IMDb plot summary: When their enemy resurfaces after 16 years, a group of ex-revolutionaries reunite to rescue the daughter of one of their own.
Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. Stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, and Benicio Del Toro.
One Battle After Another is the newest Paul Thomas Anderson movie. The film begins with Leonardo DiCaprio and Teyana Taylor as anarchist rebels who are trying to start a revolution, but when Taylor ends up turning in her fellow anarchists, DiCaprio escapes with their daughter. Over a decade later, the father and his now-teenage daughter are found by people who wanted them dead, and DiCaprio has to try and keep his daughter safe. There is a lot going on in this movie, but I'm not convinced it's quite as impressive as the hyped made it sound. It's definitely got some fun, weird comedy/drama mixing. I was especially struck by the scene where DiCaprio first discovers his daughter is a target and is being transported to a safe house, but at the time he's heavily under the influence and is barely functional getting himself across town to find people who can help him. That scene could absolutely be right at home in an overt comedy (it's more than a little reminiscent of the same actor's Quaaludes scene in Wolf of Wall Street). But mostly I just feel like this is one of PTA's films that misses me. It is a splashier, slightly more highbrow action movie. And while that aspect is certainly done well, it's not something that seems like the best movie of the year or anything like that. PTA often doesn't quite speak to me, so I guess it's not that surprising that this one didn't quite gel with me either.
How it entered my Flickchart:
🎥 One Battle After Another (2025)
📊 Ranked #1626/4190 on my Flickchart
🎯 Flickscore™: 61
beat The Sparks Brothers (#2098 → #2099)
lost to Fever Pitch (held at #1038)
lost to Silent Hill (held at #1564)
beat Solaris (#1836 → #1837)
beat Fury (#1705 → #1706)
beat Elemental (#1629 → #1630)
lost to The Wolf of Wall Street (held at #1596)
lost to Stargate (held at #1612)
lost to Don't Look Up (held at #1621)
lost to Killers of the Flower Moon (held at #1625)
beat Dan in Real Life (#1627 → #1628)
beat The Tragedy of Macbeth (#1626 → #1627)






