Itโ€™s 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. โ€œAs 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: heโ€™s been so busy responding to messages, heโ€™s 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 Marvelโ€™s Black Panther franchise and the Rocky reboot, Creed. โ€œI 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 directorโ€™s Afrofuturist superhero movie with his whole family. โ€œIt was โ€˜Wakanda Forever!โ€™ We was putting our fist up!โ€ he says, motioning a Black power fist at the screen. โ€œTo 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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