocktail

A whiskey and beet cocktail for Sinners sits on a table in front of a bat candle and barn door.

Sinners is the vampire story we’ve all been waiting for. Outside of basic tropes, Sinners makes vampires actually terrifying again with a new design, as well as deeper writing. Taking place in the deep South during the time of Jim Crow laws and rampant racism, this film explores the effects of colonization, what community can mean, and a look into how race is treated even today. One of the best parts of this film is the ability of Michael B. Jordan to play a set of twins, Smoke and Stack, creating two characters with two different personalities and sets of quirks.

We cannot forget to mention that it is beautiful to look at, thanks to Oscar nominated cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw.

Sinners also sets a new record at the Oscars with its 16 nominations. A quick run down of these nominations takes us through Actor in a Leading Role, Actor in a Supporting Role, Casting, Cinematography, Costume Design, Directing, Film Editing, Makeup and Hairstyling, Music Original Score, Music Original Song, Production Design, Sound, Visual Effects, Writing original Screenplay.

The Pine Rail Cocktail for Train Dreams

A cocktail in a coupe glass sits on a green background with sprigs of pine trees peeking in.

You’ll need a cocktail to get through this devastatingly beautiful film. A pine-infused vodka cocktail brings the nature of Train Dreams right to your kitchen. The story of Train Dreams is a novella adaptation that follows Robert Grainier (Joel Edgerton), a logger and railroad worker at the turn of the 20th century. His work keeps him away from his wife and newly born daughter but when tragedy strikes, he learns it may just of been the happiest point of his life regardless. This movie examines what is worth living for and what life can mean.

Train Dreams earns nominations for Cinematography (Adolpho Veloso), Music Original Song (Nick Cave and Bryce Dessner), Writing Adapted Screenplay (Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar), as well as Best Picture for producers Marissa McMahonTeddy SchwarzmanWill JanowitzAshley Schlaifer, and Michael Heimler.

Hamnet’s Blackberry Bramble

A blackberry bramble sits in a rocks glass on top and in front of purple velvet.

We focus in on the color purple to represent the tear-jerking story of Hamnet. Adapted from the novel, Hamnet takes us into the lives of Agnes and William Shakespeare as they battle with the loss of their young son. The processing of his grief leads William to write his famous play, Hamlet. The color purple here represents the mourning, sorrow, and nobility that settles upon the Shakespeare family. Plus, it features Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal in the starring roles.

Hamnet receives nominations for Actress in a Leading Role (Jessie Buckley), Casting (Nina Gold), Costume Design (Malgosia Turzanska), Directing (Chloé Zhao), Music Original Score (Max Richter), Production Design (Fiona Crombie and Alice Felton), Writing Adapted Screenplay (Chloé Zhao and Maggie O’Farrell), and Best Picture.

Aquavit Norski Negroni for Sentimental Value

A short glass with a Norski Negroni and lemon twist garnish.

Sentimental Value is a film for anyone who has felt out of place in their family. When an estranged father (Stellan Skarsgård) tries to reconnect with his two daughters after their mother’s death, he offers his daughter Nora (Renate Reinsve) the starring role in a film inspired by their family. When she declines, he brings in a young Hollywood star Rachel (Elle Fanning) to take her place which leads to a whole can of worms opening to reveal true feelings.

With a touching story and unbelievable acting, this Norwegian film earns its spots for Actor in a Leading Role (Stellan Skarsgård), Actress in a Leading Role (Renate Reinsve), two for Actress in a Supporting Role (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas and Elle Fanning), Directing (Joachim Trier), Film Editing (Olivier Bugge Coutté), International Feature Film, Writing Original Screenplay (Eskil Vogt and Joachim Trier), as well as Best Picture.

Tip Top Proper Cocktails for F1

Canned cocktails on a table sit beside glasses of cocktails like an Espresso Martini.
Photo from Tip Top Proper Cocktails

The quick speed of F1 can’t wait for a cocktail to be mixed. Instead, a canned cocktail comes in handy here so that you can crack it open and get back to the action. Tip Top Proper Cocktails carries classic cocktails in their canned form that somehow feel fresh out of a shaker. Their varieties include everything from the Paper Plane to an Espresso Martini, an Old Fashioned, Whiskey Sour, and so much more. So grab your favorite and then meet race car driver Sonny Hayes (Brad Pitt) in the pit as he returns to racing 30 years after his terrifying accident.

