Most anticipated 2025 movies: ’28 Years Later,’ ‘Superman,’ more

Weโre ready โ ready to turn the page on 2024, ready for such time-tested voices as Terrence Malick, Ryan Coogler and Kelly Reichardt to remind us of why we love this art form so much. Hold your breath for the second half of โWicked,โ whirling into theaters in November. Until then, weโve got another two dozen titles sure to keep things interesting.
โLiza: A Truly Terrific Absolutely True Storyโ (Jan. 31)

Liza Minnelli at the Cannes Film Festival in 1970.
(Associated Press)
There arenโt too many legendary divas left who are recognizable by just one of their names: Barbra, Stevie, Mariah โ and, of course, Liza. And yet somehow, none of these icons have yet to be the subject of a major documentary. That changes in January, when a feature film about Liza Minnelli hits theaters. The movie, which premiered to strong reviews at the Tribeca Film Festival in June, picks up immediately after Minnelliโs mother, Judy Garland, dies, and reportedly doesnโt shy away from discussing the subjectโs four marriages or addiction struggles. The โLizaโ doc is coming out on the heels of a high-profile production company optioning the rights to Minnelliโs forthcoming memoir (the book wonโt even be published until 2026) to adapt into a Warner Bros. TV adaptation. Given that the film is only 105 minutes, it sounds like the perfect teaser for a full-blown โ and long overdue โ season of Liza obsession. โAmy Kaufman
โBridget Jones: Mad About the Boyโ (Feb. 13, Peacock)

Renรฉe Zellweger and Leo Woodall in the movie โBridget Jones: Mad About the Boy.โ
(Jay Maidment / Universal Pictures)
More than two decades after โBridget Jonesโ Diaryโ introduced Renรฉe Zellwegerโs saucy, salty book publicist to the filmgoing masses, I recently had occasion to rewatch the 2001 film on a plane, half expecting a cringeworthy collection of dated jokes and dodgy fashions. What I discovered instead was a freewheeling, foul-mouthed, genuinely funny studio comedy โ and a heretofore untapped excitement for the fourth film in the franchise, โMad About the Boy.โ Rejoining Bridget as a single mother four years after the death of husband Mark Darcy (Colin Firth), the new filmโs jumping-off point is a definite drag, but it puts our heroine, and us, right back where we want to be: torn between two handsome, charming love interests (Leo Woodall and Chiwetel Ejiofor), making a complete spectacle of herself. โMatt Brennan
โPaddington in Peruโ (Feb. 14)

A scene from the movie โPaddington in Peru.โ
(Sony Pictures)
Come on; weโre all looking forward to seeing the Ben-Whishaw-voiced Paddington again, and while itโs difficult to imagine โPaddington in Peruโ will top โPaddington 2,โ which is, according to Rotten Tomatoes, the best-reviewed film of all time, at least this time we get to see our favorite bear in his native land. Taking his adopted family the Browns (minus Sally Hawkins who has been replaced by Emily Mortimer) to visit his beloved Aunt Lucy, Paddington is told that she is missing. Off they go to find her, with the aid of a potentially El-Dorado-related map and a nefarious river boat captain (Antonio Banderas). The film got mixed reviews when it debuted in the U.K. in November (no deliciously absurd Hugh Grant for one thing), but still it promises a rollicking good time the whole family can enjoy and there just arenโt enough of those these days. โMary McNamara
โMickey 17โ (Mar. 7)

Robert Pattinson and Robert Pattinson in the movie โMickey 17.โ
(Warner Bros. Pictures)
Six years after making history with 2019โs โParasiteโ (the first non-English-language film to win best picture at the Oscars), visionary South Korean director Bong Joon Ho is heading to the stars. Adapted from Edward Ashtonโs sci-fi novel โMickey7,โ โMickey 17โ returns Bong to the dystopian terrain of his 2023 film โSnowpiercer,โ with Robert Pattinson starring as Mickey, an โexpendableโ on a high-risk mission to colonize a frozen planet. Tasked with the deadliest jobs, Mickey dies over and over again, โreprintedโ each time with most of his memories intact. But when Mickey starts to question his role in this morbidly efficient cycle, his rebellion threatens the system. With its mix of dark humor, existential dread, social commentary and pure gonzo weirdness, โMickey 17โ โ which also stars Naomi Ackie, Toni Collette, Mark Ruffalo and Steven Yeun โ asks what it means to be human in a world where humanity itself is reduced to just another renewable resource. โJosh Rottenberg
โThe Wedding Banquetโ (Apr. 18)

