Scream 7

Scream 7 feels like a film caught between legacy and reinvention. The return of Neve Campbell brings emotional gravity, and seeing Sidney Prescott again instantly reconnects the series to its roots. There’s something comforting about that familiarity — like revisiting a final girl who helped redefine the genre. But comfort is also the film’s biggest…

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Goat

There’s something undeniably charming about GOAT. It knows exactly what it is: a bright, kinetic, feel-good underdog story — and it leans into that fully. From the first roarball sequence, the animation bursts with movement and color. The games don’t just unfold — they explode. Sony continues to refine its hyper-stylized sports aesthetic, blending elastic…

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Wuthering Heights

Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is a visually lush but emotionally turbulent adaptation of Emily Brontë’s novel. I felt like this film was almost a Gen-Z version of the story. Margot Robbie delivers a compelling, unpredictable Catherine, while Jacob Elordi’s Heathcliff feels quietly tragic and intense. What stands out most is the cinematography, which leans into…

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Hamnet

Hamnet is a hushed, emotionally devastating meditation on grief, elevated by great cinematography that turns loss into something tactile and deeply felt. The film avoids spectacle and exposition, choosing intimacy instead—letting silence, gesture, and environment carry the weight. Its cinematography is quietly extraordinary. Natural light, muted earth tones, and shallow focus create a world that…

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