|
3.5/5.0
|
Teacher's Pet
(2025)
|
Peter Martin
|
From its first moments, writer/director Noam Kroll's film is disquieting. ... A psychological drama that becomes more intense as it goes.
Posted Feb 02, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Iron Lung
(2026)
|
Simon Ramshaw
|
His ingenious and uncompromising approach to turning an engaging playthrough into a white-knuckle cinematic experience is something that can be called a true original, unbeholden to conventions of duration, collaboration or self-conscious discipline.
Posted Feb 02, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Bulk
(2025)
|
Simon Ramshaw
|
As human beings, we should be happy he's still so in love with his game, and is doing so much to further his craft. As audience members, it's just very hard to love it in the same way.
Posted Feb 02, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Tell Me Everything
(2026)
|
Rino Lu
|
Though it lacks the climactic force one might expect from such material, the film offers a sensitive examination of a father-son relationship shadowed by the AIDS epidemic.
Posted Feb 01, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Jaripeo
(2026)
|
Rino Lu
|
Looks less like a carefully devised project and more like an instinct-driven work, propelled by the urgency to make queer cowboy lives visible. ... Lends the film a rare openness.
Posted Feb 01, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Saccharine
(2026)
|
Martin Tsai
|
Compulsion is staged as possession, another iteration of the film's central duality: desire as both hunger and haunting, agency and surrender.
Posted Jan 31, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Big Girls Don't Cry
(2026)
|
Rino Lu
|
An intimate, quietly piercing coming-of-age story that speaks to stirring curiosity and confusion in puberty. It is nothing less than a heartfelt reflection on the uneasy process of being a "qualified" grown-up.
Posted Jan 31, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
A Poet
(2025)
|
Olga Artemyeva
|
Underneath the satire and chaotic slapstick, A Poet – this time contradicting what the title might seem to imply – is primarily a story about humans, not professions or vocations.
Posted Jan 31, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
3/5
|
Cold Storage
(2026)
|
George and Josh Bate
|
There’s good fun to be had here for those with 90 minutes to spare and with a proclivity for the repulsive and irreverent.
Posted Jan 30, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Chasing Summer
(2026)
|
Mel Valentin
|
[Illiza] Shlesinger imbues Jamie with a welcome complexity ... not just a relatable character, but a cut above the one-dimensional characters typical of similarly-premised cable fare.
Posted Jan 30, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Incomer
(2026)
|
Mel Valentin
|
Offers more than its share of surface-deep pleasures for audience members willing to embrace [director Louis] Paxton’s singular take on the "stranger on a strange island" premise.
Posted Jan 29, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Shelter
(2026)
|
Daniel Eagan
|
Shelter on the whole is above average, and Statham sets a high bar.
Posted Jan 28, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
3.5/5.0
|
Arco
(2025)
|
Peter Martin
|
Capturing the joys of childhood and the coming of age that is inevitable, as well as contemplating unknown threats and unimaginable dangers, Arco is a beautiful tale that is awash in hopes, memories, and regrets.
Posted Jan 28, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
July Rhapsody
(2002)
|
Rino Lu
|
Within this disordered rhapsody, [director Ann Hui] composes an unsettling variation on an ordinary man’s forties, winding up its movement in a gentle, poetic cadence.
Posted Jan 28, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Frank & Louis
(2026)
|
Mel Valentin
|
Takes an unhurried, detail-rich approach ... letting dialogue, camerawork, and performances lead the audience ... into the inner and outer lives of men typically forgotten or even discarded by society. ... Nuanced, nonjudgmental.
Posted Jan 27, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Buddy
(2026)
|
Mel Valentin
|
Deftly balancing dark, cringe-worthy comedy with absurdist horror, Buddy delivers exactly what its primary image of a half-charred Buddy wielding an ax in an artificial forest promised: Twisted fun (not) for the whole family.
Posted Jan 27, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
All About the Money
(2026)
|
Daniel Eagan
|
Self-serving and duplicitous, Fergie Chambers is a gold mine for a documentarian like O'Shea. He eventually seems to be trying to redeem himself, but by the end he is still blaming others for his actions.
