Wednesday, January 14, 2026

2025-2026 Dorian Film Award Nominations Include "Marty Supreme" "Twinless" and "One Battle After Another"

Twinless (c) Lionsgate, Roadside Attractions


GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics, the second largest entertainment journalists organization in the world, today announced the group’s 2026 Dorian Film Award nominations for the best in mainstream and LGBTQ-themed productions. Leading the pack: Director Paul Thomas Anderson's resonant dystopian thriller One Battle After Another (Warner Bros.) with nine nods, Ryan Coogler's full-bodied vampire mystery Sinners (also W.B.) with eight, and Josh Safdie's brash-American satire Marty Supreme (A24) with five. 


GALECA members continue to celebrate less-hyped cinematic gems across its Dorian film categories (currently 22). For starters, A24's raunchy-sweet romance Pillion starring Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling and writer-director-star Eva Victor’s bittersweet wellness drama Sorry, Baby (also from A24) are among the titles up for LGBTQ Film of the Year. Other 2025 movie releases getting some love from the group: Director Mona Fastvold's feverish historical musical The Testament of Ann Lee, the twisted stalker comedy Twinless, and Viet and Nam, about two male Vietnamese coal miners in love that was banned in its native land.


Winners will be announced on March 6, 2026.


Thursday, January 1, 2026

The Interested Bystander's Top Films of 2025 (and 2024!)

Train Dreams (c) Netflix


Two Years in Films: Best of 2024 (definitive) & 2025 (preliminary) 


2025 was full of ups and downs in the political arena that eclipsed my enjoyment of a pretty good year of films. Looking at last year’s list to make my final 2024 ranking, I realized the films were good but not great. I would say my list of 20 films on my 2025 list are more diverse and of a better quality that 2024. 


Like last year, I will only list my favorite twenty films of 2025, in alphabetical order and not actually list them in order of my top ten favorites until the end of 2026, after a year of reflection and catching up on films I may have missed. In fact, at the time of this article, I have not seen Avatar Fire and Ash or The Testament of Ann Lee yet. 


Which means, after a year of reflection, my final Top Ten of films of 2024 is below. I am also pointing out some 2025 performances that haven’t gotten the recognition they deserve from award groups so far. So, enjoy my wrap up of 2025 and, as always, I hope you have a safe and cinematically rich 2026. 

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

The Interested Bystander’s Oscar Predictions: December 2025

Frankenstein (c) Netflix

'Twas the period before Christmas, when all through LA 
Many pre-Oscar awards were given, as is the way, 
So as Film twitter quiets for just a little rest 
Here are December’s Oscar nomination predictions, the best of the best. 



Enjoy! 

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Film: Catching Up on Some of the Films Vying for International Feature at the Oscars Including Jordan’s Exceptional “All That’s Left of You” and South Korea’s Popular “No Other Choice”

The Secret Agent (c) NEON

The Oscars accept a single film submission from each foreign country. How the countries pick their film varies. This year, there are 92 films submitted and that list will be pared down to 15 when the shorts are announced next Tuesday, but here are my thoughts on six of the hopefuls. I did review Norway’s Sentimental Value earlier in the year. Also, I have been hearing good things about Belén from Argentina, Sound of Falling from Germany and Sirāt from Spain, all three I will surely review soon. Some of the films listed are currently in theaters or on streaming, if you want to catch up on some hopefuls. 

Monday, December 8, 2025

Theater: One Of My Favorite Plays of the 21st Century (“Majorie Prime”) and a Favorite Playwright’s Lesser Efforts (“Gruesome Playground Injuries”) Get Reassessed in Starry Revivals


Marjorie Prime (c) Joan Marcus


Broadway: Marjorie Prime 
2nd Stage Production at the Helen Hayes Theatre 


Memory is an elusive thing in Marjorie Prime, Jordan Harrison's 2015 exceptional play now making its debut on Broadway, and even when we have a portable encyclopedia and essentially our life’s timeline (via social media) in the palm of our hands, it doesn’t help. Somewhere in the near future, Majorie (Academy Award nominee June Squibb) is in a retirement home, and while the year is never specified, the eighty-something Majorie mindlessly sings Beyonce, which her daughter Tess (Cynthia Nixon) and her son-in-law Jon (Danny Burstein) don’t recognize (come on Harrison, Beyonce is timeless). One of the services that this retirement home provides is an AI avatar of someone in the resident’s life to help them with either loneliness or as a memory jog. For Marjorie, it’s her late-husband Walter (Christopher Lowell), but as he appeared in his 30s. Walter appears in what seems to be a hologram (as portrayed in the 2019 film version) and can be accessed by anyone who calls for him. Majorie knows she’s being manipulated by Walter’s Prime (as they are called), but she occasionally indulges in the nostalgia of their shared history when he recounts events uploaded to its Prime’s memory. Tess is suspicious of this service, but Jon thinks anything to help Marjorie in her final years is worth it. Where the play goes from there, I won’t spoil, but Harrison does a wonderful job giving us variations on his themes, which illuminates and beautifully humanizes the timeless sadness surrounding death and dementia.