Tag Archives: Raymond Chandler

The Best Newish Movies I Watched in 2025

I previously posted the best movies at least ten years old I watched this past year, so now it is time for the best new(ish) movies (released within the past few years) that I watched in 2025. The films are sorted into five tiers and listed alphabetically within each tier. In case you missed it, I made a separate list for the best horror movies I watched in 2025.

Tier 1: Cinematic Masterpieces

Anatomy of a Fall (2023) directed by Justine Triet
A man dies after falling from his house in the French Alps, but afterward his wife is suspected of having been involved. What follows is an investigation and trial attempting to discover what really happened. But this is not a typical crime story or whodunit mystery. It is about uncertainty and the nature of truth, how difficult it is to know exactly what happened about anything. It is similar to Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon in that respect. The writing and acting are phenomenal, especially the wife and her young son, who is the key witness in the trial. Though it makes the French legal system seem like a Kafkaesque nightmare.

The Northman (2022) directed by Robert Eggers
A historically accurate Viking epic about revenge with fantastic visuals and elements of horror. It’s like a more realistic Game of Thrones. Far too many historical movies map our modern morality and ideology onto the characters, but this film doesn’t do that at all. You get a sense of what life might have actually been like for people at that time. As a result, the characters and their culture seem alien to us because of how different they think and act. Pre-Christianity, the pagan world was quite different. The film assumes the Norse gods and magic are real, which made for a more interesting story. It’s a shame this film didn’t do better at the box office because I would much rather Eggers make original movies like this than a remake like Nosferatu, which performed much better financially.

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Best Fiction Books I Read in 2024

They Had No Deepness of Earth (2021) by Zero HP Lovecraft

Zero HP Lovecraft (@0x49fa98) is an anonymous internet poster I originally discovered around 2016 when I was looking at the accounts Naval Ravikant (@naval) followed on Twitter. His name and bio (horrorist) intrigued me, so I read his short story, “The Gig Economy,” which was like a modern cyberpunk take on “The Call of Cthulhu.”

I instantly became a fan and read all of Zero’s stories as they originally came out on his WordPress site (now on Substack), and later assembled in this collection. I had been meaning to re-visit the stories because they deserve (and often require) re-reading. His fiction is like a combination of the cosmic horror of H.P. Lovecraft with the dense philosophical speculation of Jorge Luis Borges and the mind-bending science fiction of Ted Chiang.

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Do Artists Get Less Creative Over Time?

Picasso’s paintings grew more creative over time

Have you ever noticed that most artists tend to get less creative when they get older? A band’s first album is often their best—or maybe their second or third album is better—but rarely does a band record their most creative music on their twelfth album. Sure, some artists like The Rolling Stones continue to perform well into their 70s, but they are only rehashing the creativity of their 20s and 30s. They are not recording new songs, or if they are, those new songs are nowhere near as beloved or creative as their earlier work. That is the normal life cycle of most musical artists: they release creative music when young, get popular, then “play the hits” for the rest of their career.

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