28 Years Later (2025)
28 Years Later is a bleak, poetic continuation. A story less about the infected and more about what survives inside the people left behind. Boyle blends ferocity with quiet reflection as a boy comes of age in a ruined Scotland, confronting new mutations, old myths, and the fragile hope of something better. A brutal, contemplative journey about memory, identity, and the thin thread of humanity that refuses to die.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Together (2025)
Together is a clever, unsettling blend of relationship drama and body horror that lands its emotional beats more effectively than its scares. While the final act stumbles with over-explanation, the film’s slow, uncomfortable tension and sharp performances make it a compelling watch. We give it a solid 4 out of 5!
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Superman (2025)
James Gunn’s new Superman aims for a more grounded, human take on the hero, less spectacle, more heart, but the execution doesn’t quite land. Despite strong turns from Edi Gathegi and Nicholas Hoult, the film struggles with flat character dynamics, cartoonish villains, uneven humour, and CGI-heavy action that undercuts the emotional stakes.
Click the title or image to check out the full review!
Click the Link Below (2025)
Click the Link Below follows filmmaker Audun Amundsen as he buys into the world of online “contrepreneurs,” paying US$7,500 for a mentorship that never quite proves its worth. The doc peeks behind the hype and hustle with rare access and quiet unease, but its gentle approach stops it from landing a real critique. Insightful, revealing, and frustratingly cautious.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
A Quiet Love (2025)
A Quiet Love follows three Deaf couples across generations in Ireland’s first ISL feature film: a tender, beautifully crafted portrait of love, identity, and resilience within the Deaf community. Directed by Garry Keane, it blends intimate storytelling with thoughtful subtitles and an immersive Deaf-led soundscape, offering a rare, deeply human window into Deaf life.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Food Delivery: Fresh from the West Philippine Sea (2025)
Food Delivery: Fresh from the West Philippine Sea is a tense, human‑centred documentary that follows Filipino fishermen and Coast Guard personnel risking their lives near Scarborough Shoal. Told entirely from the Filipino perspective, it captures quiet heroism, fear, and resilience as small wooden boats face off against far stronger forces.
Click the title or image to check out the full review!
Pōneke Classical Sessions (2025)
Pōneke Classical Sessions is a vibrant short documentary about Wellington musicians reshaping classical music; breaking from its colonial, elitist traditions and rebuilding it as something inclusive, playful, and community‑driven. Through candid interviews and live sessions in unconventional venues, it shows a new generation reclaiming the genre with experimentation, honesty, and heart.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Wildboy (2025)
Wildboy follows Brando, a young Kiwi adventurer driven by ADHD and a hunger for purpose, as he tackles epic solo journeys; from walking Aotearoa’s entire coastline to crossing Greenland and cycling the Australian outback. Stunningly shot and emotionally open, the film captures both the beauty and the brutality of long‑distance exploration, revealing how endurance becomes a path to identity, mental health, and self‑discovery.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Os Barcos (2025)
Os Barcos is a slow-burning, quietly powerful portrait of Gamboa, a Brazilian favela caught between viral tourism and everyday survival. Without narration or commentary, it watches locals cook, fish, build, and fight for dignity as influencers flock to a rooftop restaurant that masks deep inequality. As the Iemanjá festival nears, the community’s resilience, pride, and struggle against rising tensions come sharply into focus.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror (2025)
Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror is a warm, energetic documentary tracing how Richard O’Brien’s scrappy 1973 stage show became a global cult phenomenon. Through candid cast interviews, archival footage, and O’Brien’s reflections on identity, it celebrates the film’s legacy as a haven for outsiders and a joyful anthem of queer liberation.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Through A Glass, Lightly (2025)
A quiet nine‑minute portrait of Brian Scadden, one of the few artists keeping wet‑plate photography alive. Through a Glass, Lightly contrasts his slow, intentional craft with our fast digital habits, offering a gentle reminder of the value of patience, permanence, and truly seeing.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Two Travelling Aunties (2025)
Two Travelling Aunties follows Norah and Susie as they trade expectations for open roads, turning a life of quiet resilience into one of freedom, love, and adventure. What begins as a light travel story becomes a tender portrait of two women carving out a world where they can finally live as themselves.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review
Voices from the Abyss (2025)
A stark, poetic glimpse into Acapulco’s legendary La Quebrada cliff divers, Voices from the Abyss blends striking black‑and‑white imagery with the divers’ own reflections to reveal a community shaped by ritual, danger, and devotion. More visual poem than traditional documentary, it honours the legacy, labour, and quiet resilience behind every 100‑foot leap.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!
Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning (2025)
Ethan Hunt faces his most dangerous mission yet in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning, as he and the IMF race to stop a rogue AI capable of global destruction. Packed with massive stunts, relentless momentum, and the franchise’s signature practical spectacle, this final chapter delivers high‑octane thrills even as it wrestles with uneven pacing and a villain that never fully lands.
Click on the title or image to check out the full review!