The overall state of entertainment and streaming (see: Netflix bids to acquire Warner Bros.) isn’t exactly looking peachy. That said, there’s still no shortage of shows and movies to keep us hooked to all of our screens. Here’s what the GadgetMatch Team watched in 2025!
Chainsaw Man: The Movie – Reze Arc
Rodneil: This is the most I’ve enjoyed Chainsaw Man yet.
If I had to sum it up in two words, I’d return to my first thought when I stepped out of the cinema. It’s beautifully cruel.
This is for fans who crave good animation, appreciate when a story shows instead of tells, and really, for anyone who’s ever had a young crush only for it to ultimately fall by the wayside.
Plus, of course, there’s some bombastic action in there too.
KPOP Demon Hunters
Rodneil: What hasn’t already been said about KPOP Demon Hunters? No one – not even Netflix or Sony Animation – expected it to blow up the way it did.
I, too, thought it was going to be a cringefest. But two things had me looking forward to it – I like animated features and members of my ult girl group TWICE were tapped to sing one of the tracks.
In a nutshell, it has the magic of 2000s-2010s Pixar with a decidedly K-Culture coating. Animation & Art Style feels fresh, the songs are absolute bangers, and the run time doesn’t wear out its welcome.
KPOP Demon Hunters is the undisputed cultural phenomenon breakout of 2025. Bar none.
Sinners
Rodneil: Sinners is a movie that’s hard to make sense of in the immediate minutes after seeing the whole thing. It’s tagged as a horror flick but it’s so much more than that.
The film is incredibly layered, tackling racism and supernatural vampire lore among other things. I also had the privilege of seeing this on an IMAX screen and saw how director Ryan Coogler played with the aspect ratio to deliver certain scenes in a more poignant manner.
Sinners is an extremely measured story. Everything from the setting, the music, and the supernatural elements involved feel intentional. They all serve to force us to confront the cultural appropriation still going on today.
All of these deeply layered themes and invitations for deep self-inquisition are served on a film that’s beautifully scored and shot.
It’s treat to the ears, eyes, and a challenge to the mind.
Plus, there’s Michael B. Jordan and Hailee Steinfeld. I’d watch anything with those two in it.
My Hero Academia: The Final Season
Rodneil: As of writing, it’s been a little over a week since the last episode of the final season aired. I’ve been busy and on the move since and thus have yet to fully process everything. What I’ll admit is that the last episode, like many of its episodes this season and its entire run as a whole made me tear up.
My Hero Academia is one of the few anime that felt like mine. I watched it not because of anyone else’s influence but because it was something that genuinely caught my eye. And while there are many heroes and heroes-in-training to root for and be a fan of, I naturally gravitated to the protagonist- Izuku “Deku” Midoriya. He perfectly embodies the theme of the show in that being a hero is not because of ranking or powers — its your actions and how your are of service to and inspire others to take action in times of crisis or when someone is in need that defines heroism.
I feel bittersweet that this anime has ended. While everyone gravitated to the likes of Demon Slayer and Jujutsu Kaisen, I stuck with the series because out of everything that released past 2010 — it spoke to me the most. I don’t have enough words to fully express what the show meant to me but it’s something that I’ll revisit every now and again, that’s for sure.
When Life Gives You Tangerines
Vincenz: One of IU’s biggest hits in the K-Drama industry was Hotel Del Luna back in 2019. After six years, she went all out again. This time, with Park Bo-gum and Kim Seon-ho as his two male leads. But it’s not just about them, really.
Slice-of-Life dramas are usually slow-paced and emotional. But an hour’s worth of episode barely felt like it. The longer I watch, the more I crave for it.
I didn’t expect that I will cry buckets in every episode. That’s not to say it’s limited to just that. It’s a full rollercoaster ride of emotions – I cried A LOT, but also, laughed, sulked, and even got mad in every scene possible. Life lessons not forgotten.
Much like how the title got translated to the Chinese proverb “苦盡柑來遇見你” / “After the bitterness comes sweetness”, the drama purely embraces that.
It may be a bold claim but, WLGYT isn’t just one of the best K-Dramas of 2025. It is honestly one of the BEST in the entirety of K-Drama history.
Bon Appétit, Your Majesty
Vincenz: Much like stanning IU since 2009, I grew up watching and loving SNSD / Girls’ Generation a lot. This is far from YoonA’s first acting stint, but it still felt refreshing to see her not as an idol member, but a full-fledged actress.
