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Adorable Brazilian Stray Dog Movie 'Caramelo' Trailer with Rafael Vitti
Hollywood

Adorable Brazilian Stray Dog Movie ‘Caramelo’ Trailer with Rafael Vitti

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Adorable Brazilian Stray Dog Movie ‘Caramelo’ Trailer with Rafael Vitti

by Alex Billington
September 10, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Caramelo was lucky to have found you.” “I’m the lucky one.” Netflix has revealed an official trailer for a Brazilian dog movie called Caramelo, arriving to watch on Netflix worldwide starting in October this fall. The film is directed by Brazilian director Diego Freitas, and features a famous dog as the main actor. A chef and a caramel-colored mutt become best friends after a life-changing encounter. On an emotional journey, they will laugh and cry together, and also teach us valuable lessons. The film stars Rafael Vitti as Pedro and the canine star named Amendoim. The first film with Brazil’s iconic mutt dog, Caramelo is a drama that will make you both laugh and get emotional by celebrating the unique bond of companionship between pets and humans. The cast also includes Arianne Botelho, Noemia Oliveira, Ademara, Kelzy Ecard, Bruno Vinicius, Roger Gobeth, & Olívia Araújo, plus a special appearance by chef Paola Carosella. This looks super sweet and very cheesy, but good – an uplifting doggie movie to bring everyone a bit of joy.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Diego Freitas’ film Caramelo, direct from Netflix’s YouTube:

Caramelo Movie Trailer

Caramelo Movie Poster

Get ready for cuteness, emotion, and an irresistible urge to squeeze! Pedro (Rafael Vitti) is about to fulfill his dream of running a restaurant when an unexpected diagnosis turns everything upside down. With the help of the very friendly stray dog Caramelo, he embarks on a journey of rediscovery and connection, finding meaning & inspiration in the present—and a lifelong friendship. Caramelo is directed by Brazilian filmmaker Diego Freitas, director of the films My Dead Ones, Beyond the Universe, Tire 5 Cartas, and Burning Betrayal previously. The screenplay is written by Diego Freitas and Rod Azevedo, in collaboration with Carolina Castro; from a story by Diego Freitas. Produced by Iafa Britz. Netflix debuts Freitas’ Caramelo film streaming on Netflix globally starting October 8th, 2025 coming soon this fall. Who wants to watch?

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Find more posts in: Foreign Films, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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'Rebel Ridge' Wins 2025 Emmy for Best TV Movie
TV & Streaming

‘Rebel Ridge’ Wins 2025 Emmy for Best TV Movie

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Rebel Ridge took home the award for best TV movie at the 2025 Creative Arts Emmy Awards.

The Netflix film, written, produced and directed by Jeremy Saulnier, stars Aaron Pierre as a former Marine who goes up against a corrupt police force in a small Louisiana town. The project beat out fellow nominees The Gorge, Mountainhead, Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy and Nonnas in the TV movie category.

Saulnier spoke to The Hollywood Reporter ahead of the action-thriller’s September 2024 release about bringing it to fruition following a pandemic, writers and actors strikes and the exit of the movie’s original lead ahead of filming, saying, “Because we faced headwinds, [Rebel Ridge] did end up being a version of the movie that far exceeded my expectations. I’m fully at peace with it, and I love it in its current form before it’s even released. This is a first for me to have this much joy upon sharing my latest work.”

Of the five-year journey to Rebel Ridge hitting the screen, he added, “I do believe that this feels like the only version of the film that was destined to happen, and I’m so grateful that the fates connected me and Aaron Pierre, and that the crew and the cast had the fortitude to stick with us. And the support from Netflix all the way through to the end was just singular. I can’t think of any other comp where [a film] actually went through all this and over-fucking-achieved.”

The 2025 Creative Arts Emmy Awards are held on Saturday, Sept. 6 and Sunday, Sept. 7 at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles. Check out the full list of winners here.

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Jonas Brothers Dash Home in 1st 'A Very Jonas Christmas Movie' Trailer
Music

Jonas Brothers Dash Home in 1st ‘A Very Jonas Christmas Movie’ Trailer

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

The Jonas Brothers promise they’ll be home for Christmas in the first look at the sibling trio’s upcoming family-friendly holiday movie. But based on the brief trailer that dropped on Friday (Sept. 5), Joe, Nick and Kevin Jonas will have to overcome some seriously silly obstacles if they’re going to be letting it bro, bro, bro this December.

