Where to watch the Oscar-winning films, from Poor Things to Oppenheimer

Emma Stone in Poor Things
Emma Stone in Poor Things - Alamy
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Oppenheimer

Best Picture, Best Director (Christopher Nolan), Best Actor (Cillian Murphy), Best Supporting Actor (Robert Downey Jr), Best Original Score
Christopher Nolan’s portrait of the father of the nuclear bomb is a triumph, like witnessing history itself being split open. In the lead role of J Robert Oppenheimer, Cillian Murphy’s faraway gaze not only convinces you that he can actually see the invisible power that crackles between subatomic particles, but also the gravest, most unforgivable consequences of his unleashing it upon the world. Read the full review by Robbie Collin 
Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, YouTube, Apple TV, Google Play

Poor Things

Best Actress (Emma Stone)
Based on Alastair Gray’s novel of the same name, Poor Things is an exultantly raunchy and macabre gothic comedy, in which an eccentric young Englishwoman, Emma Stone’s Bella, leaves the rambling home of her Scottish guardian Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe) to cut a highly sexed swathe through western Europe. It’s wildly smart, deeply thought-through work, unlike anything you’ve seen in years. Read the full review by Robbie Collin
Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Disney Plus

The Zone of Interest

Best International Film
Devastating and vital, Jonathan Glazer’s disturbing drama follows the daily domestic activities of suburban housewife Hedwig Höss (Sandra Hüller), while her husband Rudolph (Christian Friedel) goes to work next door at Auschwitz concentration camp. As we watch Hedwig tend to her garden while screams and gunshots are clearly heard from over her garden wall, the Under the Skin director powerfully shows how evil can flourish in the most mundane circumstances. Read the full review by Robbie Collin
Where to watch: Curzon Home, Amazon Prime Video, YouTube, Apple TV, Google Play

Anatomy of a Fall

Best Original Screenplay (Justine Triet)
Justine Triet’s breathtaking intellectual thriller unpicks the aftermath of a fatal accident in the Alps. Unseen by us and possibly by anyone, Samuel (Samuel Theis) falls from the balcony of his chalet in the French Alps. A freak accident is the least likely theory. If he jumped, then, why? If he was pushed, did his wife (Sandra Hüller) do it? This event focuses the legal, forensic and psychoanalytical minds of dozens of people, obsesses several, and will define the futures of at least two. Read the full review by Tim Robey
Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, YouTube, Curzon, Google Play

The Holdovers

Best Supporting Actress (Da’Vine Joy Randolph)
Paul Giamatti shines as a curmudgeonly classics teacher forced to look after pupils over the Christmas break in this Alexander Payne’s best film since Sideways. Hilarious and impeccably acted, it’s made in a period style that chimes so tunefully with its early 1970s setting, you half-believe it had actually been made back then. A profoundly and nourishingly funny film. Read the full review by Robbie Collin
Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, YouTube, Curzon, Google Play

American Fiction

Best Adapted Sceenplay (Cord Jefferson)
Jeffrey Wright is superb in director Cord Jefferson’s sparkling literary satire about the publishing industry’s obsession with stories of black trauma. Wright plays author Thelonious Ellison, known as ‘Monk’, whose strain of erudite, classically inspired fiction is well behind the times – the only works by black writers that get picked up these days are gritty memoirs. To expunge his frustrations, Monk knocks out an inane pastiche which he initially titles ‘My Pafology’. To his horror – and his agent’s delight – he realises his own urban Springtime for Hitler is going to be a hit. Read the full review by Robbie Collin
Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video