2025 was quite the year for horror. If Billy Joel or
Fallout Boy wanted to add more verses to “We Didn’t Start the Fire” covering
all of the horrid shit that happened in the world in 2025, the song would be
longer than
Gone With the Wind. But I’m going to focus on movie-related
horror. You’re welcome.
Horror movies had a really good year at the box office. The
Conjuring: The Last Rites raked in nearly $500 million, by far the best
performance in the entire franchise (The Nun is second with $366
million). And The Conjuring isn’t the only franchise that saw solid
returns. Final Destination: Bloodlines, Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,
28 Years Later, and Black Phone 2 all made plenty of money to
guarantee future sequels, quality be damned in at least one case.
It wasn’t just franchises that were rolling in money
either. Two original films - Sinners and Weapons - came out of
nowhere to pull in well over $600 million between the two of the them. On top
of their box office returns, both films are popping in top ten movie lists all
over the place. Sinners is even getting some Best Picture buzz, though I’d
argue Weapons is a much better movie.
Setting aside box office, there were plenty more horror
movies to choose from, especially if we expand our definition of horror movie
to include movies that you might consider more action than horror. No, not Jurassic
World: Rebirth. Whether or not you consider being chased by mutant dinosaurs
horror, that movie (and entire franchise save for Jurassic Park) most
definitely does not deserve our attention. Unless that attention is pure unadulterated
disdain.
Assuming you’ve seen the movies above (or don’t want to),
what kind of horror movie do you prefer? Killer robots, perhaps? Companion
and M3GAN 2.0 have you covered. Classic horror? Guillermo del Toro made
a new Frankenstein film. Campy slashers? Heart Eyes and Clown
in a Cornfield spill blood everywhere. Thrillers that may or may not be
psychological thrillers? The Housemaid, Locked, and Bugonia
all exist. You can also just peruse the annual parade of Blumhouse, A24, Neon, and
Shudder lineups to find something that sounds interesting. Be picky with those
lineups though. Neon in particular puts out some stuff that will make you feel
icky for days.
If none of that sounds appealing to you, might I suggest
something from the one person that immediately makes you think of horror? 2025
featured six Stephen King adaptations. Yes, six, and two of them are television
series. I know that sounds like I lot and you’re right. In fact, I wouldn’t
recommend the two television series because (1) Welcome to Derry, a
prequel to It, is aggressively mediocre when it isn’t being aggressively
gross, and (2) I didn’t know The Institute even existed until ten
minutes ago, let alone watched it.
But you should definitely carve out some time to watch
the four movies. And you should do it in the following order. First, The
Monkey is a batshit crazy movie about a possessed organ grinder monkey toy
that is the perfect shock opening. Second, The Long Walk features a dystopian
competition where teenagers walk until only one is left alive. It’ll help calm
you down after The Monkey, though “calm down” is a relative term. Third,
The Running Man is another dystopian competition, but is very much an
action flick. And it’s not the campy (though entertaining) schlock that was the
80s Arnold Schwarzenegger romp. And finally, The Life of Chuck is not a
horror movie. Surprise! It’s a very pleasant movie, if not straight-up tear
jerker, to remind you that King is really good at writing characters in general.
It’s the kind of happy ending that fits King, and this little movie marathon,
to a tee.
As you can see, horror was everywhere, all year long. And
you’ll see it throughout these entire rankings.
Best of the best
of the best, sir!
This might be the toughest top five I’ve chosen of all
the years I’ve been reviewing movies. Not because there were a lot of great
movies, but because there weren’t.
· The
Running Man - A faithful adaptation of Stephen King book that is
also one of the best non-superhero action flicks in years. I can’t wait to
watch this movie several more times and read the book at least one more time.
· A
Big Bold Beautiful Journey - So weird and so good. I was already
really high on Margot Robbie and Colin Farrell, but after this film I will
watch them in anything.
· Thunderbolts*
- My wife has been very critical of the recent MCU films and series and even
she thought Thunderbolts* was a really good movie. Since she is also a
film major, that’s quite the ringing endorsement.
