The Best Movies of 2025 (So Far)

Sunlight continues to last until late in the evening, and the east coast of the United States ‘ conditions remain consistently scorching. The dog days of summer are certainly here. Perhaps so, the summer movie season is coming to an end. However, the biggest hero picture of the year is already on streaming as of press day, and studios]…]

The post The Best Movies of 2025 ( So Far ) appeared first on Den of Geek.

Sunlight continues to last until late in the evening, and the east coast of the United States ‘ conditions remain consistently scorching. The dog days of summer are absolutely here. Perhaps so, the summer movie season is coming to an end. However, the biggest hero picture of the year is already on streaming as of press period, and studios have entered the lull that begins somewhere around mid-August and lasts until the awards season correct picks up next month.

It is for this purpose that we at Den of Geek tend to wait a little bit later than the center of the year in June to do what amounts to a temperature search. The cinematic calendar has a more accurate lineage between” summers” and” after summer,” though July may mark the beginning of the up half of the year. With that said, there have been a number of exceptional movie released both during the sunny months and well before. So we’ve put together the top 2025 shows in order of relevance for your viewing pleasure. But significantly.

Jodie Comer in 28 Times After
Sony Pictures
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28 Times After

Some things get better with age, and that includes Danny Boyle and Alex Garland’s creative partnership. While not quite 28 years from the moment they reinvented the zombie genre with the indie breakout 28 Days Later, it’s still been more than two decades since the director and screenwriter have galloped alongside their rage-infected zombies. And to 28 Times After’s defiant credit, it opens with a  bombastic throwback to indie 2000s cinema that is every bit as frenzied as Boyle’s early work.

The most impressive thing about 28 Times After, however, is what comes afterward. Proving they can conjure youthful rage when it counts, Boyle and Garland quickly pivot to use their post-apocalyptic UK to grapple with more eternal themes like mortality and recognizing the difference between a death with dignity and one without. At times 28 Times After resembles a folk horror movie with its medieval trappings and beatific agrarian setting. There is still an indictment of the modern world here, particularly in a post-Brexit context, but this is a movie about loss, grief, and finally forming a good life. That holds doubly true in any scene that allows Jodie Comer or Ralph Fiennes the time to dominate the frame simply by living in it. 

Cast of the Ballad of Wallis Island
Focus Features

The Ballad of Wallis Island

The Ballad of Wallis Island was previously made as a short film in 2007 by director James Griffiths and stars/writers Tom Basden and Tim Key. Waiting nearly two decades to turn the concept into a feature proved apropos for the wistful dramedy. While on the one hand, this film serves as satire for many of a creatives ‘ worst fears, including being stranded on a remote island with a disgruntled fan, on the other hand, it is a much more thoughtful reflection on the music and cultural influences that influence us and how those touchstones can become anchors that drag at our feet.

Such is the alternating lifestyles of both folk singer Herb McGwyer ( Basden ) and eccentric millionaire Charles Heath ( Key ). Charles has invited Herb to play an intimate concert of old 2000s hits for longtime fans on a hard-to-get-to island. However, Herb only discovers that Charles, a lonely fan, makes up the intimate audience when he arrives. Also Charlie invited Herb’s ex-girlfriend and achingly missed collaborator, the now married Nell Mortimer ( Carey Mulligan ) too. Despite having a set that can go many different ways, all the collaborators, including a warmly elegiac Mulligan, manage to make it never anything less than amusing and cozy. Still, even warmth can burn. Sometimes you can’t go home, but if you do make sure there’s an exit strategy that is not dependent on the ebbing of the tide.

Michael Fassbender in Black Bag
Focus Features

Black Bag

More than one cynic has observed that marriages can be cold wars. However, few actually have government surveillance equipment and the ability to have a body count. If that sounds extreme, then you absolutely must meet George Woodhouse and Kathryn St. Jean, Michael Fassbender and Cate Blanchett’s fascinating MI6 power couple in Steven Soderbergh‘s slippery Black Bag. Benefitting from an erudite and underhanded screenplay by David Koepp ( who hasn’t been this playful in years ), Black Bag is a throwback to a time when sharp thrillers could be seen as date night entertainment for adults who like their thrills served in a frosted glass.

