January to March is often considered the dumping ground for mediocre to bad new releases at the movies. The box office is low and audiences are recovering from the wave of movies that came out during November and December. 2025’s first quarter has been interesting, with a variety of genre films that bombed at the box office, or superhero movies


Warfare (4 stars out of 4)



The best movies often feel like experiences, and Alex Garland’s “Warfare” is such a film. The only question is whether you feel you can handle the ordeal.



Set in the Battle of Ramadi in 2006 during the Iraq War, “Warfare” was co-written and directed by veteran Ray Mendoza, who was present for the events of the


The Amateur (3 stars out of 4)



Directed by James Hawes, “The Amateur” is a solid spy thriller that crosses elements of the “Bourne” franchise with this year’s “Black Bag” and echoes of Liam Neeson’s “Taken” films.



The story follows a CIA cryptography analyst named Heller (Rami Malek) who takes a dramatic career turn in the wake of a personal tragedy. Brilliant,


Death of a Unicorn (2 ½ stars out of 4)



A movie like “The Room” becomes infamous because it took itself seriously, with disastrous results. It was bad because it couldn’t help itself, and that turned it into a cult classic. A movie like “Sharknado” is a very different animal (pun slightly intended). “Sharknado” wanted to be a cult classic, and


On Becoming a Guinea Fowl (3 stars out of 4)



Made in Zambia by director Rungano Nyoni, “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl” is a compelling if deceptive exploration of culture and family dynamics.



The film opens late at night as the protagonist, a young woman named Shula (Susan Chardy), is driving home from a costume party. Her absurd dress—similar to the bulbous


Black Bag (3 ½ stars out of 4)



When you break it down, Steven Soderbergh’s “Black Bag” becomes a bizarre recipe of pop culture elements: start with a “Mission: Impossible”-style save the world premise, but set it inside a British Intelligence internal subculture that feels like a more adult version of TV’s “The Office.”



Next, execute the plot like a classic Agatha


With the recent release of Osgood Perkins's horror-comedy The Monkey, another Stephen King story has now been adapted into a film. The Monkey is inspired by a short story of the same title from a short collection called Skeleton Crew. While The Monkey might not be the most unique story from King to be adapted into a film, there is


Premise



Based on the true story of the LeRette family, young Austin (Jacob Laval) navigates life with brittle bone disease and autism, which--try as they may--can't break him down.







Far more than I expected



I was anticipating a cheesy, possibly religious family flick, but I was surprised by the quality and how stylized it was right off the bat. It's fun and


Captain America: Brave New World (2 stars out of 4)



It’s a given with Marvel productions these days that if you want to understand the latest release, you need to be familiar with half a dozen previous offerings. Julius Onah’s “Captain America: Brave New World” stays true to this trend, but wavers on a shaky foundation of sub-par predecessors and bland