· Weapons
- Best movie of the year. Also, the most surprising, out-of-nowhere movie of
the year. And it has the most satisfying ending to a movie this year, if not
this millennia.
· The
Life of Chuck - I heard good things about The Life of Chuck, but
the movie blew those compliments out of the water. And if you’re wary of
Stephen King stories because you don’t like horror, you can relax this time.
It’s the opposite of horror but still feels every bit like King.
Canada, huh? Almost
made it.
If you named any of these next few movies as being in
your top movies of the year list, I would just nod at you. The difference
between these and my top five is very little.
· F1
- It was a photo finish but F1 just missed making my top five. I still
won’t watch an actual F1 race on purpose, but I’ll watch this movie many more
times.
· Fantastic
Four: First Steps - Third reboot’s a charm. The difference this
time was the filmmakers put more than a token effort into casting, writing,
directing, production, and capturing the true essence of the Fantastic Four.
That token effort is why the 20th Century Fox logo was half-buried in the Void
in Deadpool 3.
· Companion
- I love when movies can really surprise me. I read the synopsis and watched
the opening scene to see if it would pique my interest. I was not prepared at
all for the direction the film took and it was amazing.
· Superman
- Now that is how to make a proper Superman film. Marvel will finally
have real competition and all it took was for Warner Brothers to hire a Marvel
director (James Gunn) to run the whole franchise. Also, hat tip for the best
teaser trailer of the year (the Weapons teaser was an extremely close
second).
· Black
Bag - A spy movie, but a very different one than usual. It’s more
of a whodunit than spy thriller, so I guess it’s also a mystery movie, but a
different one than usual. Trust me, it’s worth it.
The Squirmers
These movies were good, but they are tough to watch for
one reason or another. Rewatchability played a big factor in my rankings here.
Parts of each of these would be really difficult to sit through more than once.
So, they get a separate category so you don’t accidentally watch them on date
night.
· The
Luckiest Man in America - It’s a really interesting story, but the
title character is not someone you’d want to be stuck talking to at any
gathering.
· The
Assessment - Three excellent performances from Elizabeth Olsen, Himesh
Patel, and Alicia Vikander highlight this highly intriguing and quite
disturbing dystopian story. Vikander goes all in with character that will give
you both the ick and the urge to punch the next kid you see throwing a tantrum.
Surprisingly
Decent
It is almost impossible to go into a movie without some
sort of expectations. Usually, it’s from something you saw in a trailer, actors
who are in the movie, or what you already know about the director. These are
the ones that surprised me...in a good way.
· The
Long Walk - It was both a disappointment and better than I
expected. I was disappointed that they didn’t stray a bit more from the Stephen
King’s novel, but I was also pleased at how well it captured much of the source
material. I could just have easily put this in my disappointments category, but
I liked it enough not to.
· The
Roses - Definitely a better version of The War of the Roses,
but also quite a bit different. There is far less hatred and pettiness in The
Roses, which I appreciated. If that’s not what you are looking for, you can
always watch Real Housewives.
· The
Legend of Ochi - It brought back memories of the quest movies I
loved as a kid, particularly the ones featuring actual puppets. And it did it
without aiming for the dimmest kids in class.
· Sinners
- Sinners is getting a lot more praise than Weapons and I really
don’t understand why. Sinners is just a much better version of From
Dusk Til Dawn, but that’s not really saying much. And, yes, Sinners
suffers from the same problem as From Dusk Til Dawn. When the vampires
go RAWR, all of the stuff shown prior to that immediately stops mattering.
· The
Amateur - A very solid spy/revenge thriller that far too few people
noticed. And it’s one that keeps you guessing until the end. You’re welcome.
Movies for Me
Movies for Me are my guilty pleasures. Whether or not
they’re objectively good doesn’t matter. All that matters is they did the thing
I wanted them to do - entertain me.
· The
Gorge - Right off the bat, the movie that makes you want to put your
hand on my shoulder and gently ask “are you alright? I mean, really alright?”
· Death
of a Unicorn - “No, yeah. I’m definitely alright.”