According to a synopsis of A Very Jonas Christmas Movie — which is slated to premiere globally on Disney+ on Nov. 14 — the trio will “face a series of escalating obstacles as they struggle to make it from London to New York in time to spend Christmas with their families.”

In the trailer, the brothers take a bow in snowy London after a standing-room-only gig, with Kevin lamenting that he hasn’t seen his kids “in like a month.” Meanwhile, Nick FaceTimes with wife Priyanka Chopra and promises he’ll be home for the holidays as she shares a “we love you” from the fam back home. But when Randall Park (Shortcomings) asks them if they’re sure they can make it to the airport without him the next day, Nick assures their minder that it’s just one night. “We’ll be fine,” he says. Famous last words.

Cue the mayhem, as the boys dash through the snow in a stranger’s car, run around London and freak out as a pack of wolves surround them in the woods. “I’m sorry we never got to hear you sing Kevin!” Joe shouts as the snarling lobos close in. “I’m sure your voice is pretty okay!”

The film’s all-star cast also includes: Billie Lourd (The Last Showgirl), Laverne Cox (Doubt), KJ Apa (I Still Believe), Chloe Bennett (Valley Girl), Andrew Barth Feldman (Maybe Happy Ending), Andrea Martin (Only Murders in the Building), Kenny G and producer/songwriter Justin Tranter as themselves, as well as Park and Jesse Tyler Ferguson (Cocaine Bear).

The JoBros — who are also listed as producers — star as themselves in the film directed by Emmy- and Oscar-winner Jessica Yu (Quiz Lady), with some promised cameos from the extended Jonas family universe.

The brothers are still on the road for their 20th anniversary Jonas20: Greetings From Your Hometown tour, which is slated to hit the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, Calif. on Saturday night (Sept. 6).

Check out the trailer below.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Movie Review The Bengal Files | 'We' The People Must Watch | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Movie Review The Bengal Files | ‘We’ The People Must Watch | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Movie: The Bengal Files
Director:
Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri
Cast: Mithun Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi, Darshan Kumaar, Anupam Kher, Saswata Chatterjee, Namashi Chakraborty, Rajesh Khera, Puneet Issar, Priyanshu Chatterjee, Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Sourav Das, Mohan Kapur, Eklavya Sood, Anubha Arora, Palomi Ghosh, Simrat Kaur, Eklavya Sood, Mohan Kapur.
Theatrical Release Date:
September 5, 2025
Runtime:
3hrs 24mins

Writing about Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri’s The Bengal Files demands a degree of humility. I haven’t lived through the horrors of 1946 Bengal, nor do I carry survivors’ stories in my own family. My vantage is necessarily limited to what the film places before me—the choices of storytelling, performance, craft, and tone. On those terms, this is an unflinching, provocative work that revisits Direct Action Day in Calcutta and the Noakhali atrocities with a singular intent: to make audiences feel the violence and its aftershocks rather than merely know about them.

At 204 minutes, the film is a commitment. The sprawl feels both demanding and, in stretches, deserved for the scale of history it attempts to shoulder. I did wonder if it could have been trimmed—there are passages where intensity shades into excess—but the length also allows the narrative to breathe, to circle back, and to accrue weight scene by scene. Agnihotri interlaces the period reconstruction with a contemporary strand, using the present to refract the past, and vice versa. It’s a familiar device that sometimes overstates its point, yet it does add urgency to the film’s insistence that history isn’t past.

The film’s power often lies in its sound and words. There are lines that land with a crack—clap-worthy, even—because they compress rage, grief, and ideology into sharp, memorable phrasing. The background score oscillates from minimalist unease to full-throated thunder, generally carrying the scenes with it. When it swells, it does so to communicate, not merely decorate; when it recedes, it lets silence do the wounding. On the image side, the cinematography is frequently impressive: long, unbroken takes through chaos and crowd, well-choreographed, sustained at high pitch. VFX is used sparingly and, when it shows up, it doesn’t yank you out of the moment.

Agnihotri’s staging is deliberately confrontational. The film does not look away from gore; it rubs your face in it. The graphic tableaux are designed to sear, to insist that euphemism has no place here. Whether you read that as necessary realism or as a form of manipulation will depend on your tolerance for shock as a tool of remembrance. What’s undeniable is the cumulative effect: stretches of awe and dread that make you physically uneasy, the kind of sequences that leave you with goosebumps long after the cut to black.

