
2025 has proven to be a year of cinematic surprises, a period where filmmakers pushed boundaries, challenged expectations, and delivered stories that linger long after the credits roll. From pulse-pounding thrillers that leave you breathless, to intimate dramas that pierce the heart with quiet, unflinching honesty, this year’s films navigated extremes – emotional, visual, and moral – with fearless precision.
We’ve seen inventive reimaginings of familiar tales, audacious genre experiments, and performances so magnetic they redefine what it means to inhabit a character. Audiences were haunted by tales of grief and trauma, captivated by darkly comedic takes on human relationships, and thrilled by high-stakes action and morally complex antiheroes. Whether exploring the consequences of violence, the fragility of love, or the unflinching truths of history, 2025 reminded us why cinema matters: it can provoke, delight, terrify, and stay with us long after the lights come up. Here is our roundup of the year’s most unforgettable films.
Black Bag
Black Bag is a sleek, dialogue-driven spy thriller that eschews heavy action for narrative tension and character intrigue, showcasing Steven Soderbergh at his most stylish and precise. Michael Fassbender and Cate Blanchett star as George and Kathryn, a married pair of master spies entangled in a web of secrecy, mistrust, and desire, as a compromised project forces George to interrogate colleagues over a tense week-long period. David Koepp’s sharp script balances suspense with wit, giving each character distinct motives and vulnerabilities, while Soderbergh’s direction keeps the 94-minute runtime taut and compelling. With its clever twists, intense character dynamics, and the magnetic chemistry of its leads, Black Bag is an intelligent, adult-oriented thriller that revitalizes familiar genre territory with elegance and flair.
Read our full review HERE.
Black Phone 2
Bring Her Back
Bugonia
Yorgos Lanthimos’s Bugonia may be one of his most accessible films, but it remains a bleakly funny, unsettling satire that skewers corporate power, conspiracy culture, and humanity’s capacity for self-destruction. Reuniting with Emma Stone in her fourth collaboration with the director, the film centres on her icy pharmaceutical CEO Michelle Fuller, who is kidnapped by paranoid activist Teddy (a phenomenal Jesse Plemons) convinced she is an alien plotting Earth’s downfall. What unfolds is a tense, darkly comic chamber piece that balances farce with tragedy, using bee mythology, class allegory, and corporate hypocrisy to explore trauma, escapism, and the seductive clarity of certainty. As Teddy’s delusions are slowly contextualised through personal loss and systemic failure, Lanthimos and writer Will Tracy transform a bizarre premise into a mordant meditation on whether humanity deserves saving at all, leaving audiences to wrestle with the film’s apocalyptic cynicism and uneasy sliver of hope.
Read our full review HERE.
Eternity
David Freyne’s Eternity is a warmly classical, unexpectedly wholesome romantic comedy that playfully subverts the modern “A24 movie” expectation by embracing old-fashioned charm, wit, and emotional sincerity. Built around a clever afterlife conceit, Pat Cunnane’s script reimagines the classic woman-torn-between-two-men trope as Elizabeth Olsen’s Joan must choose eternity with either her longtime husband Larry (Miles Teller) or her first love Luke (Callum Turner), a romance cut short by war. The film’s limbo setting adds visual whimsy and comic invention, while Da’Vine Joy Randolph and John Early provide scene-stealing support as afterlife coordinators, balancing humour with heart. Anchored by sparkling chemistry and Olsen’s effortless comedic brilliance, Eternity recalls the golden age of rom-coms while feeling refreshingly sincere, delivering a funny, romantic, and emotionally resonant crowd-pleaser that may well become a modern genre classic.
Read our full review HERE.
Hamnet
Hamnet is a potentially triggering and emotionally wrenching film that offers a hauntingly unique take on a Shakespeare story we think we know. Jessie Buckley delivers a phenomenal performance as Agnes Hathaway, matched by Paul Mescal’s quietly devastating portrayal of William Shakespeare, as the couple grapples with the tragic death of their 11-year-old son, Hamnet – a loss that inspires the creation of Hamlet. With strong support from Emily Watson and Joe Alwyn, the largely fictionalized narrative explores the profound impact of grief on their marriage, leaving a lasting emotional impression.