Kelly Marie Tran, left, Lily Gladstone, Han Gi-Chan and Bowen Yang in the movie โThe Wedding Banquet.โ
(Luka Cyprian / Sundance Institute)
The world needs more queer rom-coms, so I would have been intrigued by any attempt to remake Ang Leeโs classic 1993 marriage farce. But since this new take on โThe Wedding Banquetโ is from โSpa Nightโ and โFire Islandโ director Andrew Ahn, that immediately made it into a must-see for me. Like the original, Ahnโs film is also centered around a fake marriage of convenience between a gay man (Han Gi-chan) and a woman (Kelly Marie Tran), but this time, the marriage is not about hiding any queer relationships. Moreover, the storyline has expanded to include another queer couple โ girlfriends trying to have a baby through IVF (played by Tran and Lily Gladstone) โ who are best friends with said gay man and his boyfriend (Bowen Yang). At a time where it feels like society is regressing in their attitudes towards the LGBTQ+ community, a film that celebrates queer chosen families is a salve. โTracy Brown
โSinnersโ (Apr. 18)

Michael B. Jordan, left, as Smoke and Miles Caton in the movie โSinners.โ
(Warner Bros. Pictures)
Ryan Coogler and Michael B. Jordanโs trifecta of critical and commercial hits โ โFruitvale Station,โ โCreedโ and โBlack Pantherโ โ has turned their director-muse combo into its own brand name. (See also: Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro, Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks.) Their upcoming horror movie is another sharp turn in a filmography thatโs pivoted from indie darling to prestige crowd-pleaser to comic-book blockbuster. โSinners,โ which Warner Bros. landed in a competitive bidding war, announced itself in a teaser that was simply blood and pizzicato strings. Gauging from the trailer, this grisly period piece appears to be set in the South with Jordan starring in a dual role as a pair of twins, at least one of whom gets to spray bullets with a retro tommy gun. Rumor is the pugnacious Irish actor Jack OโConnell plays the villain. He may be a vampire, he may be a demon โ either way, Iโm curious to see what he and the dynamic duo will unleash. โAmy Nicholson
โMission: Impossible โ The Final Reckoningโ (May 23)

Tom Cruise, center, leads his team in the movie โMission: Impossible โ The Final Reckoning.โ
(Paramount Pictures and Skydance/Paramount Pictures and Skydance)
Can we expect Tom Cruise sprinting across rooftops like the fate of the world โ or at least the summer box office โ depended on it? Need we even ask? Picking up where the $566-million-grossing โDead Reckoning Part Oneโ left off, the eighth film in the nearly 30-year-old franchise finds Ethan Hunt and his IMF team (including Simon Peggโs Benji, Ving Rhamesโ Luther and Hayley Atwellโs Grace) still locked in a battle to stop the โEntity,โ a rogue AI threatening global stability and forcing Ethan to confront his past. Directed by Christopher McQuarrie in his fourth โMissionโ outing, the movie showcases the 62-year-old Cruise continuing to push the limits of what age and studio insurance will allow. During filming in England, he was seen dangling from an upside-down biplane โ because of course. While the title hints at an epic conclusion, Cruise and McQuarrie have already teased that Ethan Huntโs story may not be over just yet. After all, in this franchise, nothing is truly impossible. โJ. Rottenberg
โBallerinaโ (June 6)

Lance Reddick, left, Ian McShane and Ana de Armas in the movie โBallerina.โ
(Larry D. Horricks / Lionsgate)
John Wick fans, take heart. Yes, 2023โs โJohn Wick: Chapter 4โ seemed like it could be the concluding entry in the hugely popular franchise featuring Keanu Reeves as the legendary โ and seemingly indestructible โ hit man of few words. Fueled by jaw-dropping mayhem, a frenzied pace and menacing dark humor, the โJohn Wickโ films were enormously entertaining, spiced by cameos from huge stars, including Halle Berry and Laurence Fishburne. Now the upcoming โBallerinaโ looks like a fresh beginning for the franchise. Billed as โFrom the World of John Wickโ, the spinoff stars Ana de Armas, who impressed James Bond fans with her action chops in โNo Time to Die.โ She stars in the spinoff as Eva Macarro, a ballerina-assassin embarking on a deadly mission to avenge the death of her father. Returning to the franchise are Ian McShane, the late Lance Reddick in his final film appearance and Reeves. There will be blood, lots of it. โGreg Braxton
โElioโ (June 13)

