- Youth (Hard Times) (Wang Bing)
- Youth (Homecoming) (Wang Bing)
- A Traveler's Needs (Hong Sangsoo)
- Night and Fog in Kurdistan (Shilan Saadi)
- Characters Disappearing (Connor Sen Warnick)
- The Trio Hall (Su Hui-yu)
- Hard Truths (Mike Leigh)
- Waterdrop (Choi Jongyong)
- The Shrouds (David Cronenberg)
- No One Sleeps (Sam Kalantari)
Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
- The Fanciful Norwegian
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 6:24 pm
- Location: Teegeeack
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Same eligibility I usually use: films that premiered in 2024 or 2025 that I saw for the first time this year.
-
nitin
- Joined: Sat Nov 08, 2014 10:49 am
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1. Sound of Falling
2. Sirat
3. The Secret Agent
4. One Battle After Another
5. Magellan
6. Blue Moon
7. It Was Just An Accident
8. Die My Love
9. La Grazia
10. Resurrection
Honourable Mentions: Two Prosecutors, The Stranger, No Other Choice, Romeria, Black Bag, Sentimental Value, The Mastermind, Sinners, Nouvelle Vague, Blue Trail, Dreams (Michel Franco), Father Mother Sister Brother, If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, Urchin, Heads or Tails, Train Dreams
Others Seen: To Kill a Mongolian Horse, Frankenstein, Marty Supreme, Bugonia, Superman, The Testament of Ann Lee
2. Sirat
3. The Secret Agent
4. One Battle After Another
5. Magellan
6. Blue Moon
7. It Was Just An Accident
8. Die My Love
9. La Grazia
10. Resurrection
Honourable Mentions: Two Prosecutors, The Stranger, No Other Choice, Romeria, Black Bag, Sentimental Value, The Mastermind, Sinners, Nouvelle Vague, Blue Trail, Dreams (Michel Franco), Father Mother Sister Brother, If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, Urchin, Heads or Tails, Train Dreams
Others Seen: To Kill a Mongolian Horse, Frankenstein, Marty Supreme, Bugonia, Superman, The Testament of Ann Lee
Last edited by nitin on Sun May 03, 2026 1:03 pm, edited 24 times in total.
- Persona
- Joined: Wed Mar 07, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1. The Secret Agent
2. 28 Years Later
3. The Phoenician Scheme
4. It Was Just an Accident
5. Train Dreams
6. A House of Dynamite
7. Roofman
8. Wake Up Dead Man
9. Naked Gun
10. K-Pop Demon Hunters
2. 28 Years Later
3. The Phoenician Scheme
4. It Was Just an Accident
5. Train Dreams
6. A House of Dynamite
7. Roofman
8. Wake Up Dead Man
9. Naked Gun
10. K-Pop Demon Hunters
Last edited by Persona on Fri Apr 17, 2026 1:46 am, edited 12 times in total.
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Top Ten of 2025
SOUND OF FALLING (Mascha Schilinski, Germany, 2025) – Formally dazzling, heterogenous, polyphonic multi-generational drama set in a house near the future / current / former internal German border. We experience life through the eyes (sometimes literally) and voices of various women as they enact and reenact themes of abuse and struggle. Several time periods are juggled, and various storylines are only filled out piece by piece, through stolen glimpses and snatches of narration, over the two and a half hours of the film. The film goes to some very dark places (we see characters’ fantasies of suicide played out, for instance, and there are plenty of deaths and mutilations), but the cinematic creativity on display is so impressive that the overall impression is one of elation rather than depression. I’m sure this film will attract more than a few comparisons with Mirror, but to me it was more like Heimat by way of Inland Empire. It’s one of many films this year that make spectacular use of Academy Ratio (three more are in my top ten, and three more are in the ten after that) which seems to be coming back as a “cinematic” (anti-television) visual format.
RESURRECTION (Cannes Version) (Bi Gan, China, 2025) – Creatively dazzling as Sound of Falling was, it – and just about every other movie ever made – is overshadowed in that respect by Bi Gan’s latest opus. It’s five films crammed into a vague science-fiction framework in which one of the rare people who can still dream (and they dream Cinema) is pursued through time by Shu Qi (finding a safe arthouse haven after the retirement of Hou Hsiao-hsien). His lucid moments manifest as films within the film embodying various styles and genres and each evoking one of the five senses. These episodes double (triple? quadruple?) as evocations of the history of the twentieth century, the history of China in the twentieth century, and the history of cinema. L’arroseur gets arroséed a couple of times; a mirror store gets (Lady of) Shanghaied; trains get metaphored. The episodes have their ups and downs (which is surely deliberate: why attempt this kind of a compendium if it’s not going to have a radical internal variety?) but it’s all a glorious cinephilic hot tub. There’s even a Bi Gan movie in there at the end, a one-take wonder that’s a horror / gangster hybrid running from the middle of the night to dawn.
The film is an entire universe unto itself. There are things in here that you’ve never seen before. For instance, the film ends with:
It’s apparently being recut even as we speak, so I’m trepidatious about what form it might be in when it gets a commercial release. They should at least proofread the English intertitles of the opening ‘silent’ (‘hand-coloured’, partly animated, thoroughly expressionistic) episode.
SIRAT (Oliver Laxe, Spain, 2025) – Laxe sure knows how to open a movie. Here he sets up the location and the premise, and introduces all the main characters in a visually and sonically astounding sequence (a rave in the Moroccan desert), then swiftly moves on to the next – and only – thing, an escape into the unknown. What better place to spend the end of the world than a place that isn’t even a place (Western Sahara)? The journey becomes more fraught and more hallucinatory as it goes on. McGuffins are jettisoned. Stark, beautiful and tense as a motherfucker.
Kinda non-specific spoiler
TWO PROSECUTORS (Sergei Loznitsa, France, 2025) – France is the only country that figures twice in my top ten, but it’s only on a funding technicality, as one of the directors is American and the other Ukrainian. Two Prosecutors is as post-Soviet as cinema gets, whatever its provenance, and it’s of a piece with Loznitsa’s earlier features in mood (grim) and quality (extraordinary). An adaptation from Georgy Demidov, who knew whereof he spoke, this film lacks the phantasmagoria of A Gentle Creature, but inhabits a similar Kafkaesque world with its own implacable authoritarian gravity. The Academy (it’s that ratio again!) compositions have an austere foregrounded geometry (boxes within boxes, occasional slashing diagonals), and Loznitsa holds and holds on personal encounters of escalating tension. Loznitsa is, of course, one of the greatest living documentary filmmakers, but his fiction features are very different in form and always something special.
IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT (Jafar Panahi, Iran, 2025) – I don’t know that Panahi has ever made a bad film (and I think I’ve seen them all), but this one is so complete that it might just rise to the top. It’s a story of revenge deferred and frustrated (often in incongruously comic terms) that balances humour and horror and tension (it occurs to me that my top five are all oddball thrillers of some kind), shot through with a casual formal mastery. The ending is sheer perfection. Life goes back to normal.
DREAMS (Dag Johan Haugerud, Norway, 2024) – The second part of Haugerud’s Oslo Trilogy might be the best, but it’s a close-run race between three brilliant films. The premise is a great one – a teenager writes a secret memoir about her relationship with her new teacher, but when she shares it with her grandmother, its sheer literary quality distorts everybody’s response to the actual situation. Haugerud’s script is flawless, and is funny and moving even as it gets deep into the weeds of the moral and personal dilemmas of the characters. The actors are effortlessly up to the task of embodying their slippery characters, and, like all the films in the trilogy, it makes superb use of the Oslo locations. These films are much harder to pull off than they might appear.
