The 69th San Francisco International Film Festival
Now in its 69th year, the San
Francisco International Film Festival, the longest-running
film festival in the Americas, returns April 24 through May 4,
2026, for eleven days of cinema spanning the full breadth of
human experience. This year's program brings together 79
programs from 40 countries, a genuinely global slate ranging
from intimate family dramas and experimental poetry films to
crackling genre thrillers, urgent political documentaries, and
animated adventures for the youngest moviegoers.
Across narrative features and documentaries alike, filmmakers
grapple with displacement and belonging, addiction and
recovery, colonial legacy, queer identity, ecological grief,
and the quiet heroism of ordinary people. There are films
rooted in Gaza hospitals and Scottish villages, Congolese
refugee camps and suburban Tokyo, the streets of San Francisco
and the highlands of Montenegro. Several titles carry the heat
of the present moment, touching on immigration, the
Palestinian conflict, and political resistance, while others
find their power in the timeless: grief, ambition, and love in
all its crooked forms.
Opening Night returns to the newly restored Castro Theatre with an
audacious double feature. Director Kent
Jones's "Late
Fame" (USA 2025) sets a warmly witty tone before
director Olivia
Wilde's "The
Invite" (USA 2026), a San Francisco-set story
screening on 35mm with the director attending in person,
closes the evening on a wilder, more transgressive note as a
genuine hometown celebration.
Fraternal twin brothers Amir (Hadi Putra)
and Ali (Idan Aedan)
grew up in the shadow of their mother's death in childbirth,
and as teenagers find themselves displaced again when their
father remarries and takes a new wife. Left to fend for
themselves, the brothers work for a local fisherman who
provides them with basic shelter.
The two could not be more different. Amir is a young man of
few words who communicates largely through animal names, yet
his deep love of books forges an unlikely bond with Lara
(Dian
Sastrowardoyo), a new English teacher carrying wounds of
her own. As that connection grows, Ali's jealousy quietly
festers, and what began as two brothers against the world
slowly curdles into something more painful and
complicated. Against a backdrop of human trafficking and
their father's murky schemes, a looming kite flying
competition becomes the test where everything between
them finally comes to a head.
Woo Ming Jin
captures the tenderness, rivalry, and fierce love between
the two brothers with extraordinary sensitivity. These
performances, naturalistic and unguarded, are the film's
beating heart. The storytelling is captivating and at times
genuinely heartbreaking, grounding its fable-like quality in
the textures of a world, rural Malaysia with its sand beach
and shadowy undercurrents, that cinema rarely visits. If the
ending feels somewhat deflating given the emotional stakes
so carefully built, it is a minor frustration in an
otherwise arresting piece of work. This film is exactly
the kind of film a festival like SFFILM exists to bring to
light.
Filipiñana
(Singapore/UK/Philippines/Netherlands/France 2026 | in
Tagalog/English | 100 min.)
"Filipiñana"
is a visually sumptuous and thematically rich debut
from Rafael
Manuel, using the manicured lawns of a Manila golf
club as a subtly damning canvas for exploring class,
colonialism, and power in the Philippines, and there
are moments where its slow-burn atmosphere genuinely
crackles with intrigue. But the film too often lets
its deliberate pace tip into stagnation, and a handful
of tonal missteps, comic beats that sit awkwardly
against the film's otherwise cool, unsettling mood,
keep it from fully cohering into the sharp social
fable it clearly aspires to be. It's the kind of film
that will find devoted admirers on the arthouse
circuit, and rightly so, but for all its creative
vision and impressive cinematography, it ultimately
remains a little too remote and uneven to leave the
deep impression it deserves.
The film is slated for a later theatrical release by
Kino
Lorber.
Elder
Son (Hijo mayor | Argentina/France 2025 | in
Spanish/Korean | 118 min.)
Winner of the Best Emerging Director
Award at the Locarno Film Festival 2025,
director Cecilia
Kang's debut feature "Elder
Son" comes to the SFFILM with
considerable festival pedigree and an ambition that is
immediately evident on screen.
Structured in three distinct parts, the film is
clearly a deeply personal excavation of the
filmmaker's own identity and family history. The first
part centers on a young Korean Argentinian teenager
Lila (Anita B
Queen) grappling with her sense of belonging,
caught between two cultures, two languages, and two
worlds. The second shifts into a reenactment of her
father Antonio's (Sang Bin
Suh) journey, a young Korean man who left his
homeland behind and built a new life in South America,
capturing the particular loneliness and quiet resolve
of the immigrant experience. By the third part, the
director abandons narrative filmmaking altogether,
moving into documentary territory as if the weight of
the story could no longer be contained by fiction
alone.
