The Official Movie Thread

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The most rewatchable film of all time?
 
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Rob Reiner and his wife were stabbed. Some reports are saying it was his son that did it.

The latest Spinal Tap sucked but it wasn't worth that!
 
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My picks of the year. Some of these have different release dates due to the festival circuit and all that bullshit.

In reverse order...

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10. Friendship (d. Andrew DeYoung)

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9. Vulcanizadora (d. Joel Potrykus)

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8. Must auk aka The Black Hole (d. Moonika Siimets)

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7. The Smashing Machine (d. Ben Safdie)

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6. Bugonia (d. Yorgos Lanthimos)

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5. Sisu: Road to Revenge (d. Jalmari Helander)

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4. Jimmy and Stiggs (d. Joe Begos)

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3. Abruptio (d. Evan Marlowe)

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2. Lone Samurai (d. Josh C. Waller)

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1. One Battle After Another (d. Paul Thomas Anderson)

Honourable mentions aka 11th to 20th (with trailer links):
11. Black Bag (d. Steven Soderbergh)
12. The Surfer (d. Lorcan Finnegan)
13. Armed (d. Neil Mackay)
14. Reflection in a Dead Diamond (d. Hélène Cattet & Bruno Forzani)
15. Warfare (d. Alex Garland & Ray Mendoza)
16. Sinners (d. Ryan Coogler)
17. 28 Years Later (d. Danny Boyle)
18. Good Boy (d. Ben Leonberg)
19. The Long Walk (d. Francis Lawrence)
20. Cannibal Mukbang (d. Aimee Kuge)
 
haven't kept up with 2025 releases too much but my current list would look like this

1. no other choice
2. 28 years later
3. one battle after another
4. sisu 2
5. ballerina
6. a house of dynamite
7. weapons
8. warfare
9. the naked gun
10. sinners
 
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I really didn't get the hype behind Weapons but otherwise solid list. Need to see No Other Choice though. Surprised to see 28 Years Later so high up, doesn't immediately strike me as a Vegard pick. Is it all the experimentation of style?
 
I wouldn't say I buy into the hype with weapons either, this is pretty close to being all 10 movies that I liked this year so ranking it at #7 isn't saying a ton. having seen both barbarian and weapons now, I feel like cregger's "shtick" is to take a pretty basic story and make it seem more complicated and mysterious by structuring it unusually.

I wouldn't say I love 28 years later because of the stylistic experimentation, if anything some of the nonsense like the camera spazzing out during action scenes took me out of the film a bit. but I love the tonal contrast of it, it's able to be this somber, reflective film about dealing with terminal illness in the immediate family and also this unhinged action thriller with big dick zombies that rip out people's spines. loved the characters too, would watch a whole-ass movie about ralph fiennes' zombie apocalypse john locke. I've seen a bunch of reviewers comment they loved the first half but didn't like the second and vice versa, and half of everyone saying they hated the ending. I think that all speaks to the diversity of it and personally I loved it all, first half, second half and ending. it's just a cinematic buffet of a movie that gave me at least three movies' worth of movie in less than 2 hours.

it's also a pretty thoughtfully written movie with a bunch going on beneath the surface. liked this video analysis despite the clickbaity title

 
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