THE BLUE TRAIL (Gabriel Mascaro, Brazil, 2025) – A soft science fiction satire of society’s attitudes to the elderly (in short: patronize, marginalize; eliminate) that takes the unexpected form of a magic realist, tropicalismo picaresque. Another gorgeous Academy film. Widescreen is for squares.
THE NEW YEAR THAT NEVER CAME (Bogdan Muresanu, Romania, 2024) – Brilliant debut that demonstrates that the Romanian New Wave is still going strong after a quarter of a century (or six decades, if you adopt Cristi Puiu’s suggested dating method!) A bunch of vivid characters (whose interconnections only slowly become apparent) all reach the end of the line in lockstep with the Ceausescu regime, and the film’s multiple synchronized climaxes are orchestrated sublimely in the final twenty minutes.
A POET (Simon Mesa Soto, Colombia, 2025) – Rough at the edges (quite literally: the film has the hairy frame edge of old 16mm, though I doubt that it was actually shot on film) but hilarious, perceptive and uncomfortable. Former poet, now general all-around loser Oscar is one of the least prepossessing protagonists in memory, and his hunched gait, whiny entitlement and general haplessness at first make you wonder if you’ll be able to last out the film. But the ridiculous situation he finds him in – ‘discovering’ a natural poet with a fresh voice among his students – offers him the possibility of reinvention, if only he can manage to not screw it up. The script unfurls magnificently, as various characters reveal their insecurities and opportunism, and various fates unravel. Ubeimar Rios’ lead performance is detailed and complex, and our sympathy kind of grudgingly seeps into him rather than being narratively demanded or specially pleaded by the actor. Rebecca Andrade as his charge, Yurlady, is also excellent, and is required to play unconscious slapstick, sly manipulation and artistic ambition all from an attitude of passive innocence.
EUREKA (Lisandro Alonso, Argentina etc., 2023) - Heartbreaking multi-layered, time-travelling, shape-shifting epic held together by the disappearances of indigenous people. The closer you look, the less you see. A very sad film, but my god it's beautiful.
Now Number 11 because of bumping:
NOUVELLE VAGUE (Richard Linklater, France, 2025) – This could so easily have ended up as an ironic pastiche, one of those films where simply making a reference to something else is supposed to amount to a joke, but Linklater’s affection and deep understanding of his subject fashion a gem that flourishes on its own merits. It looks and feels exactly like a New Wave film, but it’s not a slavish imitation of any particular model (and certainly not Godard). There are reenactments of well-known incidents, and references to various films, but they’re there for a reason and contribute to an organic whole (Belmondo and Seberg dancing the Hully Gully, for example, both evokes the Madison scene in Bande à part and illustrates how Belmondo is acting as a partner-in-crime with Seberg and thus bringing her into the fold with his other partner-in-crime, Godard.) I think the secret sauce in this film is that connective tissue of plausible relationships: Belmondo bridging the gulf between Godard and Seberg; the goading tension between Godard and Georges de Beauregard; the mutual challenge and play of Godard and Coutard; Godard taking or leaving advice he receives from Melville and Rossellini; the competitive friendship with Truffaut and others of the Cahiers crew, with Suzanne Schiffman as the (non-competitive) cement holding them together; Pierre Rissient as the amiable lubricant allowing the production to move forward. These relationships are what give the film is verisimilitude and breath. Everybody is introduced with a filmed portrait and their name, and many of the likenesses are uncanny. None of the actors miss the mark, either, which makes this some kind of casting miracle. Academy, naturellement.
Top Ten (Eleven) in Spirit of 2025
INSIDE THE YELLOW COCOON SHELL (Pham Thien An, Vietnam, 2023) – The opening sequence shot establishes Thien as a character with a spiritual itch he’s dying to scratch, but it concludes with a bike crash that sets him on another path. His sister-in-law dies from her injuries, leaving his nephew, Dao, miraculously unharmed. Thien’s brother has disappeared, so he’s the one who has to: 1) look after the orphan boy; 2) take the body back to her home village and help organize the funeral; 3) find his missing brother. This is slow, contemplative cinema, and the reference points are Tsai, Weerasethakul and early Jia, but it’s an impressive first feature that – like the quest it depicts - gets more spiritual and dreamlike as it progresses.
ONE OF THOSE DAYS WHEN HEMME DIES (Murat Firatoglu, Turkey, 2025) – This film also wears its influences on its sleeve, and its specifically early Kiarostami, particularly the linear, ‘one damn thing after another’ real-time films he scripted for others (e.g. The Key, The White Balloon, Men at Work). You know those dreams where you have something really important to do, like kill a guy, but you keep getting distracted by side-tasks that end up taking much more time than you expect? This is the film for you. It’s very well-done, if rather familiar, but the way the opening and closing scenes work with each other and the film as a whole is really clever, and pushed the film up into the top rank for me. Pairs up cosily with It Was Just an Accident.
BRAND NEW LANDSCAPE (Yuiga Danzuka, Japan, 2025) – And this pairs up cosily with Sentimental Value (both films about the abrupt, unwelcome return of an absent father), but Yuiga Danzuka’s assured debut was a lot sharper and more surprising, both in the character dynamics and narrative turns (the big one being so very Japanese). The urban landscape of Tokyo serves as a supplementary character, maybe even a rival of sorts.
MAGELLAN (Lav Diaz, Phillipines, 2025) – Wow! A sweeping historical epic, in vivid colour, with a commanding central performance from a major international star! (You haven’t seen any Lav Diaz films, have you?) Actually, the grand subject is crammed into Academy ratio (I love you Academy! Don’t ever change!); the colour is murky and misty – it’s raining and windy most of the time; and Gael Garcia Bernal is a distant, unlikeable presence, usually seen in long shot (i.e. perfect for the film.) The plight of the indigenous peoples getting duped and massacred is given equal weight as the colonial ‘adventure’, and everything – even Magellan’s ‘brilliant career’ – ends up sordid and compromised. This is pretty much exactly the film I would have expected from Diaz, but I can’t get enough of his thoughtful anti-spectacle and impeccably classical compositions in the tradition of Murnau and Ford.
FIUME O MORTE! (Igor Bezinovic, Croatia, 2025) – Superbly creative documentary about Gabriele d’Annunzio’s bizarre interlude as the dictator of a proto-fascist independent state on the border of Italy and Croatia for a couple of years after World War One. The story itself is fascinating, but Bezinovic’s approach to it is whimsical and rewarding. Timelines are provided by the tiled opening dates in the foyers of various old buildings; hand-held picture postcards are roughly juxtaposed with modern views; paintings of key events appear as tableaux vivants; vox pops reveal how little or how much the locals know about their town’s weird history. Best of all, Bezinovic casts local citizens to re-enact scenes from history. He basically asks every bald man he meets to play d’Annunzio, and then they all do. There's also a self-reflexive round-robin narratorial conceit that adds to the fun.
THE LOVE THAT REMAINS (Hlynur Palmason, Iceland, 2025) – After the brilliant Godland, I feel like I’m more attuned to what Palmason is doing in his less conceptually unusual films like this one and A White, White Day. This is a story about a fragmented family (she’s an artist, he’s a herring fisherman, away most of the time; the kids are often left to their own devices). It’s well-observed and handsomely shot (Academy, yet again), and so gently involving that a late feint at tragedy seems guaranteed to resolve itself harmlessly, which leaves one quite exposed for the weird ending that follows.
