In Three, writer-director Nayla Al Khaja delivers a chilling and richly layered debut that boldly reframes the exorcism subgenre through an Islamic and deeply personal lens. Set across beautifully textured environments in Thailand and the UAE, the film tells the story of a desperate mother, Maryam, who turns to an unlikely Western doctor to save her son Ahmed, whose deteriorating mental health may stem from something far more ancient and sinister. If you’re expecting the typical tropes of Middle Eastern horror or stylized dance numbers sprinkled between scares, Three will subvert those expectations entirely, and for the better.
Read MoreEddington (2025)
Ari Aster’s Eddington is a cinematic fever dream—an apocalyptic Western where cowboy hats are traded for face masks, and six-shooters for smartphones. Equal parts satire, horror, and political cartoon, it is the first major American film to tackle the COVID-19 era with both comedic bite and dramatic heft. While it’s definitely too long and sometimes too pleased with its own chaos, it’s also a rich, immersive, and often hilarious pressure cooker of a movie.
Read MoreNyctophobia (2024)
Nyctophobia is less a conventional horror film than a slow, surreal dive into the subconscious—a cinematic anxiety spiral wrapped in dream logic and drenched in atmosphere. Written and directed by Seayoon Jeong, the film follows Liz, a young woman struggling with the titular fear of the dark. As insomnia eats away at her sanity, Liz slips into a dream world where childhood memories and nightmares blur, and nothing—especially not time or space—feels safe or linear.
Read MoreThe Days Ahead (2025)
In The Days Ahead, writer-director Terry Winnan delivers a gripping, thought-provoking indie anthology that imagines a nuclear strike on the United Kingdom and follows the lives of ordinary citizens as they scramble to survive the unimaginable. Composed of three interconnected short films, this low-budget British drama offers a sobering meditation on preparedness, panic, and the fragility of social order when the systems we take for granted vanish overnight. What makes The Days Ahead especially striking is its unflinching realism.
Read More40 Acres (2024)
In a cinematic landscape oversaturated with post-apocalyptic thrillers, 40 Acres arrives like a bolt of lightning — fierce, grounded, and emotionally resonant. The debut feature from Canadian filmmaker R.T. Thorne is more than just an action survival story. It’s a bold and politically charged meditation on legacy, sovereignty, and the emotional toll of survival, anchored by a riveting performance from Danielle Deadwyler.
Read MoreDo No Harm (2025) #DancesWithFilms
In a cinematic landscape often defined by spectacle and noise, Do No Harm dares to be quiet—and in doing so, delivers something profoundly resonant. The feature directorial debut from Chris Hartwell, Do No Harm is a moving, intimate character study about burnout, shame, and the lies we tell ourselves to survive. It's a film with its heart on its sleeve and a haunting truth at its core.
Read MoreDune Prophecy: The Complete First Season (2025) #BluRay
The Bene Gesserit have spoken, and the prophecy is here. With the release of Dune: Prophecy: The Complete First Season on 4K UHD, Blu-ray, DVD, and Digital, fans of the ever-expanding Dune universe now have the opportunity to fully immerse themselves in the origins of one of sci-fi’s most enigmatic factions. Clocking in at just over six hours, the six-episode season invites viewers into a dense, richly stylized prequel that shines brightest when viewed with an understanding of the lore it’s built upon.
Read MoreSpilled Paint: Season 1 (2025)
While a lot of times people brush off stuff that goes to Tubi, Spilled Paint isn’t one to miss. This six-episode crime drama dives headfirst into the dangerous, high-gloss world of art forgery, where the paint is barely dry before someone ends up dead. If you're a fan of crime thrillers with layered characters, high-stakes tension, and a killer hook—this one's for you.
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