Some performances live in a scene, not a film. These ten moments prove it.
1. Cate Blanchett — Tár (2022) The orchestra audition. Blanchett dissects a young conductor’s “authenticity” argument with surgical cruelty while simultaneously auditioning the boy herself. Seven unbroken minutes of pure intellectual dominance.
2. Michelle Yeoh — Everything Everywhere All At Once (2022) The laundromat confession. Amid all the multiverse chaos, the moment Evelyn finally sees her daughter — just two women, one apology, one pair of googly eyes — destroys you completely.
3. Andrea Riseborough — To Leslie (2022) The motel room breakdown. Riseborough, shaking, trying to get sober alone, talking to no one. Three minutes that explain every Oscar campaign that followed.
4. Colin Farrell — The Banshees of Inisherin (2022) “I just don’t like you no more.” Farrell delivers the most devastating sentence in recent cinema with the flat, tired certainty of a man who has already grieved the friendship he’s ending.
5. Michael B. Jordan — Sinners (2025) Smoke, alone, after Stack dies. No dialogue. Just his hands — shaking — trying and failing to roll a cigarette that Stack always used to roll for him.
6. Brendan Fraser — The Whale (2022) The essay reading. Fraser’s Charlie listening to his daughter read her work aloud. The way his face opens, just for a moment, into something that was once a man who loved beautiful things.
7. Austin Butler — Elvis (2022) The ’68 Comeback Special. Butler stops performing Elvis and becomes him — the moment the impersonation disappears and something genuine takes over.
8. Paul Mescal — Aftersun (2022) The final dance sequence. Mescal’s Calum, strobe-lit, possessed, dancing alone in the dark while his daughter watches from a distance. You don’t understand it until you suddenly, terribly do.
9. Tár Hanning — All Quiet on the Western Front (2022) Paul watches his friend Kat die of a wound that could have been treated. A boy becoming something older and heavier than grief, in real time, in one take.10. Owen Cooper — Adolescence (2025) The full third episode is essentially one continuous performance. The moment Jamie’s mask slips — not fully, just slightly, just enough — and you see something behind it that might be a child who is genuinely lost. Cooper was 14. He had never acted before.