THE SECRET AGENT (Kleber Mendonca Filho, Brazil, 2025) – A tense, engaging 70s thriller (in both setting and style). Wagner Moura gives a charistmatic star performance, but this film reminds me just how good Mendonca is at presenting fully rounded secondary and tertiary characters in practically no time at all. After a while of working its genre magic, the film seems to make a stumble into predictability when we flash forward to the researchers researching the story – something that’s almost never a good idea – before it rallies with an excellent action / suspense sequence. Then we get not just another stumble, but the same one, on a much bigger scale.
And then Mendonca does something pretty audacious, delivering a completely different kind of ending to the one we expected. Very deft filmmaking.
MISERICORDIA (Alain Guiraudie, France, 2024) – What if Midsomer Murders were French and queer as fuck? There’s a lot of Chabrol in its DNA, but this is indelibly a Guiraudie film: stylish, perverse and black as pitch. It’s a slow-burn comedy driven by the logic of lust that accumulates its laughs slowly but surely. Many of them take the form of running gags (the way the villagers instantly disseminate every secret to everybody else; the police’s unflappable surface acceptance of every unlikely scenario presented to them; Jeremie’s inept alibi vamping). Felix Kysyl looks like a prematurely aged teenager, which is the perfect casting for the various ‘couples’ for which he auditions over the course of the film.
LOVE (Dag Johan Haugerud, Norway, 2024) – Final installment of the Oslo Trilogy. Typically excellent, and maybe the most photogenic of the three. Cruising on a ferry never looked so good.
TRAINS (Maciej Drygas, Poland, 2024) – The master documentarist tackles the history of Europe in the twentieth century told through archival footage of trains. Sections flow into one another, arranged thematically (the manufacture of a locomotive; trains in industry; trains as war machines; trains as entertainment; women railroad workers and so on) and set to a mostly musique concrete score. Another Academy ratio film, thanks to its source material.
CLOSE YOUR EYES (Victor Erice, Spain, 2023) - Victor Erice is a modern master whose output has been so sparing it's hard to say exactly what a 'typical' Erice film looks like, but I'm just glad that we got at least one more feature out of him in his eighties. It's not an old man's film, however (whereas The Quince Tree Sun, which he made when he was 50, is an old man's film par excellence) and it gracefully slips between sombre and playful modes as it manoeuvres from one 'film within a film' to the next, circling back for a satisfying synthesis in the final stretch.
Ten more worth anybody’s time:
ORWELL: 2 + 2 =5 (Raoul Peck, USA, 2025): Shrewd documentary matching Orwell’s writings to what’s happening right now.
TWINLESS (James Sweeney, USA, 2025): Delightful, twisty comedy with surprising visual flair considering how utterly script- and performance-driven it is.
HAPPYEND (Neo Sora, Japan, 2024): Barely science fiction premise about the surveillance state manifesting in a Japanese high school. Yamashita with a shot of Oshima in its arm.
ROMERIA (Carla Simon, Spain, 2025): Summer 1993: Ten Years Later, basically. It’s not as strong as that debut, but it’s excellent on its own terms.
THE MASTERMIND (Kelly Reichardt, USA, 2025): Likewise, this is a middling Reichardt film, which makes it better than most other films out there
KONTINENTAL ’25 (Radu Jude, Romania, 2025): I haven’t seen all of Jude’s film, but I haven’t seen one this close to Hong Sang-Soo before. A wry miniature that accumulates humour from repetition (how did he die again?). Apparently made in a few days in the middle of shooting Dracula. If only all toss-offs were this good.
LITTLE TROUBLE GIRLS (Urska Djukic, Slovenia, 2025): Fine coming-of-age film set among a girls’ choir on a retreat to a photogenic monastery, which manages to side-step a bunch of clichés.
AFTERNOONS OF SOLITUDE (Albert Serra, Spain, 2024): A very tough watch as we follow torero Andres Roca Rey from bloodbath to bloodbath to bloodbath. The film begins with calm, nocturnal shots of the bulls which feel more ‘human’ than Rey’s bizarre displays of ultra-stylized ‘masculinity’ in the ring.
REEDLAND (Sven Bresser, Netherlands, 2025): Cryptic rural murder mystery with a Dumont edge and excellent unnerving use of its flat, threatening setting.
SENTIMENTAL VALUE (Joachim Trier, Norway, 2025): I would probably rate this film higher if I hadn’t seen it alongside Haugerud’s Oslo Trilogy, which does much of the same stuff more deftly and persuasively. For instance, there are three characters in this film, and they’re well written and well played. Unfortunately, there’s also Elle Fanning, who is more of a plot prop, and a bunch of other characters who are barely differentiated. There’s also a comparison to be made with Nouvelle Vague (American movie star out of her comfort zone on Arty European filmshoot), and it too is unflattering.
SOUND OF FALLING (Mascha Schilinski, Germany, 2025) – Formally dazzling, heterogenous, polyphonic multi-generational drama set in a house near the future / current / former internal German border. We experience life through the eyes (sometimes literally) and voices of various women as they enact and reenact themes of abuse and struggle. Several time periods are juggled, and various storylines are only filled out piece by piece, through stolen glimpses and snatches of narration, over the two and a half hours of the film. The film goes to some very dark places (we see characters’ fantasies of suicide played out, for instance, and there are plenty of deaths and mutilations), but the cinematic creativity on display is so impressive that the overall impression is one of elation rather than depression. I’m sure this film will attract more than a few comparisons with Mirror, but to me it was more like Heimat by way of Inland Empire. It’s one of many films this year that make spectacular use of Academy Ratio (three more are in my top ten, and three more are in the ten after that) which seems to be coming back as a “cinematic” (anti-television) visual format.
RESURRECTION (Cannes Version) (Bi Gan, China, 2025) – Creatively dazzling as Sound of Falling was, it – and just about every other movie ever made – is overshadowed in that respect by Bi Gan’s latest opus. It’s five films crammed into a vague science-fiction framework in which one of the rare people who can still dream (and they dream Cinema) is pursued through time by Shu Qi (finding a safe arthouse haven after the retirement of Hou Hsiao-hsien). His lucid moments manifest as films within the film embodying various styles and genres and each evoking one of the five senses. These episodes double (triple? quadruple?) as evocations of the history of the twentieth century, the history of China in the twentieth century, and the history of cinema. L’arroseur gets arroséed a couple of times; a mirror store gets (Lady of) Shanghaied; trains get metaphored. The episodes have their ups and downs (which is surely deliberate: why attempt this kind of a compendium if it’s not going to have a radical internal variety?) but it’s all a glorious cinephilic hot tub. There’s even a Bi Gan movie in there at the end, a one-take wonder that’s a horror / gangster hybrid running from the middle of the night to dawn.
Spoiler
I know that timeline doesn’t add up, but one of the elements of the plan sequence is a section where the live action is accelerated while films play on an improvised street cinema at regular speed. It’s a reinvention of one of Wong Kar-Wai’s signature shots.
The film is an entire universe unto itself. There are things in here that you’ve never seen before. For instance, the film ends with:
Spoiler
an audience made of light in a melting wax cinema.
SIRAT (Oliver Laxe, Spain, 2025) – Laxe sure knows how to open a movie. Here he sets up the location and the premise, and introduces all the main characters in a visually and sonically astounding sequence (a rave in the Moroccan desert), then swiftly moves on to the next – and only – thing, an escape into the unknown. What better place to spend the end of the world than a place that isn’t even a place (Western Sahara)? The journey becomes more fraught and more hallucinatory as it goes on. McGuffins are jettisoned. Stark, beautiful and tense as a motherfucker.
Kinda non-specific spoiler
Spoiler
The film delivers what feels like the most shocking moment I’ve seen in a film. And the second-most shocking.
IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT (Jafar Panahi, Iran, 2025) – I don’t know that Panahi has ever made a bad film (and I think I’ve seen them all), but this one is so complete that it might just rise to the top. It’s a story of revenge deferred and frustrated (often in incongruously comic terms) that balances humour and horror and tension (it occurs to me that my top five are all oddball thrillers of some kind), shot through with a casual formal mastery. The ending is sheer perfection. Life goes back to normal.
DREAMS (Dag Johan Haugerud, Norway, 2024) – The second part of Haugerud’s Oslo Trilogy might be the best, but it’s a close-run race between three brilliant films. The premise is a great one – a teenager writes a secret memoir about her relationship with her new teacher, but when she shares it with her grandmother, its sheer literary quality distorts everybody’s response to the actual situation. Haugerud’s script is flawless, and is funny and moving even as it gets deep into the weeds of the moral and personal dilemmas of the characters. The actors are effortlessly up to the task of embodying their slippery characters, and, like all the films in the trilogy, it makes superb use of the Oslo locations. These films are much harder to pull off than they might appear.
THE BLUE TRAIL (Gabriel Mascaro, Brazil, 2025) – A soft science fiction satire of society’s attitudes to the elderly (in short: patronize, marginalize; eliminate) that takes the unexpected form of a magic realist, tropicalismo picaresque. Another gorgeous Academy film. Widescreen is for squares.
THE NEW YEAR THAT NEVER CAME (Bogdan Muresanu, Romania, 2024) – Brilliant debut that demonstrates that the Romanian New Wave is still going strong after a quarter of a century (or six decades, if you adopt Cristi Puiu’s suggested dating method!) A bunch of vivid characters (whose interconnections only slowly become apparent) all reach the end of the line in lockstep with the Ceausescu regime, and the film’s multiple synchronized climaxes are orchestrated sublimely in the final twenty minutes.
A POET (Simon Mesa Soto, Colombia, 2025) – Rough at the edges (quite literally: the film has the hairy frame edge of old 16mm, though I doubt that it was actually shot on film) but hilarious, perceptive and uncomfortable. Former poet, now general all-around loser Oscar is one of the least prepossessing protagonists in memory, and his hunched gait, whiny entitlement and general haplessness at first make you wonder if you’ll be able to last out the film. But the ridiculous situation he finds him in – ‘discovering’ a natural poet with a fresh voice among his students – offers him the possibility of reinvention, if only he can manage to not screw it up. The script unfurls magnificently, as various characters reveal their insecurities and opportunism, and various fates unravel. Ubeimar Rios’ lead performance is detailed and complex, and our sympathy kind of grudgingly seeps into him rather than being narratively demanded or specially pleaded by the actor. Rebecca Andrade as his charge, Yurlady, is also excellent, and is required to play unconscious slapstick, sly manipulation and artistic ambition all from an attitude of passive innocence.
EUREKA (Lisandro Alonso, Argentina etc., 2023) - Heartbreaking multi-layered, time-travelling, shape-shifting epic held together by the disappearances of indigenous people. The closer you look, the less you see. A very sad film, but my god it's beautiful.
Now Number 11 because of bumping:
NOUVELLE VAGUE (Richard Linklater, France, 2025) – This could so easily have ended up as an ironic pastiche, one of those films where simply making a reference to something else is supposed to amount to a joke, but Linklater’s affection and deep understanding of his subject fashion a gem that flourishes on its own merits. It looks and feels exactly like a New Wave film, but it’s not a slavish imitation of any particular model (and certainly not Godard). There are reenactments of well-known incidents, and references to various films, but they’re there for a reason and contribute to an organic whole (Belmondo and Seberg dancing the Hully Gully, for example, both evokes the Madison scene in Bande à part and illustrates how Belmondo is acting as a partner-in-crime with Seberg and thus bringing her into the fold with his other partner-in-crime, Godard.) I think the secret sauce in this film is that connective tissue of plausible relationships: Belmondo bridging the gulf between Godard and Seberg; the goading tension between Godard and Georges de Beauregard; the mutual challenge and play of Godard and Coutard; Godard taking or leaving advice he receives from Melville and Rossellini; the competitive friendship with Truffaut and others of the Cahiers crew, with Suzanne Schiffman as the (non-competitive) cement holding them together; Pierre Rissient as the amiable lubricant allowing the production to move forward. These relationships are what give the film is verisimilitude and breath. Everybody is introduced with a filmed portrait and their name, and many of the likenesses are uncanny. None of the actors miss the mark, either, which makes this some kind of casting miracle. Academy, naturellement.
Top Ten (Eleven) in Spirit of 2025
INSIDE THE YELLOW COCOON SHELL (Pham Thien An, Vietnam, 2023) – The opening sequence shot establishes Thien as a character with a spiritual itch he’s dying to scratch, but it concludes with a bike crash that sets him on another path. His sister-in-law dies from her injuries, leaving his nephew, Dao, miraculously unharmed. Thien’s brother has disappeared, so he’s the one who has to: 1) look after the orphan boy; 2) take the body back to her home village and help organize the funeral; 3) find his missing brother. This is slow, contemplative cinema, and the reference points are Tsai, Weerasethakul and early Jia, but it’s an impressive first feature that – like the quest it depicts - gets more spiritual and dreamlike as it progresses.
ONE OF THOSE DAYS WHEN HEMME DIES (Murat Firatoglu, Turkey, 2025) – This film also wears its influences on its sleeve, and its specifically early Kiarostami, particularly the linear, ‘one damn thing after another’ real-time films he scripted for others (e.g. The Key, The White Balloon, Men at Work). You know those dreams where you have something really important to do, like kill a guy, but you keep getting distracted by side-tasks that end up taking much more time than you expect? This is the film for you. It’s very well-done, if rather familiar, but the way the opening and closing scenes work with each other and the film as a whole is really clever, and pushed the film up into the top rank for me. Pairs up cosily with It Was Just an Accident.
BRAND NEW LANDSCAPE (Yuiga Danzuka, Japan, 2025) – And this pairs up cosily with Sentimental Value (both films about the abrupt, unwelcome return of an absent father), but Yuiga Danzuka’s assured debut was a lot sharper and more surprising, both in the character dynamics and narrative turns (the big one being so very Japanese). The urban landscape of Tokyo serves as a supplementary character, maybe even a rival of sorts.
MAGELLAN (Lav Diaz, Phillipines, 2025) – Wow! A sweeping historical epic, in vivid colour, with a commanding central performance from a major international star! (You haven’t seen any Lav Diaz films, have you?) Actually, the grand subject is crammed into Academy ratio (I love you Academy! Don’t ever change!); the colour is murky and misty – it’s raining and windy most of the time; and Gael Garcia Bernal is a distant, unlikeable presence, usually seen in long shot (i.e. perfect for the film.) The plight of the indigenous peoples getting duped and massacred is given equal weight as the colonial ‘adventure’, and everything – even Magellan’s ‘brilliant career’ – ends up sordid and compromised. This is pretty much exactly the film I would have expected from Diaz, but I can’t get enough of his thoughtful anti-spectacle and impeccably classical compositions in the tradition of Murnau and Ford.
FIUME O MORTE! (Igor Bezinovic, Croatia, 2025) – Superbly creative documentary about Gabriele d’Annunzio’s bizarre interlude as the dictator of a proto-fascist independent state on the border of Italy and Croatia for a couple of years after World War One. The story itself is fascinating, but Bezinovic’s approach to it is whimsical and rewarding. Timelines are provided by the tiled opening dates in the foyers of various old buildings; hand-held picture postcards are roughly juxtaposed with modern views; paintings of key events appear as tableaux vivants; vox pops reveal how little or how much the locals know about their town’s weird history. Best of all, Bezinovic casts local citizens to re-enact scenes from history. He basically asks every bald man he meets to play d’Annunzio, and then they all do. There's also a self-reflexive round-robin narratorial conceit that adds to the fun.