A movie with so much incredible imagery and intricate cinematography earns F1 four Oscar nominations in Film Editing (Stephen Mirrione), Sound (Gareth John, Al Nelson, Gwendolyn Yates Whittle, Gary A. Rizzo, and Juan Peralta), Visual Effects (Ryan Tudhope, Nicolas Chevallier, Robert Harrington, and Keith Dawson), and Best Picture.

Story, Recipes, and Photography by Kylie Thomas

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Design Within Reach Opens New Pittsburgh Store

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A beige couch sits in a living room with a table between it and another couch.
DWR’s Atlason Composed Modular Sofa and Sectional by Hlynur Atlason 

Design Within Reach’s (DWR) new Pittsburgh store brings an additional point of light to the ever-evolving Strip District. DWR, like Orrs Jewelers, Archive, Posman Books, and a handful of other retail boutiques, extends the neighborhood’s identity as a hub of commerce into a new era.  

Design Within Reach Now Open in Pittsburgh’s Strip District

DWR’s blend of blend of modern design, livable luxury, and thoughtful curation adds something quite new to one of the city’s most energetic corridors. Inside you’ll find iconic mid-century furniture by legends like Charles and Ray Eames, Eero Saarinen, George Nelson, and more. Their now-classic designs are shown adjacent to contemporary work by rising stars like Icelandic designer Hlynur Atlason. His Atlason Composed Modular Sofa and Sectional is a new DWR gem. Its various configurations connect together in myriad ways to expand a home’s seating options as far as the imagination will go.  

In addition to fantastic furniture pieces, DWR also offers textiles, lighting and home accessories, all infused with a modern take on design. The new store’s generous windows bathe all in natural light. The building’s industrial bones invite a visitor to imagine themselves at home in one of the neighborhood’s beautiful loft apartments. It’s a treat to be able to test the sit of an architect-designed chair, and to customize it with custom choices of leathers and textiles.  

A Place to Ask for Help

DWR’s design professionals are on hand to offer expert advice.  

The neighborhood is familiar to most of us as a bustling depot for wholesale and retail food sales and distribution. That identity was born in the early 20th century and cemented in 1929 with the establishment of the Strip District Terminal (originally the Pennsylvania Railroad Fruit Auction and Sales Building). The Terminal is now a sequence of retail shops, personal care businesses, and restaurants. Performances and programming liven up its colonnade in good weather. Just a block away from the still food-focused Penn Avenue, it’s bringing a new, often younger, clientele to the area. 

If your energy flags as you take it all in, take advantage of The Strip’s growing number of coffee houses. After a quick re-caffeination, venture back out to wander the neighborhood. Perhaps finish your afternoon with a drink and a bite at Balvanera, a delicious Argentine outpost adjacent to DWR. Its sophisticated menu and beautifully designed space offer further evidence of the changing tone of the Strip.  

Story by Keith Recker 
Photo courtesy of DWR 

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Sinners’ Beet the Devil Cocktail

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A whiskey and beet cocktail for Sinners sits on a table in front of a bat candle and barn door.

Inspired by fevered faith, forbidden desire, and creeping evil, Sinners’ Beet the Devil cocktail is the perfect pour for under a blood-warm Southern sky. In a world where twin brothers return home to Mississippi only to find something ancient as well as hungry waiting in the dark, a brown sugar beet reduction and a helping of whiskey lend a hand. This cocktail carries the same slow-burn tension we love in the Oscar-nominated film Sinners. Whiskey smolders like a backwoods juke joint after midnight, while the brown sugar–beet reduction bleeds a deep crimson sweetness, earthy and unrepentant. One taste feels like stepping up to the creaky bar at Smoke and Stack’s hang where salvation and damnation sit side by side, waiting to see which one claims you first.