Several moments crystallize the film’s political and moral stance. A brazen scene where an MLA slaps a CBI officer says more about the asserted rot in the system than any speech could—broad, unsubtle, effective. And then there’s a striking counterpoint to a famous Krantiveer moment: where Nana Patekar once taunted the idea of identifying blood as Hindu or Muslim, Mithun Chakraborty holds up threads of different faiths and asks if anyone can claim they belong to an Indian rather than to a Hindu or a Muslim. It’s one of the film’s rare gestures toward unity, and it resonates.

Performances serve the thesis with conviction. A veteran Mithun Chakraborty grounds his scenes with weary gravitas; Pallavi Joshi brings a steely clarity with make up that doesn’t look at all; Anupam Kher’s Gandhi is played with restrain but could have been way better in terms of the presentation. Yet the script they inhabit remains more instructive than investigative. The Bengal Files prefers moral certainty to ambiguity. It frames history in stark binaries—heroes, victims, villains—privileging one community’s suffering while leaving scant room for the messier stories of coexistence or dissent. The feature-film format, chosen for its capacity to move hearts, also streamlines complexity into vivid, forceful arcs.

For a viewer without first-hand memory, that is both compelling and troubling. The film claims fidelity to research and testimony, and much of what it depicts aligns with the brutality recorded in accounts of 1946 Bengal. But the dramatization’s urgency sometimes bulldozes nuance, turning reckoning into verdict. You feel guided—at times pushed—toward specific emotions and conclusions. That artistic choice gives the film its undeniable impact; it also narrows the space for viewers to sit with complications history rarely spares.

Ultimately, The Bengal Files is less a neutral lesson than a cinematic act of remembrance with unmistakable intent. It is long, loud in places, and often brutal—but rarely careless. Its dialogues sting, its score carries, its long takes impress, its VFX stays out of the way. It unsettles more than it entertains, and perhaps that is the point. Whether you see it as necessary courage or dangerous simplification will depend on what you ask of art: illumination through empathy, or mobilisation through certainty. From where I sit—as a critic responding to what unfolds on screen—it is a powerful, discomforting work that forces attention onto histories too often ignored, even as it leaves you wrestling with the cost of telling them this way.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Barbie Ferreira Is a Critic in TIFF Movie
TV & Streaming

Barbie Ferreira Is a Critic in TIFF Movie

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Can you blame a critic for wincing when a character pulls out a notepad in the middle of a concert? Cinematic depictions of criticism are usually withering at best, and pointedly personal at worst. Well, critics can exhale while watching “Mile End Kicks,” the sophomore feature from Canadian writer/director Chandler Levack. Levack, herself a former critic, is cynical about a few things, but the act of criticism isn’t one of them. 

Like her debut “I Like Movies,” Levack’s new film is based on her own life experiences, namely a summer she spent in Montreal as a young, aspiring writer trying to find herself. Her protagonist, Grace Pine (Barbie Ferreira), goes through a similar arc, convincing herself — as so many young people do — that moving somewhere cooler will fix her life. She’s also telling everyone that she’s writing a book about Alanis Morissette’s “Jagged Little Pill,” never mind that she has neither a book contract nor a first draft. Grace recently interned at an alt-weekly whose editor told her she had promise as a writer (more on that in a bit). But really, all she learned there is how snide and dismissive male rock critics can be toward younger women.

IndieWire's Alison Foreman at a special treadmill screening of 'The Long Walk' at Culver Theater in Los Angeles

I don’t work there anymore, so it seems safe to divulge that my personal nickname for the circle of white male gatekeepers at the publication where I got my start was “the plaid dads.” And, as with the intricacies of stocking at a suburban video store in “I Like Movies,” “Mile End Kicks” gets the nuances of life as a young female music critic right. The scenarios are relatable — who among us has not anxiously ignored emails from an editor? — as are the conversations: The argument Grace interrupts, earning derisive laughter from her coworkers, is over the merits of different Hüsker Dü albums. 