Posted Jan 27, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Wrecking Crew
(2026)
|
Daniel Eagan
|
I don't care whether Bautista and Mamoa are believable as brothers. I want to see them destroying bad guys, which is exactly what The Wrecking Crew delivers.
Posted Jan 27, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Leviticus
(2026)
|
Mel Valentin
|
Brilliant in its conception and even more brilliant in its execution, Leviticus belongs high on a list of queer horror and its discontents.
Posted Jan 27, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Musical
(2026)
|
Mel Valentin
|
Undoubtedly will make a fine addition to the collections of cringe-comedy aficionados.
Posted Jan 27, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Josephine
(2026)
|
Mel Valentin
|
A deeply moving, heartrending exploration of the loss of innocence and the unintended consequences thereof.
Posted Jan 27, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Send Help
(2026)
|
Kyle Logan
|
Send Help works as comedy every so often, whether it's because of Raimi's penchant for making violence downright goofy or the stars' charisma, but it's so overlong and stagnant as anything else that the majority of it is just a slog.
Posted Jan 26, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
undertone
(2025)
|
Andrew Mack
|
Of all the films that have depended on audio-instigated thrills and chills, The Undertone may be the best to have ever done it ... Flawless in execution and detail ... The Undertone is one of the best horror thrillers you will ever listen to.
Posted Jan 26, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
3.5/5.0
|
Revolver Lily
(2023)
|
Peter Martin
|
As a movie, Revolver Lily moves just as briskly as Yuri Ozone herself takes stealthy, decisive action. It resembles the train that kicked the action off: fast-moving, with a destination clearly in mind.
Posted Jan 26, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Mother of Flies
(2025)
|
Rino Lu
|
For a low-budget production like Mother of Flies, the film hints at how creativity can be efficiently amplified and freely shared through solidified collaboration.
Posted Jan 24, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Mercy
(2026)
|
Olga Artemyeva
|
It’s definitely not the most outrageous or silly concept Bekmambetov ever worked with, but it’s certainly the least fun ... Strives to combine two of the director’s great passions: action movies and screenlife thrillers ... with mixed results.
Posted Jan 22, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Well
(2025)
|
J Hurtado
|
Thrives on a sparse aesthetic. What flourish there is in the film is largely narrative, as the imagery tells a tale of a world in which there is no time or energy to spare.
Posted Jan 21, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Return to Silent Hill
(2026)
|
Kyle Logan
|
As an adaptation of one of the best video games ever made from a filmmaker who successfully translated the games' world to film before, it's a major disappointment.
As a movie, it's just bad.
Posted Jan 21, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Altered
(2025)
|
Peter Martin
|
A fun, punchy ride, for what it is: a sci-fi b-movie (the kind I love) that makes a good rental or purchase on a Video On Demand platform.
Posted Jan 19, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Rip
(2026)
|
Rob Hunter
|
Fantastic stuff and among [Joe] Carnahan's best. ... It rocks. It's also a reminder that movies made for this streaming era can still look, feel, and deliver as real movies.
Posted Jan 16, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Bite the Bullet
(1975)
|
Peter Martin
|
Hackman's performance raises it above the noise.
Posted Jan 15, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Night Patrol
(2025)
|
J Hurtado
|
[A] rousingly entertaining collective trauma-centered bloodbath, eschewing the tedious navel gazing that often afflicts such enterprises.
Posted Jan 15, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Killer Whale
(2026)
|
Rob Hunter
|
Flops its way onto the screen stuffed to the blowhole with a steady sludge of utterly abysmal cg effects. ... It's a shame, as Jo-Anne Brechin's direction is otherwise solid, and both Gardner and Jarnson do good work.
Posted Jan 14, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
4/5
|
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple
(2026)
|
Shelagh Rowan-Legg
|
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple is a more than worthy follow up to last year's film, visually glorious, a great sense of ironic humour, and drops enough literal and proverbial needles to make an audience applaud and craving for more.
