Movie · 2025 · Drama, Thriller · 1h 40m · R · English
Curator score: 2.8/10 (90.8K ratings)
Don't live here, don't surf here.
Overview
A man returns to the idyllic beach of his childhood to surf with his son. When he is humiliated by a group of locals, the man is drawn into a conflict that keeps rising and pushes him to his breaking point.
Ratings
Curator score: 2.8/10
IMDb: 5.9/10
Letterboxd: 3.10/5
Metacritic: 67
TMDB: 5.8/10
Director
Lorcan Finnegan
Production
ScreenWest, Saturn Films, Arenamedia, Lovely Productions, Tea Shop Productions, Stan
Cast
Nicolas Cage, Julian McMahon, Justin Rosniak, Alexander Bertrand, Rahel Romahn, Nicholas Cassim, Finn Little, Charlotte Maggi, Nina Young, James Bingham, Miranda Tapsell, Radek Jonak, Rory O'Keeffe, Talon Hopper, Sally Clune, Gautier de Fontaine, Jake Fryer-Hornsby, Adam Leeuwenhart, Dean McAskil, Tobiasz Rodney
Where to watch
Hulu
Curator Review
Verdict
A feverish, sun-blasted psychological thriller that turns a simple homecoming into a humiliating spiral of ego, class tension, and primal survival. It’s uneven and sometimes overstates its ideas, but the formal control, coastal dread, and Nicolas Cage’s committed meltdown make it a memorable watch.
Best for
Viewers who like escalating psychological breakdowns
Fans of sweaty, surreal revenge-adjacent thrillers
People drawn to coastal isolation and social humiliation stories
Nicolas Cage performance seekers
Audiences who enjoy stylized, uneasy atmosphere over tidy plotting
Skip if
You want a grounded, realistic drama
You prefer restrained performances and subtle escalation
You dislike repetitive conflict or circular narrative pressure
You need clear moral framing or neat resolution
Overview
The Surfer is less a beach thriller than a pressure cooker built out of pride, memory, and territorial humiliation. What starts as a father-son return to a childhood shoreline quickly becomes a nightmare of gatekeeping locals, sunstroke logic, and a man refusing to leave a place that has already rejected him. The film is at its strongest when it leans into that absurd, almost mythic sense of being trapped in a hostile ecosystem.
Worth noting
Lorcan Finnegan gives the movie a strong visual and sonic grip, letting the heat, glare, and surf become part of the character’s unraveling. The result is often funny in a warped way, then suddenly nasty, then strangely hypnotic. It’s not especially subtle about masculinity, status, and belonging, but it does have a real sense of escalating dread.
Bottom line
Nicolas Cage is exactly the right center for this material: volatile, wounded, ridiculous, and somehow sincere. The movie can feel overstuffed, but its commitment to mood and breakdown keeps it compelling. If you want a coastal descent into madness with a strong sense of place and a nasty streak, this delivers.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Joe A (3★) · 1779 likes
Anti-Australian propaganda on acid (complimentary)
aaron (3.5★) · 1771 likes
crazy how the thought of literally going home never once crossed his mind
cob (3.5★) · 1721 likes
genuinely felt like i was losing my fucking mind watching this (complimentary)
Robert Daniels (3★) · 1167 likes
EAT. THE. RAT.
Alicia (1.5★) · 1036 likes
surfing is not even his job, his job is just beach and he is so bad at it
2005 · Drama, Thriller, Crime · 1h 36m · R · Curator 6.9/10 (549.3K ratings) · Where to watch: Max
Explores buried identity, masculine performance, and the violence beneath a calm surface.
Topics
psychological thriller, surreal drama, sun-bleached, slow-burn tension, male ego, social humiliation, coastal setting, descent into madness, australian cinema, black comedy