Elio (voice of Yonas Kibreab), left, and Glordon (voice of Remy Edgerly) in Disney and Pixarโs โElio.โ
(Disney/Pixar)
A fantasy coming-of-age story with aliens? Sign me up. The eponymous 11-year old at the center of โElioโ has been described as an alien-obsessed space fanatic with an active imagination. After some mishap leads to Elio getting beamed up, the alien leaders of an interplanetary organization come to mistakenly believe he is the leader of โuh, Earthโ and the movie will see him having to navigate the aftermath of said misunderstanding. The film boasts the creatives behind some of my favorite Pixar tweens: โCocoโ co-director Adrian Molina and โTurning Redโ director Domee Shi, who has taken over directing duties along with โBurrowโsโ Madeline Sharafian. Iโm anticipating big emotional swings along with hilarious moments of awkward cringe as young Elio starts to figure out the kind of person he wants to be. โT.B.
โ28 Years Laterโ (June 20)

Aaron Taylor-Johnson, left, and Alfie Williams in โ28 Years Later.โ
(Miya Mizuno / Sony Pictures Entertainment)
Sometimes a terrifying trailer is enough โ and this one certainly hits the nightmare mark. But much has happened since the zombie genre got a post-9/11 rethink in 2002 with โ28 Days Later.โ Original director Danny Boyle has won Oscars, mounted an epic Olympics opening ceremony (London 2012) and strayed a bit from his playful economy. Original screenwriter Alex Garland, meanwhile, has become a signature filmmaker of his own, recently releasing the disturbing what-if action movie โCivil War.โ Theyโve reunited, bringing along the first filmโs gifted cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle (โDogville,โ โSlumdog Millionaireโ), who shot the new project on iPhones. This heroic trio, taking on the fall of civilization and the ravenous undead? Sounds like a no-brainer to us. (Need actors? How about Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes?) โJoshua Rothkopf
โF1โ (June 27)

Damson Idris and Brad Pitt in the movie โF1.โ
(Warner Bros. Pictures)
When Brad Pitt appeared on the podium recently at Formula 1โs season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, flanked by real-life drivers Charles Leclerc and George Russell, the project of producer Jerry Bruckheimer and director Joseph Kosinskiโs new racing drama came into sharp, sudden focus. More than the contemporary actioners of the 1960s and 1970s like โGrand Prixโ and โLe Mans,โ or recent period pieces like โFerrariโ and โFord v Ferrari,โ โF1โ appears to be chasing a sort of high-octane trompe lโoeil: Can โF1โ build a world so lifelike we mistake Brad Pittโs Sonny Hayes for a championship contender, and Javier Bardem for his showy team owner? Like Netflix series โDrive to Surviveโ and โSenna,โ the film was made with the participation of the sportโs governing body and so received unprecedented access. Now it just needs to avoid playing like a feature-length advertisement. โ M. Brennan
โM3GAN 2.0โ (June 27)

