Anderson dedicated his win to his late collaborator Adam Somner, who died in 2024 from cancer.
"He's in a really big bar up in the sky right now," Anderson said. "He's having a gin and tonic, and he is so happy."
The filmmaker addressed conversations about how race and character complexity are portrayed in the film, particularly surrounding Teyana Taylor's character named Perfidia Beverly Hills, a Black female revolutionary. He said the character was written to be someone struggling internally while trying to lead a revolution.
"We always knew that we were trying to make something complicated," Anderson said. "We knew that we weren't making something that was heroic. ... This woman was suffering, not only from postpartum depression, but she had issues of her own that she hadn't really reconciled with."
Anderson praised other nominees in the best directing category included Ryan Coogler for "Sinners," Chloé Zhao for "Hamnet," Joachim Trier for "Sentimental Value," and Josh Safdie for "Marty Supreme." He called them "classmates" before offering some sarcasm.