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Top Ten Films of 2025

If 2024 felt transitional, 2025 felt reactionary. The industry is still figuring out where it’s future is heading, with streaming turbulence, downsized theatrical slates, and the lingering specter of automation hanging over the heads of everyone from below-the-line workers to A-list actors. With the recent news of the landmark WB acquisition, the future is very much in a state of alarming flux. But even with cinema at a crossroads, a number of films showed up with blood dripping from their teeth in 2025. 2025 didn’t just have good movies, it had some of the very best movies of the whole decade. And I put in the work to find that out for myself. This year, I watched 109 new releases and wrote 67 reviews. The top four films from this year (all which earned a grade-A) could duke it out with any other recent release for supremacy. Even though art is, I guess, subjective and all that. Read More

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‘ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER’ Vives la Révolution In PTA Style

Possessed with a revolutionary spirit, One Battle After Another is both Paul Thomas Anderson’s funniest film and one of his most urgent. The director’s tenth feature, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Sean Penn in a two-hander with deadly consequences, marks his first return to a fully contemporary setting since his early career. Gone is the gauzy haze and nostalgia of period pieces; here, he plants his flag in a rawer, more immediate America. One riddled with problems. Anderson wraps the plot around our current sociopolitical anxieties, marrying a blisteringly sharp vision of unchecked government agencies playing Cowboys and Indians with real-world immigrant struggles. But at its core, One Battle After Another is a story about a father trying to protect his daughter, the kind of premise that in lesser hands would be played straight as genre: a simple man-on-a-mission revenge story. What could have been a standard Taken-esque snatch-and-grab thriller takes on towering dimension in PTA’s visionary hands. He uses the political backdrop not just for setting, but as a launchpad for a statement about America that is incisive, inflammatory, and deeply satirical. Gut-bustlingly so on many occasions, including a scene where white supremacists invoke the term “semen demon” with terrifying sincerity. The absurdity doesn’t undercut the message; it sharpens it.

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