Tag Archives: Rachel Brosnahan

10 Most Popular Movies of 2025, Ranked by IMDb Rating: ‘F1,’ ‘Sinners’ and More

2025 was a banger year for movies, and we’ve got the receipts to prove it.

From superhero films to original stories, audiences flocked to the box office this year, and they couldn’t stop talking about them on social media either.

Weapons and Sinners were horror movie hits, while Superman marked a new era for a classic character and Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning ended the era for another.

Based on IMDb rating, Watch With Us ranks the ten most popular movies of 2025.

See where your favorite fell on our list

The Best Movies of 2025 According to Us: ‘Frankenstein’ and More

10. ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’

IMDb rating: 5.9

Former covert operative Zora Bennett (Scarlett Johansson) leads a team into the most dangerous part of the world on a mission to retrieve genetic material from the last remaining dinosaurs. Sequestered in a warm climate near the equator, Bennett journeys there to find the monsters alongside pharmaceutical executive Martin Krebs (Rupert Friend), paleontologist Dr. Henry Loomis (Johnathan Bailey) and Bennett’s longtime associate Duncan Kincaid (Mahershala Ali).

But when they become shipwrecked there alongside a stranded family, they must delve into the heart of the deadly place, where even deadlier secrets about Jurassic Park remain.

9. ‘Happy Gilmore 2’

IMDb rating: 6.1

One of Adam Sandler‘s most iconic ’90s comedies gets the late-in-life sequel treatment with Happy Gilmore 2. After winning six Tour Championships in his career, Happy retired following the accidental death of his wife, Virginia (Julie Bowen), which led him to lose everything.

However, when Happy’s youngest daughter wants ballet lessons at a prestigious school, he decides to return to the sport that made him, and in the process, reinvigorates his life and the love of the game. The movie features several returning characters and cameos, including Steve Buscemi, Christopher McDonald and Ben Stiller.

8.’Thunderbolts’

IMDb rating: 7.1

An unconventional group of anti-heroes is forced to work together in this year’s addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Thunderbolts* stars Florence Pugh, Sebastian Stan, David Harbour, Wyatt Russell, Lewis Pullman, Olga Kurylenko and Hannah John-Kamen as the titular castoffs, who are first seen captured inside a death trap.

Upon escaping, they find themselves embarking on a dangerous mission that simultaneously forces them to confront their tormented pasts. The asterisk in the film’s title was a cheeky gimmick: the Thunderbolts are eventually revealed to be the New Avengers, with the film’s title changed accordingly during the film’s end credits.

7. ‘Superman’

IMDb rating: 7.1

While enjoying his reign as Earth’s most beloved superhero (and still successfully undercover as Metropolis reporter Clark Kent), Superman (David Corenswet) finds himself turned into a fugitive. When his arch nemesis, Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult), reveals a dark message sent to him from his Kryptonian parents, it gives Luthor the chance to get the Man of Steel out of the picture for good.

Struggling to clear his name and stop Luthor, Superman enlists help from his beloved Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan) and his fellow journalists at The Daily Planet, alongside his trusty four-legged dog, Krypto.

6. ‘Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning’

IMDb rating: 7.2

The second part of the final installment in Tom Cruise’s long-running and wildly popular Mission Impossible series sees Ethan Hunt (Cruise) go for one last spin, fighting elite bad guys and performing death-defying acts to save the world.

The Final Reckoning picks up right where Dead Reckoning left off, with Ethan and his IMF team on a mission to defeat a rogue artificial intelligence known as the Entity from destroying the world. The Entity has infiltrated intelligence networks globally, and as Hunt races to stop it, he is tailed by governments and a shady figure from his past.

5. ‘Frankenstein’

IMDb rating: 7.5

Mary Shelley’s classic horror novel is transposed into a beautiful gothic story of humanity and hubris from dark fantasy maestro Guillermo del Toro. Frankenstein follows the life of Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac),  a renowned physician with an interest in reanimating human flesh.

After some difficulty, Victor succeeds by successfully reviving dead flesh. However, when his Creature (Jacob Elordi) disappoints him, he damns it to death. And when the Creature survives, it embarks on a mission of revenge against its creator.

4. ‘Weapons’

IMDb rating: 7.5

This ambitious character drama mosaic takes the form of a horror movie about a class of disappeared children and the ostracized teacher accused of kidnapping them. When all but one of Justine Gandy’s (Julia Garner) third-grade class runs out of their homes in the middle of the night, the eyes of a tight-knit Pennsylvania town fall on the young teacher with a history of alcoholism.

