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No Other Choice
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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With its sharp social commentary and dark subject matter, this film is a devilish critique of capitalism and the violence it can breed.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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The Secret Agent
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Thoughtful, tense, politically sharp, and consistently engaging, how refreshing to see a film that not only respects its audience, but delivers tenfold.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Nuisance Bear
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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This elegant and thought-provoking meditation on resilience, coexistence, and responsibility is gorgeous, powerful, and heartbreaking all at once.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Sentient
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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One of the most emotionally distressing documentaries I’ve ever seen. It’s given me nightmares for days, and I can’t shake the film's stories or images. I truly wish I’d never watched it, but I also know it was important to.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Everybody To Kenmure Street
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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The refusal to stay silent is the backbone of resistance, showing what can be achieved when we stand together. This creative, bird's eye view documentary screams "Power to the People!"
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Closure
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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A beautifully made documentary about the painful truth of what it means to keep searching when closure may never come.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Silenced
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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An emotionally exhausting documentary with a message that’s timely and necessary, this film doesn’t hold back with its blazing critique of an issue that seems to be getting increasingly worse for women around the world.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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The Musical
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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An ugly, mean-spirited film that is unpleasant in a way that feels deliberate but not especially rewarding.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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H Is for Hawk
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Leans too heavily into the familiar, but the film is a thoughtful, quietly profound meditation on grief and the fragile process of learning how to live again.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Nouvelle Vague
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Enchanting, pretentious, and mildly irritating, this is absolute catnip for lovers of French New Wave cinema.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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The Choral
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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An earnest and comforting period piece about the healing power of music and the way creating something together can offer a glimmer of hope in the darkest of times.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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If I Go Will They Miss Me
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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What a beautifully realized film about the fragile, complicated bonds between parents and their children.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Union County
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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Doesn’t quite rise above being just another quietly competent indie drama, but it will certainly resonate with viewers who personally know someone who’s been through the system.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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28 Years Later: The Bone Temple
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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Leans hard into philosophical territory, contrasting spirituality and scientific reasoning while exploring themes of fascism, survival, and the erosion of identity. This is intellectual horror functioning at its highest level.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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A Private Life
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A great example of thoughtful, modern noir that values psychological depth over straightforward plot devices.
Posted Feb 09, 2026
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Shelter
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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A dime a dozen story elevated slightly by its performances, but lacks the excitement and tension needed to make it stand out as a fun action flick. If you’re a Statham fan, you’ll get through it just fine.
Posted Jan 29, 2026
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The Rip
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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A mediocre entry in the already overcrowded dirty cop genre.
Posted Jan 29, 2026
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Mercy
(2026)
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Louisa Moore
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Though it barely scratches the surface of its big ideas, the movie’s sheer entertainment value smooths over the missed opportunities.
Posted Jan 22, 2026
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Sirāt
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Though its meandering structure and minimal plot can test patience, the film’s shocking turns and immersive atmosphere make it a haunting, if imperfect, experience.
Posted Jan 22, 2026
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To the Victory!
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Part comedy, part tragedy, and part heartbreak, the film honestly addresses the messy, painful aftermath of war.
Posted Jan 21, 2026
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Cover-Up
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A sharp, unflinching look at the constant tug-of-war between truth and power, showing how systemic secrecy and self-preservation can rot the foundations of democracy.
Posted Jan 21, 2026
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Goodbye June
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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This depressing holiday drama is predictable, emotionally draining, and ultimately forgettable.
Posted Jan 21, 2026
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One More Shot
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A fresh take on the time loop genre, the film blends comedy, drama, and romance with a bit of cheeky science fiction fantasy.
Posted Jan 10, 2026
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The Voice of Hind Rajab
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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This testament to courage, humanity, and lives lost is unforgettable, if you can handle the heartbreak.
Posted Jan 10, 2026
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The Plague
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A dark meditation on adolescence, cruelty, and the cost of belonging.
Posted Jan 10, 2026
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Is This Thing On?
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Trades grand drama for lived-in naturalism, creating one of the more convincing portraits of a marriage nearing its end.