“Mile End Kicks” is set in 2011, but it feels more like the late aughts — again, accurate — and the care put into the details of Grace’s world is evident from the opening credits, rendered in the modified Helvetica font of an American Apparel ad. The reference reoccurs in the movie’s most artfully shot scene, which follows Grace around a party with a spotlight on her face, moving along with her. The flat, bright light creates a vignette effect reminiscent of a Terry Richardson photograph, effectively evoking both the era and the sexual danger that came with it. 

“Mile End Kicks” is also specific to Montreal (look out for the Grimes lookalike, sniffing something off the rim of a toilet at a loft party), as well as Canada as a whole. One monologue in particular about the life cycle of a hip Canadian should slay with local audiences, although it rang true for someone from the American Midwest as well. 

“Red Rooms” star Juliette Gariépy brings a French-Canadian flair as Grace’s DJ roommate Madeline, who starts off thinking that this dorky Ontario transplant who doesn’t speak French is kind of adorable before losing her patience with Grace’s unpaid rent and brazen fridge-raiding. 

She’s not a particularly well-developed character; her role is to serve as a tour guide/sounding board/eventual lesson learned for our protagonist, which speaks to one of the weaker aspects of Levack’s film. 

Grace can be a frustrating protagonist, making foolish, self-sabotaging decisions in pursuit of fleeting pleasure and conditional approval from guys who, frankly, aren’t worth her time. But that’s just part of what makes her real. By comparison, some of the supporting characters, particularly (why mince words?) idiot fuckboy Chevy (Stanley Simmons), are slightly too exaggerated for the film’s realistic milieu. 

This is where Levack’s cynicism comes in: This is a movie that can’t believe how dumb smart women act when there’s a man putting in the absolute bare minimum involved. This sentiment comes across most clearly in a sex scene that’s both funny and essential to the plot, as the terminally indifferent Chevy literally just lies there while a confused Grace does all the work. 

By comparison, his romantic rival Archie (Devon Bostick) is a weirdo, but a more believable one, and Bostick’s banter with Ferreira has a specific kind of romantic chemistry common to hyperintelligent, socially awkward nerds. But again, while it may be a byproduct of the self-absorbed protagonist’s point of view, the lives and motivations of each of these characters outside of being two guys in the same band vying for the same woman’s attention remain unconsidered. Then again, it’s kind of refreshing to have men playing the one-dimensional love interests in a movie for once. 

At times, “Mile End Kicks” seems to be reaching for a broader, more heightened style of comedy à la an ‘80s teen sex romp. Some of these jokes are funny, but the shifts in tone are sudden, and it takes a few beats for the film to recover every time. However, the fact that she can pull them off at all speaks well for the movie Levack is currently making with Adam Sandler — applied consistently over the course of an entire film, she could quite successfully direct something quite silly. 

The poignant bits, meanwhile, are consistently on point. A #MeToo-inspired office storyline (that’s the issue with her old editor, played contemptibly by Jay Baruchel) fits in better here than a similar subplot in “I Like Movies,” perhaps because it’s being experienced by the protagonist herself. It also gives us the film’s most heartrending moment, as Grace, who’s the last one in the office as usual, waves her arms to keep the motion-sensor lights on, crying the whole time.

Ferreira is a believable and sympathetic protagonist, bringing a vulnerability to Grace that makes the viewer root for her even as she blows up her life for reasons even she doesn’t seem to understand. She wants to be a critic, but she also desperately wants to be liked. The tension between those modes is gendered, as Grace recognizes when she finally writes something that she believes in late in the film. (It also helps that Grace, via Levack, is actually a good writer.) Navigating that tension is something you learn with experience — the topic of Chandler Levack’s next movie, perhaps? 

Grade: B

“Mile End Kicks” premiered at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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New VistaVision Featurette for PTA's 'One Battle After Another' Movie
Hollywood

New VistaVision Featurette for PTA’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Movie

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

New VistaVision Featurette for PTA’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Movie

by Alex Billington
September 3, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You’re going to wonder ‘why does it look like that?’ And the answer is: because of this beautiful, beautiful format.” Warner Bros has debuted a new promo featurette for Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another movie – his action thriller about revolutionaries. This is hitting theaters nationwide in September in only a few more weeks. This exciting new PTA movie is about a father trying to find his daughter who has been arrested (rewatch the first official trailer). When their evil nemesis resurfaces after 16 years, a band of ex-revolutionaries reunite again to rescue the daughter of one of their own. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Bob Ferguson, plus Regina Hall, Sean Penn, Alana Haim, Teyana Taylor, Wood Harris, Benicio del Toro as “Sensei”, Shayna McHayle, and Chase Infiniti as his daughter. This quick video focuses on the VistaVision format that they filmed this in – a special 35mm film format originally invented in the 1950s (more info here). The Brutalist was also shot on VistaVision, then upgraded for projection onto 70mm film last year. The same with this movie! PTA’s big new exiting One Battle After Another is landing in theaters soon with special screenings on film in select cities (tickets here). This should be a great time! Watch below.

