Sean Baker has confirmed that his next project will stay “in the same wheelhouse” as his Palme d’Or-winning Anora, adding that fans should “not expect a Marvel film” when the cameras roll again. Speaking on a Hollywood Reporter podcast, the director said he prefers the creative latitude of budgets under $10 million and has already begun outlining a new script that he hopes to shoot in early 2026.
Baker’s caution about Hollywood franchises comes as Anora rides a wave of accolades that began with its Palme d’Or at Cannes in 2025 and continued through a five-Oscar sweep in March, including best picture and best director. NEON will give the film its U.S. theatrical bow on 18 October, positioning the release as prestige counter-programming ahead of the holiday blockbusters. Industry analysts point to sustained festival buzz and a $40.9 million early overseas haul as signs the drama could break out beyond the arthouse circuit.
The filmmaker hinted that his follow-up may return to the American Northeast, where he once lived, to explore “the lives of working-class people the camera usually ignores.” Consistent with his earlier work on sex-work narratives, Baker said he has been researching community-led harm-reduction programs to ground the story in firsthand testimony.
Despite calls from executives to “scale up” after Anora’s success, Baker insists smaller crews and faster schedules remain central to his process, arguing that they foster the authenticity audiences now seek in mid-budget cinema. Warner Bros. and A24 are said to be monitoring the script’s progress, but Baker stressed that any eventual financing deal must preserve his final cut.