Category: Drama
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Sound of Falling Review: Mascha Schilinski’s Haunting Portrait of Women, Memory, and Witnessing

Mascha Schilinski’s The Sound of Falling is a haunting, non-linear meditation on women, memory, and the quiet violence of witnessing. Spanning generations within the same farmhouse, the film examines curiosity, abuse, and identity through fragmented vignettes that echo across time. It’s a work that lingers—less something to solve than something to feel.
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Dead Man’s Wire Review: Gus Van Sant’s Tense True-Crime Reckoning With Capitalism

Gus Van Sant’s Dead Man’s Wire revisits a bizarre 1970s hostage crisis to interrogate desperation, capitalism, and media spectacle. Anchored by a career-best performance from Bill Skarsgård, the film refuses easy moral answers, instead asking whether its central figure was insane—or simply pushed there by a system designed to break him.
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28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Review — Violence, Faith, and the True Horror of Survival

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple expands the franchise in bold and unsettling directions, shifting its focus from survival to belief, from infection to ideology. Under Nia DaCosta’s confident direction and Alex Garland’s sharp writing, the film becomes a brutal meditation on faith, violence, and the human need to assign meaning to catastrophe. Anchored by…
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Top 30 Films of 2025: A Year Defined by Risk, Reckoning, and Reinvention

A personal ranking of the 30 films that defined my 2025 — shaped by risk-taking, reinvention, and moral reckoning. From intimate character studies to bold genre experiments, these are the films that lingered, challenged expectations, and revealed where cinema felt most alive this year.
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The Chronology of Water Review: Kristen Stewart’s Raw, Unfiltered Portrait of Trauma and Survival

Kristen Stewart’s feature directorial debut, adapted from Lidia Yuknavitch’s 2011 memoir, is a raw and uncompromising portrait of trauma, memory, and survival. The Chronology of Water follows Lidia, a competitive swimmer navigating abuse, fractured memories, and the complicated process of reclaiming autonomy through writing. Anchored by a career-defining performance from Imogen Poots, Stewart’s adaptation embraces…
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Father Mother Sister Brother Review: Jim Jarmusch’s Quiet, Universal Meditation on Family

In Father Mother Sister Brother, Jim Jarmusch delivers a quiet, triptych meditation on family, connection, and the emotions that live beneath polite conversation. Told across three loosely linked vignettes, the film favors gesture, silence, and body language over overt dialogue, allowing meaning to surface gradually. With understated performances and carefully choreographed framing, Jarmusch explores family…
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The Year of Relationships: 2025 Movies That Get Love Right (and Wrong)

Where do we, as a society, currently stand when it comes to relationships? Dating? Commitment? The landscape has shifted so dramatically that it sometimes feels like we’re living in an entirely new emotional era. The openness of relationships has expanded far beyond where it once was—breaking away from antiquated, traditional notions and allowing people to…
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Arco Is a Future You Want to Get Lost In — Here’s Why

Release Date: limited U.S. release November 14, 2025 (Neon) Runtime: 89 minutes (1h 29m) Rated: PG Production Companies: Remembers, MountainA, France 3 Cinéma, Fit Via Vi Film Productions, Sons of Rigor Producers: Félix de Givry, Sophie Mas, Natalie Portman, Ugo (Ugo/Ugo Bienvenu) Bienvenu (producer credits) Animation/Visual leads: Adam Sillard (animation lead) and Fabio Besse (production design)…
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Sirāt Is the Bad-Feel Movie of the Year — And It Hurts to Look Away

Release Date: November 14, 2025 (U.S. Release) Runtime: 115 minutes (1h 55m) Rated: R Production Companies: Los Desertores Films AIE, Telefónica Audiovisual Digital, Filmes da Ermida, El Deseo, Uri Films, 4A4 Productions Producers: Domingo Corral, Óliver Laxe, Xavi Font, Pedro Almodóvar, Agustín Almodóvar, Esther García, Oriol Maymó, Mani Mortazavi, Andrea Queralt Cinematography: Mauro Herce Editing: Cristóbal…
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“Sentimental Value”: Joachim Trier’s Most Tender Exploration of Family, Art, and Memory

Release Date: November 7, 2025 (Limited) Runtime: 133 minutes (2h 14m) Rated: R — some language, a sexual reference, and brief nudity Production Companies: Mer Film, Eye Eye Pictures, MK Productions, BBC Film, Lumen Production, Komplizen Film, Zentropa, Zentropa Sweden, Film i Väst, Alaz Film Producers: Maria Ekerhovd, Andrea Berentsen Ottmar Cinematography: Kasper Tuxen Editing: Olivier…