Here’s the VistaVision featurette for Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another, via YouTube:

One Battle After Another Featurette

One Battle After Another Tickets

You can rewatch the first teaser for PTA’s One Battle After Another right here and second full trailer here.

Inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s postmodern 1990 novel Vineland. When their evil enemy resurfaces after 16 years, a group of ex-revolutionaries reunites to rescue one of their own’s daughter. One Battle After Another, formerly known as The Battle of Baktan Cross or Desert Highway or BC Project, is written and directed by the acclaimed American filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson, director of the films Hard Eight, Boogie Nights, Magnolia, Punch-Drunk Love, There Will Be Blood, The Master, Inherent Vice, Phantom Thread, and Licorice Pizza previously, as well as a few shorts, music videos, and other projects. Produced by Sara Murphy, Adam Somner, and Paul Thomas Anderson. This might premiere at a film festival coming up this summer, but nothing has been announced yet. Warner Bros will debut PTA’s One Battle After Another in theaters nationwide starting September 26th, 2025 coming up soon. Who’s down to watch this movie?

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Find more posts in: Featurette, Hype, To Watch, Trailer

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Charli XCX to Contribute Original Songs to New Wuthering Heights Movie
Music

Charli XCX to Contribute Original Songs to New Wuthering Heights Movie

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Warner Bros. Pictures shared the official teaser for Wuthering Heights—writer, director, and producer Emerald Fennell’s forthcoming film adaptation of the famed Emily Brontë novel. The clip reveals that Charli XCX is contributing original songs to the film. Watch the teaser video below.

Wuthering Heights is Fennell’s third feature film, following 2020’s Promising Young Woman and 2023’s Saltburn. It stars Margot Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw and Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff. The movie is scored by Anthony Willis, who scored Fennell’s first two features. Wuthering Heights hits theaters on Saturday, February 14, 2026.

Read Pitchfork’s review of Charli XCX’s Brat. Plus, revisit the column “Brat Summer Is Dead, Long Live Brat Summer.”

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Movie Review: In 'The Baltimorons,' emergency dental work prompts an unlikely rom-com | Hollywood
Bollywood

Movie Review: In ‘The Baltimorons,’ emergency dental work prompts an unlikely rom-com | Hollywood

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

There are all kinds of movies that are either endangered or practically extinct. The big-studio comedy. The original musical. But the sweet and shaggy regular-people movie — more a province of the 1970s, always one that required a little hunting down — is a particularly rare breed.

Movie Review: In ‘The Baltimorons,’ emergency dental work prompts an unlikely rom-com

“Baltimorons” is one of those little movies you might stumble across and be surprised that it hooks you. It does so despite — or more likely because — of its complete lack of flashiness or any self-evident attempt to “hook you.” Instead, it manages that simply with low-key charm and a warm, unpretentious humanity.

Director Jay Duplass’ film is about a young Baltimore man in recovery for two things. Cliff has quit both drinking and improv comedy. If “yes, and” had been his personal mantra, he’s now, after a failed suicide attempt seen in the movie’s first moments, pledged to give up both for his girlfriend, Brittany .

It doesn’t take us long to grasp that this state of affairs is trying for Cliff, a gregarious and easygoing guy, but an aimless one. The alcohol isn’t so much the problem, though. More difficult is going cold turkey on riffing his way through life.

On Christmas Eve, while Cliff is heading to Brittany’s family home for a holiday celebration, he trips and chips his tooth. With most dentist offices closed, he ends up at the door of Didi . Their interactions are, at first, awkward. Cliff is informal and prying; Didi, many years his senior, is more official. As a partner for Cliff’s eager conversation, Didi, a woman with a defeated, just-getting-through-the-day, middle-aged melancholy, would seem about the least genial match.