The divinely performed George and Kathryn invite all of their espionage coworkers, including a dazzling ensemble made up of Regé-Jean Page, Naomie Harris, Tom Burke, and Marisa Abela, to dinner, which is where Black Bag even begins. Unbeknownst to the guests though is that George slipped some truth serum into the roast. It undoubtedly makes for lively table conversation. It also acts as an opening salvo for a story about risks that come with trust, loyalty, and knowing your partner, even in a setting where the stakes are no less high than treason and summary execution.

Sally Hawkins in Bring Her Back Review
A24

Bring Her Back

You’ll likely be enchanted by Danny and Michael Philippou, twin Australian brothers known as RackaRacka and RackaRacka, because of their upbeat optimism and joie de vivre. Which makes their two incredibly nihilistic horror movies to date, Talk to Me and now Bring Her Back, all the more curiously bleak. Bring Her Back, like their feature film debut, digs deeply into the darkest and most agonizing parts of doubt and grief, and in this case, as it relates to parents and children.

Take Sally Hawkins ‘ Laura for instance, a gregarious and extroverted foster mother who seems to take sincere interest in Andy ( Billy Barrett ) and Piper ( Sora Wong ). Andy and Piper are step-siblings turned orphans. They also genuinely care about one another, with Piper and the actor portraying her both having visual impairments. So that makes the horror they’re about to be put through by a guardian who is herself unable to let go of the memory of a child she lost all the more insidious, even before demonology and ritualistic incantations emerge. Beyond the horror trappings, Bring Her Back is made so immersive that it’s the naked vulnerability on display in the Philippous ‘ screenplay and the ferocious turn of Hawkins, who in turn channels Bette Davis in Whatever Happened Baby Jane?

Sophie Thatcher in Companion
New Line Cinema / WB

Companion

Something of a spiritual sequel to The Stepford Wives (others might also say a correction ), Drew Hancock’s Companion kicked off a strong year for horror with this mirthful and pleasantly merciless satire. Companion, told from the perspective of an android with a heart of gold named Iris ( Sophie Thatcher ), bravely defends humanity from synthetics and shrewdly assesses humanity as probably unworthy of saving. Jack Quaid certainly has a ball personifying modern day incel entitlement as Josh, the manosphere louse who rented Iris to be his sentient sex doll until he grew bored.

Although the plot becomes a little more complicated than you might anticipate, Hancock reveals a talent for comedy and a firm sense of tone as Companion dances between science fiction, heist movie antics, and finally feminist horror emancipation. After making a splash in the genre in last year’s Heretic, Thatcher also confirms she will be a mainstay with a bubbly performance so brimming with life that it even got a bunch of entertainment writers to sympathize with the AI.

Paul Rudd in Friendship Review
A24

Friendship

Tim Robinson’s brand of comedy can be an acquired taste. His jokes have always been punishingly cruel, relying on him to make you cry until your muscles hurt. Now that sadism has been elevated to a joyous place in Friendship, a new laugher written and directed by Andrew DeYoung that gets a lot of mileage out of our familiarity with Paul Rudd. After all, Paul Rudd is a cool dude, and his on-screen Austin is in fact the coolest with his I Love You Man smile and Anchorman-style swag.

But it’s only after audiences are encouraged to recognize Robinson’s needy and pathetic Craig is more than just a clinger, but also a kind of milquetoast 2020s Travis Bickle, that the penny drops. Friendship is a comedy told from the delusional perspective of the villain, so watching him destroy his marriage to Kate Mara, his heinous job at a parasitic tech company, and eventually even his bromance with Rudd takes on a biblical degree of schadenfreude. Also, hold out for the toad glands scene.

Denzel Washington in Lowest 2 Highest 2
Apple / A24

Lowest 2 Highest 2

Akira Kurosawa has remained one of the most malleable and influential filmmakers when it comes to adapting and reimagining his works for other cultures. From The Magnificent Seven to A Fistful of Dollars, to even Bill Nighy’s under-appreciated gem from a few years ago, Living, the Japanese master has inspired many great films in the West (and to be fair was himself not immune from painting the works of William Shakespeare in samurai red). So it is that one of Kurosawa’s less flashy efforts, the 1960s-set ransom thriller High and Low, has proven fertile ground to plant a deeply Americanized and New York-centric Spike Lee joint: Lowest 2 Highest 2.

