Box office One Battle After Another grossed $72.9 million in the U.S. and Canada, and $140 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $212.9 million. The film ended up being a
box-office disappointment, falling short of its estimated $300 million break-even point. It is also Anderson's highest-grossing release to date. In the U.S. and Canada, the film opened in 3,634 theaters, the widest release for a film directed by Anderson and his first to debut in wide release. It made $8.8 million on its first day, including $3.1 million from Thursday previews. The film earned $22 million over the weekend, topping the box office, and handily marking the best weekend for a film directed by Anderson, topping the $4.9 million earned by
There Will Be Blood in its fifth weekend in 2008. In its second weekend,
One Battle After Another grossed $11 million (a drop of 50%), finishing second behind then-newcomer
Taylor Swift: The Official Release Party of a Showgirl.
Critical response The film received widespread acclaim, receiving reviews that were overwhelmingly positive, with multiple critics calling the film a "masterpiece". Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on its A+ to F scale, while those at
PostTrak rated the film four-and-a-half out of five stars, with 74% of audiences saying they would "definitely recommend" it.
Justin Chang of
The New Yorker called the film "a father-daughter epic, with an unusually personal gush of feeling. You can count on one hand the number of scenes that Bob and Willa share, but their connectiona swirl of protectiveness, exasperation, and fiercely unconditional lovebinds the movie and its madly whirling parts together". Katie Walsh of the
Chicago Tribune called the film a "searing indictment of this particular moment in American history" by which "Anderson balances the sprawling, conspiracy-minded aspects of this yarn with the intimate father-daughter story, which is the heart of the matter". Writing for
The New York Times,
Manohla Dargis called the film "a carnivalesque epic about good and evil, violence and power, inalienable rights and the fight against injustice; it's also a love story. The film speaks to the failures of the past and of the present but insists on the promise of the future".
Richard Lawson of
The Hollywood Reporter wrote that
One Battle After Another is "a furious film, a richly engaging and persuasive polemic" in which "Anderson shows a previously unseen aptitude for action and suspense;
One Battle After Another is, essentially, a thriller, albeit one teeming with enormous ideas about the collapse and possible rescue of the country". Alex Saveliev of
Film Threat opened his review by writing that the film "demands to be seen on the largest screen possible to fully absorb the 35 mm VistaVision experience with every cell of your body. Everything about it is grand: its characters, its action sequences, its timely sentiments, even the quieter moments".
Peter Bradshaw, awarding the film five stars and writing for
The Guardian, was effusive in his praise. He celebrated the "riff on the now recognisable Anderson-Pynchonian idea of counterculture and counter-revolution", praised the score by Greenwood, and pondered if the "central paternity crisis triangle [is] an image for an ownership dispute around the American melting-pot dream". The performances of the cast were also highly praised. Gleiberman also added that "Anderson knows that the quality that liberates DiCaprio is comedy. By having him play Bob as a dissolute stoner addict, discombobulated by his loss of faith, he humanizes DiCaprio and coaxes a great performance out of him." Tallerico of
RogerEbert.com felt DiCaprio gives a "carefully modulated" performance, but he nevertheless singled out Sean Penn's performance as "his best work in years", writing he "flexes his muscles, grits his teeth, and growls his lines, but somehow threads the needle between truth and caricature".
David Ehrlich of
IndieWire praised "magnetically self-possessed newcomer/instant movie star Chase Infiniti, whose performance inspires a strange kind of secondhand pride". He also singled out the performances of Penn and Taylor, calling the latter "eruptive [...] steaming with revolutionary zeal" and the former "career-best".
Deadline Hollywoods Pete Hammond called Penn's performance "a riot to watch" while considering the performance of Taylor as "dazzling" and "unforgettable".
The Wall Street Journals
Kyle Smith similarly noted the film is "big and brash. Rangy in tone, style and theme, it has so much going on that a single viewing hardly seems sufficient to absorb it all. Whether it's a masterpiece or a hodgepodge will be a matter of some discussion; the reach is evident but the grasp is a little shaky".
Liel Leibovitz of
The Free Press described the film as "just another sign that Hollywood has once again driven itself to total moral, artistic, and creative ruin". During a post-screening panel discussion with Anderson, fellow filmmaker and moderator
Steven Spielberg highly praised the film, calling it "insane" and "really incredible", adding, "This is such a concoction of things that are so bizarre and at the same time so relevant, that I think have become increasingly more relevant than perhaps even when [Anderson] finished the screenplay, and assembled [the] cast and crew, and began production." The film garnered significant praise by other prominent filmmakers, including
Francis Ford Coppola,
Michael Mann, and
Paul Schrader. Producer
Sara Murphy said she hoped the film's reception among audiences and critics would encourage more studios to invest in "risky" projects similar to it: "Original films are not usually done at this level", of a "a big, good-time movie."