But as we move through different perspectives — police officer Paul (Alden Ehrenreich), enraged father Archer (Josh Brolin), drug addict James (Austin Abrams), school principal Marcus (Benedict Wong) — bits and pieces of a sinister plot come into play, all leading to a young boy named Alex Lilly (Cary Christopher).

3. ‘Sinners’

IMDb rating: 7.5

In early-’30s Mississippi, identical twin brothers and gangsters Elijah “Smoke” Moore and Elias “Stack” Moore (both played by Michael B. Jordan) return to their home state after a prolific stint rubbing elbows with Al Capone in Chicago. Using the money they accrued illegally, the twins purchase an old sawmill in order to start a juke joint for the Black community, and are joined by their young, blues-singing cousin Sammie (Miles Caton).

Though the brothers are suddenly confronted with the lives they left behind, they soon find they’ve got more problems than two scorned old flames. An Irish vampire (Jack O’Connell) hears the music emanating from Club Juke, and he’d very much like to be invited inside.

2. ‘F1: The Movie’

IMDb rating: 7.7

Sonny Hayes (Brad Pitt) was once Formula 1’s most talented racer during the 1990s, but an accident that prematurely ended Sonny’s career has left him as a racer-for-hire who never lived up to his potential,

Thirty years after his accident, a struggling F1 team at risk of being sold by its investors convinces Sonny to join them as a second driver, racing alongside hotshot rookie Joshua Pearce (Damson Idris). Forced to face an intimidating future that’s already arrived, Sonny seeks some kind of redemption while learning that winning isn’t something you can always do alone.

1. ‘One Battle After Another’

IMDb rating: 7.8

Sixteen years ago, “Ghetto” Pat Calhoun (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Perfidia Beverly Hills (Teyana Taylor) were members of a far-left revolutionary group in Los Angeles known as the French 75. But when Perfidia got caught and gave up names, she went into witness protection and left Pat and their baby daughter to take on new identities on their own.

Now a paranoid stoner dad, Pat, under the pseudonym Bob Ferguson, tries his best to raise his teenage daughter Willa (Chase Infiniti), who has grown up to believe her mom was a hero. But when an enemy (Sean Penn) from their pasts resurfaces and kidnaps Willa, both Bob and his daughter are forced to confront the ghosts of their former lives as they race to find each other.

The Best 2025 Netflix Movies With Great Rotten Tomatoes Scores, Ranked

Who Is Chase Infiniti? What to Know About ‘One Battle After Another’ Star

There’s a new It Girl in Hollywood, and it’s One Battle After Another’s breakout star, Chase Infiniti.

The actress captivated audiences with her role of Willa Ferguson/Charlene Calhoun in Paul Thomas Anderson’s 2025 action thriller alongside Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Regina Hall and Teyana Taylor.

For Infiniti, making her film debut was her biggest dream, and she was among great company on set.

“This is all that I’ve ever wanted to do: be in an action movie, have fight choreography,” she told Variety of the opportunity in October 2025. “You can’t make this up. I literally get to do the things I grew up watching on the screen.”

Disney Channel Original Movie Leading Ladies: Where Are They Now?

Starring as DiCaprio’s onscreen daughter admittedly left Infiniti “mindblown.”

“I remember getting told that I was going to meet him in a chemistry read, and then, finding out that I booked the job and that I would be working with him, I was like, ‘What do you mean I’m going to be acting opposite Leonardo DiCaprio?’ That truly blew my mind,” she told Taylor in a joint piece for Interview Magazine in September 2025.

With more roles on the horizon and a promising future, scroll below to learn more about Infiniti:

Chase Infiniti Is a Theater Kid

Infiniti, who was born Chase Infiniti Payne in 2000 and raised in Indianapolis, has always had a passion for theater.

“I am not joking when I say all that I did growing up in Indianapolis was theater,” she told Interview Magazine in September 2025. “I literally was just doing as much theater as I could. Especially during the summers. During the school year, if I was not at school, I was rehearsing for a musical or a play. I didn’t do much outside of that.”

GettyImages-2246138697 Who Is Chase Infiniti? What to Know About One Battle After Another Actress
Chase Infiniti Jeff Spicer/Getty Images for Warner Bros.

Chase Infiniti Is Open to Starring in Animated or Superhero Films

Infiniti described herself as a big Disney fan, with a long list of animated films she’s fond of.

“I’d be lying if I said I was not obsessed with Tangled or The Princess and the Frog,” she told Interview Magazine in September 2025.

She also revealed she watched James Gunn’s Superman, starring Rachel Brosnahan and David Corenswet.

“I would love to do something like that. But I would also love to sing. I would also love to do an animated movie. Really, anything,” she reflected. “Cast me in a superhero movie. Cast me in an action movie. Cast me in an animated something. I am open.”