That structural boldness is both the film's greatest
strength and its most significant liability. The
intimacy of Cecilia
Kang's inquiry, watching a filmmaker
search for herself through the lives of those who came
before her, gives the film its most affecting
moments. Yet the film drifts constantly between its
three registers without always giving the audience
enough emotional footing to follow. The meditative
pace occasionally tips into inertia, and the episodic
structure, while intentional, creates a detachment
that keeps viewers at a distance precisely when
closeness is most needed.
Cecilia
Kang's visual instincts are assured and the
Locarno recognition is well deserved. But as a
cinematic experience, this film feels more rewarding
as a personal artistic statement than as a story that
draws you in and refuses to let go.
Two
Pianos (Deux pianos | France 2025 | in
French | 115 min.)
"Two
Pianos" is a film that promises a duet but
delivers a solo, following the brooding Mathias
(François
Civil) as he returns to Lyon and confronts the
unresolved mysteries of his past, a journey that is
intermittently compelling but ultimately too opaque to
fully resonate. Director Arnaud
Desplechin crafts the film with his characteristic
literary sensibility, drawing on a story rooted in
impossible love and the weight of solitude that
connects all his characters, yet the emotional payoff
feels elusive. The title itself proves a little
misleading: rather than a true two-hander between
Mathias and Elena (Charlotte
Rampling), the legendary pianist who serves as his
former mentor and guiding force, the film is largely
consumed by Mathias's inner turmoil, leaving
Charlotte
Rampling's formidable presence as little more than
an afterthought, never given enough screen time to
justify her place as the so-called second piano of the
title. François
Civil carries the burden of the story with
magnetism as Mathias, but the film around him never
quite rises to meet the depth it reaches for.
The film is slated for a later theatrical release by
Kino
Lorber.
Directed by Yael
Bridge, the documentary "Who
Moves America" embeds itself within the
lives of UPS Teamsters as they inch toward a potential
historic strike, marking it as one of the more
essential portraits of contemporary America in this
year's lineup. Following workers across California,
New York, and Kentucky, the film foregrounds the grind
of organizing, not as a triumphant march but as
something more tangled: a tug-of-war between solidarity
and self-interest, between collective hope and
individual survival. Archival fragments from the 1997
strike echo through the present, giving the story a
sense of cyclical struggle, like footsteps retracing
and reshaping an old path.
The film succeeds most in humanizing the "brown
uniform" workforce, turning what is often an invisible
labor force into a mosaic of specific lives. You begin
to see the delivery not as convenience, but as
consequence. In that sense, it accomplishes its core
mission: to make the audience reconsider the hands
behind the packages.
Yet for a story rooted in one of the largest labor
negotiations in North America, the film oddly pulls
its punches when it comes to scale. We're told these
workers are vital to the U.S. economy, that their
decisions could ripple across global supply chains,
but the magnitude remains more stated than felt. The
documentary stays close to its subjects, sometimes so
close that the broader picture blurs out of view. A
wider lens could have better conveyed just how deeply
these workers are woven into everyday consumer
expectations.
There's also a lingering sense that the film could
have dug deeper into its own characters. The access is
there, the stakes are there, but the storytelling
doesn't always press hard enough to uncover the more
revealing contradictions or emotional
undercurrents. As a result, the narrative can feel
less gripping than its subject matter promises,
occasionally settling into observation when it might
have benefited from sharper excavation.
This documentary is a thoughtful, well-intentioned
look at labor in motion, one that sparks reflection
even if it doesn't fully ignite. It opens the door,
but doesn't quite walk us all the way through.
Academy award winning director Steven
Soderbergh has long proven that he can do more with less
than almost any filmmaker working
today. With "The
Christophers" (UK/USA 2025 | 100 min.), he strips
everything back to its barest, most essential form, and the
result is nothing short of arresting.
A young painter and sometime-forger named Lori
(Michaela Coel)
is hired by the estranged children of aging artist Julian
Sklar (Ian McKellen)
to infiltrate his cluttered London home and complete a series
of long-abandoned canvases. The series, known as The
Christophers, represents some of Julian's most personal
and unfinished work, its incompleteness tied to a past love
whose absence haunts both the paintings and the man
himself.
Julian's children's scheme is straightforward enough: get the
canvases finished, get them sold, and secure an inheritance
before the old man dies. What unfolds from this decidedly
corrupt arrangement is one of the most captivating exchanges
between two characters you're likely to see on screen this
year. Savvy audiences may find themselves ahead of the story
at times, as certain turns telegraph themselves early, but the
journey remains compelling enough that predictability rarely
diminishes the pleasure of watching it unfold.
