AFI Awards Lunch: A-Listers Celebrate 2025’s Top American Films and TV Shows

A Night of Recognition and Celebration No awards season event has a higher ratio of notables to nobodies than the annual AFI Awards luncheon, which also has an unbeatable ratio of winners to losers. Every table in the ballroom of the Four Seasons in Beverly Hills is reserved for the principal personnel behind an American […]

A Night of Recognition and Celebration

No awards season event has a higher ratio of notables to nobodies than the annual AFI Awards luncheon, which also has an unbeatable ratio of winners to losers. Every table in the ballroom of the Four Seasons in Beverly Hills is reserved for the principal personnel behind an American film or TV show that was chosen a month or so earlier, by a jury convened by the American Film Institute, as one of the previous year’s 10 best (plus, in some years, such as this one, a film or TV show that was tapped to receive a "special award").

Attendees at this year’s luncheon included the crème de la crème of Hollywood’s A-list, among them:

  • Leonardo DiCaprio, star of One Battle After Another
  • Emma Stone, star/producer of Bugonia
  • Timothée Chalamet and Gwyneth Paltrow, stars of Marty Supreme
  • James Cameron, writer/director of Avatar: Fire and Ash
  • Ariana Grande, star of Wicked: For Good
  • Ryan Coogler, writer/director, and Michael B. Jordan, star of Sinners
  • Steven Spielberg, producer of Hamnet, and Chloé Zhao, writer/director of Hamnet
  • George Clooney and Adam Sandler, stars of Jay Kelly
  • Guillermo del Toro, writer/director of Frankenstein, and Jacob Elordi, star of Frankenstein
  • Mark Ruffalo, star of Task
  • Ethan Hawke, star of The Lowdown
  • Adam Scott and Britt Lower, stars of Severance
  • Vince Gilligan, creator of Pluribus, and Rhea Seehorn, star of Pluribus

And the list goes on – plus top execs at studios and networks, including Netflix’s Ted Sarandos and Bela Bajaria, Warner Bros.’ Michael De Luca, FX’s John Landgraf, A24’s David Fenkel, and their parent companies, including Apple’s Tim Cook.

It all made for a memorable, if somewhat crowded, cocktail hour. Cameron and DiCaprio, who collaborated on Titanic some 30 years ago, ran into each other and hugged. 2012 Sundance writers lab classmates-turned indie darlings-turned Marvel filmmakers-turned current Oscar contenders Coogler and Zhao caught up, as did Seehorn and Gilligan with the star of a prior Gilligan show, Breaking Bad‘s Jesse Plemons, who was in the room as part of the Bugonia contingent. Zhao also posed with Grande and Hamnet star Jessie Buckley, and then with Spielberg and Cook. And Clooney and Sarandos chatted, before Clooney brought Sandler and their Jay Kelly costar Laura Dern over to say hello to the afternoon’s surprise guest, Carol Burnett.

The Official Festivities

The official festivities kicked off, as always, with a montage, beautifully assembled by AFI’s Chris Merrill, featuring great film and TV work from past years ending in the same number as the year of work being honored. This year’s reel, with "Smile" playing over it, evoked particular applause when clips appeared connected to people in the room – 1975’s Jaws, directed by Spielberg; 1995’s The Usual Suspects, featuring Benicio Del Toro (a star of One Battle After AnotherCreed, written/directed by Coogler and starring Jordan; The Revenant, starring DiCaprio; and Better Call Saul, starring Seehorn – and also when a clip played of Diane Keaton, who died in October, in 2005’s Something’s Gotta Give.

When the clip of Seehorn in Better Call Saul transitioned into a clip of her in Pluribus, it marked the start of a montage featuring each of the AFI Awards honorees for 2025, which prompted each table to erupt as their project came on the big screen.

Then, AFI president and CEO Bob Gazzale welcomed everyone; noted that "Smile" was written by Charlie Chaplin, whose granddaughter, actress Oona Chaplin, was in the room at the Avatar: Fire and Ash table; and said that the song had been chosen for the montage to acknowledge the challenges of 2025 that had impacted the Hollywood community – from the devastating wildfires of January through the tragic murders of Rob Reiner and Michelle Reiner in December – and the art that helped us to get through it: "We need your stories to help us make sense of emotions we cannot escape."

Gazzale also acknowledged the heavy representation of AFI Conservatory alums amongst this year’s honorees, including Task creator Brad Ingelsby and Bugonia producer Ari Aster; and the presence in the room of two past recipients of the AFI Life Achievement Award, Clooney and Spielberg, as well as AFI’s founder George Stevens Jr., 93, who received a standing ovation.

The Reading of the AFI Almanac

Then came the reading, for the AFI Almanac, of the explanations for this year’s AFI Awards selections, delivered by the heads of the juries that selected them.

Rich Frank, who chaired a TV jury that considered 65 shows, noted that Disney+’s Andor "cuts deep"; Netflix’s Death by Lightning features a "brilliant cast"; Netflix’s The Diplomat boasts "an all-star ensemble"; FX’s The Lowdown features, via Hawke, "one of the year’s most magnetic performances"; HBO Max’s The Pitt "pulses with empathy" and is "taut and timely"; Apple TV+’s Pluribus is a "high concept slow burn" in which "Rhea Seehorn stands alone"; Apple TV+’s Severance succeeds on the back of a "stellar ensemble"; Apple TV+’s The Studio "cuts Hollywood bull st to the bone"; and Task was "beautifully realized."

Ava DuVernay spoke on behalf of the film jury, presenting a special award to Neon’s Iranian film It Was Just an Accident. She then called 20th Century’s Avatar: Fire and Ash "an appeal to the heart that beats within and connects all living things"; Searchlight’s Bugonia "a cinematic experience unlike any other" that features, courtesy of Stone and Plemons, "a master class in the art of acting"; Netflix’s Frankenstein "a monument to the art of cinema"; Focus’ Hamnet a film in which "Jessie Buckley gives the performance of a lifetime"; Netflix’s Jay Kelly "hilarious and heartbreaking" and "tailor-made for America’s leading man," Clooney; A24’s Marty Supreme "set in the past but utterly of the moment," with a performance by Chalamet that makes him "the undeniable leading man of a new generation"; Warners’ One Battle After Another "a rallying cry for fearless originality in American film" and a showcase for "cinema’s supernova, Leonardo DiCaprio"; Sinners "a wholly original vision" and "modern masterpiece" centered on "one of today’s brightest stars," Jordan; Netflix’s Train Dreams "an art piece worthy of the highest poetry"; and Universal’s Wicked: For Good a musical built on "spellbinding performances" by Cynthia Erivo and Grande.

Closing Remarks

The ceremony closed with remarks from Burnett, who was introduced to a standing ovation and declared: "What a lunch! The world is a better place for having heard your voices. Congratulations, and thank you so much."