Posted Jan 13, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
3/5
|
Space/Time
(2025)
|
Peter Martin
|
[Becomes] quite thrilling. ... Anyone with a proclivity for science fiction [will] appreciate what the filmmakers accomplished with a low budget and a lot of imagination.
Posted Jan 12, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
All That's Left of You
(2025)
|
Olga Artemyeva
|
Dabis’ film is also a story of different kinds of love and being able to make choices even when they seem impossible. Among them, the choice to somehow go on no matter what appears to be the most devastating – but also at least a little bit soothing.
Posted Jan 09, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
OBEX
(2025)
|
Mel Valentin
|
If you’re on OBEX’s wavelength or frequency, i.e., attuned to its oddball charms, quirky humor, and irony-free, poignant exploration of its central themes, then OBEX will prove a deeply engaging, infinitely rewarding experience.
Posted Jan 06, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
100 Nights of Hero
(2025)
|
Rino Lu
|
What makes [it] remarkable is its playful use of a double entendre. ... Not only liberates characters trapped on the page, but permits its feminist ethos to give birth, in turn, to queer subjectivities -- an achievement as elegant as it is exhilarating.
Posted Jan 06, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
3/5
|
Marshmallow
(2025)
|
Peter Martin
|
Distinguishes itself with its clever wrinkles on a familiar premise. ... The kind of modestly-budgeted indie horror flick that I love to discover.
Posted Jan 02, 2026
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Anaconda
(2025)
|
J Hurtado
|
[T]he rare reinvention that acknowledges the faults of its source material – Cajun Jon Voight, anyone? – and exploits them for the jokes they always were... it surprised the hell out of me, and that’s exactly what I needed.
Posted Dec 29, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Plague
(2025)
|
Olga Artemyeva
|
Succinct but effective ... presenting a welcome departure from what a lot of genre films tend to do these days. ... Might not have any groundbreakingly novel ideas on the painful subject, the ones it has are still relevant.
Posted Dec 25, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Marty Supreme
(2025)
|
Mel Valentin
|
Elevated by career-best performances from Chalamet and A’zion. ... Safdie’s hyperkinetic direction, and Daniel Lopatin’s dazzling, 1980s-inspired score, ... and Marty Supreme becomes a must-watch for serious and casual moviegoers alike.
Posted Dec 24, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Song Sung Blue
(2025)
|
Maxwell Rabb
|
Instead of an empathetic glimpse into one niche of Americana, Hollywood mutates a real-life phenomenon into a disheartening impersonation.
Posted Dec 22, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Lone Samurai
(2025)
|
Maxwell Rabb
|
Slogs forward as the samurai wanders aimlessly across the island before being captured by a band of cartoonishly evil natives. The story is stitched together so sloppily that there's no tension, no momentum -- just dead air between swings of the blade.
Posted Dec 22, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Great Flood
(2025)
|
Pierce Conran
|
It soon stops being a disaster film, and veers off into madly ambitious yet maddeningly asinine speculative sci-fi.
Posted Dec 20, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
The Housemaid
(2025)
|
Kyle Logan
|
While not every aspect is entirely successful, The Housemaid's big swings at fucked-up fun land far more than they miss.
Posted Dec 18, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Overlord: The Sacred Kingdom
(2024)
|
Paz O'Farrell
|
There [are] many female characters, but they don't feel very well roughed out. Then again, no one does. Not even the battles, which mainly consist of cries of "fire ball".
Posted Dec 17, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
A Private Life
(2025)
|
Olga Artemyeva
|
The sum of its quirks makes it charming enough to become one of these guilty pleasures you don’t really need to deny yourself.
Posted Dec 17, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Jay Kelly
(2025)
|
Olga Artemyeva
|
Clearly a personal project for several of its creators ... Which only makes it more perplexing how a personal work like this ends up feeling like the most sanitized, Hollywood-polished version of inner turmoil possible.
Posted Dec 17, 2025
Edit critic review
|
|
|
Sound of Falling
(2025)
|
Olga Artemyeva
|
One of the most fascinating and powerful cinematic experiences of the year.
Posted Dec 17, 2025
Edit critic review
|