Currently, Infiniti is working on The Handmaid’s Tale sequel series, The Testaments. She will play a character named Agnes.

Chase Infiniti Is Inspired by Zendaya

The rising star told Elle in October 2025 that she looks up to Zendaya.

“I remember being like, this girl looks like me. She is mixed. She is singing, acting, dancing, doing the thing that I want to do just in a different format that I didn’t even think about,” Infiniti told the outlet.

Mikey Madison’s Biggest Roles Before Her ‘Anora’ 2025 Oscars Win

Chase Infiniti Shared the Biggest Lesson She Learned on Set

“I learned the value of trusting yourself and trusting your teammates, because we are on a team and we are all working towards the same goal,” Infiniti told Elle in October 2025. “Actually, I’ll say trusting the importance of trusting yourself. And then also observing what great, gentle leadership looks like, whether it be from Paul Thomas Anderson or from Leonardo DiCaprio. The two of them were incredible leaders and guides on that film.”

Chase Infiniti Revealed Her Celebrity Crushes

She’s got good taste! Infiniti shared with Elle in October 2025 that she “grew up watching High School Musical, so Zac Efron and Corbin Bleu” were her crushes.

“I was also obsessed with One Direction at one point,” she added.

The New York Times: Golden Globes 2018: Seth Meyers Will Host, and Actresses Will Wear Black

By BROOKS BARNES and CARA BUCKLEY

“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” won best movie drama, and “Lady Bird” won best comedy. Frances McDormand and Gary Oldman won the best acting prizes for drama; Saoirse Ronan and James Franco won for comedy. See all the Golden Globes winners.

Oprah Winfrey received the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement. Her speech focused on the #MeToo movement.

The show began with a monologue from Seth Meyers, the host, who took aim at Kevin Spacey, Harvey Weinstein and others.

It took only four minutes for Harvey Weinstein to be booed on Sunday night at the 75th Golden Globes.

From there, the Hollywood establishment, convening publicly for the first time since allegations of sexual misconduct toppled Mr. Weinstein, used the Globes to insist that it would reform itself — that the harassment of women would no longer be tolerated, that the culture of silence that aided and abetted men like Mr. Weinstein was over, that women and men would be paid equally.

Seth Meyers, hosting the Globes, turned directly to what he called “the elephant not in the room” when he opened the NBC broadcast by saying, “Good evening, ladies and remaining gentlemen.”

“There’s a new era underway,” he continued, “and I can tell because it’s been years since a white man was this nervous in Hollywood.”

Mr. Meyers prompted the booing of Mr. Weinstein with a joke about the deaths section of the Oscars telecast.

“Harvey Weinstein isn’t here tonight because, well, I’ve heard rumors that he’s crazy and difficult to work with,” Mr. Meyers said.

“But don’t worry, he’ll be back in 20 years when he becomes the first person ever booed during the ‘In Memoriam.’”

The Globes soon moved on to celebrating films and television series about women. “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,” about a mother (Frances McDormand) who takes her daughter’s murder investigation into her own hands, emerged as the movie to beat in the coming Oscar race, winning four Globes, including ones for best drama and Ms. McDormand’s acting. Greta Gerwig’s “Lady Bird,” a coming-of-age tale set in Sacramento, was honored with prizes for best comedy and Saoirse Ronan’s acting.

The major TV winners were the HBO series “Big Little Lies,” which received four Globes, including awards for Nicole Kidman and Laura Dern; “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” a new Amazon series that collected two prizes, including best TV comedy; and “The Handmaid’s Tale,” which received two Globes, including best TV

“A new day is on the horizon!” Oprah Winfrey, accepting the Cecil B. DeMille lifetime achievement award, shouted toward the end of her eight-minute speech, which focused mostly on the #MeToo movement, noting that it was brought forth by the “insatiable dedication” of journalists and women, like the recently deceased Recy Taylor, who have spoken up to tell their stories.

“When that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men,” Ms. Winfrey said.

She received multiple standing ovations — some people stayed standing as she spoke — and finished her comments with an assertion of hope, looking forward to “the day when nobody ever has to say #MeToo again.”
Where to Stream the Nominated Movies and TV Shows

Here’s a guide to the Golden Globes nominees that are both streamable and worth your time from Watching, The New York Times’s TV and movie recommendation site.

After Ms. Winfrey exited the stage, Natalie Portman arrived to present the award for best director. “Here are the all-male nominees,” Ms. Portman said. (Guillermo del Toro won for “The Shape of Water.”)

For some people watching at home, the pronouncements struck a hypocritical note. Weren’t some of these people the same ones who had been silent about Mr. Weinstein’s behavior for decades?