THE LOVE THAT REMAINS (Hlynur Palmason, Iceland, 2025) – After the brilliant Godland, I feel like I’m more attuned to what Palmason is doing in his less conceptually unusual films like this one and A White, White Day. This is a story about a fragmented family (she’s an artist, he’s a herring fisherman, away most of the time; the kids are often left to their own devices). It’s well-observed and handsomely shot (Academy, yet again), and so gently involving that a late feint at tragedy seems guaranteed to resolve itself harmlessly, which leaves one quite exposed for the weird ending that follows.
THE SECRET AGENT (Kleber Mendonca Filho, Brazil, 2025) – A tense, engaging 70s thriller (in both setting and style). Wagner Moura gives a charistmatic star performance, but this film reminds me just how good Mendonca is at presenting fully rounded secondary and tertiary characters in practically no time at all. After a while of working its genre magic, the film seems to make a stumble into predictability when we flash forward to the researchers researching the story – something that’s almost never a good idea – before it rallies with an excellent action / suspense sequence. Then we get not just another stumble, but the same one, on a much bigger scale.
Spoiler
Not only do we go back to the low-stakes world of the modern day researchers, but they give away the ending of the main story.
Spoiler
After this flash forward, we never return to the period narrative, and the throwaway ‘spoiler’ is all the conclusion we are offered for the central narrative of the film. Then Mendonca sets up the alternative conventional ending of this sort of film: the Confrontation with the Survivor, who will offer enigmatic words of wisdom and tie a bow on the whole enterprise. And this too is ripped away from us when we find that Fernando isn’t really interested and barely remembers his father at all.
LOVE (Dag Johan Haugerud, Norway, 2024) – Final installment of the Oslo Trilogy. Typically excellent, and maybe the most photogenic of the three. Cruising on a ferry never looked so good.
TRAINS (Maciej Drygas, Poland, 2024) – The master documentarist tackles the history of Europe in the twentieth century told through archival footage of trains. Sections flow into one another, arranged thematically (the manufacture of a locomotive; trains in industry; trains as war machines; trains as entertainment; women railroad workers and so on) and set to a mostly musique concrete score. Another Academy ratio film, thanks to its source material.
CLOSE YOUR EYES (Victor Erice, Spain, 2023) - Victor Erice is a modern master whose output has been so sparing it's hard to say exactly what a 'typical' Erice film looks like, but I'm just glad that we got at least one more feature out of him in his eighties. It's not an old man's film, however (whereas The Quince Tree Sun, which he made when he was 50, is an old man's film par excellence) and it gracefully slips between sombre and playful modes as it manoeuvres from one 'film within a film' to the next, circling back for a satisfying synthesis in the final stretch.
Ten more worth anybody’s time:
ORWELL: 2 + 2 =5 (Raoul Peck, USA, 2025): Shrewd documentary matching Orwell’s writings to what’s happening right now.
TWINLESS (James Sweeney, USA, 2025): Delightful, twisty comedy with surprising visual flair considering how utterly script- and performance-driven it is.
HAPPYEND (Neo Sora, Japan, 2024): Barely science fiction premise about the surveillance state manifesting in a Japanese high school. Yamashita with a shot of Oshima in its arm.
ROMERIA (Carla Simon, Spain, 2025): Summer 1993: Ten Years Later, basically. It’s not as strong as that debut, but it’s excellent on its own terms.
THE MASTERMIND (Kelly Reichardt, USA, 2025): Likewise, this is a middling Reichardt film, which makes it better than most other films out there
KONTINENTAL ’25 (Radu Jude, Romania, 2025): I haven’t seen all of Jude’s film, but I haven’t seen one this close to Hong Sang-Soo before. A wry miniature that accumulates humour from repetition (how did he die again?). Apparently made in a few days in the middle of shooting Dracula. If only all toss-offs were this good.
LITTLE TROUBLE GIRLS (Urska Djukic, Slovenia, 2025): Fine coming-of-age film set among a girls’ choir on a retreat to a photogenic monastery, which manages to side-step a bunch of clichés.
AFTERNOONS OF SOLITUDE (Albert Serra, Spain, 2024): A very tough watch as we follow torero Andres Roca Rey from bloodbath to bloodbath to bloodbath. The film begins with calm, nocturnal shots of the bulls which feel more ‘human’ than Rey’s bizarre displays of ultra-stylized ‘masculinity’ in the ring.
REEDLAND (Sven Bresser, Netherlands, 2025): Cryptic rural murder mystery with a Dumont edge and excellent unnerving use of its flat, threatening setting.
SENTIMENTAL VALUE (Joachim Trier, Norway, 2025): I would probably rate this film higher if I hadn’t seen it alongside Haugerud’s Oslo Trilogy, which does much of the same stuff more deftly and persuasively. For instance, there are three characters in this film, and they’re well written and well played. Unfortunately, there’s also Elle Fanning, who is more of a plot prop, and a bunch of other characters who are barely differentiated. There’s also a comparison to be made with Nouvelle Vague (American movie star out of her comfort zone on Arty European filmshoot), and it too is unflattering.
Last edited by zedz on Mon Dec 08, 2025 3:19 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Aunt Peg
- Joined: Fri Dec 21, 2012 9:30 am
- Location: Sydney
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Has to be the most underrated film of 2024 - an engrossing film and that amazing climatic ending to top it all off. The New Year That Never Came deserves so much more exposure and why it wasn't in the Main Competition at Venice last year in nothing short of a travesty.zedz wrote: Thu Aug 14, 2025 3:41 am Top Ten of 2025
THE NEW YEAR THAT NEVER CAME (Bogdan Muresanu, Romania, 2024) – Brilliant debut that demonstrates that the Romanian New Wave is still going strong after a quarter of a century (or six decades, if you adopt Cristi Puiu’s suggested dating method!) A bunch of vivid characters (whose interconnections only slowly become apparent) all reach the end of the line in lockstep with the Ceausescu regime, and the film’s multiple synchronized climaxes are orchestrated sublimely in the final twenty minutes.
One favourite film of 2025 so far. If I hadn't known who directed it I would have sworn that it was an Albert Serra film. Of the Lav Diaz films I've seen over the years this is his most accessible work to date.MAGELLAN(Lav Diaz, Phillipines, 2025) – Wow! A sweeping historical epic, in vivid colour, with a commanding central performance from a major international star! (You haven’t seen any Lav Diaz films, have you?) Actually, the grand subject is crammed into Academy ratio (I love you Academy! Don’t ever change!); the colour is murky and misty – it’s raining and windy most of the time; and Gael Garcia Bernal is a distant, unlikeable presence, usually seen in long shot (i.e. perfect for the film.) The plight of the indigenous peoples getting duped and massacred is given equal weight as the colonial ‘adventure’, and everything – even Magellan’s ‘brilliant career’ – ends up sordid and compromised. This is pretty much exactly the film I would have expected from Diaz, but I can’t get enough of his thoughtful anti-spectacle and impeccably classical compositions in the tradition of Murnau and Ford.