What Oscar Academy Award Nominations Did Sinners‘ Receive?

The film Sinners starring Michael B. Jordan as a set of twins is now the most-nominated film in history at the Oscars with 16 nominations. This surpasses previous films like All Above Eve, Titanic, and La La Land all with 14 nominations. While it may surprise some that a vampire film is now at the top of the list, this movie is about so much more than just a touch of horror. It examines race in the past and in modernity, colonization and its after-effects, a lust for community, and so much more.

The film received acting nods for Actor in a Leading Role (Michael B. Jordan), Actor in a Supporting Role (Delroy Lindo), Actress in a Supporting Role (Wunmi Mosaku), and Casting (Francine Maisler). Sinners technical achievements go even further with nods for Cinematography (Autumn Durald Arkapaw), Costume Design (Ruth E. Carter), Directing (Ryan Coogler), Film Editing (Michael P. Shawver), Makeup and Hairstyling (Ken Diaz, Mike Fontaine, and Shunika Terry), Music Original Score (Ludwig Goransson), Music Original Song (I Lied to You), Production Design (Hannah Beachler and Monique Champagne), Sound (Chris Welcker, Benjamin A. Burtt, Felipe Pacheco, Brandon Proctor, and Steve Boeddeker), Visual Effects (Michael Ralla, Espen Nordahl, Guido Wolter, and Donnie Dean), Writing Original Screenplay (Ryan Coogler), as well as Best Picture.

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A whiskey and beet cocktail for Sinners sits on a table in front of a bat candle and barn door.

Sinners’ Beet the Devil Cocktail


  • Author: Kylie Thomas

Description

We like to think this cocktail would be a staple at Smoke and Stack’s Juke Joint.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 2 oz bourbon or rye whiskey
  • ¾ oz brown sugar-beet reduction syrup
  • ½ oz fresh lemon juice
  • 2 dashes orange bitters

For the brown sugar-beet reduction:

  • 1 cup fresh beet juice
  • 1 cup brown sugar


Instructions

  1. Add whiskey, lemon juice, and bitters to a shaker with ice.
  2. Shake hard until well chilled which should take about 10–15 seconds.
  3. Strain into a rocks glass over a large ice cube.
  4. Using the back of a bar spoon, gently float the brown sugar-beet reduction over the cocktail and serve immediately.

For the brown sugar-beet reduction:

  1. Combine beet juice and brown sugar in a saucepan over medium heat.
  2. Simmer gently for 10–15 minutes until slightly thickened.
  3. Cool completely, then strain.
  4. Store refrigerated for up to 2 weeks.

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Kylie Thomas

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Collier’s Cuts: Reviving Universal’s Monster Classic by Giving ‘The Bride!’ Her Due

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The Bride holds a gun against curtains of gold.
A graphic for The Bride! movie with a photo and information and a rating.

James Whale’s 1935 film The Bride of Frankenstein is the best of Universal’s golden-age monster flicks — even though its title character only appears on screen for about five minutes. Nearly a century later, Maggie Gyllenhaal has decided to give The Bride! her movie back.

The Bride! (2026) Movie Review

In the early going, The Bride! has a lot in common with its 91-year-old predecessor. The lead actress — Jessie Buckley — appears as both Frankenstein novelist Mary Shelley and the title character, just as Elsa Lanchester did nearly a century ago. A talkative Frankenstein’s monster, played by Christian Bale, seeks out companionship and love, just as Boris Karloff once did. And a mad scientist, delightfully portrayed by Annette Bening, pursues unholy discoveries.

From there, though, Maggie Gyllenhaal’s film has plenty of new thoughts to share. The Bride! remains in a freewheeling, often stream-of-consciousness conversation with the many adaptations that have come before it. (Not just Universal and Hammer, either; the influence of Mel Brooks looms large.) But that conversation is not mere pastiche or recombination; The Bride! has a resonant story to offer, setting its tale in a phantasmagoric remix of mobland Chicago circa 1930.