· Mission:
Impossible - Final Reckoning - This movie was messy, forgot a bunch
of stuff from the previous entry, and got just plain silly with some of the
action scenes. But it - and the franchise as a whole - is just so entertaining.
There’s no way this is the finale of the franchise.
· Love
Hurts - It tickled me that Marshawn Lynch was kind of good at
acting. Let’s just keep moving.
· Novocaine
- Speaking of hurt, I’m finally recovered from experiencing Novocaine in
4DX. I don’t recommend it. The 4DX, that is. The movie was fun.
· The
Monkey - Bonkers. Utterly bonkers.
· Locked
- I didn’t know it was possible to make an entire movie take place in a parked
SUV, let alone a movie that isn’t total crap.
· Heads
of State - The only reason this movie worked on any level is because of
Idris Elba and John Cena. There was surprisingly good chemistry between them in
this otherwise absurd action comedy.
· Fountain
of Youth - It wants to be National Treasure unless it wants to
be Indiana Jones. But it ended up much closer Tomb Raider (the
Alicia Vikander one) unless it was closer to Uncharted. Can you tell I
like this genre of movie?
· Deep
Cover - I swear to you I’m alright.
Movies Not for Me
Flip a coin on these films. These movies were okay and
also were movies. None of them spoke to me in any way, but maybe they spoke to
you.
· One
Battle After Another - If Hamnet doesn’t become the most
overhyped movie heading into the Oscars, One Battle After Another will
win that title. Had this movie landed with me, I would have put it in The
Squirmers category. Sean Penn’s Captain Lockjaw is one of the most disturbing
characters you will ever experience outside of the Trump administration.
· Heart
Eyes - I still don’t know what to make of this silly horror flick,
so this seemed like the right category for it.
· The
Accountant 2 - A very meh action movie that doubles down on the premise
that autism provides practically superhuman computer hacking powers. Maybe this
is really why RFK Jr. links autism to vaccines.
· Eenie
Meanie - It’s kind of good, I think? Samara Weaving was solid, but it’s
one of those movies that you forget about an hour after watching it.
· Caught
Stealing - I prefer my Darren Aronofsky movies weirder than this. Caught
Stealing is decent, but a bit uneven. Zoe Kravitz was given far too little
to do, but Austin Butler was pretty good.
Intermission
There are so many TV series that people insist we watch
that I sacrifice watching some movies to fit those series in. After looking at
the length of this list, it seems I sacrificed a lot more than I thought.
·
Welcome to Wrexham - Season 4 -
I’m still amazed that a documentary series about a sport I hated when I was kid
might be my current favorite show to watch. I genuinely tear up more than once
during each season and season four was no different.
·
Ted Lasso - People recommended
this show so much that we finally caved in and subscribed to AppleTV. We binged
the entire season and it was so very much worth the subscription cost.
·
Man on the Inside - Season 2 -
Like Ted Lasso, Man on the Inside is a feel-good show. It’s a lighthearted
break from sci-fi and dystopian shows.
·
Reacher - Season 3 - Season three
was a great rebound after the very uneven season two. I hope it doesn’t turn
into a Star Trek type thing where only the odd numbered seasons are the
good ones.
·
The Residence - A goofy little
romp set in the White House that might be a Knives Out show unless it’s
a Clue series in disguise. If you like a good mystery that doesn’t take
itself too seriously, definitely make time for The Residence.
·
Taylor Swift: The End of an Era -
Yeah. I like Taylor Swift. Not as much as my wife likes her, but I have more
than several of her song lyrics memorized. I might have also teared up once.
Maybe.
·
Paradise - I had no idea what to
expect of this show, but it ended up being one of my favorites of the year. The
reveal at the end of the first episode alone makes the entire series worth
watching.
·
Fallout - Season 1 - This
definitely falls in my Movies for Me category. It’s pretty silly, very campy,
and my eyes were glued to the entire first season. I can’t wait to start season
2, but I have to finish writing this thing first.