Her chemistry with the super rookie actor Lee Chae-min is just one (and finally, he got that break he deserved since his debut). However, those that stood out are undoubtedly the hilarious scenes. More so, how it leaves viewers not just drooling, but the utmost curiosity in how the fusion of traditional and modern Korean, Western, and even Chinese cuisine were all possible.
And it’s not just her versatility in acting, the way she actually learned how to cook in a chef’s way speaks volumes for the drama itself.—
Weak Hero: Class 02
Vincenz: I waited exactly two years and sevent months for the sequel of Weak Hero: Class 01 – only to devour it in less than 24 hours.
After that almost three-year drought, it fired up the questions that remained unanswered since the first season. Weak Hero: Class 02 gets bolder with more action-packed scenes not limited to just Si-eun, but a whole gang of protagonists, antagonists, and even the involvement of several institutions in one.
Much like watching the drama since S01, watching S02 is as unstoppable as ever. Once you go in, there’s no way out. And the spoiler? There are still mysteries unsolved. Class 03, how long will I wait for you?
Predator: Killer of Killers
Levi: The sixth installment of the Predator franchise was one of the first movies I watched after having re-subscribed to Disney+.
It’s a gripping anthology film that is packed with lots of action while taking viewers to different eras throughout time. I understand why it’s an animated take instead of live action, given how gruesome and intense the fight scenes were.
The three protagonist warriors were all given the chance to shine, and the need to team up towards the end added to the thrill. All the while, it highlighted the strengths and vulnerabilities of different Predator warriors too and plugged rightfully into the grander scheme of things.
Weapons
Levi: I had no expectations whatsoever when I watched the premiere for this movie. It turned out to be one of this year’s horror/mystery/thriller masterpieces.
It’s well-woven, with the sudden and perplexing central conflict setting viewers up and getting them hooked from start to finish.
The movie was presented in a non-linear approach through different perspectives from several characters all linked together. Each part’s end had a cliffhanger or loose ends that all the more set up the climactic finale.
From a technical standpoint, the camera work gets you tense, from simple panning, framing, and blurring too. You’re just glued, waiting for the puzzle to be solved.
Caramello
Levi: When I was hospitalized, I tried to squeeze the most out of an eventually expensive bill. That included binge-watching everything possible on Netflix on the room’s TV.
Caramello was one of the trending movies at the time and boy did it get me in tears throughout.
The story is very realistic and relatable, and the movie draws appeal from this, along with twists and turns along the way.
You will just be left worried and continuously thinking about the fate of the protagonist chef, Pedro, as he tries to carve out a name for himself while dealing with something unexpected.
There was nothing fairytale-y nor idealistic about everything that transpired, and that’s what really got viewers captivated and moved.
Superman
Luigi: This year, James Gunn took the dying Snyderverse, reshaped everything, and strapped a jetpack onto what’s left. If Superman is any indication of what Gunn is doing, we can safely say that the DC Universe is in good hands.
Not an origin story, Superman hearkens back to a simpler time when superhero adventures were just fun. Though the film still has a handful of topical messages, it just wants to give audiences a roaring good time. There’s just so much to love: a light-hearted Superman, a head-strong Lois Lane, the quippy Mister Terrific, and the hard-to-love Guy Gardner.
It’s so endlessly fun that I’ve already watched it thrice. And for the first time in a long while, I’m actually hyped to see what comes next in a superhero universe.
Peacemaker (Season 2)
Luigi: Staying with DC, Peacemaker is an entirely different beast but echoes much of the same fun that Superman had. In this R-rated series, John Cena plays Peacemaker, a naive superhero who just wants to have fun with his friends.
The first season, which is a bit more toned down, had Peacemaker deal with his racist father. This time, there’s some multiverse madness where the superhero finds an alternate world where he’s much more popular and successful. Obviously, there’s a twist, but it would be a shame to spoil it here.
What also sets it apart is that it can stand alone without Superman. It’s an enthralling series that doesn’t need to tease the future or do needless callbacks to the past.
One Battle After Another
Luigi: I didn’t think much about One Battle After Another at first. Coming into the cinema, I just knew that it was a Paul Thomas Anderson film, so it’s bound to be good. Oh my goodness, it was more than good.
Leonardo DiCaprio plays a retired militant activist who just wants to live a quiet life with his daughter. However, when an old enemy goes back on the hunt for him and his daughter, things take a turn for the worst. His quiet life turns into a rescue mission to save his daughter from the harshness of his past.
