Ryan Coogler's blues-steeped vampire epic ''Sinners'' led all films with 16 nominations to the 98th Academy Awards on Thursday, setting a record for the most in Oscar history.
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences voters showered ''Sinners'' with more nominations than they had ever bestowed before, breaking the 14-nomination mark set by ''All About Eve,'' ''Titanic'' and ''La La Land.'' Along with best picture, Coogler was nominated for best director and best screenplay, and double-duty star Michael B. Jordan was rewarded with his first Oscar nomination, for best actor.
Paul Thomas Anderson's father-daughter revolutionary saga ''One Battle After Another,'' the favorite coming into nominations, trailed in second with 13 of its own. Four of its actors — Leonardo DiCaprio, Teyana Taylor, Benicio del Toro and Sean Penn — were nominated, though newcomer Chase Infiniti was left out in best actress.
In those two top nominees, the film academy put its full force behind a pair of visceral and bracingly original American epics that each connected with a fraught national moment. Coogler's Jim Crow-era film — the rare horror movie to win the academy's favor — conjures a mythical allegory of Black life. In ''One Battle After Another,'' a dormant spirit of rebellion is revived in an out-of-control police state.
Both are also Warner Bros. titles. In the midst of a contentious sale to Netflix, the 102-year-old studio had its best Oscar nominations mornings ever, with 33 total nods. In a memo to Warner Bros. Discovery employees, David Zaslav, chief executive, called it ''a golden moment for our company.'' As the fate of Warner Bros., which Netflix is buying for $72 billion, hangs in the balance amid a challenge from Paramount Skydance, Hollywood is bracing for potentially the largest realignment in the film industry's history.
A coronation for Coogler
For Coogler, the 39-year-old filmmaker of ''Fruitvale Station'' and ''Black Panther,'' it was a crowning moment. One of Hollywood's most esteemed yet humble filmmakers, Coogler has called ''Sinners'' — a film that he will own outright 25 years after its release — his most personal movie.
''I wrote this script for my uncle who passed away 11 years ago,'' Coogler said in an interview Thursday morning. ''I got to imagine that he's listening to some blues music right now to celebrate.''