·
Alien: Earth - I’m glad they
stayed away from all the Engineers nonsense introduced by Prometheus and
I liked the new creatures they added. But this series is a really slow burn. So
slow, in fact, that my son grew bored by episode five (of eight) and didn’t
finish the rest of the season. I did finish it, but season two is going to have
a shorter leash for me.
·
Wednesday - Season 2 - I actually
didn’t sacrifice much time for this one. The first episode was quite bad, so we
moved on to other series. And let’s all agree that season one wasn’t
particularly good either. This franchise is Temu Harry Potter wrapped in Addams
Family schlock.
·
Welcome to Derry - I’m pretty
disappointed that it’s nothing more than a prequel to It. But they sure
did up the ante on the gore.
·
Severance - Season 1 - Now
this is my kind of story. Science fiction. Dystopia. General all-around
weirdness. Like I said about Fallout, I’ll get to season two after I
write a couple thousand more words here.
·
Only Murders in the Building - Season 5
- I’m very impressed out how well this series has maintained the quality and
intrigue. It even acknowledged the bizarre subplot of Howard and the doorman
robot in the best way possible when Nathan Lane’s Teddy Dimas literally asked
if Howard is fucking the robot.
We’re Really Only
in it for the Money
Nothing provides studios more inspiration than easy
money. Nothing provides studios more fear than expiring IP rights. That’s how
we continually get an annual plethora of lackluster uninspired sequels,
remakes, and franchise entries.
·
How to Train Your Dragon - The
original animated movie was really good and this new film is a shot-for-shot
remake, but with CGI. The CGI is fantastic, but these is no other
distinguishing factor. Not even the chief, played once again by Gerard Butler.
· Avatar:
Fire and Ash - Avatar almost needs its own category; I
struggled between putting it here and putting in the next category. On the one
hand, there is no other film that even sniffs the spectacular visual effects
James Cameron has crafted for this franchise. He really does care about making
something people want to see. On the other hand, the writing leaves a ton to be
desired, which further proves he just wants to make something people want to see.
· Predator:
Badlands - You know a franchise is completely out of ideas when
they turn one of the scariest and coolest villains into the hero. This does not
bode well for the Alien franchise either, which might already be going
in the same direction, given the events in Alien: Earth.
· Nobody
2 - Nobody is one of those movies that nobody thought would
get a sequel. That sequel showed why we all thought that.
·
Den of Thieves 2: Pantera - Might
be the most boring heist movie ever made. The full heist scene was well-made,
featuring no music and almost no sound, in an attempt to really submerse the
audience in the heist.
· Lilo
& Stitch - There are probably fans of the original that have a
list of complaints about this remake. I never saw the original, so they’ll have
to take those complaints elsewhere. My only complaint is the remake grossed $1
billion at the box office, which means more uninspired live-action Disney
remakes are in my future.
· 28
Years Later - I do not get the appeal of this franchise. There’s
nothing about these films that make them stand out against other zombie films.
And if I wanted to watch a naked, diseased lunatic try to eat people, I’m sure
RFK Jr. has a price.
· The
Bad Guys 2 - I can’t remember a thing about this movie and I watched it
three weeks ago. That’s the epitome of a movie that is nothing more than a
money grab.
We Decided We Weren’t Just in it for the Money
These movies are no less money grabs than the films you
just read about, but they actually tried to provide some solid entertainment
for your money. This might be the weakest crop of this type of movie in years,
but they were all much better than everything in the previous category.
· Zootopia
2 - A little redundant in some of the story arcs, but still quite
an enjoyable movie. It’s lots of fun for people of all ages. But I still want
to know why the fish aren’t sentient.
· Tron:
Ares - Finally, a Tron movie that non-software developers
can understand.
· Snow
White - I mean, of course they’re in it for the money. Every Disney
live-action remake is preying on nostalgia to pry open your wallet. But I
maintain that Snow White is the best of those remakes so far, combining
some new elements with the original elements. If you can get over the weird
looking CGI dwarves, you’ll see what I mean.
· Captain
America: Brave New World - I’ll admit that I was wrong about Thor:
Love and Thunder. A second viewing will do that sometimes. I’ve only
watched Brave New World once, but I’m confident I’m right that it’s a
good “reset” movie.