Ian McKellen
delivers what can only be described as a masterclass. As
Julian, caustic, brilliant, broken, and achingly lonely, he
inhabits a man reckoning with mortality, irrelevance, and a
lifetime of self-imposed emotional exile. Every line lands
with the weight of decades behind it. He can be devastating
and darkly funny within the same breath, and watching him
dissect his own character's subtext feels like witnessing
something genuinely rare. This is acting at its most fearless
and most human.
Michaela Coel
more than holds her own opposite him. Her Lori enters the
story under false pretenses, yet she makes her completely
magnetic, sharp, guarded, and electrified by the world she has
stepped into. The chemistry between the two artists is the
film's beating heart, and their exchanges crackle with
intelligence, antipathy, and a strange, grudging tenderness
that neither character quite knows what to do with.
Michaela Coel and Ian McKellen in The Christophers.
(Courtesy of Neon)
What's refreshing, genuinely and deeply refreshing, is
Steven
Soderbergh's confidence in restraint. Working
from Ed Solomon's
tightly crafted screenplay, he trusts that two extraordinary
people in a room talking is more than enough. There are no
elaborate set pieces, no narrative pyrotechnics. Just faces,
words, and the weight of what goes unspoken. A reported
33-minute dialogue sequence in the film's second act could
feel like a risk; instead, it feels like a gift. His
camera, handheld inside Julian's house and deliberately steady
outside it, keeps you subtly unsettled without ever calling
attention to itself, direction so assured it disappears into
the storytelling.
The house itself functions almost as a third major character:
a monument to self-imposed seclusion, packed with the
accumulated detritus of a brilliant life
half-lived. Production designer Antonia Lowe has crafted a
space that feels genuinely inhabited and genuinely haunted.
The film is a reminder, one we apparently need, that a film
can be intimate in scale and enormous in emotional scope. It
is funny, sad, morally thorny, and largely satisfying despite
its occasional predictability. In an era of relentless visual
noise, the filmmakers have made something genuinely
radical: a story about art, legacy, family, and fraud that
trusts its audience completely.
Israeli writer-director Nadav Lapid's
provocative "Yes"
(כן | France/Cyprus/Germany/Israel 2026 | in
Hebrew/English/Russian | 150 min.) came to
Cannes' Directors'
Fortnight with considerable ambition and a genuinely
timely premise. Set in the aftermath of October 7, the film follows
Y. (Ariel Bronz),
a jazz musician, and his wife Yasmin (Efrat Dor), a
dancer, as they surrender themselves, body, soul, and art, to
Israel's wealthy and powerful elite, including a
globe-spanning Russian billionaire (Alexey
Serebryakov), eventually tasked with composing a new
national anthem of vengeful, aggressively anti-Gaza
sentiment. It is a bold satirical concept, and a pointed
critique of how artists and institutions alike fell into line
behind the Israeli government's wartime agenda. One can
appreciate what Lapid is reaching for, even if the film
ultimately struggles to bring a wider audience along with it.
From the opening minutes, Nadav Lapid
signals that conventional storytelling is not his
priority. The camera moves with restless, dizzying energy, and
the soundscape is deliberately overwhelming, designed to leave
viewers feeling unmoored. This is a conscious artistic
decision, and there is a certain integrity to that
commitment. Whether it translates into a rewarding experience,
however, will depend enormously on what you are looking for
from a film.
Those hoping for a clear narrative thread may find themselves
adrift. The movie moves freely between musical sequences,
satirical set pieces, and moments of genuine provocation, with
little interest in traditional story logic. Y. is written as a
passive figure who composes rather than speaks and submits
rather than resists, while Yasmin channels her own complicity
through movement and dance. As a thematic statement about
artistic complicity in wartime, this makes sense. As a viewing
experience across two and a half hours, it asks a great deal
of patience from its audience.
A scene from Yes.
(Courtesy of Kino Lorber)
There are genuine highlights here. The film's musical tragedy
elements have real energy, and film brings an undeniable
visual boldness to several sequences. Naama Preis as
Leah, Y.'s former lover and arguably the film's only true
voice, offers a grounded and compelling performance that
stands apart from the surrounding chaos. These moments hint at
what a slightly more disciplined version of this film might
have achieved.
Ultimately, this is a work that prioritises ideology and
sensation over connection. Nadav Lapid's
anger at the state of modern Israel is sincere and deeply
felt, and that sincerity deserves acknowledgment. But a film
that intentionally disorients, shocks, and withholds narrative
coherence will find only a narrow audience willing to meet it
fully on its own terms.