The Bride! and Her Monster, On the Run

After digging up the hastily buried body of a murdered flapper — who may be possessed by the spirit of the aforementioned Shelley — the monster and his hired scientist (named Dr. Euphronious, in a clear echo of the original film’s Dr. Pretorious) restore life to the clearly confused corpse. For a while, it’s ill-fitting fun and deadly games; the unlikely couple sneaks off to the movies, enjoying a top-hat musical starring the monster’s favorite performer (Jake Gyllenhaal), before dancing the night away at an anachronistic underground club. (The performer Fever Ray cameos as a bizarre chanteuse.)

After the debauchery turns violent, however, a mob forms, much to the chagrin of “Franky,” who knows a thing or two about angry crowds. With a pair of deadpan detectives (Penélope Cruz and Peter Sarsgaard) on their tail, the monstrous couple decamps for New York, where they bond … even if The Bride is kept in the dark about her reanimated state.

There’s probably a bit more plot than needed here; I thought the film was wrapping up at one point, only to discover there were 40 minutes and several revelations yet to come. If The Bride! errs, it only does so in making too much clear; some restraint on the exact nature of each character might’ve helped. But any such sins pale in comparison to the remarkable vision on display.

Gyllenhaal Creates a Work of Art That Will Divide — and Endure

I’m sure there will be some viewers who don’t get on board with The Bride!. It’s a runaway train with no shortage of bold choices and surprisingly stylistic flair; if you don’t buy in completely in the early going, you may find some of its moves (dance and otherwise) absurd.

But I believe The Bride! is so singular and confident an effort that it is destined to be embraced over time. This belongs in an outre canon with films such as David Lynch’s Wild at Heart, Alex Proyas’ Dark City and Damien Chazelle’s Babylon. All these films have their detractors and their acolytes, in large part because they defy convention and genre in a beautifully reckless way. It’s a “hell-for-leather” experience, as our Bride is fond of saying.

Wild at Heart is probably the best point of comparison — a doomed and complicated couple on a nightmarish yet beautiful road trip. Sure, these ones are literal monsters. With monsters this entertaining, though, who needs regular old humans?

Disney and Pixar Try to Launch Another Franchise — and More New Releases

The Disney/Pixar animated film Hoppers, about an animal lover communicating with various critters via a robotic beaver, is receiving warm notices. The film boasts a 96% “Fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with critics praising the film’s humor and lively visuals. While it should top the box-office returns this weekend, the Mouse House and its sister studio have had trouble launching original properties lately; hopefully, this one catches on over time (so they have a property other than Toy Story and Incredibles to generate future sequels).

When in doubt, fight some aliens. Netflix is dropping the Australian actioner War Machine this Friday; Alan Ritchson, Dennis Quaid, Stephan James and other square jaws must fend off an interstellar invasion in an effort from Hitman’s Bodyguard director Patrick Hughes.

Dual Oscar nominee Sirat expands to more North American theaters this weekend. The film, which landed on my Top 10 list for 2025, is a harrowing tale of a desperate search in the Moroccan desert. It’s a tough watch, but a remarkable film — particularly for its sound and cinematography.

Also expanding: Pillion, the erotic drama that’s garnered considerable buzz. Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling star as mismatched lovers. The film won the Screenplay prize at Cannes.

Story by Sean Collier
Photos Courtesy of Warner Bros.

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Frozen Frankenstein: White Chocolate Caramel Mudslide

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A white chocolate caramel frozen mudslide in a tall glass with whipped cream on top and a white anatomical heart sculpture behind it.

Born in the lab and blended to perfection, the White Chocolate Caramel Frozen Mudslide cocktail is our decadent homage to the haunting beauty of the Frankenstein (2025) movie. As the gothic reimagining of Mary Shelley’s classic story earns its Oscar-nomination for Best Picture this dessert-style drink celebrates the film’s dark beauty as well as electrifying creativity. Velvety white chocolate, rich caramel, and a healthy dose of booze combine to create a cocktail that feels indulgent, dramatic, and a little bit monstrous…in the best way. Not to mention its creamy frozen texture reminds us of the icy lands that Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) and his Creature (Jacob Elordi) venture into.

What Oscar Nominations Did Frankenstein (2025) Receive?