And Ms. Winfrey, of course, was accepting an award named for a man who had helped cement a culture of male domination in Hollywood. It was also notable that many of the men who won awards did not mention the current reckoning that Hollywood is undergoing regarding sexual harassment and the role of women in entertainment.

The foreign journalists who bestow the Globes are known for spreading their awards far and wide, and that was the case on Sunday. Gary Oldman won best actor in a drama, for playing Winston Churchill in “Darkest Hour.” Pixar’s “Coco” was named best animated film. And the figure-skating dark comedy “I, Tonya” was recognized with Allison Janney’s win for best supporting actress.

But several movies received nothing, most notably Steven Spielberg’s newspaper drama “The Post,” which was nominated for six prizes. “Call Me by Your Name,” “Get Out,” “Mudbound” and “All the Money in the World” were also ignored.

James Franco won best actor in a comedy for “The Disaster Artist,” a biopic about Tommy Wiseau, an eccentric Hollywood figure best known for his cult film “The Room.” Mr. Wiseau, who had been sitting in the ballroom in wraparound blue sunglasses and looking at his phone, sauntered to the stage, where a hoarse Mr. Franco was espousing his love for his brother, Dave Franco, who also stars in “The Disaster Artist.” Standing nearby, the younger Franco got a little teary.
‘Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ is a big winner in TV.

The night’s first award went to Ms. Kidman, who won best actress in a television movie or limited series. “Power of women!” she said, holding up her Globe and name checking her female co-stars. Ms. Kidman won for her role in “Big Little Lies,” in which she plays a battered wife who summons the courage to leave her husband. Her co-star Alexander Skarsgard won for best supporting actor, and the show won for best limited series or TV movie.

As expected, Hulu’s adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s dystopian novel about the repression of women, “The Handmaid’s Tale,” matched its best drama win last year at the Emmy Awards. Elisabeth Moss, who stars in that series, also repeated her Emmys win, collecting the trophy for best actress in a drama. The “This Is Us” star Sterling K. Brown was named best dramatic actor, the first time in Globes history that a black man had won that prize.

“You wrote a role for a black man that could only be played by a black man,” Mr. Brown said in his speech, thanking the “This Is Us” creator, Dan Fogelman, for creating his part. “I am being seen for who I am, and being appreciated for who I am, and it makes it that much more difficult to dismiss me or dismiss anybody who looks like me.”

Get recommendations on the best TV shows and films to stream and watch, delivered to your inbox.
You agree to receive occasional updates and special offers for The New York Times’s products and services.

(It was a reminder of how much has changed in Hollywood in recent months. Kevin Spacey won the category at the 72nd ceremony for his performance in “House of Cards,” a series that fired him late last year after men came forward to accuse him of unwanted sexual advances.)

The Amazon series “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” about a perfectionist 1950s housewife who becomes a stand-up comic, won the Globe for best TV comedy, and its star, Rachel Brosnahan, collected the trophy for best actress in a comedy.

“Their support was completely unwavering,” Amy Sherman-Palladino, the show’s creator, said of Amazon from the stage while wearing a top hat festooned with feathers. She made no mention of Roy Price, who had helped push forward the series before resigning in October following accusations of sexual harassment.

Kendall Jenner, left, and the activist Marai Larasi with Emma Watson. Credit Damon Winter/The New York Times

The Globes were draped in black, quite literally, with actresses and some actors vowing to use their attire to make a statement about sexual harassment in Hollywood and other spheres. Winners were expected to use their moments of glory to rail against the systemic sexism and silence that allowed the behavior of men like Mr. Weinstein, James Toback, Louis C.K. and Mr. Spacey to fester for decades.

On the red carpet, eight actresses walked hand in hand with activists who focus on sexual harassment and gender inequality.

“We don’t want to create hierarchies — saying that women in Hollywood are more important than other women,” Marai Larasi, the executive director of Imkaan, a British network of organizations dedicated to ending violence against black women, said on the E! arrivals special.

“We have a platform, and we’re trying to use it in the best way we possibly can.” Ms. Larasi attended as Emma Watson’s guest.

But the tone on the red carpet was not entirely serious. Smiles abounded. Along with discussion about women’s rights came lighthearted banter by nominees about butterflies (the stomach variety) and some of the usual fashion chitchat.

Alexis Bledel carried a black crystal clutch from Onna Ehrlich; Gucci dressed Margot Robbie and Dakota Johnson.

And inside the ballroom, the ceremony in many ways felt like business as usual. Stars, producers and studio executives schmoozed in frantic fashion during the commercial breaks and straight through some awards.

The vibe even approached easygoing and carefree — as if Hollywood felt it had exculpated itself with all of the serious talk on the red carpet and the sharp-edged jokes Mr. Meyers cracked during his monologue.