Hedda

2025   Amazon MGM Studios

Rated:  R

Length:  1 hr  47min

Drama ~ Romance

Directed by:  Nia DaCosta

Starring:  Tessa Thompson, Imogen PootsTom BatemanNicholas Pinnock, Finbar Lynch, Mirren Mack and Nina Hoss.

A Little Chaos Is Good For The Gathering.

Tessa Thompson stars as Hedda Gabler, a complex woman caught between the ghosts of her past and the stifling confines of her present life. Recently married to George Tesman (Tom Bateman) and back from an extended honeymoon to a country estate they can barely afford, Hedda is determined to secure a better future for them. George aspires to a prestigious university professorship, and Hedda organizes a party inviting his academic peers, including Professor Greenwood (Finbar Lynch) and his wife Tabitha (Mirren Mack), to help boost his chances.

The party turns tense with the arrival of Eileen Lovborg (Nina Hoss), a sober former alcoholic academic and Hedda’s ex-lover, whose presence stirs up old wounds and rivalry. Eileen has revitalized her career with a promising manuscript and support from Thea (Imogen Poots), who is fiercely protective of her. Hedda, while outwardly appearing hospitable, maneuvers behind the scenes to undermine Eileen’s progress and sway favors toward George, revealing layers of manipulation and jealousy.

Over the course of this charged night, Hedda’s volatile emotional state deepens, exposing her as a woman simultaneously enraged by and yearning for connection. Her actions straddle a blend of calculated cruelty and desperate vulnerability, driven by complex motives including resentment, love, and a fierce desire for control. The dynamics between Hedda, George, Eileen, and Thea escalate, pulling everyone into a spiraling clash of power, betrayal, and unspoken desires.

Based on the play Hedda Gabler written by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen and first performed in 1891, it tells the story of Hedda Gabler, the strong-willed daughter of a general who feels trapped in a boring marriage to the scholar George Tesman. Hedda struggles against the expectations of society and her own desire for power and freedom. The play explores themes like control, jealousy, societal pressure, and the limits placed on women in the 19th century. Hedda’s manipulative actions and personal conflicts build to a tragic and emotionally intense conclusion.

The movie adaptation organizes the story into five acts:

Act 1: Introduction:

Hedda and her husband George Tesman return from their honeymoon to a country estate. Hedda arranges a party inviting academic friends to help boost George’s career prospects. The act sets up Hedda’s desires, relationships, and the social pressure she feels.

Act 2: Rising Tension:

The arrival of Eileen Lovborg, a former lover of Hedda’s and George’s academic rival, introduces conflict. Eileen’s success and renewed sobriety threaten Hedda’s plans, stirring jealousy and insecurity. The social dynamics begin to fray.

Act 3: Conflict Escalates:

Hedda’s manipulation and emotional unrest come to the forefront as she undermines Eileen and struggles for control. Personal secrets and desires cause rising tension between Hedda, George, Eileen, and Thea (Imogen Poots), deepening the drama.

Act 4: Climax:

Unfolding events during the party lead to confrontations and revelations. Hedda’s growing desperation leads to drastic decisions, pushing characters toward breaking points and tragedy.

Act 5: Resolution and Aftermath:

The consequences of Hedda’s actions become clear. The film closes with reflection on the characters’ fates and the emotional and psychological toll of the night’s events.

Tessa Thompson’s portrayal delivers a powerful, multifaceted Hedda, blending menace and melancholy, while the strong supporting cast enhances the intensity of this psychological drama. Set in the early 20th century with lavish costumes and atmospheric production, the film reimagines the classic Henrik Ibsen play through a contemporary lens focused on gender, race, and same sex relationships, offering a fresh yet faithful adaptation of the tragic tale.

Nosferatu

2024   Focus Features

Rated:  R

Length:  2 hr  12min

Gothic Horror ~ Supernatural Horror ~ Vampire Horror

Directed by:  Robert Eggers

Starring:  Bill SkarsgårdNicholas HoultLily-Rose DeppAaron Taylor-JohnsonEmma Corrin, Ralph Ineson and Willem Dafoe.

