One Battle After Another exhibits significant progressive ideological influence through its diverse casting choices, thematic emphasis on resistance against a police state portrayed as right-wing authoritarianism, and a villainous white supremacist character played by Sean Penn that serves as a cartoonish critique of traditional white norms. The ensemble features prominent Black actors like Chase Infiniti as the spirited daughter Willa, Teyana Taylor, Regina Hall, and Wood Harris alongside Latino Benicio del Toro, de-centering the white male lead (DiCaprio) in a narrative that sympathizes with washed-up revolutionaries and subtly endorses left-wing radicalism. These elements manifest as lecture-like political messaging on systemic oppression, clashing with the thriller-action genre and prioritizing ideological satire over pure entertainment, resulting in widespread conservative backlash labeling it 'woke trash,' 'anti-white propaganda,' and a 'reckless ode to radical terrorism' that could inspire violence. Critics praised it, but audience reactions highlight how the forced diversity and overt left-leaning politics compromised storytelling coherence and box-office appeal, turning a potentially gripping father-daughter tale into a divisive activist vehicle.