Posted Jan 07, 2026
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Anaconda
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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This is the kind of movie that sounds like it could be painfully stupid on paper, but instead turns out to be genuinely funny, self-aware, and far more charming than it has any right to be.
Posted Jan 03, 2026
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Rental Family
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A small but meaningful reminder of how important kindness and human connection really are in a world that seems to be losing both.
Posted Jan 03, 2026
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It Was Just an Accident
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Asks whether it’s possible to hold onto your humanity while staring down the person you believe destroyed it.
Posted Jan 01, 2026
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The Testament of Ann Lee
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Admirable in its audacity and unforgettable in its execution, this film is unlike anything you have ever seen.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
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Marty Supreme
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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There’s a lot to appreciate here, but be prepared for a character study of narcissism rather than a highly entertaining drama.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
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Song Sung Blue
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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The film settles for bland mediocrity, drowning its musical dreams and emotional ambitions in clichés, strained performances, and a dispiriting lack of inspiration.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
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Late Shift
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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The film strikes a careful balance that provides suspense without sensationalizing, tension without melodrama, and respect for the real-world heroes the film depicts. Those who work in the field will no doubt find much that rings true.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
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Don't Let the Cat Out
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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The movie walks a fine line between horror and comedy, but it never goes full camp. It’s more awkwardly funny than outright hilarious, which somehow makes it even more disturbing.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
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Lovely Day
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A charming, funny, and quietly devastating portrait of a man learning to face not just marriage, but himself.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
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The Smashing Machine
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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The fights, the travel, and the cycles of addiction are presented with such blunt persistence that they begin to feel more like an endurance test than a work of art that’s designed to draw the audience in.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
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The Housemaid
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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It’s a shame "The Housemaid" lacks the sharp satire, psychological bite, and suspense that Feig has been known to handle so well. Instead, the film is a sour and unpleasant experience that’s lazy, mean-spirited, and embarrassingly obvious.
Posted Dec 17, 2025
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Trash Baby
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Highlights the beauty, resilience, and struggles of growing up in a world that doesn’t always offer an easy way out.
Posted Dec 16, 2025
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A HOUSE OF DYNAMITE
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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This is a fast-moving, tense film, and Bigelow proves once again that she’s unmatched at handling complex, suspenseful, and frighteningly realistic material like this.
Posted Dec 16, 2025
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Dust Bunny
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Underneath the colorful visuals and the gory fairytale setup is a hollow, disjointed mess of a story. A quirky idea is buried under over-direction, under-writing, and faux profundity. It’s just too weird, too messy, and too hollow to work.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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Hamnet
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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This lush, mournful, and beautifully crafted film takes a deeply personal approach to one of the most mythologized figures in Western literature.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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Sentimental Value
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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Digs deep into family messiness and the blurry line between art and life, and it will hit hard with those who find within it connection and meaning.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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Dead Man's Wire
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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The darkness of class resentment echo the frustrations of the present day working and middle class, making the film oddly relevant despite its period setting.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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Unidentified
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A smart, socially conscious, female-driven thriller that grows into its story, director Haifaa Al-Mansour’s film unfolds like a straightforward crime thriller. But it’s the surprise twist in the second half that really gives the film its bite.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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Die My Love
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A suffocating, overwrought exercise in self-importance. By the end, the film is so consumed by its own darkness that it forgets to be about anything other than itself.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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The Balloonists
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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An entertaining adventure documentary about obsession, risk, and the human desire to do the impossible.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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Jay Kelly
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A film full of beautifully crafted moments and little truths about fame, regret, and the fragile possibility of redemption.
Posted Dec 14, 2025
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Five Nights at Freddy's 2
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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The type of genre movie that’s not quite good enough to recommend, but also not amusingly bad enough to be a full-blown cult classic in the making.
Posted Dec 05, 2025
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Merrily We Roll Along
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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A modest yet engaging stage-to-screen adaptation, lifted by Jonathan Groff’s charisma and a strong ensemble, even if the music doesn’t always translate smoothly to film.
Posted Dec 05, 2025
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Zootopia 2
(2025)
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Louisa Moore
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This entertaining sequel develops the characters, expands the world, and delivers an exciting story that’s fun for kids but smart enough for finicky adults.
Posted Dec 04, 2025
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