


Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer” ended a years-long Academy Awards drought for big-budget blockbusters on Sunday, as it won the Oscar for Best Picture and six other prizes, bucking a years-long trend of small-budget or independent films winning the prize that had prompted questions about the Academy being out of touch with the film audience.
Emma Thomas, Christopher Nolan, and Charles Roven, winners of the Best Picture award for ... [+]
According to BoxOfficeMojo, Oppenheimer’s global box office earnings stood at $957 million, making it the biggest global earner to win the Academy’s top prize since “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King,” which won in 2004.
The final installment of Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy raked in $1.15 billion worldwide.
With a domestic box office of $329 million, the biopic about the physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer is also the biggest earner in the U.S. to win Best Picture since “The Return of the King.”
The last film to both win Best Picture at the Oscars and rake in over $100 million at the U.S. box office was 2012’s Argo, whose domestic tally stands at $136 million.
$100 million. That was the estimated budget for the biopic—which was financed and distributed by Universal Pictures—making it one of the biggest budget films to win the Best Picture Oscar in recent years. With a budget of around $90 million, the 2006 crime drama “The Departed” is the most recent Oscar winner with a comparable budget. Since then, the Ben Affleck-directed Argo is the only Best Picture winner, with an estimated budget higher than $25 million.
The biopic capped off a dominant awards season run by winning seven prizes at the Academy Awards on Sunday night. Aside from the top prize, Nolan won Best Director while the film’s titular lead Cillian Murphy won the Best Actor prize. Robert Downey Jr. won Best Supporting Actor for playing U.S. Navy Rear Admiral Lewis Strauss while the film also won prizes for Cinematography, Original Score and Editing. The Best Picture and Best Director wins were a first for Nolan, who is among the highest grossing directors in history with many of his top films earning strong critical acclaim.