Political views and controversies The New York Times Michelle Goldberg argued it was "an antifascist movie at a fascist moment", a film which she observed "was made in the America that existed before
Donald Trump's return" to office eight months earlier; Goldberg alleged whether or not "if such a forthrightly antifascist film could be produced in Hollywood today". Screenwriter and podcaster
Bret Easton Ellis alleged, "It's kind of shocking to see these kind of accolades forI'm sorry, it's not a very good moviebecause of its political ideology, and it's so obvious that's what they're responding to [...] Why it's considered a masterpiece, the greatest film of the decade, the greatest film ever made [is] because it really aligns with this kind of leftist sensibility." Ellis later added on his podcast allegations that, "You have the left and the entertainment press propping this movie up to such an absurd degree that it felt unnatural." Responding to the political controversies surrounding the film, Gleiberman posited that "part of the power of
One Battle After Another is that it is not, in fact, a left-wing movie, it's important to recognize how that misperception has been fed by a lot of people on the left [...] I think a lot of the attitude of the entertainment media has been to reflexively treat
One Battle After Another as if the film itself were raising a revolutionary fistand as if there were something 'left-wing' about attacking authoritarianism. There is not." However, as authority is depicted in the film as unpredictable, militarized, and with the power to destabilize entire neighborhoods, many critics and outlets agreed that this made the film's release incredibly "timely" amidst the
expansion of ICE operations under the
second Trump administration. Murphy said in February 2026 that the concurrent
ICE operations in Minneapolis, which
killed civilians, made the film "devastatingly" timely: In January 2026, Daniel Boguslaw of
The American Prospect compared the character Steven J. Lockjaw to then-commander of the
U.S. Border Patrol Gregory Bovino, who promoted aggressive
law enforcement tactics within the agency.
Perfidia's character and racial themes Ellen E Jones of
The Guardian opined that the film's handling of racial themes "raises questions about how white male directors depict Black women", particularly with regards to Perfidia Beverly Hills, and the ways in which she is
sexualized by two white men (Pat/Bob and Lockjaw, the latter a white supremacist); Jones argued that Perfidia is a
sex criminal.
The New York Times Maya Phillips called Perfidia "the most radical part" of the film, writing, "In one major sense, the film does send a nuanced political message embodied in the brief and mysterious arc of Perfidia Beverly Hills: that the success of a contemporary American political movement is inextricably tied to the sexual freedom and agency of Black women." In November 2025, Taylor rejected these critiques, stating: In January 2026, Taylor explained further: "[People feel] like she was overly horny. And I'm like, do you realize the first thing we see of Perfidia is her having a gun to a guy's head, and he calls her 'sweet thing'? Are youare we watching the same film?" She said that Perfidia weaponizes her sexuality against her enemies: "Perfidia kind of dived into the, 'Oh, you think I'm hot? All right, bet. Cool if I get to still do what I'm doing'." Perfidia's decisions, Taylor said, are made in "survival mode": In February 2026, Taylor stated that Perfidia "is so misunderstood, but most importantly, human, and so raw. And she is unapologetically herself", adding: In March 2026, backstage at the
98th Academy Awards, Anderson addressed the critiques regarding Perfidia's character:
Year-end lists The
American Film Institute and
National Board of Review listed
One Battle After Another as one of 2025's ten best films.
Film Comment, a
New York Times readers poll, and a
Sight and Sound poll of over 100 international critics all ranked it as the year's best.
IndieWires annual critics poll also ranked the film at #1, with a final result of 573 points; 101 of the 148 critics who voted had
One Battle After Another somewhere on their Top 10 ballots, while 43 of those 101 mentions were #1 picks. Additionally,
IndieWire surveyed fifty filmmakers' favorite films of the year; twenty listed
One Battle After Another. These included
Fede Álvarez,
Olivier Assayas,
Clint Bentley,
Oliver Laxe, and
Michael Mann; Laxe called the film "a testament to the excess of our times, on every level". In his list of 2025's 20 best films,
Rolling Stones David Fear called
One Battle After Another a "thundering, dizzying epic", and "a timeless tale about revolutionaries taking care of their own while getting the next generation to pick up the flag".