· Wake
Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery - Knives Out flicks are such
fun mystery movies and Wake Up Dead Man continues that streak. I love
that Daniel Craig looks like he really enjoys playing detective Benoit Blanc.
Ditto for Josh Brolin, who clearly was reveling in his role as a bombastic
priest.
This Parachute is a Knapsack!
The second category where expectations are key. Lazy
screenplays and disappointing films will always exist. And some are the movies
that start strong and don’t stick the landing, otherwise known as Shyamalan-ing.
· Together
- How do you feel about watching a gymnastics routine where the gymnast
absolutely faceplants the landing? Alison Brie’s excellent performance is the
only reason that landing didn’t include broken bones.
· The
Housemaid - It’s a glorified Lifetime Channel movie with the poor
plot and character development to match. But there is also a bit of Skin-emax
thrown in (for both men and women) to distract you from noticing. Syndey
Sweeney’s got good “jeans” indeed (as does Brandon Sklenar).
· Mickey
17 - I was hoping it would be the one good science fiction movie I look
for every year and it very much wasn’t. The premise was interesting, but the
execution was very lacking. Considering director Bong Joon Ho also made the
ghastly Snowpiercer, I shouldn’t have been surprised Ho would deliver
another sci-fi letdown.
· Good
Fortune - You’d think a film featuring Seth Rogen and Aziz Ansari
would be funnier than your average catholic mass, but you’d be wrong. You’d
also think Keanu Reeves would take this opportunity to remind people he’s more
than John Wick, but you’d be wrong again. That’s what you get for thinking.
· Bugonia
- I’m a big fan of director Yorgos Lanthimos because he currently does weird
better than anybody. I expected Bugonia to be stuffed with weird from
beginning to end, but it was only weird at the very end.
· The
Old Guard 2 - I don’t really know why I liked the first The Old
Guard, but I might like it a whole lot less now after watching this sequel.
I enjoy Charlize Theron kicking ass and the action scenes were fine. But the
movie as a whole was just so utterly joyless.
· The
Naked Gun - Speaking of being far less funny than it should have
been. Apparently, nobody involved with the film gave it a second thought that
spoofing yourself when yourself is already a spoof is, almost by definition,
not funny. But it was at least funnier than Good Fortune.
TL;DR
At least ‘The Letdowns’ contained some entertainment
value. These next films were very boring, not the least bit entertaining, and
lacked any plot beyond the initial premise. Or they were movies I quit in the
middle or refused to watch. They are the very definition of “two hours of your
life you will never get back.”
· The
Smashing Machine - You’d be hard-pressed to find a movie about a
less interesting person than ultimate fighter Mark Kerr. And despite a
fantastic performance from Emily Blunt, this movie has nothing to offer.
· Eephus
- I made it about forty-five minutes into this tortured metaphor before I had
to stop watching or risk Tommy John surgery from angrily hurling objects at the
screen. It’s bad enough that the actors played baseball like how a constipated
toddler would. What made it worse was the movie felt like it was written by
people who never played baseball imagining what they think gets said in a
dugout.
· A
Working Man - I’m so bored during Jason Statham films, even the ones
featuring prehistoric sharks. Just like I got so bored with Liam Neeson action
flicks, Statham movies are always the same. But at least in Neeson films,
Neeson would take some damage during fights. Statham fights always play out
like every cheat code has been enabled.
· Last
Breath - An ode to deep sea gas line repairmen. No seriously.
· Die
My Love - Not even a hint of a plot in this depressing, confusing movie
about a woman who hates what her life has become. The movie doesn’t try to
develop her character. Instead, it just shows us bits of her life and not even
in any kind of coherent order.
Not the Worst, But You Sure Tried Hard
The challenge with this category is convincing you of the
one redeeming quality for each of these films that kept them out of the cellar.
Good luck to me, right?
· Regretting
You - Redeeming quality...redeeming quality...oh, I know. Mckenna
Grace didn’t mail in her performance for a movie that all but begged for
mail-ins.