While you may think you know the story of Frankenstein, Guillermo del Toro proves that there’s much more to tell. His adaptation dives deep into themes of cycles of abuse, grief, and also the downfall of a hubris nature. With a stellar cast backing this director’s image, the film creates a whole new world to immerse ourselves in.

At the Oscars, the film gains nominations for Actor in a Supporting Role (Jacob Elordi), Cinematography (Dan Laustsen), Costume Design (Kate Hawley), Makeup and Hairstyling (Mike Hill, Jordan Samuel, and Cliona Furey), Music Original Score (Alexandre Desplat), Production Design (Tamara Deverell and Shane Vieau), Sound (Greg Chapman, Nathan Robitaille, Nelson Ferreira, Christian Cooke, and Brad Zoern), Writing Adapted Screenplay (Guillermo del Toro), and Best Picture.

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A white chocolate caramel frozen mudslide in a tall glass with whipped cream on top and a white anatomical heart sculpture behind it.

Frozen Frankenstein: White Chocolate Caramel Mudslide


  • Author: Kylie Thomas

Description

A monstrous concoction so delicious you’ll want the whole glass to yourself.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 oz Baileys Irish Cream
  • 1 oz Kahlúa
  • 1 oz vanilla vodka
  • 1 oz white chocolate liqueur
  • 2 cups vanilla ice cream
  • ¼ cup ice
  • 2 tbsp caramel sauce
  • 2 tbsp white chocolate syrup
  • Whipped cream (for topping)


Instructions

  1. Swirl caramel sauce and white chocolate syrup around the inside of a chilled glass. (You can use a frother for this just dip in the syrup and then place inside middle of the glass and turn it on to splatter the sides in a ring shape)
  2. Combine all ingredients in blender and blender until smooth. Be careful not to over-blend or it will become watery.
  3. Pour into your glass and top with whipped cream.

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Kylie Thomas

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Modelo French 75 for One Battle After Another

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A person holds a match to a flute French 75 with a lemon twist and a bottle of Modelo in the background.

If there’s one thing the characters in One Battle After Another know, it’s guns, explosives, and Modelo. This high-intensity film deserves a cocktail to match that’s sparkling, flavorful, and even resembles a stick of dynamite in its flute glass shape. Since this film earned 13 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, we thought the best way to honor the French 75 revolutionary group is with a French 75 of their own. Since our main character here Bob Ferguson (Leonardo Dicaprio) often cracks open a Modelo with Sergio (Benicio del Toro), we add in an easy-to-make Modelo reduction syrup that adds a bit of depth to this light cocktail. It’s crisp, a little malty, and completely upgrades this classic cocktail for the new world order.

A person pours champagne into a cocktail flute with a lemon twist garnish.

What Academy Awards is One Battle After Another Nominated for at the Oscars?

If you’ve seen One Battle After Another, it’s no surprise that this film took home 13 nominations thanks to its expert acting, incredible score, stunning special effects, as well as its heartfelt and hilarious script. In acting categories, this movie earns nods for Actor in a Leading Role (Leonardo Dicaprio), two for Actor in a Supporting Role (Benicio del Toro and Sean Penn), Actress in a Supporting Role (Teyana Taylor), and Casting (Cassandra Kulukundis). It then also earns nods for Cinematography (Michael Bauman), Directing (Paul Thomas Anderson), Film Editing (Andy Jurgensen), Music Original Score (Jonny Greenwood), Production Design (Florencia Martin and Anthony Carlino), Sound (José Antonio García, Christopher Scarabosio, and Tony Villaflor), Writing (Paul Thomas Anderson), and of course, Best Picture.

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A person holds a match to a flute French 75 with a lemon twist and a bottle of Modelo in the background.

Modelo French 75 for One Battle After Another


  • Author: Kylie Thomas

Description

In honor of the French 75 and Bob’s love for a Modelo.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 oz London dry gin
  • ½ oz fresh lemon juice
  • ½ oz Modelo reduction syrup
  • Top with champagne or sparkling wine
  • Lemon twist (for garnish)

For the Modelo reduction syrup:


Instructions

  1. Add gin, lemon juice, and Modelo syrup to a shaker with ice.
  2. Shake until well chilled.
  3. Strain into a chilled flute.
  4. Top with Champagne.
  5. Garnish with a lemon twist.

