A very strange thing happened to me in the final months of 2025: I lost much of my enthusiasm for moviegoing. At some point, my need to see each and every acclaimed film began to feel like a dreaded homework assignment rather than a pleasurable adventure. I backed out of moviegoing plans again and again.
To date, I have yet to see any of the following films, although I've more than sufficient opportunities to do so: Marty Supreme, Hamnet, Train Dreams, Frankenstein. I started, but couldn't bring myself to finish: Bring Her Back, Die My Love, Caught by the Tides. I was actually able to finish these films, but only after two or three attempts to get fully invested in them: Eddington, The Mastermind, Nouvelle Vague, Weapons, Sinners.
Why is my interest in films on the wane? I haven't entirely worked that out yet. Certainly, the perilous state of our country - and the world in general - has preoccupied me. I’ve spent too much time doom scrolling through news sites and social media; as a result, my attention span is now noticeably impaired. I find slow or difficult movies tougher to stick with, as evidenced by the stats reported above.
Then too, the moviegoing experience has changed drastically since the pandemic, and not for the better. I can’t remember the last time I was part of anything close to a sold-out theater audience. Nevertheless, every theater chain (but especially AMC) has cranked up the sound in its auditoriums to ear-splitting levels. I wear earplugs every time I go to the movies, and sometimes even that isn’t enough. At a recent matinee of Sentimental Value (a sensitive Norwegian drama that was mostly subtitled for English-speaking audiences, and in NO WAY required extra-amplified sound) I was literally in pain, despite having my earplugs in. I finally went to the lobby where I asked the young woman at the ticket desk if the volume could be turned down. She did so, after realizing that the volume in our auditorium was set 25% higher (!) than it was supposed to be. Since then, I’ve made a habit of waiting for most films to become available on streaming. I have a 55-inch UHD television on which I can control the volume myself, and movies look very good on it (although it's still totally worth the big screen experience for some films - F1, for example.) I sometimes miss the buzz of communal moviegoing, but I value protecting my hearing more.
And yet...
There were at least ten movies released last year that moved, excited or even exhilarated me - movies well worth praising here. Some of these are critical darlings and entirely predictable choices. But some are overlooked or under-appreciated gems. This year, of all years, I have no real right to post a ten best list. (To date, I've seen just 64 films released in 2025. When I published last year’s list, I’d seen 96 films released in 2024.) But I'm going to do it anyway, because it wouldn't be January if I didn't.
Some notes about what qualified for my list:
I only consider films which were in general release for the first time in the Chicago area between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2025, inclusive. "General release" means that film festival screenings don't count. It also means that some 2024 films will be considered for this list (including The Brutalist, Sing Sing, The Last Showgirl, Flow and No Other Land.) It also means that quite a few films generally considered to be 2025 releasees will be eligible for my 2026 list. (Among them: The Secret Agent, Is This Thing On?, Sitar, Pillion, The Voice of Hind Rijab, No Other Choice and The Testament of Ann Lee).
Here are my personal choices for the best films of 2025, presented in ascending order of preference:
10. Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy (director: Michael Morris)
I will make NO apologies to any serious cinephile for including the latest Bridget Jones film in this list! Well-made cinematic comfort food is an absolute necessity in these stressful times, and this one hits all the right notes.
9. Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5 (director: Raoul Peck)
Here's the flipside of the Bridget Jones endorsement above: just as surely as we need occasional respite from the world's horrors, we have an equal need to face our harsh realities with clear eyes. This documentary is a great starting point.
8. Flow (director: Gints Zibalodis)
Five animals - a cat, a dog, a capybara, a lemur and a bird - band together to find dry land during a devastating flood. Their journey is fraught with peril, but they find a way to support each other in their escape. And no human actors’ voices are given to them; all the drama is in their exquisitely animated faces and movements. I don't know much about how capybaras and lemurs move, but I guarantee the animators must have studied the movements of cats, dogs and birds in great detail before working on this film. The realism of their work is stunning. Flow was the first ever Latvian film to win an Academy Award, and it was very well deserved.
7. Bugonia (director: Yorgos Lanthimos)
You don't come to a Yorgos Lanthimos film expecting a feel-good experience. In fact, his most recent work (Poor Things, Kind of Kindness) has been disturbing to the point of repulsiveness. And some may find Bugonia to be just more of same indulgent nastiness.
6. The Baltimorons (director: Jay Duplass)
One of the year’s sweetest surprises. This amiable, low-budget comedy - devoid of recognizable stars or predictable comic beats - follows two seemingly mismatched people through an eventful Christmas Eve.
5. The Friend (directors: Scott McGehee, David Siegel )
Unfairly overlooked in a year of otherwise over-hyped cinema, this fine adaptation of Sigrid Nunez' novel features what might be the greatest performance ever given by a canine performer. Naomi Watts plays a lonely academic who inherits a particularly charismatic Great Dane from her late friend/colleague/former lover (Bill Murray). Her slow, stumbling road to accepting - and ultimately loving - this unexpected companion is depicted with great humor and sensitivity.
The Friend also contains a stunning fantasy sequence in which Watts confronts her deceased friend about the pain his suicide caused everyone who loved him. It’s not a rant - it’s sensitive and nuanced - but the anger and anguish she expresses are heartbreaking in their authenticity. And it just about wiped me out. Having myself lost someone I loved to suicide, I can attest to how perfectly this scene captures the emotions of those who are left behind.
4. No Other Land (directors: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Hamdan Ballal, Rachel Szor)
This harrowing documentary, made by a team of both Palestinian and Israeli activists, depicts the slow but devastating destruction of a Palestinian village by Israeli soldiers. It's a bit of guerilla filmmaking, but skillfully edited and assembled - and ultimately heartbreaking, although it offers a few, small glimmers of hope. I'm not qualified to speak in any detail about the conflicts between Israel and Palestine, and fear I'd only sound fatuous if I tried. But I know this film - shocking, saddening and revelatory - is an important document of that conflict.
3. It Was Just an Accident (director: Jafar Panahi)
An epic film about love, trauma, anti-Semitism, the immigrant experience and the power of great architecture. Adrien Brody plays Lazlo Toth, a brilliant Jewish architect who survives the concentration camps, heads to America, and lives in a relative’s spare room while eking out a meager living. After he supervises the building of a home library for a wealthy industrialist (Guy Pearce), his identity is revealed and he’s put to work designing a community center.
There are no happy endings here, no moments of genuine triumph. Lazlo, a man with passionate artistic sensibilities and a traumatic history of loss and suffering, keeps bumping up against the prejudice and materialistic values of those who hold his fate in their hands. But, in a stunning epilogue, Corbet allows him to have the last word.
1. One Battle After Another (director Paul Thomas Anderson)
Best described as a "black-comedy action thriller" (not my original words, but definitely the best way to categorize it), Paul Thomas Anderson's latest film is an exhilarating ride. Watching this film is like strapping yourself into a roller coaster, particularly during a brilliantly executed chase scene through hilly desert terrain in its final chapter. It moves fast, tossing out sight gags and plot points in rapid succession, Much of it is breathlessly funny, but some scenes are underscored with mournful poignancy or well-earned moral outrage. And like the best roller coaster rides, it leaves you giddy and anxious to ride again.
A few other distinctions (and disses)...
Honorable Mention: Sinners, Riefenstahl, Sorry Baby, Highest 2 Lowest, Nouvelle Vague, Lurker
2025 Nominees to the Academy of the Overrated: Blue Moon, Sentimental Value, Friendship