· From
the World of John Wick: Ballerina - If you want to make more John
Wick movies, just do it. It’s just mean to tease us with Ana de Armas
playing the new assassin only to once again make everything about Wick.
· You’re
Cordially Invited - This movie is what I started the year with. A
movie that wanted me to laugh at not one but two ruined weddings. Reese
Witherspoon doesn’t completely suck, so...yay?
·
Drop - I watched three of the
seven movies produced by Blumhouse this year and Drop was the best. That
is not a compliment. Drop is a dumb, dumb movie. Its premise is so
ridiculous that my suspension of disbelief just laughed inside my brain for the
entire movie. But there’s something I like about Brandon Sklenar, so at least
there’s that.
· Wicked:
For Good - It’s not a terrible movie in general and I realize it’s
really just the second half of a five-hour movie, the very solid Wicked
being the first half. But unlike that first movie, For Good has a really
messy plot, zero memorable songs, and goes out of its way to show us Dorothy’s
entire journey through Oz without showing us Dorothy’s face. There are better
versions of this movie, but also worse versions.
Pooping on the Silver Screen
And now, the moment you’ve been waiting for - the five
worst movies of the year. Unlike with my top five, these terrible films were
easy to identify.
·
Materialists - This movie made we
want to stab my ears out. The robot actress known as Dakota Johnson continues
to be the negative poster child of nepobabies.
· A
Minecraft Movie - I’m just going to requote my Minecraft-loving son’s
reaction after watching the movie - “What the fuck was that?”
· Hell
of a Summer - My son and I tried to give this movie every benefit of
the doubt that it was trying to be a satire of summer camp slasher flicks. By
the end, it proved that junior high plays aren’t the worst productions out
there.
· A
House of Dynamite - Want to know the best way to make me hate a movie
with my entire soul? Let Zack Snyder direct it. The next best way is to cut to
the credits without resolving any of the plot.
· Five
Nights at Freddy’s 2 - This absolute plopper of a film managed to
pull in $220 million at the box office, proving once again why we can’t have
nice things. The worst thing about that number is it will fund at least three
more sequels best described as what if chlamydia had diarrhea?
Pooping on the Silver Screen: The Sequel
This is the bonus category for movies that were made as
sheer money grabs, but were also terrible movies in general. They are the
shitty sequels, prequels, remakes, and franchise entries that keep getting made
because you won’t stop watching them.
· Jurassic
World: Rebirth - Like the Fast and Furious franchise,
audiences just can’t stop shelling out nearly a billion dollars for every new Jurassic
World abomination. Chances are high that the next one is going to somehow
involve a dinosaur in outer space.
· Now
You See Me, Now You Don’t - The quality of this franchise has
disappeared quicker than every magician’s assistant. The magic hasn’t just left
this franchise, it’s been sawed in half and not in the fun magic trick kind of
way.
· M3GAN
2.0 - I wasn’t a fan of the first film and, based on the box office
numbers, hardly anybody was a fan of this sequel. And who can blame them? They
turned a barely scary murder doll into a very not-scary hero doll fighting a
terminator.
· Karate
Kid: Legends - It’s the least bad of these trashcan sequels, but is
still much worse than if they had just phoned in another sequel. This one went
out of its way to make a mockery of Jackie Chan and Ralph Macchio.
· I
Know What You Did Last Summer - One of the funniest things that
happened all year was the reaction my colleague had to a line in my review of
this film after seeing the film. My review said, “I Know What You Did Last
Summer is an obvious choice to resurrect...if the target audience is people
who were teenagers in the 1990s who still have bad taste in movies.” His
response was “come on now,” but with a smirk that said “you’re not wrong.”
Despite 2025 being a big ball of crap in general, we had
a bunch of good movies to distract us from life’s horrors. And not just horror
movies. 2026 is sure to feature plenty more horror movies to watch, from originals
to sequels to adaptations. And, plenty of non-horror from The Avengers
to Supergirl to Dune 3 to Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey
to a bunch of animated sequels. I’m looking forward to all of them because 2026
is sure to provide more content for “We Didn’t Start the Fire.”