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The best movies of 2025 so far, according to critics
The best movies of 2025 so far, according to critics

Yahoo

time17-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The best movies of 2025 so far, according to critics

When it comes to movies, why wait for the end-of-year best-of lists? A number of movies have already garnered 3.5 stars or more from The Washington Post's critics and contributors (Ann Hornaday, Ty Burr, Michael Brodeur, Jen Yamato, Michael O'Sullivan, Thomas Floyd and Chris Klimek — identified by their initials below). Throughout the year, we'll update this list — bookmark it! — with the films we loved and where to watch them. (Note that all movies reviewed by The Post in 2025 are eligible for inclusion.) Ryan Coogler's wildly entertaining mash-up of genres, tonal flavors and stunning production values veers confidently between pulpy and profound, never sacrificing what's on its mind for its primary aim, which is to shock and enthrall. There's a culture war raging within the throbbing, thrumming 1930s juke joint that serves as its backdrop; viewers should rest assured — or be forewarned — that this particular skirmish will leave blood on the floor. (R, 137 minutes) — Ann Hornaday Where to watch: In theaters The French writer-director Alain Guiraudie makes transgressive dramas that double as the bleakest of black comedies, where friendships between men veer from social to sexual to antagonistic and back, and where the morality of a country village can be a thin veneer over the darkest deeds of the heart. 'Misericordia' is less sexually explicit than Guiraudie's most well-known movie, the Cannes prizewinner 'Stranger by the Lake,' but it's no less fascinatingly, even amusingly wicked. (Unrated, 104 minutes) — Ty Burr Where to watch: In theaters It takes nerve to make a documentary about the most unpopular period of a massively popular public figure's life. 'One to One: John & Yoko' demonstrates that it's worth the effort. Co-directors Kevin Macdonald and Sam Rice-Edwards have done an impressively deep archival dive to give us this portrait of John Lennon in 1972, the year the ex-Beatle arrived in New York City to stay and embarked on a period of radical politics and art, accompanied by his wife, muse, collaborator and co-instigator Yoko Ono, whose mere presence drove most people nuts. (R, 100 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: In theaters In baseball, an 'eephus' is a trick pitch, a high-arcing throw that discombobulates a hitter while dazzling the crowd. Which is not a bad description of 'Eephus,' a tiny but nearly perfect movie that bids goodbye not only to a local ballfield and the middle-aged men who play on it, but to a vanishing America for whom baseball was the game — a definition of how we congregate and compete and build small myths to sustain us after the final at-bat. (Unrated, 99 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Apple TV+, Google Play, Prime Video, YouTube The guinea fowl is a ubiquitous, henlike bird native to Africa, where it's known for traveling in flocks and raising a noisy alarm when predators are nearby. In Rungano Nyoni's scalding Cannes prizewinner 'On Becoming a Guinea Fowl,' the bird serves as a metaphor for a society that will do anything to avoid listening. Nyoni's film is a keening black comedy with sparks of magical realism and folktale, in which she lets the visual and thematic pieces of the dramatic puzzle fall into place gradually. (PG-13, 99 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Apple TV+, Google Play, Prime Video, YouTube Nearly a decade ago, Britain's perennially hapless rom-com heroine Bridget Jones actually did make it to marriage and motherhood after three movies and countless comical indignities. But in the tender, sexy coda 'Mad About the Boy,' the fourth film adapted from Helen Fielding's Bridget Jones's Diary novel series, she discovers there's more life to live after the happily-ever-after. It's the best of the sequels yet. A buoyant and luminous Renée Zellweger returns as a widowed Bridget, with Leo Woodall of 'The White Lotus' as her younger love interest, Roxster. Michael Morris directs. (R, 124 minutes) — Jen Yamato Where to watch: Peacock Filmed from 2019 to 2023, this documentary is the work of a joint Palestinian-Israeli collective of four filmmakers, but really it's the story of two of them and of a friendship that is both hopeful and hopeless. Basel Adra is a young Palestinian activist who grew up in the southern Hebron Hills. Yuval Abraham is a young Israeli whose political views were changed by studying Arabic in high school; now he tries to get stories of the demolitions of Palestinian villages into an Israeli news media that doesn't want to hear it. As an act of citizen journalism, 'No Other Land' is a document as damning as they come, and it lands in this endless, bitterly complex struggle like an argument that refuses to be rationalized away. (Unrated, 92 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Not yet available for streaming This documentary about the conflict in Ukraine and the citizen army fighting back against Russia's invasion focuses squarely on artists and craftspeople who by necessity have become warriors. Are their senses and sensibilities dulled by the violence around them and the violence they're forced to wreak? Or are they more alert to the pains, paradoxes and even joys of struggling through to the end of each day alive? 'Porcelain War' is a testament to how life's beauty — all the world's fertility an artist is trained to see — endures among privation and death. (R, 87 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Not yet available for streaming Director Walter Salles crafts an epic within an epic: a teeming family drama contained within the melodrama of a country going insane. In 1970, Brazil existed in a state of constant tension, with a military dictatorship overseeing a resurgent economy and the increasingly brutal repression of anyone it saw as stepping out of line. Among the latter was Rubens Paiva (Selton Mello), a civil engineer and congressman, whose disappearance unleashed the fury and determination of his wife, Eunice (Fernanda Torres) — this film's real hero. (PG-13, 136 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Apple TV+, Google Play, Prime Video, YouTube A ghost story, as told from the point of view of the ghost. 'Presence' is more unsettling than scary, more dramatically gripping than nerve-shredding. And it's directed by Steven Soderbergh, so you know it has to be smart. His camera silently roams an old suburban house, unable to step past the doors outside, putting the audience inside the mind of a phantom as it yearns to protect the most vulnerable member of the family that lives there. (R, 84 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Apple TV+, Google Play, Prime Video, YouTube Building his scripts through collaborative improvisation with his casts, director Mike Leigh creates itchy comedy-dramas about life's misfits and reprobates and, occasionally, its optimists — average folk, often, who create and survive their own mundane disasters. 'Hard Truths' stars Marianne Jean-Baptiste as a middle-aged, working-class Londoner with a gift for invective and complaint: a woman of titanic feeling who has somehow become a prisoner of herself. (R, 97 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Apple TV+, Google Play, Prime Video, YouTube This delightfully unhinged musical biopic from director Michael Gracey ('The Greatest Showman') chronicles British pop singer and former boy band sensation Robbie Williams, revisiting the singer's tumultuous rise and celebrating his effervescent body of Brit-pop hits ('Angels' among them). American audiences might be shocked at how well it works on all fronts. Especially considering that Williams is rendered throughout as a CGI chimpanzee. (R, 135 minutes) — Michael Brodeur Where to watch: Apple TV+, Google Play, Prime Video, YouTube Adapting Colson Whitehead's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel that was inspired by the true story of dozens of young men (the majority of them Black) tortured and killed at a reform institution in the Florida Panhandle, RaMell Ross ('Hale County This Morning, This Evening') reinvents the cinema as a language of hope. Hope for what? Survival, connection, bearing witness to historical crimes, the sacrament of peering into another person's soul. It's one of the most visually and sonically gorgeous movies of the year. (PG-13, 140 minutes) — T.B. Where to watch: Apple TV+, Prime Video

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