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Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Top 10 Films of 2025

Hello from the other side of the shadows. The 2025 movie year started slow but thankfully gained steady speed right up until the end. I wasn’t into the big, American movie events of the year, but I found a ton of gold in foreign and indie films. But, of course, number 1 could only go one way. Ocean waves.


10 No Other Choice (Park Chan-wook)
One of the best satires I’ve seen in years. I watch Park’s previous film, Decision to Leave, a few times a year (mesmerizing), and I suspect I’ll revisit this one often as well. The first “murder” is a brilliant set piece of drunken, homicidal confusion, all with a gorgeous song blasting at 11. Classic.

9 Lurker (Alex Russell)
A fantastic independent film, shot in LA, filmed economically, and told wonderfully. This isn’t a movie about an obsessed fan; it’s a movie about a guy who is obsessed with becoming bigger by any means necessary. A cautionary tale for who you allow into your circle. Théodore Pellerin gives an excellent performance as a genuine psychopath with nothing to lose. 

8 Sentimental Value (Joaquim Trier)
There are two minutes about an hour into this film that may be my favorite two consecutive minutes of cinema this year. It begins with Stellan Skarsgård giving a birthday gift to his grandchild. I dare not reveal what the gift was, but my laughter didn’t stop for the rest of the film. It was my favorite joke in a movie this year. The scene directly after shows Skarsgård having a cigarette with his somewhat estranged daughter (Renate Reinsve, perfect). They say nothing aloud, but communicate everything with their eyes. 

7 Cloud (Kiyoshi Kurosawa)
A two-part film of glorious intrigue. The first hour is patient set-up as we watch a psychopathic reseller swindle honest people out of goods and sell them online for a massive profit. Hour two is the fallout of the man’s behavior from the first hour, filmed as an operatic gun battle. This had too quiet of a release in America, but it’s on the Criterion Channel right now for anyone to see. Please check this out.

6 Presence (Steven Soderbergh)
Has this been done before? An entire ghost story shot from the POV of the ghost, and every scene is one shot. Few directors alive have been able to maintain such a skill in blending story and technique. (Also shout out to Black Bag, which Soderbergh released just a few weeks after this film. What a movie madman.)

5 Bugonia (Yorgos Lanthimos)
I have no clue why the release of this movie has been so quiet compared to other Yorgos films, but this thing is an absolute blast. So much better on a second viewing; you can study their faces and see little ticks throughout. I’ll be baffled if this isn’t nominated for a handful of Oscars tomorrow.

4 Nouvelle Vague (Richard Linklater)
Two great films in one year, Richard Linklater does it again with his real-time Blue Moon, and this wonderful ode to the making of Breathless. This film is on Netflix and no one is talking about it. It completely reinvigorated my interest in the French New Wave and my own filmmaking. I’ll be thanking this movie for years to come. Stay tuned.

3 Song Sung Blue (Craig Brewer)
Wow. This thing came out of nowhere and completely captivated me. This is not the type of movie I often enjoy, but goddamn if I didn’t fall for its charm. Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson were fantastic as two real-life lovers who started a Neil Diamond cover band. If the logline sounds lame, I promise the movie is not. (And watch the original documentary on YouTube!)

2 If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (Mary Bronstein)
Rose Byrne gives the performance of 2025 in Mary Bronstein’s If I Had Legs I’d Kick You. I skipped this movie when it was in theaters, which is a damn shame. I’ve watched it three times in the past two months, and it has never left my mind. This is the kind of performance I am always searching for. Honest, raw, funny, and so very real. Maybe she’ll have a chance at winning the Oscar. I hope.

1 One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson)
No question, from here on it, it’s One Battle After Another. I knew this was the best movie of 2025 as I was watching it the first time. I’ve seen the film 10 times so far, with no sign of slowing down. I love it, I love all of it. PTA has been nominated for 11 Oscars and never won. After tomorrow morning, he’ll likely have 14 nominations to his name. If the Academy does not give him at least one Oscar for this film, it will be the biggest Fuck You from the Academy to one filmmaker that I have ever seen. I hope, for the sake of the Academy’s worth, merit, and credibility, they right this wrong. Hopefully a few times over. Ocean waves.

12 comments:

  1. I've only seen one film in your list so far and it is currently #2 on my list. There's too many films to watch as I don't have the time, energy, and money to go see anything right now.

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    1. Nice list! I vow to give Die My Love many more chances. I really want to explore that more. And, I am in the harsh, lonely, isolated dark woods of not liking your number one pick. It just wasn't for me. I'm on an island with six people, I know.

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  2. So nice to see you pop up in my blog reader! There's still a lot for me to watch on your list but I always enjoy your recommendations. One Battle is undeniable though! I hadn't heard much about Presence when it came out but if it made your top 10 that makes it jump up on my list to catch up on.

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    1. Hey there! Great to hear from you too! I really loved Presence. I saw it in Jan 2025 and it stayed with me. I still absolutely love Soderbergh!

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  3. I hadn't heard any talk about 'Song Sung Blue' or 'If I Had Legs' online or otherwise, until your praise. It's a shame they didn't pop up on too many people's radars when they were running in theaters. I'll have to check them out when they come out on streaming. Number one was the same for me too, and it would be great to see a commentary for 'One Battle After Another' :)

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    1. I'm not gonna lie, both of those movies floored me, and I never expected them to make my list, let alone rank so highly. I wanted to put SSB up so high because those types of movies never work on me. Maybe one or two a decade. But that thing hit. And Rose Byrne's work in Legs is towering. I'm sure Buckley will win the Oscar, but I hope Rose has a fighting chance.

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  4. Good blog! :) I'm a little surprised that Weapons isn't on this list. Imho it was brilliant, not only for horror, but as a film itself.

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    1. Thank you! You have left a very kind message and I appreciate it. Pains me to share that Weapons was not for me. I tried twice, and I had too many barriers to entry. (For one, because there's no need to shit on a movie you loved, I really didn't think the night scenes looked good at all. Almost like an AI video game, or... something.)

      I'm just no fun, I know.

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  5. One Battle After Another is pretty undeniable. Topped my list, as well. Don't really disagree with any of these picks, but great to see Bugonia, Cloud, and Lurker here. Hope you're doing well!

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    1. The Wallys! LOVE it! You put so much time into those, I can tell. Amazing work. Love that you repped Cloud and Lurker too, I wish more people would. And damnit, your past list reminded me that I still need to see Perfect Days. Silly that I haven't yet. I'm watching (at least) one new-to-me Criterion every week of 2026, and I've added that one to my list.

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  6. In what universe is Dolores Claiborne a bad film but One Battle After Another is a good one?

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    1. You lost me... I dig Dolores Claiborne, read the book, even. I've written about that movie positively a few times on this blog. But what does DC have to do with OBAA??

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