Warner Bros. Sweeps Oscars 2026 With 'One Battle After Another' And ‘Sinners’ — And Faces Bigger Merger Decision This Week

'One Battle After Another' won six awards, including best picture.

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Paul Anderson, winner of the Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Director and Best Picture Awards for “One Battle After Another,” poses during the 98th Oscars on March 15, 2026. (Photo by Brianna Bryson/Getty Images)

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Yuvraj Malik · Stocktwits

Published Mar 16, 2026, 6:57 AM

WBD
  • The action thriller also won best director and best adapted screenplay.
  • Another Warner Bros. production, “Sinners,” won four Oscars.
  • Investors await WBD’s special shareholder meeting on March 20 to decide whether it takes up Paramount’s acquisition offer or sticks with Netflix’s.

Amid a mostly flat share price for three months, Warner Bros. investors might have some reason to cheer on Monday. 

“One Battle After Another,” an action thriller backed and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, dominated this year’s Oscars. The Paul Thomas Anderson-directed film won six awards, including best picture and best director. Here’s the full list of nominees and winners via the BBC.

“One Battle After Another” follows a former rebel who is forced back into conflict when his past enemies return. He reunites with his group of former revolutionaries to rescue his kidnapped daughter. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Sean Penn and released last September, the movie has been praised for its cinematic experience, political commentary, dark humor, and action sequences. 

Another Warner Bros. production, “Sinners” - a horror film written and directed by Ryan Coogler of “Black Panther” fame - won four awards, including best actor and best original screenplay.

WBD To Decide On Merger On March 20

The awards arrive as Warner Bros. navigates a complicated merger. In a sequence of events worthy of the big screen, the company accepted a sweetened offer from Paramount Skydance after Netflix — which had previously formalized its own bid — declined to match it. Warner Bros. is now set to hold a special shareholder meeting on Friday, where shareholders will vote on whether to accept Paramount's offer or side with Netflix.

WBD Stock Move

Although the stock has traded with a narrow range since Warner Bros. and Netflix announced their deal in mid-December, WBD stock has declined for three weeks straight amid market volatility related to the U.S.-Iran war. 

On Stocktwits, retail sentiment for the stock was ‘extremely bearish’ as of early Monday, unchanged from the previous day, with ‘extremely low’ message volume. Amid scant activity, some investors still believe WBD remains a good bet.

“Only an uneducated investor would not be buying the WBD stock,” one user commented, arguing that regardless of how the deal unfolds, or even if it falls through, Warner Bros. stands to benefit.

WBD shares are down nearly 6% year-to-date, but are up more than 50% over the past six months since news of a potential sale first emerged.

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