"Yes"opens
in the San Francisco Bay Area theaters on Friday, April 10,
2026.
Let's be honest about what director Kat Coiro's
comedy "You, Me &
Tuscany" (USA 2026 | 104 min.) is: a sun-drenched
fantasy in which a young woman breaks into a stranger's Tuscan
villa, impersonates his to his entire family, evades
consequences at every single turn, and somehow ends up falling
in love with a brooding, vineyard-owning hunk who is, of
course, both handsome and kind. In real life, Anna would be
arrested before she finished her first plate of pesto
gnocchi. The film knows this, and it simply doesn't care.
Anna (Halle Bailey)
is a drifting twenty-something in New York who has abandoned
her dreams of becoming a chef and lost her housing after a
disastrous house-sitting job. A chance encounter with charming
Italian Matteo (Lorenzo De
Moor) leads her to impulsively fly to Tuscany to crash at
his empty villa, just for one night. When Matteo's mother
Gabriella (Isabella
Ferrari) and grandmother Nonna (Stefania
Casini) show up unexpectedly, Anna panics and pretends to
be his fiancée. The lie unravels further when Matteo's
cousin Michael (Regé-Jean
Page) arrives, and Anna finds herself falling for entirely
the wrong person in entirely the right place.
To its credit, that shameless escapism is precisely the film's
engine. On paper, Anna could easily read as a con woman, a
liar who breaks into homes and strings people along. Yet, the
film's feel-good spirit is a masterclass in audience
manipulation, in the best possible sense. That is because Anna
is so disarmingly charming that you forgive her every
transgression and you want her to get away with it, and so she
does, again and again. The audiences don't come to a romantic
comedy for legal plausibility; they come to root for someone.
Michael, steadfast and kind, runs the family vineyard while
his cousin gallivants around the world, and provides exactly
the kind of smoldering counterweight the story needs. Their
chemistry is undeniable. The supporting Costa family, warmly
drawn and enthusiastically performed, gives Anna's deception
real emotional stakes, which is more than the script strictly
deserves.
Then there is Tuscany itself. The film is absolutely gorgeous:
sun-kissed vineyards in Val d'Orcia, a UNESCO-listed Pienza
streetscape, the grandeur of Cinecittà Studios reimagined
as an elegant family home. Cinematographer Danny Ruhlmann
captures Italy not as a postcard but as a living, breathing
world. The food, prepared by a Michelin-level chef, looks
extraordinary. If the film's only ambition were to make you
book a flight to Florence, it would be a resounding success.
Anna
(Halle Bailey) and Michael (Regé-Jean Page)
in You, Me & Tuscany. (Photo: Giulia
Parmigiani)
But the film has a language problem, because it is a
persistent, nagging one. The film's characters slip between
Italian and English as though the two languages are
interchangeable, which anyone who has spent time in rural
Tuscany will tell you is far from the reality. The film's
constant switching between English and Italian never finds a
coherent logic. Why would a Tuscan father argue with his son
in English? The answer, of course, is so that audiences don't
have to read subtitles. But this kind of contrivance breaks
the spell of the authentically Italian atmosphere the
production worked so hard to create. For a film that pushed
its cast and crew to embrace genuine regional detail, and that
boasts real Italian locations and an Italian-born lead actor,
the language treatment feels oddly lazy and strangely random.
This is not a film that will ask anything of you; not belief,
not logic, not patience with subtitles. It is beautiful people
in a beautiful place doing implausible things, wrapped in
warmth and good food. Depending on what you need from a weekend
night, that may be exactly enough. But a story this
unbelievable, told this prettily, earns admiration for its
charm and gentle contempt for its craft.
Imagine being stuck in a subway corridor, walking the same
stretch of fluorescent-lit tile over and over, unsure whether
you missed something or whether the world itself has simply
broken. That is the premise of "Exit
8" (8番出口 | Japan 2025
| in Japanese | 95 min.), and for a few disorienting minutes,
director Genki Kawamura
makes you feel it in your bones.
Based on Kotake
Create's wildly popular indie video game, the film follows
a man known only as The Lost Man (Kazunari
Ninomiya), trapped in an endless underground passage and
forced to spot subtle anomalies in its repeating design in
order to inch closer to the exit. It is the kind of
high-concept that feels urgently cinematic: claustrophobic,
surreal, ripe with dread.
The early sequences deliver on that potential. The sterile
corridor hums with unease, and Kazunari
Ninomiya carries the film almost entirely on his face, his
bewildered stillness pulling you into the loop alongside
him. Each repetition lands with a low, creeping dread,
slightly off in ways that take a moment to place.
