What a big year it was!
For the last few years I’ve held a modest goal of watching 2 films a week or 104 a year but always fell well short at around 70-80 features a year. Well this year I finally smashed that goal! 160 features and docs! The difference not spending every waking hour working on your own movie makes hey?!
After 6 long years I finally finished my debut feature film!
SKELETON GIRLS. A KIDNAPPED SOCIETY was not only finished but it went out into the world, screened before audiences at a couple of festivals (Revelation Perth International Film Festival and Sydney Underground Film Festival) and is now at the mercy of other people’s end of year lists like this one. What a trip that is!
This year I could finally sit back and enjoy other people’s art without feeling the guilt of my own work being unfinished. Also after so many years labouring over making one single thing there was a lot of self-reflection – why am I doing this, what was this all for, do I continue down this path, can I even continue any further. In a way movie watching became part of the reflection process and a refilling the creative tank. I don’t think I’ve answered those large existential questions yet but it was a fun odyssey through cinema.
Films watched in 2025 (in order of viewing)
- Gunpowder Milkshake (USA, 2021)
- New Jack City (USA, 1991)
- Bonnie and Clyde (USA, 1967) *
- Dead End Drive-In (Australia, 1986)
- David Lynch: The Art Life (USA, 2016) Doco *
- Eraserhead (USA, 1978)
- Mona Lisa and the Blood Moon (USA, 2021)
- Open Your Eyes (Spain, 1997)
- Before We Vanish (Japan, 2017)
- Royal Space Force. The Wings of Honnêamise (Japan, 1987)
- Columbus (USA, 2017) *
- Motorway (Hong Kong, 2012)
- Genocide In The Wildflower State (Australia, 2024) Doco *
- Sound of Metal (USA, 2019) *
- Belle De Jour (France, 1967)
- The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (France, 1972) *
- That Obscure Object of Desire (France, 1977) *
- Funeral Parade of Roses (Japan, 1969) *
- Afterglows (Japan, 2023)
- Kung Fu Panda (USA, 2008)
- Robinson Crusoe (Mexico, 1954)
- Tristana (Spain, 1970)
- Buñuel: A Surrealist Filmmaker (Spain, 2021) Doco
- Mystery Train (USA, 1989) *
- Heaven’s Burning (Australia, 1997)
- Night on Earth (USA, 1991)
- Down by Law (USA, 1986)
- We’re All Going to the World’s Fair (USA, 2021) *
- Dead Man (USA,1995)
- Time Addicts (Australia, 2023) *
- Humanist Vampire Seeking Consenting Suicidal Person (Canada, 2023)
- Fargo (USA, 1996)
- Red Nights (France, 2010)
- Moving (Japan, 1993) *
- Foxcatcher (USA, 2014)
- The Royal Hotel (Australia, 2023)
- To Die For (USA, 1995)
- Sweet As (Australia, 2022)
- Vacant Possession (Australia, 1995)
- Hairpin Circus (Japan, 1972) *
- Haru (Japan, 1996) *
- One Million Yen Girl (Japan, 2008) *
- Possession (German, 1981) *
- One From The Heart (USA, 1982)
- The Law of the Border (Türkiye, 1966)
- Tiger Stripes (Malaysia, 2023) *
- Heavy Trip (Finland, 2018) *
- Heavier Trip (Finland, 2024)
- Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (Japan, 1983)
- Ruined Heart (The Philippines, 2014)
- The Wages of Fear (French, 1953) *
- Distant Thunder (Japan, 2022)
- Titane (France, 2021)
- Risky Business (USA, 1983)
- Midsommar (USA, 2019)
- Serial Experiments Lain (Japan, 1998 – Anime)
- Nope (USA, 2022)
- Requiem For A Vampire (France, 1973)
- One Cut of the Dead (Japan, 2017) *
- Blow-Up (UK, 1966)
- Chinatown (USA, 1974) *
- Sholay (India, 1975)
- Taste of Cherry (Iran, 1997) *
- Suzume (Japan, 2022) *
- Blue Road: The Edna O’Brien Story (Ireland, 2024) Doco – REV
- The Hanging Garden (Japan, 2005)
- Monsters Club (Japan, 2011)
- I’m Flash (Japan, 2012)
- Wolf’s Calling (Japan, 2019)
- The Day of Destruction (Japan, 2020)
- Go Seppuku Yourselves (Japan, 2021)
- Blue Spring (Japan, 2001)
- Electric Dragon 80,000V (Japan, 2001)
- U Are The Universe (Ukraine, 2024) – REV
- Lesbian Space Princess (Australia, 2024) – REV
- Pater Noster and the Mission of Light (USA, 2024) – REV
- Exit Medea (UK, 2025) – REV
- Scarlet Blue (France, 2024) – REV
- Transcending Dimensions (Japan, 2025) – REV *
- Else (Belgium, 2024) – REV