But each gets little windows into the other’s life. Didi, divorced, learns her daughter won’t be with her that evening — a phone call overheard by Cliff. And when the dental work is done, Cliff realizes his car has been towed. Didi reluctantly offers a ride, and, from there, the two end up on an unlikely Christmas Eve odyssey together, without the supernatural qualities of Dickens but nevertheless with ghosts from the past along the way, such as Didi’s ex-husband and Cliff’s former improv troupe .

“Rom-com” or “May-December romance” would be reasonable labels to put on Duplass’ film, written by him and Strassner. But part of the freewheeling charm of the film is that it doesn’t try to define the relationship that evolves during its lightly paced night. These are just a couple of people a bit disappointed by life, who find each other at the right time.

Jay Duplass and his brother, Mark Duplass , first made their mark in the early ‘00s with micro-budget comedies like “The Puffy Chair.” “The Baltimorons,” though, doesn’t feel like it’s trying to shake up the movie industry. Like its characters, it’s just trying to get by, and maybe find a little companionship along the way.

“The Baltimorons,” an Independent Film Company release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for language. Running time: 100 minutes. Three stars out of four.

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra’s IMDb Score Sparks Buzz
Bollywood

Which Indian Superhero Movie Wins On IMDb?

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra’s IMDb Score Sparks Buzz
Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra’s IMDb Score Sparks Buzz(Photo Credit –Facebook/Netflix)

Following its theatrical release on August 28, 2025, Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra, Malayalam cinema’s first female-led superhero movie starring Kalyani Priyadarshan in the lead role, received positive reviews from critics and audiences alike. The Indian film industry has not produced many entries in the superhero genre, so comparisons with other notable titles are inevitable.

Let’s see how this ambitious Dominic Arun-directed film, bankrolled by Dulquer Salmaan’s Wayfarer Films, stacks up against some of the most popular modern Indian superhero movies like HanuMan, Brahmastra Part 1: Shiva, Minnal Murali, and Krish in terms of IMDb ratings. Is Lokah really the best Indian superhero movie so far? Let’s find out.

Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra vs. Popular Indian Superhero Movies – IMDb Ratings

As of now, Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra holds an impressive IMDb user rating of 8.3/10. For comparison, here are the scores of some notable post-2000 Indian superhero films:

  1. Minnal Murali (2021) – 7.8/10
  2. HanuMan (2024) – 7.7/10
  3. Bhavesh Joshi Superhero (2018) – 7.6/10
  4. Maaveeran (2023) – 7.4/10
  5. Veeran (2023) – 7.3/10
  6. Krrish (2006) – 6.5/10
  7. Brahmastra Part 1: Shiva (2022) – 5.6/10
  8. Ra.One (2011) – 4.9/10

Clearly, none of the above modern Indian superhero films of the post-2000 era have surpassed Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra in IMDb ratings. The closest competitor is another Malayalam superhero film, Minnal Murali, with a 7.8/10 score. It will be interesting to see if Lokah can maintain its position as the highest-rated Indian superhero movie in the coming days.

What Is Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra About?

Directed by Dominic Arun, the film follows Chandra (Kalyani Priyadarshan), a mysterious woman who arrives in Bangalore for unknown reasons. She works night shifts at a café and lives opposite two jobless youths, Sunny (Naslen) and Venu (Chandu Salimkumar). While Sunny is drawn to her, he senses something unusual. As Chandra’s true identity emerges, she becomes entangled in a dangerous organ trafficking ring and must face dark forces threatening the world.

Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra – Official Trailer

For more such stories, check out Down South 

Must Read: When Prabhas Chased Katrina Kaif For 6 Months, But She Allegedly Rejected His Baahubali 2 Star Power: “She Didn’t Think Working With Him Was Worth…”

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September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Calendar of New Movie Releases
Music

Calendar of New Movie Releases

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Looking for new family movies to watch? This Billboard Family calendar is a roundup of 2025 kid and family movie releases that should be appropriate for most ages. To help people find picks that the entire family can enjoy together, only rated PG movies — or those that are expected to be rated PG — are included on the list.

Plenty of family films open in 2025. Winter and spring highlights for kids included January’s Paddington in Peru, the third installment of the hit movie series starring the sweet children’s literature character Paddington Bear, and the March release of Disney’s Snow White, the live-action version of Walt Disney Productions’ 1937 animated classic, starring Rachel Zegler.

