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SXSW 2025: All Of Deadline’s Movie Reviews

    The 2025 SXSW Film & TV Festival kicked off Friday, March 7 in Austin with world and North American premieres of movies in 11 sections, TV shows in three sections and several short film and virtual reality programs.

    This year’s festival kicks off with opening-night film Another Simple Favor reteaming Paul Feig, Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick, with other notable world premiere titles including Chad Hartigan’s The Threesome, Kate Mara‘s two entries The Astronaut and The Dutchman (the latter also starring André Holland), the Ben Affleck-Jon Bernthal sequel The Accountant 2, the Nicole Kidman-starring Holland and Death of a Unicorn starring Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega.

    Check out Deadline’s reviews recaps below as films premiere at the fest, which runs through March 15, and click on the titles for the full reviews.

    ‘The Accountant 2’

    Amazon MGM Studios

    Section: Headliner
    Director: Gavin O’Connor
    Cast: Ben Affleck, Jon Bernthal, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Daniella Pineda, Allison Robertson, J.K. Simmons
    Deadline’s takeaway: Nearly a decade after The Accountant, the sequel stands perfectly on its own while delving further into the dynamics that felt halfheartedly introduced the first time around, like Ben Affleck and Jon Bernthal hitting perfect comedic chemistry as estranged brothers who still know how to push each other’s buttons. — GG

    ‘Another Simple Favor’

    Lorenzo Sisti / Amazon Content Services Llc

    Section: Headliner
    Director: Paul Feig
    Cast: Anna Kendrick, Blake Lively, Andrew Rannells, Bashir Salahuddin, Elizabeth Perkins, Michele Morrone, Alex Newell, Henry Golding, Allison Janney 
    Deadline’s takeaway: While some might argue that Feig and writers Jessica Sharzer and Laeta Kalogridis are too reliant on obvious nods to the original film — bringing back familiar plot devices like the mommy vlog teaser opening and an act-three twist that felt a little too recycled — the references ultimately add a playful wink to a fun and exciting film that stands on its own. — GG

    ‘The Astronaut’

    Rocket Power LLC

    Section: Narrative Spotlight
    Director: Jess Varley
    Cast: Kate Mara, Laurence Fishburne, Gabriel Luna, Ivana Milicevic, Macy Gray
    Deadline’s takeaway: Ultimately, The Astronaut doesn’t soar quite as high as some of the better entries in this universe, notably Denis Villeneuve’s Arrival, which I kept thinking about watching this unfold. Its climax just feels a bit rushed and a little incomplete for this to be more than a minor addition to an overly ripe genre. — PH

    Jessica Hynes, Téa Leoni, Will Poulter, Paul Rudd, Jenna Ortega and Anthony Carrigan stand in a circle and look down in a still from 'Death of a Unicorn'.

    ‘Death of a Unicorn’

    Andrew Wonder

    Section: Headliner
    Director: Alex Scharfman
    Cast: Jenna Ortega, Paul Rudd, Will Poulter, Richard E. Grant, Anthony Carrigan, Téa Leoni, Jessica Hynes, Sunita Mani, Stephen Park
    Deadline’s takeaway: And while the film touches on some serious issues through a humorous lens — like addiction, price-gouging and science deniers — the message felt uneven, hidden beneath a comedy horror that struggles to find its footing, despite its star-studded roster. — GG

    André Holland and Kate Mara ride next to each other on a subway in 'The Dutchman'.

    André Holland and Kate Mara in ‘The Dutchman’

    Frank DeMarco/Andre Gaines

    Section: Narrative Spotlight
    Director: Andre Gains
    Cast: André Holland, Kate Mara, Zazie Beetz, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Aldis Hodge, Lauren E. Banks
    Deadline’s takeaway: Although the symbolism is strong and the underlying themes might seem a little heavy-handed at times, given that the source material was originally written for the stage during a wholly troubling era not unlike our own, that’s forgivable. The film is a dialogue-driven character study that presents as a journey of self-reflection as a nightmarish fever dream. — GG

    Amanda Peet and Matthew Shear in ‘Fantasy Life’ at SXSW

    SXSW

    Section: Narrative Feature
    Director: Matthew Shear
    Cast: Amanda Peet, Matthew Shear, Alessandro Nivola, Judd Hirsch, Bob Balaban, Andrea Martin, Zosia Mamet, Jessica Harper, Holland Taylor, Sheng Wang
    Deadline’s takeaway: Shear has crafted a classic kind of family dynamic for this kind of smart, dialogue-driven comedy but he shows a great deal of promise in carefully keeping the inherent drama beneath the surface, particularly involving mental illness and depression, without using any of it as the butt of a joke. These characters and their deep anxieties and life problems feel very real. — PH

    'Ghost Boy'

    Martin Pistorius, subject of ‘Ghost Boy’

    SXSW

    Section: Visions
    Director: Rodney Ascher
    Cast: Jett Harris
    Deadline’s takeaway: At an ambitious 95 minutes, Ghost Boy tends to lag in places, but both director and narrator are aware of their story’s potential to get stuck in a groove, and both are there to pick up the slack whenever it’s needed. Like all of Ascher’s films (notably 2021’s A Glitch in the Matrix), it manages to humanize the unthinkable, and its subject will continue to haunt you long after the closing credits. — DW

    ‘LifeHack’

    SXSW

    Section: Narrative Spotlight
    Director: Ronan Corrigan
    Cast: Georgie Farmer, Yasmin Finney, Roman Hayeck-Green, James Scholz, Jessica Reynolds, Charlie Creed-Miles
    Deadline’s takeaway: For my money this is hands down the best Screenlife movie yet, a dazzling marriage of online skill, clever storytelling, brilliant editing, and acting within the confines of your computer screen that rivals the best of any heist film in recent years. — PH

    Polly Maberly in 'Odyssey'

    Polly Maberly in ‘Odyssey’

    Paul Stephenson

    Section: Visions
    Director: Gerard Johnson
    Cast: Polly Maberly, Mikael Persbrandt, Jasmine Blackborow, Guy Burnet, Ryan Hayes, Charley Palmer Rothwell, Kellie Shirley
    Deadline’s takeaway: Key to the film’s success is leading lady Maberly, a great British actress who seems to be have been hiding in plain sight so far. Maberly is the glue that binds together what could so easily have looked like two very different scripts cut in half and jammed together. — DW

    ‘The Threesome’

    Star Thrower Entertainment

    Section: Narrative Spotlight
    Director: Chad Hartigan
    Cast: Zoey Deutch, Jonah Hauer-King, Ruby Cruz, Jaboukie Young-White, Josh Segarra, Robert Longstreet, Arden Myrin, Kristin Slaysman, Allan McLeod, Julia Sweeney
    Deadline’s takeaway: The soap-opera turns The Threesome takes are in the hands of talented indie filmmakers who devise a complex tale of three young singles simply looking for love but find complications pulling them apart and keeping them together in ways they never could have imagined. — PH

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