M3GAN in the movie โM3GAN 2.0.โ
(Geoffrey Short / Universal Pictures)
You just canโt keep an evil AI doll down. โM3GAN,โ the horror movie about a robot created by brilliant scientist Gemma (Allison Williams) meant to be the playmate and companion for her grieving niece Cady (Violet McGraw) was a huge hit when it premiered in 2022. M3GAN developed her own self-awareness and transformed into a living doll that took on its own deadly personality, complete with quirky little dance moves. Although M3GAN came to a bad end by the final credits, the sequel reveals that she has been resurrected and is now even more lethal. Returning for more scary-fun thrills are Williams and McGraw. โG.B.
Untitled Trey Parker/Matt Stone Film (July 4)
Matt Stone and Trey Parker, photographed in Melbourne, Australia in 2017.
(Chris Hopkins / Getty Images)
Little has been revealed about Trey Parker and Matt Stoneโs upcoming comedy, their first feature film since 2004โs โTeam America: World Police.โ Still, here are two clues that itโs going to hit theaters like an incendiary device: First, the award-laden musician and provocateur Kendrick Lamar produces and stars as a Civil War-era reenactor who learns his white girlfriendโs ancestors once enslaved his own. Second, Paramount Chief Executive Brian Robbins has made a point of releasing it on July 4. โItโs certain to create some fireworks,โ Robbins said to a room of movie-theater owners. With a script by the malevolently hilarious Vernon Chatman (โWonder Showzen,โ โXavier: Renegade Angel,โ โThe Shivering Truthโ), every creative involved is known for pushing boundaries over a cliff and then stomping on their remains. The last time the โSouth Parkโ creators teamed up with Lamar, they digitally transformed him into O.J. Simpson. โA.N.
โSupermanโ (July 11)

David Corenswet in the movie โSuperman.โ
(Warner Bros. Pictures / DC Comics)
Itโs a bird! Itโs a plane! Itโs a new Superman movie! Written and directed by DC Studios boss James Gunn, โSupermanโ will see David Corenswet take over the mantle as the eponymous Man of Steel while also serving as the big-screen launch of the rebooted DC Universe. Picking up some time after Superman has revealed himself to the world, the film will follow the Kryptonian superhero as he is trying to figure out who he is as a person while struggling with his day-to-day life, according to the filmmaker. But what Iโm most interested in is how a hero like Superman, who symbolizes hope and the very best of humanity because he believes in the innate goodness of people, will resonate at a time when society is so polarized that rhetoric dehumanizes those with opposing viewpoints. What does โtruth, justice and a better tomorrowโ mean to us right now? โT.B.
โFreakier Fridayโ (Aug. 8)

Jamie Lee Curtis, left, and Lindsay Lohan in the movie โFreakier Friday.โ
(Glen Wilson / Disney Enterprises)
As someone who grew up loving the โFreaky Fridayโ remake of the early aughts โ and has had that pop-rock earworm from its closing scene stuck in my head for 22 years โ Iโm thrilled that Disney is releasing a follow-up to the body-swapping comedy. Years after a by-the-book mother Tess (Jamie Lee Curtis) and a rebellious daughter Anna (Lindsay Lohan) spent some time experiencing each otherโs lives, Anna now has a daughter of her own and a soon-to-be stepdaughter. Might a little soul-switching be helpful when merging families? The entire cast of the original film is back for the sequel โ Mark Harmon, Chad Michael Murray, Christina Vidal Mitchell, Haley Hudson, Lucille Soong, Stephen Tobolowsky and Rosalind Chao โ this time joined by Manny Jacinto, Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, Julia Butters and Sophia Hammons. And of course, Iโm hoping this second movie, directed by Nisha Ganatra (โThe High Noteโ), also closes with an โUltimateโ-level banger. โAshley Lee
Untitled Paul Thomas Anderson Film (Aug. 8)
Writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson, photographed in Los Angeles in 2018.
(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)
Of course we donโt know the title. Or anything else, officially. Letterboxd is calling it โThe Battle of Baktan Cross,โ so maybe thatโs it. We know that Anderson started shooting in Humboldt County about a year ago and wrapped in El Paso a few months later. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio (sporting a handlebar mustache), Regina Hall, Sean Penn, Alana Haim and Benicio del Toro. It might be loosely inspired by Thomas Pynchonโs joyous blast of a novel, โVineland.โ Or it might not. (In the past, Anderson said it was โjust too intimidatingโ to tackle โVineland,โ adding โmy brainโs not big enough.โ) Warner Bros. has dubbed the movie an โevent film,โ giving it a summer release date and a reported $115 million budget. Looking to separate fact from fiction, I emailed Anderson who, of course, was of no help. โI need to start figuring out what the fโ to say,โ he replied. True. Summer will be here before we know it. โGlenn Whipp
โThe Brideโ (Sep. 26)