Succumb To The Darkness

Nosferatu unfolds in 19th-century Germany, centering on Ellen Hutter (Lily-Rose Depp), a young woman haunted by eerie nightmares and a psychic connection to the mysterious vampire Nosferatu. Ellen’s husband, Thomas Hutter (Nicholas Hoult), a real estate agent, is sent to Transylvania to finalize the sale of a remote manor to the reclusive and terrifying Count Orlok (Bill Skarsgård). Despite warnings from locals, Thomas persists, unaware of the dark fate awaiting him and his family.

Upon meeting Count Orlok at his eerie castle, Thomas experiences increasingly disturbing events. Orlok exerts a malevolent influence, forcing Thomas to annul his marriage to Ellen through a strange document. While Thomas becomes physically weakened and trapped in the castle, Orlok sets off on a ship to Ellen’s town, Wisborg, carrying with him a devastating plague transmitted by rats. Ellen’s health deteriorates as she suffers from seizures and sleepwalking, under the vampire’s sinister spell.

As Orlok’s deadly presence spreads devastation through Wisborg, Ellen, along with her allies the doctor Wilhelm Sievers (Ralph Ineson) and occult scientist Albin Eberhart von Franz (Willem Dafoe), seeks to uncover a way to stop Nosferatu. They discover that Orlok’s power can only be ended by a willing sacrifice from a pure maiden. Ellen, driven by love and despair, makes a harrowing decision to confront Orlok on her own.

The tension crescendos as Ellen sacrifices herself, luring Orlok and stalling him until sunrise, ultimately ending his reign of terror. This act is both tragic and empowering, highlighting Ellen’s bravery and empathy amid chaos and loss. The film doesn’t shy away from exploring dark sexual themes, violence, and despair, pushing boundaries both visually and narratively.

Nosferatu is a triumph of horror craftsmanship, its moody visuals, gripping performances, and relentless sense of doom evoke the spirit of the original while giving it new life. While it lacks some visceral scares, it makes up for it in atmosphere and existential horror, a film not just about vampires but about loneliness, obsession, and sacrificial love. For fans of Gothic, Vampire and Supernatural Horror, Nosferatu delivers a chilling experience that lingers long after the credits roll.

The Woman In The Yard Coming To Amazon Prime Friday October 31, 2025

Just In Time For Halloween! The Spooky Psychological Horror Movie The Woman In The Yard Streams on Amazon Prime Friday October 31, 2025!

A lone, spectral woman shrouded entirely in black appears on a family’s front lawn without explanation and warns them “Today’s the day.”

Where did she come from? What does she want? When will she leave? Only The Woman in the Yard knows.

From Blumhouse, the most successful global brand in horror, comes a new original chiller starring BAFTA and SAG nominee Danielle Deadwyler (Till, The Harder They Fall, The Piano Lesson) as Ramona, a woman crippled by grief after she survives a car accident that takes her husband (Russell Hornsby; BMF, Fences).

Seriously injured, Ramona now must care for their 14-year-old son (Peyton Jackson; Respect, American Refugee) and 6-year-old-daughter (Estella Kahiha; Will Trent, BMF), alone in her rural farmhouse.

Then one day the woman takes form in their yard.

Ramona assumes the woman (Okwui Okpokwasili; The Exorcist: Believer, Julie Taymor’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream) is lost or demented, but as the woman creeps nearer and nearer to the house, it becomes clear she is no ordinary figure and her intentions are anything but peaceful. Now Ramona must rally to protect herself and her children from the grasp of the woman who simply won’t leave them alone.

The Woman in the Yard is directed by Jaume Collet-Serra (Black Adam, Jungle Cruise), who recently directed Deadwyler in the upcoming action thriller Carry On. The film is written by first-time feature screenwriter Sam Stefanak.

