Latin American Nominees in 2025 Academy Awards

Latin American Nominees in 2025 Academy Awards

Oscars

Last Updated on February 11, 2025 1:50 pm by Erwin Noguera

For decades, the Oscars have been a stage where Latin American and Brazilian talent has often been overlooked, sidelined, or reduced to stereotypes. Despite rich storytelling traditions and a wealth of creative brilliance, actors, filmmakers, and creatives from Central and South America have historically struggled for recognition at Hollywoodโ€™s most prestigious awards ceremony.

History of Latin America Nominees

The statistics are sobering: only 2% of Oscar nominees and winners have been Hispanic or Latino, with glaring gaps in major acting categories.

No Latina has ever won Best Actress, and only two Latin American filmmakers have taken home the award for Best Picture in 2017, The Shape of Water, and 2014, Birdman. A Latino has not won Best Actor since 1950 and there hasnโ€™t been a Latino nomination for the category since 2011.

2025: The Year of Change

This year, the Academy might finally be making history! With five Latino artists nominated in major acting categories, a Best Picture nominee for the groundbreaking Brazil film Iโ€™m Still Here and 13 nominations for the French-Mexican narco-musical Emilia Pรฉrez, the Academy appears to be waking up to the undeniable power of Latin American storytelling. These nominations celebrate the talent that has been pushing boundaries for decades.

From Fernanda Torresโ€™ poignant performance as a lawyer-activist in Iโ€™m Still Here to Karla Sofรญa Gascรณnโ€™s nomination as the first transgender actress in the Best Actress category for Emilia Pรฉrez, this yearโ€™s nominees are rewriting Oscar history. Zoe Saldaรฑa, Colman Domingo, Monica Barbaro, and others are also bringing their heritage to the forefront, proving that Latinx talent belongs at the center of global cinema.

The 2025 Oscars are becoming a long-overdue reckoning with Hollywoodโ€™s history of exclusion. Itโ€™s a celebration of resilience, creativity, and cultural richness that has always deserved its place in the spotlight.

Latin American Nominees

Films

Emilia Pรฉrez
A French narco-musical with 13 nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director (Jacques Audiard), and Best Actress (Karla Sofรญa Gascรณn).

Features two Spanish-language songs nominated for Best Original Song: โ€œEl Malโ€ (performed by Zoe Saldaรฑa) and โ€œMi Caminoโ€ (sung by Selena Gomez).
Sing SingNominated for Best Picture.

Features Colman Domingo, an Afro-Latino actor, nominated for Best Actor for his performance as a prisoner.
ConclaveFeatures Mexican actor Carlos Diehz in the crucial role of Cardinal Benitez
Other Recognized FilmsDune: Part Two (Javier Bardem featured prominently).

Alien: Romulus (directed by Uruguayan filmmaker Fede รlvarez, recognized in technical categories).

Actors

Karla Sofรญa Gascรณn:First transgender actress nominated for Best Actress for her role in Emilia Pรฉrez.
Her performance as Manitas has sparked both acclaim and controversy.
Colman Domingo:Nominated for Best Actor for his role in Sing Sing, representing Afro-Latino talent.
Zoe Saldaรฑa:Nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Emilia Pรฉrez. She also performed the nominated song โ€œEl Malโ€.
Monica Barbaro:Nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of Joan Baez in โ€œA Complete Unknownโ€.
Selena Gomez:Recognized as a performer of the nominated song โ€œMi Caminoโ€ from Emilia Pรฉrez.

Brazilian Nominees

Films

Iโ€™m Still Here (Ainda Estou Aqui)Directed by Walter Salles, this is the first Brazilian film to be nominated for Best Picture.

Also competing in the categories of Best International Feature and Best Actress (Fernanda Torres).


The film tells the story of Eunice Paiva, an activist during Brazilโ€™s military dictatorship, and has been praised as a powerful narrative of resistance.

Actors

Fernanda TorresNominated for Best Actress for her role in Iโ€™m Still Here.
This marks a historic moment as she follows in her mother Fernanda Montenegroโ€™s footsteps, who was previously the only Brazilian actress nominated in this category (1999).

This yearโ€™s nominations highlight a growing recognition of Latin American and Brazilian cinema at the Oscars, celebrating diverse stories and groundbreaking performances that reflect cultural richness and resilience.

Make sure to place your bets on your favourite Latin America nominees on the Gambyl Exchange, and get ready to watch them take home the Golden Statue when the Oscars air live on March 2nd 2025.

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