- Shame (Australia, 1987) – REV
- Skeleton Girls. A Kidnapped Society (Australia, 2025) – REV
- A Grand Mockery (Australia, 2024) – REV
- Skeleton Girls. A Kidnapped Society (Australia, 2025) – REV
- Squid Game 3 – (South Korea, 2025 – TV)
- The Hyperboreans (Chile, 2024)
- Gojoe: Spirit War Chronicle (Japan, 2000)
- Oasis (South Korea, 2002)
- Burning (South Korea, 2018) *
- The Seventh Seal (Sweden, 1957) *
- Lord of the Flies (UK, 1963)
- Following (UK, 1999)
- Bad Guy (South Korea, 2001)
- Apollo’s Song (JTV, 2025)
- The Toxic Avenger (USA, 1984)
- The Scoop (Japan, 2024) – JFF
- Scrooged (USA, 1988)
- Renaissance (France, 2006)
- Snowpiercer (South Korea, 2013)
- Leonardo da Vinci (USA, 2024) Doco
- After Blue (France, 2021) *
- Smithereens (USA, 1982) *
- Welcome Home Roxy Carmichael (USA, 1990)
- Pusher (Denmark, 1996)
- Scarygirl (Australia, 2024)
- Paris, Texas (German, 1984) *
- Rouge (Hong Kong, 1987) *
- The Miscreants of Taliwood (Australia, 2009) Doco *
- Love City, Jalalabad (Australia, 2013) Doco
- Yellow House Afghanistan (Australia, 2025) Doco
- Queens of the Dead (USA, 2025) – SUFF
- Tokyo Evil Hotel (Japan, 2025) – SUFF
- UHF (in Stink-O-Vision) (USA, 1989) – SUFF
- I Live Here Now (USA, 2025) – SUFF
- Exorcismo – The Transgressive Legacy of Clasificada S (Spain, 2024) – Doco SUFF (Did not finish due to scheduling)
- Snatchers (Australia, 2025) – SUFF
- Jimmy and Stiggs (USA, 2024) – SUFF
- Skeleton Girls. A Kidnapped Society (Australia, 2025) – SUFF
- Fuck Toys (USA, 2025) – SUFF
- Beetlejuice (USA, 1988)
- Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (USA, 2024)
- Branded to Kill (Japan, 1967)
- Guns Akimbo (USA, 2019)
- Sonic the Hedgehog (USA, 2020)
- O Brother, Where Art Thou? (USA, 2000)
- Hard Eight (USA, 1996)
- Super Mario Bros. (USA, 1993)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (USA, 2022)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (USA, 2024)
- Unforgiven (USA, 1992) *
- Unforgiven (Japan, 2013)
- Gladiator II (USA, 2024)
- Mirrored Mind (Japan, 2005)
- Saturday Night Fever (USA, 1977)
- Bad Genius (Thailand, 2017)
- The Bad Guys (USA, 2022)
- Highlander (UK, 1986)
- The Incident (Mexico, 2014) *
- Terrifier (USA, 2016)
- K-Pop Demon Hunters (USA, 2025)
- The Similars (Mexico, 2015)
- After Hours (USA, 1985)
- Pulse (Japan, 2001)
- Cloud (Japan, 2024) – JFF *
- The Beastmaster (USA, 1982)
- Sinners (USA, 2025)
- The Remains of the Day (UK, 1993)
- Woman of Water (Japan, 2002)
- Mr. K (Belgium, 2024)
- Severance (UK, 2006)
- Battle Royal II: Requiem (Japan, 2003)
- End of Days (USA, 1999)
- The Running Man (USA, 1987)
- The Invisible Man (USA, 2020) *
- Fallen Leaves (Finland, 2023)
- Divinity (USA, 2023) *
- Made in Hong Kong (Hong Kong, 1997)
- Vivarium (Ireland, 2019)
- Misery (USA, 1990) *
- Kimi (USA, 2022)
- The Thicket (USA, 2024)
- The Naked Gun (USA, 2025)
150 Features, 9 Docos, 2 TV series, 1 Anime. Bold * denotes favourites watched for the first time.
With 160 films to reflect on this will be a major test of my memory but here’s some thoughts on what stood out for me in 2025.
I watched 22 films in the cinema this year, nearly all of which were from the 2 film festivals I attended. I also discovered Kanopy. How freaking awesome is Kanopy! I have almost 100 films in my watchlist but only enough credits to watch 4 a month. My other main source is SBS OnDemand where I watched 56 features. I’m an SBS lifer!
Early in the year I revisited the work of Luis Buñuel, namely his latter day works that I hadn’t seen. Buñuel had a big influence on me, particularly my short Happy In Our Graves. Ten Years Deep so it was a bit of returning to the well of inspiration, like my Jodorowsky trip the previous year. The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and That Obscure Object of Desire were excellent and reminded me of how vital a dissident Buñuel was. He was a fearless provocateur his entire life, right to the end. I feel he is largely overlooked by this current era of ‘cinephiles’ (if you would call them that) and it is his spirit of disdain for authority, elites and their virtues that cinema desperately needs right now.