But cinema is not a video game. Where the game's loop
functions as an interactive puzzle and the player determines
the repetition meaning and resolves the tension, the film asks
its audience to be passive witnesses to the same corridor,
again and again. What feels intriguing and enigmatic in the
first act calcifies into tedium by the second. Without a hand
on the controller, the looping loses its power. It becomes not
a mechanism of dread but a structural crutch.
Director Genki Kawamura
attempts to open the world by introducing additional figures:
a robotic The Walking Man (Yamato
Kochi), a mysterious The Woman (Nana Komatsu),
and a confused The Boy (Naru
Asanuma). These characters appear as potential anomalies,
as possible keys to the puzzle. But the screenplay offers them
little to do beyond existing as visual riddles. They orbit The
Lost Man without deepening his story or meaningfully expanding
the film's themes of guilt and eternal recurrence.
Exit 8 (Courtesy of Neon)
Sensing that atmosphere alone cannot sustain a 95-minute
feature, the film pivots in its third act toward outright
horror: grotesque imagery, jarring sound design, incidents
that lean into the bizarre and the shocking. But these moments
register more as gross than terrifying. They feel less like
organic escalations and more like a filmmaker rattling the
cage of his own limitations, reaching for sensation when the
story has run out of ideas.
The film wants audiences to feel they have "wandered into one
of M.C. Escher's optical illusions," and structurally, the
film does echo Escher's impossible staircases. The trouble is
that an Escher drawing is something you study and then
leave. The film locks you inside one for an hour and a half.
After the accumulation of loops and strangeness, the
resolution arrives with the emotional weight of a shrug, as if
the corridor simply stops repeating without ever explaining
why it mattered that it did. The film is formally faithful to
the source material's setting and rules, but it captures
little of what made the game compulsive. In a game, failure
sends you back to the beginning with new resolve. In this
film, you just go back to the beginning, waiting for a way out
that never quite materialized.
"Exit 8"opens
in the Bay Area theaters on Friday, April 10, 2026. Director
Genki Kawamura
will be in San Francisco for a Special Q&A screening on
Sunday April 12, 2026.
You have found the right person, the ring is on the finger,
and the wedding is days away. Then, over drinks with friends
and a seemingly harmless party game, your beloved says one
sentence that changes everything. You cannot unknow it. You
cannot pretend it was never said. What do you do? That is the
exact trap Norwegian writer-director Kristoffer
Borgli sets in his third feature "The
Drama" (USA 2026 | 108 min.), a film that starts
as a charming love story and then becomes one of the most
unsettling relationship comedies in recent memory.
The premise is deceptively simple. Emma (Zendaya) and
Charlie (Robert
Pattinson) are blissfully engaged and the wedding is just
days away. They sit down to finalize the wine selection for
the wedding reception with the bride's maid Rachel
(Alana Haim)
and Rachel's husband Mike (Mamoudou
Athie), also Charlie's long time friend. A
game, What's the Worst Thing You've Ever Done?, is all
it takes. Emma reveals a moment from her adolescence, an
episode from when she was fifteen years old, and the
atmosphere in the room shifts irrevocably.
From here, the filmmaker engineers a masterfully escalating
second act. The revelation itself is withheld just long enough
to let dread pool in the silence before it finally lands, and
when it does, the film's already-taut emotional architecture
begins to crack in every direction at once.
What makes the film so compelling is how scrupulously it
refuses to take sides. It presents both Emma and Charlie
as people we genuinely like, which makes their unraveling
truly painful to watch. Emma, shaped by a difficult
Louisiana childhood and a lifelong hunger to belong, is
sympathetic without being a saint. Charlie, buttoned-up and
fragile behind his charming British composure, is
believably both decent and flawed. The film asks a very
difficult question: how much of a person's past are we
entitled to judge? And it has the integrity to leave it
unanswered.
Zendaya brings
a genuine warmth to Emma, a woman who has spent a
lifetime trying to earn the love of rooms she was never sure
she deserved to be in. Every flicker of insecurity, every
brave attempt at openness, registers with aching
specificity. Robert
Pattinson, meanwhile, does what few actors can:
he makes repression fascinating. Charlie's slow implosion, his
inability to simply feel something and let it pass, is as
funny as it is heartbreaking, a portrait of a man who has
never had to confront anything truly hard until now. Together
they are a couple you believe in completely, which means you
feel every fissure as the ground shifts beneath them.