Another fan of Twinless here, so much so I went home and purchased his first film Straight Up (2019) one of the many films lost in the early days of the pandemic and it was nearly as great as Twinless. Both films have whip smart dialogue, vividly drawn characters (even those with just a scene or two) and are technically beautifully crafted. James Sweeney with his first two films is I think the major actor/writer/director to emerge over the last few years. Go in blind to these films - particularly Twinless. The surprises are wonderfully rewarding. A treat from start to finish.TWINLESS (James Sweeney, USA, 2025): Delightful, twisty comedy with surprising visual flair considering how utterly script- and performance-driven it is;
-
BrianB
- Joined: Wed Feb 13, 2019 11:50 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1. Train Dreams
2. One Battle After Another
3. No Other Choice
4. Eddington
5. Nouvelle Vague
6. Asura
7. The Phoenician Scheme
8. Sinners
9. Bugonia
10. The American Southwest
2. One Battle After Another
3. No Other Choice
4. Eddington
5. Nouvelle Vague
6. Asura
7. The Phoenician Scheme
8. Sinners
9. Bugonia
10. The American Southwest
Last edited by BrianB on Sat Jan 17, 2026 9:53 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Altair
- Joined: Wed Aug 14, 2013 4:56 pm
- Location: England
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1. After the Hunt
2. Marty Supreme
3. Mektoub My Love: Canto Due
4. A House of Dynamite
5. Highest 2 Lowest
6. One Battle After Another
7. Warfare
8. Weapons
9. Den of Thieves 2: Pantera
10. Sinners
...
11. Jay Kelly
11. Materialists
12. Caught Stealing
13. The Phoenician Scheme
14. Companion
15. Avatar: Fire and Ash
16. Erupcja
17. Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning
18. F1
2. Marty Supreme
3. Mektoub My Love: Canto Due
4. A House of Dynamite
5. Highest 2 Lowest
6. One Battle After Another
7. Warfare
8. Weapons
9. Den of Thieves 2: Pantera
10. Sinners
...
11. Jay Kelly
11. Materialists
12. Caught Stealing
13. The Phoenician Scheme
14. Companion
15. Avatar: Fire and Ash
16. Erupcja
17. Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning
18. F1
Last edited by Altair on Fri May 22, 2026 6:01 am, edited 10 times in total.
-
escharlotteauthor
- Joined: Mon Oct 07, 2024 2:10 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
01 A House of Dynamite
02 One Battle After Another
03 Sentimental Value
04 Train Dreams
05 Sinners
06 The Mastermind
07 It Was Just an Accident
08 Companion
09 Resurrection
10 Bring Her Back
11
12
13
14
15
02 One Battle After Another
03 Sentimental Value
04 Train Dreams
05 Sinners
06 The Mastermind
07 It Was Just an Accident
08 Companion
09 Resurrection
10 Bring Her Back
11
12
13
14
15
Last edited by escharlotteauthor on Fri Dec 19, 2025 4:17 am, edited 2 times in total.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
01 One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson)
02 the Phoenician Scheme (Wes Anderson)
03 Black Bag (Steven Soderbergh)
ALSO SEEN, ON THE UP END: the Testament of Ann Lee
ALSO SEEN, ON THE DOWN END: Good Fortune, Sinners
Updated 04/11/2026
02 the Phoenician Scheme (Wes Anderson)
03 Black Bag (Steven Soderbergh)
ALSO SEEN, ON THE UP END: the Testament of Ann Lee
ALSO SEEN, ON THE DOWN END: Good Fortune, Sinners
Updated 04/11/2026
- Mr Sausage
- Has Risen from the Grave
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 1:02 am
- Location: Canada
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1. Reflections in a Dead Diamond
2. Splitsville
3. The Ice Tower
4. The Phoenician Scheme
5. The Undertone
6. Bring Her Back
7. Mirroirs No. 3
8. Super Happy Forever
9. Frankenstein
10. Weapons
2. Splitsville
3. The Ice Tower
4. The Phoenician Scheme
5. The Undertone
6. Bring Her Back
7. Mirroirs No. 3
8. Super Happy Forever
9. Frankenstein
10. Weapons
- geoffcowgill
- Joined: Thu Jun 28, 2007 11:48 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1- No Other Choice
2- Marty Supreme
3- One Battle After Another
4- Black Bag
5- It Was Just an Accident
6- Die My Love
7- The Ballad of Wallis Island
8- Sentimental Value
9- Sorry, Baby
10- The Phoenician Scheme
2- Marty Supreme
3- One Battle After Another
4- Black Bag
5- It Was Just an Accident
6- Die My Love
7- The Ballad of Wallis Island
8- Sentimental Value
9- Sorry, Baby
10- The Phoenician Scheme
Last edited by geoffcowgill on Tue Dec 30, 2025 12:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Shrew
- The Untamed One
- Joined: Tue Feb 27, 2007 6:22 am
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1) One Battle After Another
2) Marty Supreme
3) Die, My Love
4) Nouvelle Vague
5) The Secret Agent
6) No Other Choice
7) Sentimental Value
8) Train Dreams
9) Superman
10) Wake Up Dead Man
So suffereth the etc: The Mastermind, It Was Just an Accident, Black Bag, Weapons, The Testament of Ann Lee, Father Mother Sister Brother, The Phoenician Scheme, Roofman, Caught by the Tides, Hamnet, Mickey 17, Blue Moon, Jay Kelly, If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, Sinners, The Naked Gun, K-pop Demon Hunters, Avatar: Fire and Ash, Elio, Bugonia, Frankenstein, Honey Don't
2) Marty Supreme
3) Die, My Love
4) Nouvelle Vague
5) The Secret Agent
6) No Other Choice
7) Sentimental Value
8) Train Dreams
9) Superman
10) Wake Up Dead Man
So suffereth the etc: The Mastermind, It Was Just an Accident, Black Bag, Weapons, The Testament of Ann Lee, Father Mother Sister Brother, The Phoenician Scheme, Roofman, Caught by the Tides, Hamnet, Mickey 17, Blue Moon, Jay Kelly, If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, Sinners, The Naked Gun, K-pop Demon Hunters, Avatar: Fire and Ash, Elio, Bugonia, Frankenstein, Honey Don't
Last edited by Shrew on Wed Dec 03, 2025 1:59 am, edited 6 times in total.
- Lowry_Sam
- Joined: Mon Jul 05, 2010 7:35 pm
- Location: San Francisco, CA
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
2025 is the year I decided to go back to theaters and see them the way I used to in the hopes of recapturing that warm fuzzy feeling after seeing something that surprised me or made me think or feel something. I was beginning to think my (home) viewing habit (and the ability to pause) was making me more jaded about new releases & so I should attempt to see them in the theater and support local theaters. I also was going to try to see at least some of the current films being released when they're being released to have at least some opinion around awards season. I can't say I was blown away by anything I've seen so far. Most of the rave reviews I am seeing are just getting an okay from me. I also haven't seen anything I thought was truly bad yet, but I am using online ratings to guage what to go and see.
So far here's my 2025 so far:
1. Sentimental Value
2. Marty Supreme
3. Vermiglio
4 It was Just An Accident
5. La Grazia
6. One Battle After Another
7. Bugonia
8. The Voice of Hind Rajab
9. No Other Choice
10. The Secret Agent
So far here's my 2025 so far:
1. Sentimental Value
2. Marty Supreme
3. Vermiglio
4 It was Just An Accident
5. La Grazia
6. One Battle After Another
7. Bugonia
8. The Voice of Hind Rajab
9. No Other Choice
10. The Secret Agent
Last edited by Lowry_Sam on Mon Jan 19, 2026 7:30 pm, edited 7 times in total.
-
Guido
- Joined: Sun Jun 01, 2008 3:31 am
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Like Lowry_Sam, I have to say that these are all feeling pretty middling right now. I had a ton of amazing first-time watches this year (see below), but nothing newly released truly swept me up.
