The 10 Best Films I Watched in 2025 (Out of 70)

I watched 70 films in 2025. These 10 hit the hardestโ€”some like a gut-punch, some like a mirror, and a few like a chaotic little group chat that accidentally tells the truth.

Iโ€™m not ranking these by โ€œobjective greatnessโ€ because Iโ€™m not a robot (and even robots have Letterboxd opinions now). This is about impact: the movies that stayed in my head after the credits, the ones that made me rethink how we love, cope, deny, perform, surviveโ€”especially under systems that profit from our confusion.

1) Anora โ€” the โ€œfunny-thrillerโ€ that turns into a spiritual audit

My notes were: powerful, funny, engagingโ€”then boom: self-denial, losing yourself, materialism as emotional Novocain. Thatโ€™s still the best summary.

Sean Baker takes what looks like a chaotic modern Cinderella setupโ€”Brooklyn sex worker meets rich kid, sudden marriageโ€”and uses it to expose the soft, seductive violence of money and fantasy. Itโ€™s fast, entertaining, and lowkey terrifying because itโ€™s not about villains twirling mustaches. Itโ€™s about how easy it is to trade pieces of yourself for a story that โ€œsoundsโ€ like winning. And then realizing you sold the wrong parts. Wikipedia+2IMDb+2

2) Iโ€™m Still Here (Ainda Estou Aqui) โ€” grief as resistance

This one is a true-story gut-check: a family living under Brazilโ€™s military dictatorship, and the motherโ€”Eunice Paivaโ€”having to rebuild reality after the forced disappearance of her husband. Itโ€™s not just โ€œsad.โ€ Itโ€™s that specific suffering families carry when the state disappears people and then tries to disappear the truth too.

What hit me: the film doesnโ€™t treat survival like a motivational poster. It treats survival like workโ€”like courage you donโ€™t get credit for until decades later (if youโ€™re lucky). And it lands even harder knowing itโ€™s adapted from Marcelo Rubens Paivaโ€™s memoir, meaning this is literally memory fighting back. Wikipedia+2AP News+2

3) Babygirl โ€” desire, denial, and the chaos of not knowing yourself

This movie is a psychological maze about sex drive and fantasyโ€”especially that maddening human thing where we want what we deny we wantโ€ฆ and we also donโ€™t want it to be clear, because clarity comes with consequences.

Halina Reijn builds it as an erotic thriller where a powerful CEO risks everything in an affair with a younger intern, but the real thriller is internal: the tug-of-war between identity, control, shame, and impulse. Itโ€™s messy in a way that feels honestโ€”because humans are messy, and pretending otherwise is how we end up emotionally illiterate with good lighting. Wikipedia+1

4) The Hypnosis (Hypnosen) โ€” cringe comedy with a philosophy degree

A couple building a womenโ€™s health app goes to pitch it at a fancy startup competitionโ€ฆ and then hypnosis cracks the โ€œnormal personโ€ mask right off. Watching it felt like being trapped at a networking retreat where everyone is performing โ€œpurpose,โ€ and then one person accidentally becomes real.

Itโ€™s funny, but itโ€™s also a sharp little satire on conformity: the way โ€œprofessionalismโ€ becomes a cage, and how quickly society punishes anyoneโ€”especially womenโ€”for stepping outside approved behavior. Also: it premiered at Karlovy Vary and cleaned up attention back home in Sweden (major Guldbagge love). Wikipedia+2kviff.com+2

5) Sick of Myself โ€” body horror, attention economy, and the saddest laugh

This is an absurdist black comedy thatโ€™s shockingly deep about self-hate, image, and attention as a survival strategyโ€”until it becomes a trap.

The story is basically: a woman spirals into increasingly extreme behavior to become the center of attention, and the film dares you to ask whether youโ€™re judging herโ€ฆ or recognizing the culture that taught her attention equals worth. It premiered in Cannesโ€™ Un Certain Regard, which makes sense because itโ€™s both hilarious and psychologically rude (compliment). Wikipedia+1

2025 watchlist truth: A lot of โ€œmental healthโ€ discourse is really just people trying to name the pain caused by systems that monetize insecurity.

6) A House on Fire (Casa en flames) โ€” family love, but make it explosive

I went in expecting โ€œfamily drama,โ€ and got a sharply funny, painfully real pressure-cooker: a divorced mom drags the whole family to a Costa Brava house weekend while everything simmering underneath finally boils over.

Itโ€™s the kind of movie that understands a brutal truth: family can be the source of your deepest wounds and the last thing standing when the world collapses. Also, quick correction to my own brain: itโ€™s Catalan/Spanish (not French), and it skewers bourgeois hypocrisy with a smile that shows teeth. Wikipedia+1

7) Soul Kitchen โ€” joy as a serious human need

This is the โ€œsimple but happyโ€ pick, and I mean that with full respect. Fatih Akin gives us Hamburg life, a chaotic restaurant, friendship, music, and a kind of grounded optimism that doesnโ€™t feel fake.

