Itโs lunchtime in New York City, and Miles Caton is still in bed. That morning, the 20-year-old star of Sinners set his alarm for 8.30am so he could watch the Oscar nominations live. โAs soon as I woke up, I went straight to YouTube,โ he says, where he learned Sinners had been nominated for 16 Academy Awards, more than any other film in Oscars history. Unsurprisingly, his phone has been blowing up: heโs been so busy responding to messages, heโs yet to get out of bed.
A southern gothic horror musical set in the 1930s, about the bloodsucking of Black culture, Sinners was the unexpected box office smash of 2025, earning $368m in ticket sales globally. The film co-stars Michael B Jordan and comes from the imagination of Ryan Coogler, the writer-director behind Marvelโs Black Panther franchise and the Rocky reboot, Creed. โI watched Black Panther for the first time when I was 12 years old,โ says Caton, who remembers going to the cinema to see the directorโs Afrofuturist superhero movie with his whole family. โIt was โWakanda Forever!โ We was putting our fist up!โ he says, motioning a Black power fist at the screen. โTo me, a Ryan Coogler film was culture,โ he says.
Dressed in a black hoodie pulled up over a silk skull c
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