Christian Bale in the movie โThe Bride.โ
(Niko Tavernise / Warner Bros. Pictures)
Jessie Buckley stars as the titular character in Maggie Gyllenhaalโs reimagining of โThe Bride of Frankensteinโ and if there is a more exciting sentence to be written in cinematic journalism, I donโt know what it is. Oh, and Christian Bale stars as the Monster (who, as purists will know doubt point out, was not called Frankenstein, that being the name of the man who originally created him.) Thereโs a throughline here from Gyllenhaalโs 2021 directorial debut โThe Lost Daughter,โ which examined the notion of a โmonstrousโ mother. Also, the new film follows on the heels of โPoor Things,โ which featured another surgically cobbled-together young woman bent on busting social norms. But โFrankensteinโ was, after all, a female creation; Mary Shelley didnโt just write a book that has generated conversation and adaptations for more than 200 years, she basically invented science fiction and modern horror. So it will be well worth seeing this story told through the eyes of a woman, both in front of and behind the camera. โM.M.
โWicked: For Goodโ (Nov. 21)

Cynthia Erivo, left, and Ariana Grande in โWicked: Part I.โ
(Universal Pictures)
Universal strategically split Jon M. Chuโs film version of the blockbuster stage show into two parts, complete with a yearlong intermission. The first movie โ already the highest grossing film adaptation of a Broadway musical โ introduced audiences to the green witch Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) and her bubbly bestie Glinda (Ariana Grande), and ended on a gravity-defying cliffhanger, with Elphaba flying away from Oz instead of aligning with the Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) and her former mentor Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh). Like the 2003 showโs Act 2, the second movie will overlap with the events of the movie โThe Wizard of Ozโ and reveal the fates of Glindaโs charismatic boyfriend Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey), Elphabaโs younger sister Nessarose (Marissa Bode) and her crush Boq (Ethan Slater). While it will also include two new songs from composer Stephen Schwartz, Iโm most looking forward to Erivo and Grandeโs rendition of the beloved duet from which this second installment takes its title. โA.L.
โAfter the Huntโ (TBA)

Luca Guadagnino at the premiere of โQueerโ during the London Film Festival in October.
(Scott A. Garfitt / Invision / Associated Press)
Something about the โAfter the Huntโ ensemble of Julia Roberts, Ayo Edebiri, Michael Stuhlbarg, Chloรซ Sevigny and Andrew Garfield feels unpredictable: a mix of generations, stardoms and performing styles that has a slight air of combustible danger to it. The grouping is made even more exciting in that the cast is being led by director Luca Guadagnino, who is following the one-two flex of โChallengersโ and โQueerโ with a dramatic thriller from actor turned first-time screenwriter Nora Garrett. In the story, a Yale professor (Roberts) finds her personal and professional lives thrown into disarray after a star student levels a rape accusation against a colleague. The exploration of power dynamics, sexual politics and academia is just the kind of provocative storytelling that Guadagnino excels at, unafraid of sticking his nose straight into any number of cultural hornetโs nests. โMark Olsen
โDie, My Loveโ (TBA)

Scottish director Lynne Ramsay speaks during an interview at the Morelia Film Festival in 2018.
(Berenice Bautista / Associated Press)
Simply saying that Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay will have a new film in 2025 โ her first since 2017โs โYou Were Never Really Hereโ and only her fifth since 1999 โ is enough to merit inclusion on this list. But the fact it is an adaptation of Ariana Harwiczโs darkly comic novel โDie, My Loveโ about post-natal depression and bipolar disorder, with a cast including Jennifer Lawrence, Robert Pattinson, LaKeith Stanfield, Nick Nolte and Sissy Spacek, makes it truly irresistible. Ramsay specializes in vibes and mood as much as direct storytelling, dipping into wells of deep and disturbing emotions, and she should be able to create sparks from the combined live-wire energies of Lawrence and Pattinson, who are both able to walk the razor-edge of goofy/weird and haunting/dramatic like few others. โM.O.
โThe Mastermindโ (TBA)
Filmmaker Kelly Reichardt, photographed in New York in 2020.
(Michael Nagle / For The Times)
Josh OโConnor has become one of Hollywoodโs most in-demand young actors with roles in upcoming films from, among others, Rian Johnson and Steven Spielberg. He will also star in Kelly Reichardtโs โThe Mastermind,โ described as the story of an art heist set amid the shifting cultural and political dynamics of the Vietnam War era. Reichardt has brought her observant, politically-charged filmmaking to genre storytelling before, with the eco-terrorism thriller โNight Movesโ and her westerns โMeekโs Cutoffโ and โFirst Cow,โ though this could be her most conventionally accessible work yet. The cast also includes โSeptember 5โsโ John Magaro, who has worked with Reichardt twice before, as well as โLicorice Pizzaโ star Alana Haim, Bill Camp, Hope Davis, Gaby Hoffman and โThe Penguinโsโ Rhenzy Feliz. โM.O.
โMaterialistsโ (TBA)