Summer brought theatrical releases such as June’s Elio, a Pixar original described as a “comedic misadventure” that’s about an 11-year-old alien-and-space fanatic who’s transported to an “interplanetary paradise that is home to intelligent life from galaxies far and wide,” and August’s Freakier Friday, with stars Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan reuniting in a sequel to the 2003 family comedy that had the mother-daughter duo swapping bodies.

Looking ahead to fall 2025 in the kid and family movie space, part two of Universal’s Wicked, titled Wicked: For Good, arrives in theaters in late November — a month that also packs in Disney’s Zootopia 2 and Netflix’s In Your Dreams as the holiday season begins.

Among the most anticipated 2026 animated movie releases are Super Mario World (April 2026) and Toy Story 5 (June 2026). Family movies that do not yet have a release date, but are expected in 2026, include stop-motion dark fantasy Wildwood from Laika, the studio behind 2009’s Coraline; the opening for this film will be updated on the calendar once announced.

Bookmark this page and check back to see the latest updates to Billboard Family‘s calendar of 2025 movie releases for kids and families.

  • January

    Jan. 3

    Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl (PG, streaming on Netflix)

    Jan. 17

    Henry Danger: The Movie (PG, Nickelodeon and streaming on Paramount+)

    Jan. 24

    The Colors Within (PG, in theaters)

    Jan. 31

    Dog Man (PG, in theaters)

  • February

    Feb. 14

    Paddington in Peru (PG, in theaters)

    Feb. 21

    The Unbreakable Boy (PG, in theaters)

  • March

    March 7

    Night of the Zoopocalypse (PG, in theaters)

    March 14

    The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie (PG, in theaters)

    March 21

    Disney’s Snow White (PG, in theaters)

    March 28

    Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Road Trip (PG, streaming on Disney+)

  • April

    April 4

    A Minecraft Movie (PG, in theaters)

    April 11

    Pets (PG, streaming on Disney+)

    The King of Kings (PG, in theaters)

    April 25

    The Legend of Ochi (PG, in theaters)

  • May

    May 23

    Lilo & Stitch (PG, in theaters)

  • June

    June 13

    How to Train Your Dragon (PG, in theaters)

    June 20

    Elio (PG, in theaters)

    KPop Demon Hunters (PG, streaming on Netflix)

  • July

    July 2

    Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado (PG, Nickelodeon and streaming on Paramount+)

    July 11

    Zombies 4: Dawn of the Vampires (G, streaming on Disney+)

    July 18

    Smurfs (PG, in theaters)

  • August

    Aug. 1

    The Bad Guys 2 (PG, in theaters)

    Aug. 6

    Sketch (PG, in theaters)

    Aug. 8

    Freakier Friday (PG, in theaters)

  • September

    Sept. 26

    Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie (G, in theaters)

  • October

    Oct. 17

    Pets on a Train (PG, in theaters)

    The Twits (PG, streaming on Netflix)

    Oct. 29

    Stitch Head (in theaters)

  • November

    Nov. 14

    In Your Dreams (PG, streaming on Netflix)

    Nov. 21

    David (in theaters)

    Wicked: For Good (in theaters)

    Nov. 26

    Zootopia 2 (PG, in theaters)

  • December

    Dec. 19

    The SpongeBob Movie: Search for Squarepants (in theaters)

    Dec. 25

    Winnie the Pooh: A Hundred Acre Christmas (streaming on Amazon Prime Video)

  • Looking Ahead to 2026

    Hoppers (in theaters, March 6, 2026)

    Super Mario World (in theaters, April 3, 2026)

    Toy Story 5 (in theaters, June 19, 2026)

    Minions 3: Mega Minions (in theaters, June 1, 2026)

    PAW Patrol: The Dino Movie (in theaters, Aug. 14, 2026)

    Coyote vs. Acme (in theaters, Aug. 28, 2026)

    Hexed (in theaters, fall 2026)

    Coming to theaters in Fall 2026, Disney’s #Hexed is an all-new original film that follows an awkward teenage boy and his Type – A mom, who discover that what makes him unusual, might just be magical powers that will turn their lives and a secret world of magic, upside down.… pic.twitter.com/wGEM3gNkor

    — Disney Animation (@DisneyAnimation) August 30, 2025

    The Cat in the Hat (in theaters, Nov. 6, 2026)

    Pookoo (TBD)

    Wildwood (TBD)

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