In a year where so much cinema (and reality) is about collapse, Soul Kitchen is a reminder that joy isnโ€™t a distractionโ€”itโ€™s fuel. It even snagged major Venice love back in 2009, which is wild for a crowd-pleasing comedy. Wikipedia+2Wexner Center for the Arts+2

8) Happening (Lโ€™ร‰vรฉnement) โ€” a necessary reminder in a rollback era

Set in 1963 France, a student tries to obtain an abortion when itโ€™s illegalโ€”meaning the state forces her into danger, isolation, and humiliation, then pretends itโ€™s โ€œmorality.โ€

This film is intense because it refuses to look away. Itโ€™s based on Annie Ernauxโ€™s memoir and it won the Golden Lion at Venice, which tells you how hard it hit. Watching it nowโ€”while womenโ€™s rights are openly under attack againโ€”lands like a warning flare. Wikipedia+2Vanity Fair+2

9) The Encampments โ€” student courage vs. the crackdown machine

This documentary is painfully relevant: it tracks the student encampment movement that ignited at Columbia and spread across campuses, as students protested their universitiesโ€™ ties to the war on Gaza and faced escalating repression.

It features Mahmoud Khalilโ€”who later became a symbol of the U.S. crackdown on pro-Palestinian activism when he was detained by immigration authorities, and then released months later after a judgeโ€™s ruling. Whatever your politics, that sequence should set off every civil-liberties alarm bell you own. AP News+3Wikipedia+3Watermelon Pictures+3

10) The Charmer (Charmรธren) โ€” immigration, desperation, and moral weather

Set in Denmark, this is a tough, realistic story about an Iranian man racing against time to secure legal stayโ€”trying to find a woman to marry, and slowly revealing how love, manipulation, fear, and trauma can tangle together.

Itโ€™s not interested in easy moral judgment. Itโ€™s interested in the psychological cost of bordersโ€”how immigration systems turn relationships into survival math. The film premiered at San Sebastiรกn in the New Directors program, which fits: itโ€™s controlled, smart, and emotionally sharp. DFI+2Film Forum+2


Honorable mentions (aka: the bench was stacked)

  • Emilia Pรฉrez
  • The Brutalist
  • The Seed of the Sacred Fig
  • No Other Land
  • The Idiots
  • Certified Copy
  • The Delinquents
  • Passages
  • Lurker
  • The Bests
  • Die My Love
  • Harvest
  • Moon
  • Non-fiction
  • Yannick
  • The History of Sound

The pattern I didnโ€™t expect

A lot of my โ€œbest of 2025โ€ ended up being about denialโ€”personal denial, family denial, state denial, cultural denialโ€”and the moment it cracks. Thatโ€™s not just cinema. Thatโ€™s the world. And from Dearborn to anywhere else, we know what itโ€™s like to live with big narratives forced onto real human livesโ€”and still insist on being human anyway.

Disclaimer: This list reflects personal viewing and opinion, not medical/legal advice or official endorsements. Film availability, versions, and release dates may vary by region and platform.


Sources (for the factual film details)

  1. Anora โ€” Wikipedia (release, Cannes, awards). Wikipedia
  2. Anora โ€” IMDb / Rotten Tomatoes (synopsis). IMDb+1
  3. Iโ€™m Still Here โ€” Wikipedia (story basis, credits). Wikipedia
  4. Iโ€™m Still Here โ€” AP / Reuters (Oscar win). AP News+1
  5. Babygirl โ€” Wikipedia / Rotten Tomatoes (premise, release). Wikipedia+1
  6. The Hypnosis โ€” Wikipedia / KVIFF (premise, premiere). Wikipedia+1
  7. The Hypnosis โ€” Guldbagge Awards page (nominations/wins context). Wikipedia
  8. Sick of Myself โ€” Wikipedia / Cannes (premiere context). Wikipedia+1
  9. A House on Fire (Casa en flames) โ€” Wikipedia (plot/setup). Wikipedia
  10. Soul Kitchen โ€” Wikipedia / Wex Arts (Venice prizes). Wikipedia+1
  11. Happening โ€” Wikipedia / Venice coverage (premise, Golden Lion). Wikipedia+1
  12. The Encampments โ€” Watermelon Pictures / Wikipedia / coverage (film description). The Washington Post+3Watermelon Pictures+3Wikipedia+3
  13. Mahmoud Khalil release โ€” AP (timeline detail). AP News
  14. The Charmer โ€” Danish Film Institute / Film Forum / Wikipedia (premise + premiere). DFI+2Film Forum+2