Robert
Pattinson and Zendaya in The Drama. (Courtesy of
A24)
But not everything lands with the same conviction. A subplot
involving Charlie and a coworker feels somewhat perfunctory,
the character dynamics too thinly sketched to be
convincing. It reads less as an authentic strand of the story
and more as scaffolding, a mechanism put in place to nudge the
plot toward where the film needs it to go toward the climax.
Threading through it all is Daniel
Pemberton's score, a miracle of restraint and it never
swells manipulatively to tell us how to feel. It doesn't mimic
the film's mood or condescends to the audience; instead it
breathes alongside the characters, rising and retreating with
an intuition that feels almost novelistic. There is not a
single cue that overstays its welcome or arrives a beat too
early.
This is a film that trusts its audience enough to sit with
discomfort, and generous enough to leave something tender
beneath all the turbulence. A few awkward plot mechanics
aside, it is a sharp, funny, and surprisingly captivating
piece of work.
Like it or not, AI has already slipped into our daily routines
and now stands at a crossroads with humanity, one path lit by
promise, the other flickering with peril. Co-directed
by Daniel Roher
and Charlie
Tyrell, the documentary "The AI Doc: Or
How I Became an Apocaloptimist" (USA 2026 | 103
min.) frames this technological inflection point
through the intimate lens of impending fatherhood,
as Daniel Roher
prepares for the birth of his son and sets out to understand
what kind of world the child will inherit.
The film assembles an impressive roster of interviewees. Tech
leaders such as Sam Altman (OpenAI), Demis Hassabis (Google),
and Dario Amodei (Anthropic) appear alongside skeptics,
historians, and ethicists including Yuval Noah Harari and
Tristan Harris. The access is striking, the conversations
urgent, the stakes framed in nothing less than existential
terms.
Yet for all its formidable lineup and apocalyptic rhetoric,
the film often circles its subject rather than pinning it
down. We hear repeated warnings that AI could spiral beyond
human control, that corporate incentives favor speed over
safety, that a geopolitical race dynamic could accelerate
catastrophe. The sound bites are ominous, but the dangers
remain largely abstract.
Concrete examples are surprisingly scarce. While the
documentary speaks in sweeping hypotheticals about extinction
level risk and runaway systems, it avoids sustained engagement
with documented incidents in which AI systems have already
caused harm, including reported cases of chatbots encouraging
self harm. Without these illustrations, the alarm can feel
abstract. We are told the is near, but rarely shown
the terrain beneath our feet.
The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist.
(Courtesy of Focus Features)
The film also leans heavily on handmade animation, stop
motion, and collage. The tactile aesthetic is designed to
counterbalance the cold logic of code with something
recognizably human. At times, the craft is inventive and
charming. At others, the constant visual embellishment
distracts from what could have been a tighter, more coherent
argument about AI safety and governance.
The film's guiding philosophy, "apocaloptimism," proposes a
carefully measured hope, a call for regulation and democratic
oversight rather than blind acceleration or fatalism. But
after nearly two hours of polarized camps and high stakes
speculation, viewers may leave feeling less galvanized than
adrift. The documentary insists that we still have agency, yet
offers few specifics about how that agency might realistically
be exercised. The suggestion that lobbying politicians might
solve the problem hardly feels convincing.
This documentary is undeniably timely and asks urgent
questions about technology, power, and responsibility. What it
lacks is the granular evidence and structural clarity that
might transform unease into understanding. It leaves us at
that crossroads, fully aware of the fork in the road, still
squinting for signposts.
When "Ready or
Not" (2019) came out, it felt like a pleasant
surprise: a tight, gleefully unhinged horror-comedy that built
its absurdity on a foundation of real dread. Grace
(Samara
Weaving), bloodied in that wedding dress on the lawn, was
one of cinema's most satisfying final images in years: earned,
funny, and shocking all at once. So it's genuinely dispiriting
to report that "Ready or Not 2:
Here I Come" (USA 2026 | 108 min.) is exactly the
kind of sequel that sequel-skeptics always feared: louder,
bloodier, and considerably less purposeful.
The premise picks up frame-for-frame where the first film
ended. Grace discovers she hasn't escaped anything; she's
merely advanced to the next level of a far larger and older
game. As it turns out, the Le Domas family was only one of
several elite dynasties bound together by a supernatural pact,
and whoever hunts down Grace and claims the High Seat of the
Council controls it all. Four rival families are now competing
to do just that: the old-money Danforths, the opportunistic El
Caídos, the calculating Wans, and the blustery Rajans. They
are hunting Grace, but also actively trying to sabotage each
other, since only one family can claim the throne. On paper,
this sounds like delicious anarchy. In practice, it's a
crowded and unwieldy contraption whose rules keep shifting
just when you're trying to care about any of it. The game felt
menacingly specific in the first film; here it feels like
mythology that exists primarily to justify more carnage rather
than generate genuine suspense.