Hamnet is scheduled for release in Australia on January 15th, 2026. Look for our full review coming soon.
If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
Mary Bronstein’s If I Had Legs I’d Kick You is a punishingly intimate, darkly comic portrait of motherhood as an all-consuming, thankless labour, anchored by a career-best performance from Rose Byrne. Shot in suffocating close proximity to Byrne’s Linda, the film immerses us in her unraveling world: a chronically ill child, an absent husband, professional and financial collapse, and a society quick to judge yet slow to offer empathy. By keeping Linda’s daughter largely unseen, Bronstein underscores the invisible weight of caregiving and Linda’s desperate struggle to retain an identity beyond motherhood, while encounters with figures like a suspiciously kind motel manager (A$AP Rocky) heighten the film’s relentless tension. Exhausting, unsettling, and bleakly funny, the film is an unforgettable, if emotionally draining, experience – one whose lasting power comes from Byrne’s fearless, full-bodied embodiment of a woman barely staying afloat.
Read our full review HERE.
It Was Just An Accident
Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident is a masterclass in restraint, a quietly devastating thriller that derives its immense power from moral tension, lived experience, and unsettling ambiguity rather than spectacle. Built around a deceptively simple premise, the film follows Vahid, a former political prisoner who abducts a man he believes was his former torturer, then seeks out fellow survivors to help identify him and share the unbearable responsibility of deciding his fate. Unfolding through charged conversations, silences, and hesitation, Panahi transforms memory and doubt into sources of suspense, refusing easy binaries around justice, trauma, or revenge. With humane, precise direction, deeply naturalistic performances, and a chilling final image that lingers as a moral reckoning, the film implicates the audience in its questions, standing as one of Panahi’s most powerful and enduring works.
It Was Just An Accident is scheduled for release in Australia on January 29th, 2026. Look for our full review coming soon.
Kiss of the Spider Woman
One Battle After Another
Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another stands as one of his most ambitious and urgent works, blending anarchic black comedy, political satire, and visceral action into a scathing portrait of modern America. Loosely inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, the film follows washed-up revolutionary Bob Ferguson (a ferocious Leonardo DiCaprio) and his teenage daughter as they’re hunted by the grotesquely corrupt Colonel Lockjaw (a terrifyingly unhinged Sean Penn), with the film gradually finding its rhythm after a deliberately chaotic, prologue-heavy opening. Beneath its farcical violence and manic energy lies a sharp meditation on power, corruption, and ideological decay, bolstered by standout turns from Chase Infiniti and Teyana Taylor. Demanding, unruly, and defiantly non-commercial, the film rewards patient viewers with a thrilling, pointed, and darkly hilarious experience that reaffirms Anderson’s status as one of contemporary cinema’s most vital voices.
Read our full review HERE.
Roofman
Roofman tells the astonishing true story of Jeffrey Manchester, a man who robbed 45 McDonald’s locations by entering through the roofs in a bid to provide for his daughter and improve his life, balancing criminality with a fundamentally kind-hearted nature. Under Derek Cianfrance’s direction and co-written with Kirt Gunn, the film blends humor, charm, and emotional weight, anchored by Channing Tatum’s effortlessly charismatic performance that makes Jeffrey’s mischief oddly endearing. From his first heist to his daring prison escape and inventive hideout in a Toys “R” Us, the film captures both the thrill and the human cost of his actions, including a tender, low-key romance with single mother Leigh Wainscott (Kirsten Dunst). While the true story ensures a bittersweet outcome, Roofman navigates its eccentric, almost farcical premise with care, delivering a heart-rending, darkly funny, and surprisingly accessible portrait of a man torn between freedom, love, and the consequences of his choices.
Read our full review HERE.
