One Battle After Another: Sean Penn's Latest Triumph Shakes Up the Oscars 2026
There’s a moment in One Battle After Another where Sean Penn’s character, a man who’s been chewed up and spit out by life more times than he can count, just stands there. He’s not saying a word, but the camera lingers long enough to catch the war going on behind his eyes. It’s pure Penn—the kind of unvarnished, take-no-prisoners acting that made the Dolby Theatre crowd rise to its feet last night. The 2026 Oscars just wrapped, and if you believe the chatter from folks who were sipping champagne inside, this film is the one to beat.
Penn, who first took home the golden guy back in 2004 for Mystic River, has always had a gift for finding scripts that dig under your skin. One Battle After Another is his gnarliest, most personal project in years. It follows a bloke trying to outrun his past while stumbling through a present that keeps throwing punches. No neat resolutions here—just the messy, relentless grind of survival. Word from the after-parties is that even the industry heavies were wiping their eyes during the screening last month.
Then there’s the score. Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood has done something properly special with the One Battle After Another (Original Soundtrack). It’s not background music; it’s a character in its own right. Jagged strings slice through quiet piano passages, echoing the chaos inside the protagonist’s head. People who’ve heard advance copies are already calling it his most affecting work since There Will Be Blood. A mate of mine who caught the LA premiere reckons the track “Ash Wednesday” alone should win every award going.
Penn’s been talking up two books on the festival circuit that tie directly into the film’s DNA. The first is Strangers in Time, a novel about displaced souls carving out a patch of safety in a world that’s turned hostile—themes that pulse through every frame of the movie. The second is The Huntress: A Novel, a visceral tale of revenge and endurance set just after the war. Insiders say Penn had cast and crew read both during pre-production to get inside the characters’ heads.
Here’s what’s sticking with me after letting it all sink in:
- Penn’s best work since Milk: He strips everything back. Watch the diner scene—it’s a masterclass in saying everything without opening your mouth.
- Greenwood’s score is already legendary: It’s the kind of album you put on when you need to feel something deeply. “Embers at Dawn” is worth the price alone.
- The novels hit just as hard: Strangers in Time and The Huntress: A Novel aren’t just companion reads—they’re essential gut-punches in their own right.
- The Oscar buzz is real: After last night’s wins for Best Actor and Best Original Score, the whispers are that this train’s just getting started.
What gets me about One Battle After Another is how it refuses to sugarcoat anything. In a town that loves happy endings, Penn and his team have made something raw and uncomfortably true. The battles don’t stop when the credits roll—they just change shape. And maybe that’s the point, especially for us here in Aotearoa. We know a thing or two about standing firm when the weather turns. So grab a ticket, let Greenwood’s music hit you in the chest, and if you’re hungry for more, track down Strangers in Time or The Huntress: A Novel. Trust me—you’ll want to sit with these stories long after the house lights come up.