As dramatic as the synopsis sounds, One Battle After Another is actually one of the funniest movies I’ve seen this year, filled with incredibly timed quips and antics. It’s both one of the most dramatic comedies and the funniest dramas you’ll ever see.
Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Luigi: I don’t think this series can do any wrong. For the third outing, Rian Johnson is back with a mystery that you will enjoy gnawing on for almost three hours.
When a priest in a small town is murdered and a fellow priest is the prime suspect, Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc becomes the only one who can solve the impossible murder. As always, Craig is supported by an impressive cast of big names including Josh Brolin, Josh O’Connor, Glenn Close, Jeremy Renner, Kerry Washington, Mila Kunis, and Cailee Spaeny.
Unlike the previous two, Wake Up Dead Man is a bit more sparse with the social commentary. In its stead, the third Knives Out movie has a straight-up murder mystery. Rian Johnson just knows how to write them to keep you on your toes.
Predator: Badlands
Luigi: Predator: Badlands is NOT what you’d expect from a Predator movie. Whereas most reboots today rehash the formulas that made their originals popular, the new movie dares to do something different by turning the creature feature into… a coming-of-age family adventure?
Dek, the least ferocious of his Yautje tribe, chooses to go to another planet to hunt an impossible beast and prove his strength to his tribe. However, his hunt becomes more than he can chew, especially when the Alien franchise’s Weyland-Yutani show up to also hunt for the same beast.
It’s not a horror or a thriller like the original series, but it surprisingly works. What it lacks in bloody violence is replaced with a hero’s journey that just makes sense. It’s a nice, refreshing take on the old monster.
Bring Her Back
JP: I’m drawn to films that work in layers. Where a compelling narrative carries an undercurrent of metaphors used to explore deeper themes. While Bring Her Back isn’t overly cerebral, it effectively uses horror mechanics as an emotional vehicle, carrying the audience forward with every visceral scene. It uses fear not for shock value but to build tension and unease, mirroring real-world discomfort and uncertainties.
Rooted in themes of loss and desperation, it trusts emotion over explanation, allowing the audience to understand through feeling rather than being told. That kind of restraint is rarely executed well, which is why the film stood out to me among others I’ve watched in 2025.
Bring Her Back is one of those films that stay with you long after the credits have rolled.
Final Destination: Bloodlines
JP: There’s something refreshing about horror that doesn’t overthink itself.
Final Destination: Bloodlines has been received far more warmly than its detractors might suggest, especially by audiences who understand what the franchise has always been about. Much of the criticism seems to hinge on believability, which feels like a misplaced expectation for the genre.
I know it doesn’t offer much depth, but that’s what the franchise has always been about. Campy thrills, wildly unbelievable accidents, and familiar character tropes that make you root for their survival. In that sense, Final Destination: Bloodlines understood the franchise’s appeal perfectly, and executed it well. It stuck to their formula rather than reinventing and botching it.
As a horror fan, I found it to be a genuinely fun ride and a long-overdue return for the franchise. I guess the wait was worth it.
Levi: Just to add, if you saw this as someone who’s well-versed with how things go in Final Destination films, you’d still appreciate it because the filmmakers were playful with the elements in Bloodlines.
The backyard barbeque scene stood out for me with its unpredictability as you didn’t know what would lead to the father’s demise. It turned out to be a lawn mower and not the glass shard and rake.
The overall chase with death trying to go after everyone saved from The Sky View led to an enjoyable experience without dull parts.
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – The Movie: Infinity Castle
MJ: I didn’t expect Demon Slayer to become part of my life the way it did. At the time, I was dating a doctor who was also a die-hard anime fan, and loving him meant committing to a two-week marathon of all five seasons of Kimetsu no Yaiba right before the Infinity Castle movie premiered. What began as an act of devotion slowly turned into genuine obsession.
Infinity Castle marks the first chapter of a trilogy adapting the manga’s Sunrise Arc, where the Hashiras and the Demon Slayer Corps face their final battle against Muzan Kibutsuji, the Demon King. By the time I reached this film, I was already deeply invested and emotionally tethered to the characters.
Demon Slayer stayed with me long after the credits rolled. Its music became part of my training playlists, scoring my runs and workouts, while its animation raised my already high standards for visual storytelling.
Wicked: For Good
MJ: I first watched Wicked because someone I loved wanted me to. Back then, we saw ourselves in Glinda and Elphaba, two people bound by affection, ambition, and a friendship that changed them forever. I only saw the first part during that chapter of my life, when everything still felt shared.