The original film's genius was its economy. One house. One
bride. One terrible night. Everything escalated within a
closed pressure cooker, which is precisely why it worked. The
sequel sprawls across hospitals, country clubs, golf courses,
and a gothic temple built inside an abandoned
church, but spatial grandeur doesn't replace the
claustrophobia that made the first film tick.
Then there are the eruptions. The first film's wicked
signature joke was watching characters suddenly explode in a
full-body burst of blood, equal parts grotesque and
absurd. Used sparingly, it landed with perfect comic horror
timing. The sequel, which reportedly deployed around 325
gallons of stage blood through a custom-built 360-degree air
cannon, treats the gag as a recurring main course. By the
third or fourth time someone goes off like a geyser of
crimson, the shock has curdled into a numbing routine. The
brilliance of those moments was always their surprise; you
cannot repeatedly sell an audience something they now fully
expect.
Kathryn Newton and Samara Weaving in Ready or Not 2:
Here I Come. (Courtesy of Searchlight
Pictures)
Samara Weaving
remains a force of nature, and her commitment to Grace is
beyond reproach. But the film asks us to accept that a woman
absorbing injuries that would hospitalize anyone simply keeps
sprinting and brawling with barely a pause for
consequence. The first film made Grace's survival feel
desperate and earned. Here, the physical accumulation becomes
an unintentional comedy of its own, though not quite the kind the
filmmakers intended.
Faith (Kathryn
Newton), Grace's estranged sister, is brought to life with
energy and genuine comic timing, and the chemistry between the
two leads has real warmth. But the sisterhood subplot keeps
pulling the brakes on the film's momentum. Every time the
violence machine begins to generate heat, we're redirected to
the sisters' unresolved feelings. Neither thread gets quite
enough room, and the horror-comedy engine and the emotional
reconciliation story run on different rhythms that never fully
synchronize.
This horror movie is not without pleasures, and fans who want
more of everything the first film offered will find it served
in heaping portions. But excess is not the same thing as
intensity, and the sequel mistakes scale for stakes. The
original's wit came from knowing exactly when to pull
the rug. Here, the rug has been pulled so many times there's
nothing left beneath your feet but chaos.
You wake up alone on a spaceship. You don't remember your name
and how you got there, or why. And somehow, saving all of
humanity is your problem to solve. What would you do? That
existential gut-drop is the engine of "Project Hail
Mary" (USA 2026 | 156 min.), and
directors Phil Lord and
Christopher
Miller make the most of it, for a while. The trouble is
that this is two films in one, and the seams show.
Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling),
a middle school science teacher, wakes up on a spacecraft
light years from Earth, his memories returning in slow,
disorienting fragments. As he pieces together the truth, one
thing becomes clear: he is humanity's last, best hope of
stopping the sun from going dark. It's a fascinating setup,
intimate and eerie, and for its first act the film makes
superb use of that solitude. Grace alone in the void,
rationing his wits alongside his oxygen, conjures the same
stripped-back tension that made "Gravity"
(2013) so viscerally effective.
Then Rocky (voiced by James Ortiz)
arrives, and the film becomes something else entirely.
Rocky is a spider-like, rock-armored alien who has traveled
from his own star system chasing the same solar mystery. The
craft involved in bringing him to life is genuinely
remarkable, puppetry work that reportedly pushed the limits of
what has ever been built for cinema. If you have a soft spot
for multi-limbed, faceless creatures, Rocky will win you
over. If not, no amount of personality will overcome the
instinct to recoil.
The friendship that develops between Grace and Rocky is
earnest, and the filmmakers clearly love it, treating it as
the beating heart of the film. The intention is sweet. The
execution, though, never quite achieves the emotional altitude
it reaches for. The bond is charming rather than moving, and
it never delivers the gut-punch the third act demands. Instead
of drawing its power from something raw and primal, as
"Gravity"
did by stripping its story down to one person's pure will to
survive, "Project Hail
Mary" places all its emotional weight on a
friendship that, despite everyone's best efforts, remains at a
certain remove.
Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in Project Hail Mary.
(Photo: Jonathan Olley)
Part of the problem is that Grace himself is difficult to feel
the full weight of. Ryan Gosling
is excellent, funny and physically committed, doing precisely
what the role asks. But the film struggles to make us feel the
crushing burden of his mission, or what truly drives this
unlikely hero to keep going when every rational option has run
out. Without that core conviction, the stakes, however
planetary in scale, drift.