After that I took a slight Jim Jarmusch detour through his mid-80’s to mid-90’s period. I loved Mystery Train, feel like I might have seen it before 20 years ago and didn’t remember/or appreciate it then, which feels strange as I’m all for stories of oddballs and outsiders in derelict, subterranean urban landscapes!
I then seeked out a trio of obscure Japanese films that appear to have been rediscovered in the social media era all of which were excellent. Haru is a quaint 90’s time capsule of the emergence of online romance, there’s a hellva lot of onscreen text to get through and the complication with the sister was a bit of a stretch but you can’t help but be sucked into these characters’ lives. It’s all about that passing train shot though! One Million Yen Girl is about a girl trying to find her place in a world that not matter where she runs to is repeatedly taken advantage of, exploited or controlled, mostly at the hands of men and complicit women. Written and directed by Yuki Tanada who made My Broken Mariko, one of my favs last year, I definitely need to seek out more of her work. Hairpin Circus was a cool jazz-infused street racing flick from the 70’s about a man being pulled back into a past life under the allure of a fierce woman with a hot car and the promise of nocturnal excitement. It’s the perfect antidote to the stupidity that The Fast & The Furious series has become.
Another Japanese film I was hanging to see was the new Toshiaki Toyoda film Transcending Dimensions. When it was announced as part of Revelation I was beside myself with excitement – my film was screening at the same fest as Toyoda, that was a buzz! In the lead up I binged all the films of his I had on Blu Ray released by the legendary Third Window Films. This was actually very cool to see the continued evolution of his Wolf Mountain series and Transcending Dimensions didn’t disappoint. I’d argue it was a return to form of sorts, not that he was out of form but the previous decade had been a difficult time for him. This one just clicked and everything he was building toward just went to the next level ie. the mid-film opening credit sequence?! As a side note I am noticing something of a trend in some Japanese films of having the opening titles VERY late into a movie, like after the first act. Interesting.
Before heading over for Sydney Underground I entered the world of George Gittoes. George’s documentaries are incredible yet insane, the must watch is The Miscreants of Taliwood. George goes deep into the Pakistan/Afghanistan border to track down and then join in with filmmakers who are genuinely risking their lives making movies. The Taliban in the area view film as immoral and are actively burning down DVD sellers (this is 2008 still!). Werner Herzog may romanticize risking it all as a ‘solider of cinema’ yet I don’t think his life was ever in danger in the way these fledgling filmmakers were and continue to be. There’s an air of surfer/hippie cool to George who seems to be there out of genuine curiosity, part naivety and total compassion that somehow keeps him from harms way. George received the inaugural SUFF Life Time Achievement Award and screened a director’s cut of his new film Yellow House Afghanistan – which I missed as it clashed directly with my own film screening. I did meet him very briefly as we passed on the stairs after our screenings which was a honour. He mentioned not being happy with the cuts that were made by SBS for the broadcast version which is why there is a director’s cut. He also had just finished a film in the Ukraine which is now out and I’ll watch that soon.
Some other stand outs this year were: Columbus – I have a soft spot for architecture and the this two-hander is perfectly carried by leads John Cho & Hayley Lu Richardson; Sound of Metal – this one hits close to home as someone that has played in bands, went to tonnes of live shows and has the hearing damage to prove it. Riz Ahmed is brilliant as a metal drummer losing his hearing, and it’s conclusion is unsettling. If you go to shows wear ear plugs FFS! And people with AirPods in all day long, stop it! One Cut of the Dead – this one had been on my radar for a long time, it had me feeling underwhelmed at first until the narrative twist, very clever and very fun. Lived up to the hype. Taste of Cherry – this has one of the most controversial endings ever, not because of anything shocking or extreme, but because of what it cheats you out of. A man drives around Tehran looking for someone to help him as he contemplates ending his life. The film is so perfectly crafted from performance to photography that it takes us to the precipice of knowing whether he has chosen life or death. We feel in such assured hands that surely they have an answer. What we get is what we deserve really, for being so invested. I was in disbelief.
Some other quick thoughts. Titane was perhaps the biggest disappointment, had been looking forward to this one for a while, it started great but turned into a different kind of movie half way through that was less interesting. I loved the look and radical vision of Divinity although it didn’t always work as a film for me, but I respect any attempt to push the boundaries. The psychedelic space western After Blue also looked great and I actually think they used some of the exact same hats that we used in my film! Lastly Time Addicts and A Grand Mockery are two Australian films worth looking out for, one very clever, the other very challenging.
I’m going wrap it up here as the year is almost out. It was a big year of moving watching and I especially loved every minute of being apart of two film festivals we screened at. Next year we have two more festivals lined up and I look forward to catching as many films there as I can fit in. I didn’t get to the Sight & Sound Top 100 that I mentioned last year, I really got to commit to that next year I reckon!
riche
31.12.25