One Battle After Another appeared on more critics' annual "best of" lists than any other 2025 film, receiving the most #1 votes. The film was included on 735 lists, with 212 ranking it at #1. It appeared on former
U.S. president Barack Obama's annual list of his favorite films of each year; though it was not ranked,
One Battle After Another appeared at the top of the list. • 1st – Phil Bacharach (
Oklahoma Gazette) • 1st – Lindsey Bahr (
Associated Press) • 1st –
Peter Bradshaw (
The Guardian) • 1st – Max Cea (
Esquire) • 1st – Jake Coyle (Associated Press) • 1st –
David Ehrlich (
IndieWire) • 1st – David Fear (
Rolling Stone) • 1st –
Owen Gleiberman (
Variety) • 1st – Bill Goodykoontz (
The Arizona Republic) • 1st – André Hereford (
Metro Weekly) • 1st – Josh Larsen (
Filmspotting) • 1st – Daniel Loria (
Boxoffice Pro) • 1st – Kiko Martinez (
San Antonio Current) • 1st – Malcolm McMillan (
Tom's Guide) • 1st – Agnivo Niyogi (
The Telegraph) • 1st – Clinton Olsasky (
Iowa Public Radio) • 1st – James Owen (
Columbia Daily Tribune) • 1st – Spencer Perry (
ComicBook.com) • 1st – Michael Phillips (
Filmspotting) • 1st – Kevin Slane (
Boston.com) • 1st –
Peter Travers (The Travers Take) • 1st – Alissa Wilkinson (
The New York Times) • 1st – Alison Willmore (
Vulture) Fear also included Penn and Taylor's performances in his
Rolling Stone list of 2025's 17 best film performances. Taylor's was named one of the year's 25 best by
The Hollywood Reporter.
Vanity Fair also listed Taylor's as one of the best;
Mark Guiducci wrote that "there is much to love about [
One Battle After Another], but Taylor is at the top of the list". Penn's performance was ranked by multiple critics as one of the best villain performances of 2025. In December 2025,
Colliders William Smith ranked
One Battle After Another 9th on his list of the "10 Greatest Movie Masterpieces of the Last 10 Years", calling it one of "the most imminent" and "entertaining" films of the year, and adding that its "righteous indignation" and "bold politics" feel "particularly pointed and appropriate for the current state of America".
Colliders Diego Pineda Pacheco ranked the film 8th on his list of the "10 Greatest Movie Masterpieces of the 21st Century", writing, "[Anderson] has been delivering masterpiece after masterpiece since the '90s, but this one truly does feel like the epitome of his career, an artistic achievement unlike any other he's made before ... [the film] is full of fascinating characters and exceptional performers, making it an enthralling dramedy packed with exquisite creative choices." In February 2026,
Collider ranked
One Battle After Another as the best film of 2025 in their list of "The Greatest Movie of Every Year of the 21st Century (So Far)", writing that it is "a comedic epic of sorts" and "moves at a mean pace and never drags", adding, "The tension is never undermined by the comedy, and the comedy never clashes with the parts of the film that are meant to be a bit more serious. It's incredibly well-balanced for something so grand and ambitious, and it seems likely that it'll continue to remain entertaining, relevant, and distinctive as the years march on further."
Accolades At the
31st Critics' Choice Awards,
One Battle After Another won three awards, including
Best Picture and
Best Director for Anderson. It was also nominated for nine awards at the
83rd Golden Globes, receiving the most nominations of any film that year; del Toro, DiCaprio, Infiniti, Penn, and Taylor all received nominations for their performances. Ultimately, the film won four Golden Globes:
Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy,
Best Director,
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture (Taylor), and
Best Screenplay. It also became the most-nominated film in the history of the
Screen Actors Guild at the
32nd Actor Awards, with a record-breaking seven nominations and Penn winning
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role. At the
79th British Academy Film Awards, the film led the nominations with fourteen overall, winning six, including
Best Film and
Best Director. Additionally, at the
98th Academy Awards, the film received thirteen nominations, including
Best Picture,
Best Director,
Best Adapted Screenplay and four acting nominations (for del Toro, DiCaprio, Penn, and Taylor), the second-most of any film that year. The film went on to win six Oscars: Best Picture (Somner, Murphy, and Anderson), Best Director (Anderson),
Best Supporting Actor (Penn), Best Adapted Screenplay (Anderson),
Best Film Editing (Jurgensen), and
Best Casting (Kulukundis), becoming the inaugural recipient for the latter. ==Potential sequel==