Greig Fraser's
cinematography is stunning in its warmth and intimacy, and the
production design, a ship assembled by multiple nations with
each capsule built by different hands, is one of the film's
genuine triumphs, visually inventive and thematically
coherent. However, at 2 hours and 36 minutes, the film also
outstays its welcome. There is a tighter, more piercing
version of the movie inside this one, a film that
earns its emotional ending rather than simply arriving at it.
What remains is a movie with a genuinely big heart, impressive
spectacle, and a belief in human connection that feels both
sincere and, in the current moment, necessary. It just doesn't
quite stick the landing it's been running toward for nearly
three hours.
Sometimes a film wears its heart so openly on its sleeve that
you wish, almost painfully, it had the script to match. That
is the central tension of "Reminders of
Him" (USA 2026 | 114 min.), adapted
from Colleen
Hoover's bestselling novel and directed
by Vanessa
Caswill, a film with every emotional ingredient in place
but its storytelling is shakier than it first appears. The
ambition is evident, and the cast commits gamely to the
material. But good intentions and handsome cinematography of
Alberta landscape, standing in for Wyoming, can only carry a
film so far.
The premise is heartfelt: Kenna Rowan (Maika Monroe),
released after seven years in prison for an accident that
killed her boyfriend Scotty Landry (Rudy Pankow),
returns to Laramie hoping to reunite with Diem
(Zoe Kosovic),
the daughter she has never been allowed to raise. Scotty's
grieving parents, Grace (Lauren Graham)
and Patrick (Bradley
Whitford), guard the girl like a fortress. Into this
minefield walks Ledger (Tyriq
Withers), Scotty's oldest friend and local bar owner, who
finds himself drawn to the very woman the family blames for
their son's death. It is a genuinely rich setup. The film,
unfortunately, does not know what to do with it.
To the screenplay's credit, there is not a villain in
sight. Every character here is drawn with a recognizable
decency: Kenna carries her guilt without self-pity, Grace's
cruelty comes entirely from grief, Ledger's conflict is rooted
in loyalty, and even the most obstructive characters are
acting from a place the audience can understand. That
generosity of spirit is genuinely disarming, and it earns the
film a measure of goodwill early on. The trouble is that
sympathy and resonance are not the same thing. We understand
these people, we do not begrudge them, but we cannot quite
feel what they feel. Their grief stays at arm's length. Their
longing does not pull at us. Their hope, when it finally
surfaces, registers as a plot development rather than a
release. The film secures our sympathy with ease, then
mistakes that for emotional connection, never doing the harder
work of making us truly inhabit the story alongside them.
The film charts this territory in a mostly linear fashion that
is easy enough to follow, perhaps too easy. The storytelling
rarely surprises, and scenes that should accumulate into
something devastating too often tick by at a pace that feels
not just unhurried but sluggish. A significantly tighter cut
would have helped. What the script mistakes for restraint
repeatedly reads as stalling, and the film's two-hour runtime
begins to feel like a test of patience well before the third
act arrives.
More damaging is how thoroughly the script undermines its own
surprises. Kenna's maternal longing is so overwhelming and so
constant that every plot turn becomes predictable long before
it arrives. The emotional revelations the film builds toward,
the moments meant to catch the audience off guard, land with a
familiar thud. All its cards are on the table within the first
half hour.
Tyriq
Withers and Maika Monroe in Reminders of Him.
(Photo: Michelle Faye)
The relationship between Ledger and the Landry family
compounds the problem. For a man established as Scotty's
oldest childhood friend, Ledger is conspicuously absent from
any depiction of Kenna and Scotty's life together. The film
offers no explanation for this gap, no falling out, no
distance, nothing. Then, without acknowledgment of the
inconsistency, Ledger has assumed a near-paternal role in
young Diem's upbringing. It is a thread the screenplay never
bothers to untangle, and it quietly undermines the emotional
logic the entire story depends on.
Maika Monroe
works hard in the lead role and occasionally breaks through,
giving Kenna a worn, interior quality that suggests a
performer capable of more than the material demands of
her. Tyriq Withers
is likable and physically credible. But these are performances
in service of a script that has not done the necessary work,
and the gap between what the actors are reaching for and what
the writing actually provides becomes increasingly difficult
to ignore.
This film tries very sincerely to break your heart,
and there is something almost poignant about watching it fall
short. It populates its world with people worth caring about,
then fails to build the bridge that would make us care
deeply. Sympathy without resonance is a lonely thing to sit
with for two hours. The film reaches toward something real,
stumbles over its own construction, and never quite recovers.