Director Celine Song, left, on the set of โMaterialists,โ with Dakota Johnson and Chris Evans.
(Atsushi Nishijima / A24)
About a year ago, over a glass or three of wine, filmmaker Celine Song and I were talking about our past lives and the ways we met our spouses. โI used to be a matchmaker, you know,โ she revealed, and then proceeded to tell me some stories that made me question how anyone managed to stay in a relationship for more than five minutes. I remembered this conversation when it was announced that her next movie, the follow-up to the 2023 Oscar-nominated best picture โPast Lives,โ was going to be a dramedy about a professional matchmaker who finds her own match with a rich man, only to find herself questioning her choice when an ex-boyfriend comes back into her life. Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans star in the film, and who doesnโt want to see what comes from that love triangle? โG.W.
โMother Maryโ (TBA)

Anne Hathaway in the movie โMother Mary.โ
(A24)
Billed as an โepic pop melodrama,โ this film from A24 follows the relationship between a pop star, played by Anne Hathaway, and a fashion designer, played by Michaela Coel, the Emmy-winning creator and star of โI May Destroy You.โ Writer-director David Lowery has described โMother Maryโ as a โweird, weird filmโ and โthe hardest thing Iโve ever done.โ The film features original songs by Charli XCX and Jack Antonoff and an ensemble cast including FKA Twigs and โEuphoriaโsโ Hunter Schafer. Itโs hard to know exactly what to expect from a director who moves between different genres, from poetic indies like โAinโt Them Bodies Saintsโ to big-budget fantasies like โPeter Pan & Wendy.โ Early images from the movie show Hathaway in a golden halo-like headdress and gilt bodysuit, looking like Cher meets the Virgin Mary โ and, well, Iโm sold. Whatever this movie is, Iโll be watching. โMeredith Blake
โSentimental Valueโ (TBA)

Jury member Joachim Trier at the opening ceremony of the Cannes Film Festival in 2021.
(Vianney Le Caer / Invision / Associated Press)
With his Oscar-nominated romantic comedy โThe Worst Person in the World,โ director Joachim Trier put his distinctive twist on a familiar archetype โ the late-20-something woman with the messy personal life. With this follow up, expected next year from Neon, heโll dig into a dysfunctional father-daughter relationship. Written by Trier and Eskil Vogt, โSentimental Valueโ reunites the filmmaker with his โWorst Personโ leading lady Renate Reinsve. She plays an actor named Nora, whose eccentric father Gutav (Stellan Skarsgรฅrd), a once-celebrated filmmaker desperate for a comeback, reappears after a prolonged absence. In a bid for reconciliation, he offers a part in his new film to Nora, who isnโt interested. Elle Fanning plays an American star working in Oslo, Norway. โM. Blake
โThe Way of the Windโ (TBA)

Terrence Malick on the Made in Austin panel at SXSW in Austin, Tx., in 2017.
(Michael Buckner / Variety via Getty Images)
Terrence Malick has been editing his three-hour biblical epic (rumored to have a Cannes slot) for five years, so Iโd be lying if I didnโt admit part of me simply wants to see how that turned out. Following several episodes in the life of Jesus of Nazareth, โThe Way of the Windโ reportedly centers on Peter (Matthias Schoenaerts) attempting to convince Jesus (Gรฉza Rรถhrig) to become part of the anti-Roman political movement. According to early interviews, the film is more interested in the man than the miracles โ unless you count a rather miraculous cast that includes Ben Kingsley, Joseph Fiennes, Aidan Turner and Mark Rylance as Satan (the latter who honestly clinches it for me). Malick seems well-suited for a big spiritual tapestry, and if the film industry can manage to produce at least one decent film on Winston Churchill every year, youโd think they could do something similar for the founder of Christianity. So, you know, say a little prayer. โM.M.