For the Modelo reduction syrup:

  1. Pour Modelo into a saucepan and bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat.
  2. Reduce the liquid by about half which will take about 10–15 minutes.
  3. Add sugar and stir until fully dissolved.
  4. Add lemon peel and simmer for 2–3 more minutes.
  5. Strain and cool completely then tore in the fridge for up to 2 weeks.
A person holds a match to a flute cocktail with a lemon twist garnish.

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Kylie Thomas

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A Brazilian Caipirinha for The Secret Agent

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A short glass with lime wedges at the bottom, a lot of ice, and a dried lime wheel on top.

The colors of Carnival and the tension of politics in 1970s Brazil sets the scene for this Caipirinha to shine. The Secret Agent is a gripping Brazilian thriller set in the atmosphere of 1970s Brazil during the military dictatorship. Starring Wagner Moura, the film follows a man forced into hiding while navigating danger, secrecy, and shifting loyalties in the city of Recife. Amid the suspense and intrigue, Brazil’s culture plays an important role in the film’s setting. The scenes take you through the energy of Carnival and into the depths of Brazilian homes. To celebrate this film’s Oscar-nominations, including Best Picture, a Caipirinha, Brazil’s national cocktail, seems rightly fit. Made with fresh lime, sugar, and cachaça it’s bright, bold, and refreshing. Fix yourself one as you sit down to watch The Secret Agent ahead of the Oscars.

What Oscar Academy Award Nominations Did The Secret Agent Receive?

While The Secret Agent may not have racked up as many nominations as other Best Picture nominees, the film still cements its spot as a worthy opponent. Wagner Moura’s portrayal of such an intricate character like Marcelo earns him a nomination for Actor in a Leading Role. He’s also joined in the acting categories by Gabriel Domingues who is nominated for the Casting of The Secret Agent. Along with the Best Picture nomination for producer Emilie Lesclaux, the film rightly earns a spot in the race for International Feature Film too.

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A short glass with lime wedges at the bottom, a lot of ice, and a dried lime wheel on top.

A Brazilian Caipirinha for The Secret Agent


  • Author: Kylie Thomas

Description

Brazil’s national cocktail takes us to the world of The Secret Agent.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 lime
  • 2 tsp sugar
  • 2 oz cachaça
  • Crushed or small ice cubes


Instructions

  1. Cut up lime into 8 wedges. 
  2. Place at bottom of glass with sugar and muddle until combined. Be careful not to over-muddle. 
  3. Fill glass with ice and then pour in cachaça. 
  4. Stir until sugar dissolves and serve. 

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Kylie Thomas

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Auxolith’s Honey Blood Orange Americano for Bugonia

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A tall cocktail in red with a honey blood orange garnish over top of the glass and honey running down the sides of the glass as a golden bar spoon sits against it.

As the company Auxolith reigns over the movie-world of Bugonia, we imagine an evilly good mix of Honey and Blood Orange in an Americano is just what Emma Stone‘s CEO character would desire. Bugonia throws us straight into the middle of the kidnapping of Auxolith CEO Michelle Fuller. Two men (Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis) then lock her in their basement out of fear she is an alien who wants to destroy Earth. After endless catastrophes such as a backfiring experimental drug treatment for opioid withdrawal, the power that Auxolith and Fuller as CEO holds is frightening with an angle cast on those who put greed first. To create a sip that’s as deliciously deceptive, we’re taking utterly sweet honey and testing its power with the addition of blood orange, sweet vermouth, Campari, and also bubbly soda water. It’s a cocktail for the true winner here… you!

What Oscar Academy Award Nominations Did Bugonia Receive?

