The Oscar-winning performances of 2025 sorted by screen time percentage
• Amy Madigan (Weapons) - 14:45 / 11.48%
• Sean Penn (One Battle After Another) - 33:02 / 20.43%
• Michael B. Jordan (Sinners) - 1:10:03 / 50.94%
• Jessie Buckley (Hamnet) - 1:09:38 / 55.38%
Screen time data for Pillion (2025)
- Harry Melling - 1:24:49 (80.14%)
- Alexander Skarsgård - 53:23 (50.44%)
- Douglas Hodge - 16:01 (15.13%)
- Lesley Sharp - 10:47 (10.19%)
@MattB_WOF I do. As integral and three-dimensional as his character is, he’s afforded very little POV and ultimately doesn’t rise above supporting villain status.
Screen time data for Nuremberg (2025)
- Rami Malek - 1:17:54 (52.40%)
- Russell Crowe - 43:02 (28.95%)
- Leo Woodall - 32:17 (21.72%)
- Michael Shannon - 32:01 (21.54%)
- Mark O’Brien - 15:01 (10.10%)
- Richard E. Grant - 12:10 (8.18%)
- John Slattery - 11:14 (7.56%)
2026 update
Bearing in mind that Amy Madigan technically first appears in Weapons at the 4:45 mark, Michael B. Jordan (Sinners) is the first lead winner since Gary Oldman (Darkest Hour) to have a later entrance than both of the same year’s supporting winners.
THREAD: I’ve calculated the entrance and exit times for every Oscar-winning performance, and I’m going to share a summary for each category.
(Note: As always, each film’s credits [if any] count as part of its total runtime.)
147. Stellan Skarsgård (Sentimental Value)
Nom S, belonged in L
Screen time: 40.23%
The most logical way to digest this intricate film is to view its two (no more and no less) most prominent characters as equally important co-leads.
146. Jacob Elordi (Frankenstein)
Nom S, belonged in L
Screen time: 38.92%
Guillermo del Toro knew his version of this familiar story had to be innovative, so he amplified the role of The Creature to the extent of sharing co-lead status with Victor.