01 ∙ One Battle After Another
02 ∙ Misericorde
03 ∙ Afternoons of Solitude
04 ∙ Mirroirs N. 3
05 ∙
06 ∙
07 ∙ The Phoenician Scheme
08 ∙ Sentimental Value
09 ∙ Cover-Up
10 ∙ Black Bag
Yet to see: The Mastermind, The Ice Tower, Magellan, The Shrouds
No thanks: Eddington, Resurrection (I feel bad about this one, and I'll likely revisit, but for now...), Sinners, Reflection in a Dead Diamond, The Naked Gun, F1.
Best first-time watches: Rosa de Areia (Cordeiro/Reis), Choose Me (Rudolph), Pilgrim, Farewell (Roemer), [Coming Attractions, Dream Work, Outer Space] (Tscherkassky), Céline (Brisseau), Spacy (Ito)
01 ∙ One Battle After Another
02 ∙ Misericorde
03 ∙ Afternoons of Solitude
04 ∙ Mirroirs N. 3
05 ∙
06 ∙
07 ∙ The Phoenician Scheme
08 ∙ Sentimental Value
09 ∙ Cover-Up
10 ∙ Black Bag
Yet to see: The Mastermind, The Ice Tower, Magellan, The Shrouds
No thanks: Eddington, Resurrection (I feel bad about this one, and I'll likely revisit, but for now...), Sinners, Reflection in a Dead Diamond, The Naked Gun, F1.
Best first-time watches: Rosa de Areia (Cordeiro/Reis), Choose Me (Rudolph), Pilgrim, Farewell (Roemer), [Coming Attractions, Dream Work, Outer Space] (Tscherkassky), Céline (Brisseau), Spacy (Ito)
- Swift
- Joined: Sun Oct 28, 2012 7:52 pm
- Location: Calgary, Alberta
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Like Lowry_Sam, I've been making more of an effort to see films in the cinema this year. Only one of my list was a home watch. I don't usually participate in these threads so don't know the rules. I watched I'm Still Here and The Brutalist in theatres this year, but potentially they qualify as 2024 films? Also, lots of the positioning is interchangeable. I'm reminded why I don't usually make lists.
1. Train Dreams
2. The Shrouds
3. Black Bag
4. It Was Just an Accident
5. One Battle After Another
6. The Naked Gun
7. The Ballad of Wallis Island
8. Bugonia
9. I'm Still Here
10. The Brutalist
Honourable mentions: Weapons, The Phoenician Scheme, F1, 28 Years Later, Den of Thieves 2: Pantera, The Amateur, Adolescence
1. Train Dreams
2. The Shrouds
3. Black Bag
4. It Was Just an Accident
5. One Battle After Another
6. The Naked Gun
7. The Ballad of Wallis Island
8. Bugonia
9. I'm Still Here
10. The Brutalist
Honourable mentions: Weapons, The Phoenician Scheme, F1, 28 Years Later, Den of Thieves 2: Pantera, The Amateur, Adolescence
- bottlesofsmoke
- Joined: Fri Jan 08, 2021 4:26 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
1. Nouvelle Vague
2. The Mastermind
3. The Phoenician Scheme
4. Black Bag
5. One Battle After Another
6. Wake Up Dead Man
7. Presence
8. Weapons
9. Highest 2 Lowest
10. Bugonia
Also Seen and Enjoyed: Eddington, Bring Her Back, Friendship, Ballerina, Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning, Frankenstein, Superman, Train Dreams, Warfare, Sinners, The Lost Bus, Final Destination: Bloodlines, The Monkey, F1, Die My Love, Caught Stealing
Also Seen: Nobody 2, Companion, Lilo & Stitch, Summer of 69, Den of Thieves 2: Pantera, Bridget Jones Diary: Mad About the Boy, Holland, Novocaine, 28 Years Later, M3GAN 2.0, Wolf Man, The Naked Gun, Materialists, The Roses, William Wyler: Forty Takes Willy, K-Pop Demon Hunters, Black Phone 2, The Smashing Machine
2. The Mastermind
3. The Phoenician Scheme
4. Black Bag
5. One Battle After Another
6. Wake Up Dead Man
7. Presence
8. Weapons
9. Highest 2 Lowest
10. Bugonia
Also Seen and Enjoyed: Eddington, Bring Her Back, Friendship, Ballerina, Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning, Frankenstein, Superman, Train Dreams, Warfare, Sinners, The Lost Bus, Final Destination: Bloodlines, The Monkey, F1, Die My Love, Caught Stealing
Also Seen: Nobody 2, Companion, Lilo & Stitch, Summer of 69, Den of Thieves 2: Pantera, Bridget Jones Diary: Mad About the Boy, Holland, Novocaine, 28 Years Later, M3GAN 2.0, Wolf Man, The Naked Gun, Materialists, The Roses, William Wyler: Forty Takes Willy, K-Pop Demon Hunters, Black Phone 2, The Smashing Machine
Last edited by bottlesofsmoke on Thu Feb 12, 2026 5:25 am, edited 4 times in total.
- JamesF
- Label Representative
- Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2010 5:36 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Best of the year:
One Battle After Another
Marty Supreme
Seed of the Sacred Fig
The Ballad of Wallis Island
Wake Up Dead Man
The Mastermind
Weapons
Black Bag
Companion
Sorry, Baby
Worst of the year:
Fantastic 4: First Steps
On Swift Horses
Nobody 2
A Big Bold Beautiful Journey
Hallow Road
Death of a Unicorn
Opus
One Battle After Another
Marty Supreme
Seed of the Sacred Fig
The Ballad of Wallis Island
Wake Up Dead Man
The Mastermind
Weapons
Black Bag
Companion
Sorry, Baby
Worst of the year:
Fantastic 4: First Steps
On Swift Horses
Nobody 2
A Big Bold Beautiful Journey
Hallow Road
Death of a Unicorn
Opus
Last edited by JamesF on Fri Dec 26, 2025 4:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Ribs
- Joined: Fri Jun 13, 2014 5:14 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
01 Avatar: Fire and Ash
02 Blue Moon
03 Highest 2 Lowest
04 Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
05 F1: The Movie
06 One Battle After Another
07 Train Dreams
08 It Was Just An Accident
09 Father Mother Sister Brother
10 Kokuho
02 Blue Moon
03 Highest 2 Lowest
04 Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
05 F1: The Movie
06 One Battle After Another
07 Train Dreams
08 It Was Just An Accident
09 Father Mother Sister Brother
10 Kokuho
-
yoshimori
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 6:03 am
- Location: LA CA
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Stuff I saw in 2025 that premiered in the last couple years:
1. Poca Pon (Ohtsuka)
2. “Water Sports” (Alcazaren 2024)
3. Die My Love (Ramsay)
4. 28 Years Later - first hour (Boyle, Dod Mantle, Harris)
5. The Phoenician Scheme (Anderson)
6. “Razeh-del” (Tafakory 2024)
7. Secret Agent – minus the last 15 minutes (Mendonça)
8. The Bikeriders (Nichols 2023)
9. The Tuba Thieves (O’Daniel 2023)
10. Trenque Lauquen (Citarella 2023)
Also Pretty Good: "The Answers to the Questions" (2024), Bugonia - in parts, Honey Don't, Human Resource, Sanatorium under the Sign of the Hourglass (2024), Un silence (2024), An Unfinished Film (2024)