The story of a magisterial music executive (Denzel Washington) who sees his kingdom threatened when envious eyes think they have kidnapped his son—but instead snatch the teenage child of Washington’s BFF and ostensible valet (Jeffrey Wright)—Lowest 2 Highest 2 is a throwback thriller and morality tale about the choices that define a soul. Yet the film also marks the fifth collaboration between Lee and Washington, and arguably their most potent since Malcolm X 33 years ago. In this context, the film takes on a seemingly personal quality about the expectations placed on Black artists by a world that thinks it has ownership over their talent and attention. It’s a trenchant, brooding work filled with self-examination and, perhaps, accusation.

Tom Hiddleston and Annalise Basso in The Life of Chuck
NEON

The Life of Chuck

Stephen King is an author usually celebrated for his gift for suspense and terror. His readers are able to identify him just as well for the ebullient humanism and moral certitude he frequently displays throughout his writing. It seems safe to say that writer-director Mike Flanagan can be counted as one of those devoted admirers. The filmmaker already has given us the best King adaptations made in this century, including Gerald’s Game and Doctor Sleep. The Life of Chuck can now be added to that list. Like Rob Reiner and Frank Darabont before him, Flanagan has picked up one of King’s less well-known tales or short stories that is only the sentimentality and none of the pesky horror crowbarred in. Even with its enigmatic mystery set at the end of the world, it’s entirely the” good vibes”.

Seriously though, the apocalypse does seem to be nigh in one of the film’s disparate vignettes where disasters around the globe are said to be occurring. But Flanagan nor Life of Chuck, give them any mind while focusing on the failed, but nonetheless enduring, marriage of Marty ( Chiwetel Ejiofor ) and ex-wife Felicia ( Karen Gillan ). The biggest mystery of all is how this story connects with other chapters about a few days in the life of a mild-mannered accountant named Chuck ( Tom Hiddleston, Benjamin Pajak, or Jacob Tremblay, depending on the sequence ). But the logic of the narrative is far less important than the emotional truth it evokes every time one of the Chucks gives into the ache in his heart, or the twinkle in his toes.

It is truly the most amazing crowd-pleaser one can see this year, and it deserves a much larger audience.

Molly Gordon in Oh Hi
Sony Pictures Classics

Oh, Hi!

Never let the importance of a secure word and clearly defined boundaries be undervalued. Iris and Isaac ( Molly Gordon and Logan Lerman ) could use more of both in Oh, Hi!, a light but charming comedy from director Sophie Brooks, working from a script she co-wrote with Gordon. Iris and Isaac are on their first romantic getaway from the city when they are caught in a cautionary tale of dating don’ts after discovering handcuffs in their AirBNB.

Unfortunately it is only while tied up that Isaac makes the insensitive choice to admit he never thought they were a couple, even in spite of the fact that they’re on a weekend holiday with red wine and sautéed scallops. Iris in turn makes the rash decision to not unbound her non-beau until they can, uh, talk things out. Oh, Hello! is a parable about mixed signals and the worst-case scenarios brought on by sexual misadventure. It is a kind of millennial parable. is a bemusing rom-com of a frothy sort. Geraldine Viswanathan and John Reynolds serve as two friends roped into the high-concept crucible, and it’s narrative’s rough edges are smoothed out by a game cast that includes both actors, both of whom play the role of friends, in an ultimately sincere reflection on the dangers of leaving yourself exposed to the world, both figuratively and literally.

Michael B Jordan in Sinners Review
WB

Sinners

It is still hard to fathom why so many prognosticators second-guessed Ryan Coogler going all-in on an original horror movie via Sinners. More than once Coogler has proven to be a storyteller with superb instincts for marrying artistry with commercial affability, as seen in his soulful work in franchise films like Creed and Black Panther. Still, Sinners is Coogler unchained from IP, fan expectations, or anything but his own muses, which, when captured in stunning IMAX 65mm photography, became a blockbuster legend.