A year later, I watched Wicked: For Good alone, and the timing felt devastatingly poetic. Without him beside me, the story unfolded differently. Elphaba and Glinda’s journey became less about magic and spectacle and more about parting ways, choosing growth, and honoring love even when it no longer fits.
It was a reminder that some people shape who you become, even if they are not meant to stay. Watching it on my own made me appreciate how love leaves echoes, and how some relationships end not in bitterness, but in gratitude for having mattered at all.
Physical: Asia
MJ: Watching Physical: Asia felt less like entertainment and more like witnessing a multi-nation sporting event unfold in real time. As an athlete, I found myself cheering as if it were the Olympics, rooting not only for my own country but for competitors across the Asia-Pacific region whose stories slowly became just as compelling.
The show introduced me to athletes I deeply admired, including Mongolian Bokh wrestler Orkhonbayar Bayarsaikhan, judoka Adiyasuren Amarsaikhan, and volleyball player Khandsuren Gantogtokh. Their grit, pride, and emotional vulnerability reminded me why sports have always felt universal to me.
While I had reservations about how some challenges leaned in favor of Korean CrossFitters and former Physical: 100 participants, I still appreciated how athletes from other countries showed up and gave everything they had, even when the odds were clearly stacked against them. It reinforced something I already knew but needed to be reminded of. Pride and emotion are powerful fuels for athletes, and I saw myself in that fire.
Running Point
MJ: Basketball was never my sport. Growing up, I struggled with it, and the cultural obsession around it in the Philippines often felt overwhelming. While others lived and breathed basketball, I found my place in tennis, track and field, and volleyball, where my strengths actually showed.
Netflix’s Running Point entered my life at the exact moment I needed it. As someone who recently began co-running a sports agency, the show offered unexpected insight into team leadership and the politics that shape the sports industry. What surprised me most was how deeply I related to Isla Gordon, played by Kate Hudson.
Isla is a reformed party girl forced to prove herself as a capable businesswoman after unexpectedly taking over her family’s professional basketball team. Her journey mirrored my own more closely than I anticipated. I was once a party boy, and I was suddenly put in charge of a sports event team.
Running Point was light, funny, and deeply validating. It gave me perspective and lessons I didn’t know I needed, all while reminding me that growth often begins when life hands you responsibility before you feel ready.
I didn’t watch The Devil Wears Prada when it first came out in 2006.
I came to it a few years later, at a time when I was still figuring things out—career, identity, even the kind of movies I allowed myself to enjoy. It wasn’t something I would’ve picked on my own back then.
At the time, it felt like a story about love versus career. I was about to graduate with a Mass Communication degree, unsure of where I was headed, trying to make sense of both ambition and connection.
Watching it again recently, it lands differently.
It’s less about choosing between two things—and more about understanding who you are, and having the courage to follow that honestly.
That’s what makes The Devil Wears Prada 2 feel so deliberate. It doesn’t just revisit the past. It builds on it.
Growth over spectacle
There’s a version of this sequel that could’ve leaned entirely on nostalgia. Bigger moments. Sharper outfits. A louder version of what already worked.
This isn’t that.
The film is grander, but in ways that feel earned. It embraces the 20-year gap instead of ignoring it, placing its characters exactly where you’d expect them to be—not in status, but in spirit.
Miranda Priestly still commands every room, but no longer feels as unassailable as she once did.
Andy Sachs carries experience. She’s no longer the green assistant, but an accomplished journalist whose relationship with Miranda still shapes her decisions.
Emily Charlton feels fully realized—no longer orbiting power, but owning her place within it.
And Nigel remains a pillar. Dependable to both Miranda and Andy, an almost invisible hand that guides more than it claims.
None of them feel stuck in who they were. That’s the point.
What it says about the work
This is where the film hit me the hardest.
Working in tech media, I constantly see the push toward generative AI—toward making everything faster, more efficient, more scalable. A lot of it is impressive. Some of it is genuinely useful.
But some of it is also unsettling.
We’re at a point where generative visuals can fool people. Where audio—music even—can sound convincing enough that you stop questioning where it came from. That’s the part that lingers.
Because music, for me, is personal. It’s how I process things. And realizing that something artificial can mimic that emotional weight—even if imperfectly—feels dangerous in a quieter, harder-to-define way.
This film doesn’t shout about AI. It doesn’t need to. Instead, it argues for something more fundamental.
That the human touch still matters.