Bugonia from start to finish is a wild ride and you never quite know what will come next. Touching on themes of today’s landscape like climate change, monopolization, capitalism, and even conspiracy theory as a whole, it’s also a film that feels like it could easily happen in real life. Between its intense but darkly comedic adaptation by Yorgos Lanthimos as well as the cast and crew that bring this tale to life, Bugonia receives four nominations for the 2026 Oscars ceremony. These include Actress in a Leading Role (Emma Stone), Music Original Score (Jerskin Fendrix), Writing Adapted Screenplay (Will Tracy), and Best Picture for producers Ed Guiney & Andrew Lowe, Yorgos Lanthimos, Emma Stone and Lars Knudsen.

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Auxolith’s Honey Blood Orange Americano for Bugonia


  • Author: Kylie Thomas

Description

Grab a glass before the world explodes.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 oz Campari
  • 1 oz sweet vermouth
  • ½¾ oz honey blood orange syrup (to taste)
  • Club soda
  • Blood orange slice and honey for garnish

For the honey blood orange syrup:

  • 1 cup fresh blood orange juice
  • ½ cup honey
  • ½ cup sugar


Instructions

  1. Fill a highball glass with ice.
  2. Add Campari, sweet vermouth, and the syrup then stir.
  3. Top with club soda and gently stir again.
  4. Garnish with a blood orange slice or twist.

For the honey blood orange syrup:

  1. Add blood orange juice, honey, and sugar to a small saucepan.
  2. Heat on low–medium, stirring until the sugar and honey dissolve (do not boil).
  3. Simmer gently for 3–5 minutes.
  4. Remove from heat and let cool.
  5. Strain and store in the fridge for up to 2 weeks.
A tall cocktail in red with a honey blood orange garnish over top of the glass and honey running down the sides of the glass as a golden bar spoon sits against it.

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Kylie Thomas

Subscribe to TABLE Magazine‘s print edition.

Marty Supreme’s Orange Dirty Shirley Cocktail

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An Orange Dirty Shirley Cocktail sits beside a spilled bucket of ping-pong balls with cherries and an orange wheel for garnish.

Marty Mauser is a name you’ll remember for a long time after you watch the Oscar-nominated film Marty Supreme. A lasting legacy deserves a superstar cocktail so we’re shaking Marty up an Orange Dirty Shirley Cocktail. If you haven’t seen the latest Timothée Chalamet starring feature, drop everything and head to the TV. We have work to do. From the outside, Marty Supreme seems like the story of an ambitious ping-pong player but in actuality it’s a wild ride through what it means to be human. Marty reads almost like a child in a man’s body as he navigates the world of love, loss, and passion. We follow him with just as much innocence, just as much determination, and cheer in our hearts as he reaches his finish-line. What could fit better here than a grown-up, upscale version of a childhood favorite?

What Oscar Nominations Did Marty Supreme Receive?

For 2026’s Oscars ceremony, Marty Supreme makes it mark through its stellar, star-speckled cast, intricate editing, and beautiful 1950s’ world-building through scenery and costumes. With Timothée Chalamet in the lead role, we all knew this film would be up for at least one Oscar but the rest of the cast and crew prove its deserving of even more. Marty Supreme earns nine nominations at this year’s awards including Actor in a Leading Role (Timothée Chalamet), Casting (Jennifer Venditti), Cinematography (Darius Khondji), Costume Design (Miyako Bellizzi), Directing (Josh Safdie), Film Editing (Ronald Bronstein and Josh Safdie), Production Design (Jack Fisk and Adam Willis), Writing Original Screenplay (Ronald Bronstein and Josh Safdie), and Best Picture.

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Marty Supreme’s Orange Dirty Shirley


  • Author: Kylie Thomas

Description

For the kid at heart in Marty.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 1/2 oz vodka
  • 1/2 oz orange liqueur (we used triple sec)
  • 1/2 oz grenadine
  • 4 oz lemon soda
  • Lime
  • Orange wheel or garnish
  • Maraschino cherries for garnish


Instructions

  1. Fill a glass with ice.
  2. Pour in vodka and orange liqueur.
  3. Top with lemon-lime soda.
  4. Slowly add grenadine.
  5. Stir gently.
  6. Garnish with cherries and an orange slice.

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Kylie Thomas

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