Simply the way Coogler films rolling fields of cotton in Jim Crow and Depression era Mississippi alone is poignant enough to be worth the price of admission. Coogler uses pulpy genre elements like vampires and bootleggers with itchy trigger fingers to support a larger narrative about the transcendent and everlasting power of Black art, connecting culture with its future and past at the same time. Both his own family history and the Southern folklore and mythology are deeply rooted in the origin of the blues. One magnificent interlude in particular, which occurs when Miles Caton picks up his guitar at a juke joint, carries the movie to a special rarified space. It’s also supremely entertaining to digest all that in a movie where Michael B. Jordan dons dueling fedoras, tommy guns, and Southern accents.

David Corenswet and Rachel Brosnahan as Superman and Lois Lane
Warner Bros.

Superman

The oldest superhero in the canon has inexplicably proven the most difficult to adapt in the modern age. A live-action Superman who made you both believe and care that a man could fly has remained elusive in the 21st century despite the efforts of numerous directors, showrunners, and storytellers of various ideologies. While James Gunn’s Superman is by no means a perfect film, it is the first time since the days of Christopher Reeve and Dick Donner that the Man of Tomorrow felt vital in the here and now of today.

A large element of that win comes from the casting. Clark Kent is portrayed in a way that is neither a put-on like Reeve’s interpretation nor a loner’s burden, like the last few big-screen Kal-Els. Corenswet makes an alien born on another planet feel human ( or one might simply say American ). However, this Superman has its origins in Rachel Brosnahan’s flawless Lois Lane. Their chemistry is so infectious it even allows the movie to hover over the picture’s patchier elements, like stuffing in four other superhero pals from” the Justice Gang”, plus plenty of top-heavy worldbuilding. Yes, Superman ‘ 25 tries to do a lot, but what it does best is give the title character back his hope and heart.

Alison Brie and Dave Franco in Together
NEON

Together

For a long time, Dave Franco and Alison Brie have been the” cool kids” duo of independent film, and writer-director Michael Shanks makes use of this to a sinister effect in Together. A movie focused on a co-dependent and deeply unhappy hipster power couple whose gone to seed in their 30s, it’s arguable whether protagonists Tim ( Franco ) and Millie ( Brie ) even remember a time when they weren’t together upon leaving their former kingdom of Brooklyn for the provincial drudgery of upstate New York.

When they discover that upstate is more than just teaching positions and hiking trails, their passion and communication skills will be put to the test. Out in the woods awaits a Lovecraftian power that will force the pair to get a whole lot closer in what amounts to some fairly lighthearted body horror. Together has a couple of gross-out sequences inspired by Cronenberg, but it’s really the movie’s ability to use the horror of your body craving to merge—in every sense of the word—with your significant other’s as a kind of high-end, New Age couple’s therapy session that makes Together an oddly wholesome date night flick.

Josh Brolin in Weapons
New Line Cinema / WB

Weapons

Based solely on this list, it’s obvious that studios and production companies are increasingly leaning toward horror in the creation of successful original stories. But when those stories can be as twisted and satisfying as Zach Cregger’s new sleeper hit, Weapons, it is difficult to argue with the results. A follow-up ( and perhaps a crossover between the two universes )? with Cregger’s Barbarian from 2022, Weapons focuses on a community torn asunder when all the children from a single elementary classroom awaken from their beds at 2: 17 a. m. and vanish to parts unknown in the night.

Confidently told in a novelistic format with various characters leading their own chapters and narrative timelines—including the teacher of the class that disappeared ( Julia Garner ) and the father of one of the missing children who blames the instructor explicitly ( Josh Brolin ) —Weapons is a patient ensemble piece that at times better resembles a a studio drama from 20 years ago than a horror movie. What is a deeply troubling and satisfying sophomore effort is underpinned by the true malevolence at play and the subtly subtly allusions about adults unable to protect their children from ( ahem ) weapons in the classroom.

The post The Best Movies of 2025 ( So Far ) appeared first on Den of Geek.

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