That taste, judgment, and intention aren’t things you can replicate at scale.
That the pain of heartbreak, the joy of victory, and the complicated weight of living—these are things that come from experience. And experience leaves a mark. We leave a part of ourselves in everything we create, whether we mean to or not.
That’s something I don’t think can ever be fully replicated.
AI is a helpful tool. But it should not be relied upon for things that require a piece of our soul.
Direction that understands power
A lot of that message lands because of how The Devil Wears Prada 2 is directed.
Blocking and staging do most of the talking. Who stands where, who moves first, who stays still—these choices define power before any dialogue kicks in.
The camera follows emotion closely. Moments of uncertainty feel slightly unsteady. Scenes of control are composed and precise.
It’s not trying to impress you. It knows exactly what it’s doing.
Sound that knows its place
The sound design follows that same discipline.
Nothing competes. Nothing distracts.
Every element feels intentional–supporting the scene instead of demanding attention. It’s cohesive in a way that’s easy to overlook, but once you notice it, you realize how much it’s doing.
Dialogue that winks, but doesn’t linger
There are a few “wink” moments–lines that echo the original, callbacks that longtime fans will catch instantly.
But the film shows restraint.
It never lets those moments take over. They’re accents, not the foundation.
Nostalgia used with purpose
That restraint carries through how the film handles nostalgia as a whole.
It doesn’t rely on it. It uses it.
Parallels to the original are there, but they exist to highlight change—not to recreate what once worked.
It’s less about remembering.More about understanding what time has done.
Why it works now
What makes The Devil Wears Prada 2 land isn’t just that it’s well-made.
It’s that it feels necessary.
In a world that keeps pushing toward speed, output, and efficiency, this film slows things down just enough to remind you what actually matters.
The intention behind every line, every scene feels sharp—like it could only come from people who care. Who care about the craft. Who care about making something that connects.
It might sound like a tired argument. But it’s still true.
The breadth and depth of humans who care is irreplaceable.
The teaser trailer for DC Studio’s horror thriller, Clayface, has just been released. It is the studio’s first-ever foray into the genre, with the film co-written by Mike Flanagan and directed by James Watkins.
The R-rated standalone film is still part of the new James Gunn DC Universe, taking place within the main DCU timeline before the events of the 2025 Superman.
It stars Tom Rhys Harries as the titular Gotham City villain. He is joined by Naomi Ackie, David Dencik, Max Minghella, Eddie Marsan, Nancy Carroll, and Joshua James.
The film opens internationally on October 21 and in North America on October 23.
Here’s a quick look at the film’s teaser trailer:
Clayface explores one man’s horrifying descent from rising Hollywood star to revenge-filled monster.
The story revolves around the loss of one’s identity and humanity, corrosive love, and dark underbelly of scientific ambition.
Joining Watkins in his creative team are director of photography Rob Hardy, production designer James Price, editor Jon Harris, visual effects supervisor Angus Bickerton, costume designer Keith Madden, and casting director Lucy Bevan.
In addition, here’s a quick look at the movie’s teaser poster:
Entertainment
DC’s Clayface teaser shows off a horror-filled superhero movie
Our first taste of James Gunn’s Gotham City will be frightening.
Last year, James Gunn’s Superman sparked an impressive wave of excitement for the new DC Universe. Though this year’s spotlight is on Supergirl, Clayface is also getting an eponymous film, giving us our first taste of Gotham City in this bustling universe.
There’s been a lot of mystery surrounding this film. For one, Gotham City’s DCU debut is based on, arguably, a secondary villain, rather than any member of the Bat-Family. Secondly, Gunn has confirmed that the movie will heavily lean towards the horror genre, a feat others have tried but often failed.
Today, DC Studios has released the first teaser trailer for Clayface. And no, Gunn wasn’t kidding when he said this is going to be a horror film.
Tom Rhys Harries plays Matt Hagen, a rising movie star suddenly scarred by a violent attack. Desperate to resurrect his career, he resorts to a scientific experiment that turns his skin into moldable clay.
As the teaser hints, the film will not shy away from body horror, including shots of Hagen’s disfigured face either from the attack or from the clay. It’s a big departure from the more traditional style of Superman or Supergirl. But it’s a gamble that might pay off for a universe as young as the DCU.
It’s also apropos that the DCU’s first horror film is getting a horror-themed premiere. Clayface will premiere in cinemas on October 23, 2026.
SEE ALSO: Superman sequel, titled Man of Tomorrow, comes out in 2027
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