Not Bad: After the Hunt, Apocalypse in the Tropics (2024), BLKNWS, The Botanist, A Cadet (2024), Cloud (2024), Eddington, Handling the Undead (2024), I'm Still Here (2024), Karavan, Kill the Jockey (2024), Kiiroiko, Marty Supreme, New Group, Pin de fartie, Romería, Saikai Paradise, Sentimental Value, Silent Friend, Sirât, La tour de glace, The Way We Talk (2024), Weapons, Winter Light
Disappointing: Brightest Sun, Dreams, No Other Choice, One Battle After Another, Steppenwolf (2024), Teki Cometh (2024)
Of only minor interest: 3670, The Damned (2024), Grand Theft Hamlet (2024), Landmarks, Menus-Plaisirs - Les Troisgros (2023), Renoir, Separated (2024), Some Rain Must Fall (2024), The Testament of Ann Lee
Irrelevant: 28 Years Later - second half, 3 Km to the End of the World (2024), All the Long Nights (2024), All We Imagine as Light (2024), Armand (2024), Baby (2024), Blonde, Brand New Landscape, Chatterboxes, Close Your Eyes (2023), Conclave (2024), Cover-Up, Cu Li Never Cries (2024), Exit 8, I, the Executioner (2024),L'île rouge (2023), Kokuho [National Treasure], Little Boy, Magellan, The Mastermind, Miroirs No. 3, My Father’s Son, Nobody 2, Nouvelle vague, The Ozu Diaries, Pavane for an Infant (2024), The Perfect Neighbor, Presence (2024), Rendez-vous avec Pol Pot (2024), Riefenstahl (2024), "Scénarios" (2024), Shadowless Tower (2023), Shadows of Fire (2023), She Taught Me Serendipity (2024), Sound of Falling, A Useful Ghost, The Wave, When Fall Comes (2024), White Flowers and Fruits
Weak: Barrio triste, Blossoms (2023), Blue Moon, By the Stream (2024), Harvest (2024), History of Sound, In Our Day (2023), It Was Just an Accident, Jay Kelly, Journey into Sato Tadao, Mon crime (2023), Love on Trial, The Shadow Scholars (2024), Side by Side (2023), SK13 - Kubrick's Endgame (2024), Spectateurs! (2024), A Traveler’s Needs (2024), Two Prosecutors, The Wedding Banquet
Bad: Baby Invasion (2024), Chaos, Emmanuelle (2024), Father Mother Sister Brother, Lust in the Rain (2024), Moon [Tsuki] (2023), Morte cucina, The President’s Cake, Sinners
Horrible: Frankenstein, Resurrection, Sons of the Neon Night
1. Poca Pon (Ohtsuka)
2. “Water Sports” (Alcazaren 2024)
3. Die My Love (Ramsay)
4. 28 Years Later - first hour (Boyle, Dod Mantle, Harris)
5. The Phoenician Scheme (Anderson)
6. “Razeh-del” (Tafakory 2024)
7. Secret Agent – minus the last 15 minutes (Mendonça)
8. The Bikeriders (Nichols 2023)
9. The Tuba Thieves (O’Daniel 2023)
10. Trenque Lauquen (Citarella 2023)
Also Pretty Good: "The Answers to the Questions" (2024), Bugonia - in parts, Honey Don't, Human Resource, Sanatorium under the Sign of the Hourglass (2024), Un silence (2024), An Unfinished Film (2024)
Not Bad: After the Hunt, Apocalypse in the Tropics (2024), BLKNWS, The Botanist, A Cadet (2024), Cloud (2024), Eddington, Handling the Undead (2024), I'm Still Here (2024), Karavan, Kill the Jockey (2024), Kiiroiko, Marty Supreme, New Group, Pin de fartie, Romería, Saikai Paradise, Sentimental Value, Silent Friend, Sirât, La tour de glace, The Way We Talk (2024), Weapons, Winter Light
Disappointing: Brightest Sun, Dreams, No Other Choice, One Battle After Another, Steppenwolf (2024), Teki Cometh (2024)
Of only minor interest: 3670, The Damned (2024), Grand Theft Hamlet (2024), Landmarks, Menus-Plaisirs - Les Troisgros (2023), Renoir, Separated (2024), Some Rain Must Fall (2024), The Testament of Ann Lee
Irrelevant: 28 Years Later - second half, 3 Km to the End of the World (2024), All the Long Nights (2024), All We Imagine as Light (2024), Armand (2024), Baby (2024), Blonde, Brand New Landscape, Chatterboxes, Close Your Eyes (2023), Conclave (2024), Cover-Up, Cu Li Never Cries (2024), Exit 8, I, the Executioner (2024),L'île rouge (2023), Kokuho [National Treasure], Little Boy, Magellan, The Mastermind, Miroirs No. 3, My Father’s Son, Nobody 2, Nouvelle vague, The Ozu Diaries, Pavane for an Infant (2024), The Perfect Neighbor, Presence (2024), Rendez-vous avec Pol Pot (2024), Riefenstahl (2024), "Scénarios" (2024), Shadowless Tower (2023), Shadows of Fire (2023), She Taught Me Serendipity (2024), Sound of Falling, A Useful Ghost, The Wave, When Fall Comes (2024), White Flowers and Fruits
Weak: Barrio triste, Blossoms (2023), Blue Moon, By the Stream (2024), Harvest (2024), History of Sound, In Our Day (2023), It Was Just an Accident, Jay Kelly, Journey into Sato Tadao, Mon crime (2023), Love on Trial, The Shadow Scholars (2024), Side by Side (2023), SK13 - Kubrick's Endgame (2024), Spectateurs! (2024), A Traveler’s Needs (2024), Two Prosecutors, The Wedding Banquet
Bad: Baby Invasion (2024), Chaos, Emmanuelle (2024), Father Mother Sister Brother, Lust in the Rain (2024), Moon [Tsuki] (2023), Morte cucina, The President’s Cake, Sinners
Horrible: Frankenstein, Resurrection, Sons of the Neon Night
- Soy Cuba
- Joined: Mon Jul 10, 2023 12:36 pm
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Black Dog
★★★★½
If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
★★★★½
Sentimental Value
★★★★½
The Kingdom
★★★★½
Our Girls
★★★★½
Train Dreams
★★★★½
Sirāt
★★★★½
One Battle After Another
★★★★½
The Girl with the Needle
★★★★½
I Swear
★★★★½
It Was Just an Accident
★★★★
★★★★½
If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
★★★★½
Sentimental Value
★★★★½
The Kingdom
★★★★½
Our Girls
★★★★½
Train Dreams
★★★★½
Sirāt
★★★★½
One Battle After Another
★★★★½
The Girl with the Needle
★★★★½
I Swear
★★★★½
It Was Just an Accident
★★★★
- DarkImbecile
- Ask me about my visible cat breasts
- Joined: Mon Dec 09, 2013 10:24 pm
- Location: Albuquerque, NM
Re: Dynamic Top Tens of 2025
Top Ten:
1. Resurrection (Bi)
2. Marty Supreme (Safdie)
3. One Battle After Another (P.T. Anderson)
4. Eddington (Aster)
5. Pillion (Lighton)
6. The Testament of Ann Lee (Fastvold)
7. Hamnet (Zhao)
8. No Other Choice (Park)
9. The Phoenician Scheme (W. Anderson)
10. All That's Left of You (Dabis)
1. Resurrection (Bi)
2. Marty Supreme (Safdie)
3. One Battle After Another (P.T. Anderson)
4. Eddington (Aster)
5. Pillion (Lighton)
6. The Testament of Ann Lee (Fastvold)
7. Hamnet (Zhao)
8. No Other Choice (Park)
9. The Phoenician Scheme (W. Anderson)
10. All That's Left of You (Dabis)