The film is produced by Jason Blum, producer of The Invisible Man and The Black Phone, along with acclaimed Emmy nominated producer Stephanie Allain p.g.a. (The Exorcist: Believer, Hustle & Flow), and is executive produced by star Danielle Deadwyler, Jaume Collet-Serra, James Moran and Gabrielle Ebron.

New Movie Hedda Debuts On Prime Wednesday October 29, 2025

Amazon Prime Debuts Hedda Wednesday October 29, 2025.  A provocative reimagining of Henrik Ibsen’s classic play, Hedda follows enigmatic newlywed Hedda (Tessa Thompson), who is outwardly composed but hiding a simmering discontent that threatens to explode when the brilliant and charismatic Eileen Lovberg (Nina Hoss) reenters her life. Over the course of a raucous party, the high and low of society endure the consequences of this dangerous and unknowable woman yearning for a past love. What ensues is a ruthless game of manipulation, where lust, jealousy, and betrayal collide. Written and directed by Nia DaCosta, Hedda is a daring exploration of power, desire, and a woman’s refusal to be confined.

Starring: Tessa Thompson, Imogen Poots, Tom Bateman, Nicholas Pinnock and Nina Hoss.

Canary Black

2024   Amazon MGM Studios

Rated:  R

Length:  1 hr  41min

Action ~ Drama

Directed by:  Pierre Morel

Starring:  Kate Beckinsale, Rupert Friend, Ray StevensonSaffron Burrows, and Jaz Hutchins.

“There’s a file….Canary Black…….you’re going to steal it from your agency. If you fail your husband dies.”

Kate Beckinsale stars as a top CIA operative, Avery Graves. Avery is blackmailed by terrorists into betraying her own country to save her kidnapped husband. Cut off from her team, she turns to her underworld contacts to help locate the coveted intelligence that the kidnappers want. As she is betrayed at every turn, Avery finds herself in a deadly race to deliver a ransom that could trigger a global crisis.

In the very first scene, Kate Beckinsale is wearing a blonde wig that reminds me of Charlize Theron in Atomic Blonde. In fact they almost look identical. And the plot is almost the same, Spy operative is tasked with an impossible mission to extract the priceless file everybody is dying over. Avery graves then scales down the side of a very tall building and kills numerous armed bad men so can she can execute the target in his own swimming pool. All while still wearing the wig.

Then she shows up at home where her husband of three years is making her dinner because it is their anniversary. Some very cheesy gifts are exchanged and then they go out for dinner. Her Husband is played by Rupert Friend and he apparently has no idea she’s a CIA operative and lethal. Rupert is an English actor and I am not familiar with him, but my first thoughts in that first scene with him were:

  • Yo, where’d you get those glasses, I would ditch them.
  • She married you? Really?
  • What’s up with the thick Irish accent, it sucks, actually it’s annoying. And aren’t you playing an Englishman in this movie.

The dialogue and chemistry between them seemed forced, I didn’t really get the vibe that they had known each other and been married for three years. It was almost as if they were strangers forced into a scene.

There were some other scenes and dialogue throughout the movie that felt the same way to me, forced, wasn’t really feeling the vibe. It just felt a little off. Jaz Hutchins who plays Agent Mayfield was horrible. It was some really bad over the top acting. Reminded me of Gerard Butler in LAST SEEN ALIVE. Even the plot and characters just seemed off, forced. I mean Kate did good trying to pull it all together for everybody else but it seemed lacking.

Pierre Morel also directed Taken and Peppermint which I really like, Peppermint is one of my favorites actually. But this one missed the mark, something didn’t work out right. I like Kate Beckinsale but I think Jennifer Garner did a better job in Peppermint. I went in with high expectations and was looking forward to a new spy action thriller. I did enjoy it in spite of the flaws, but on the other side of watching I don’t feel like I could recommend it.

So, that’s just a wave of the hand as in so-so, it was just alright and I can’t recommend it.