Overall, I give Anora an 8.9/10. The "Best Picture" buzz is deserved, but I will have to wait and see how good The Brutalist is. I'm also not convinced that Conclave isn't a dark horse right now.
I also think that the correct vibes for Mikey Madison for Best Actress are correct.
Warning: Yes, this is a movie that shows the bluntness of sex work. There is A LOT of nudity and I was a little surprised at how many sex scenes there were. It's enough that I'm shocked that Neon got away with making this film and it not getting an NC-17 rating. So, if watching nudity and sex scenes bother you in entertainment, I wonder recommend skipping this. This is the opposite of what Pretty Woman (1990) presented.
Yes, you could say that Anora is a modern-day, tragic, explicit, profanity-filled version of Pretty Woman. Except instead of Richard Gere playing a corporate raider, you have Mark Eidelstein playing an immature indulgent son of a Russian oligarch. After "enjoying" hiring Anora (or "Ani") for some initial encounters, Ivan (or "Vanya") decides to hire her as his girlfriend for a week. On a whim, they decide to fly to Las Vegas and Ivan is bummed out about returning to Russia to work for his father. He decides that if he marries an American, he can stay in U.S. and continue his indulgent lifestyle. Anora agrees to elope in a tacky chapel. You understand that she does care about him, but she is primarily motivated by seeing his wealth as a way to escape the life and work that she's been living.
Problem is, the family has discovered this and they want to put a stop to it. Ivan runs off and Anora is left fending for herself against the family's "fixers". BTW - the fight scene between Anora, Igor, and Garnick is EPIC.

They then go on a chase to find Ivan so they can get this marriage annulled. And Ivan is found - and he's basically been nonstop partying and he
really had just left Anora alone to fend for herself. You realize that the family just sees Anora as a problem and not understanding what a mess Ivan is. Everything gets resolved and Anora, in a heartbreaking final scene, believes that she will never get out of her desperate situation.
Some nitpicks that I have: The "searching for Ivan" part too a little too long in the movie and I think they could have cut 15-20 minutes in this movie. But Sean Baker pulled off an amazing movie and performances are overall fantastic.