• About
  • podcasts
  • Shop

Surgeons of Horror

~ Dissecting horror films

Surgeons of Horror

Tag Archives: the rule of jenny pen

The Golden Scalpel Awards 2025

27 Saturday Dec 2025

Posted by surgeons of horror in Best Movies and Shows

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

bring her back, companion, dangerous animals, film, geoffrey rush, horror, julia garner, michael b jordan, movies, Nosferatu, ryan coogler, sean byrne, sinners, the rule of jenny pen, weapons

Horror as Discipline, Horror as Diagnosis

Horror cinema in 2025 proved itself less interested in spectacle than in excavation. Across continents and budgets, the year’s most vital films treated fear not as an external shock but as a condition embedded in history, technology, power, and the body itself. Monsters, when they appeared at all, were often secondary to systems: inheritance, authority, intimacy, and the quiet violence of belief.

The Golden Scalpel Awards were conceived not as a popularity contest, nor as an exercise in shock valorisation, but as a critical intervention — an attempt to assess horror cinema as a serious artistic and ideological practice. These awards privilege films that cut rather than bludgeon; works that understand dread as something cumulative, ethical, and often unresolved. Performance, direction, and form are judged not by extremity, but by precision.

In keeping with that ethos, categories that reduce complexity to provocation have been deliberately avoided. There is no “Most Disturbing” award here. Disturbance, after all, is not a metric — it is a by-product of rigor.

What follows is a bifurcated awards structure: International Excellence and Australian Horror Excellence, allowing global achievements to be recognised without subsuming the distinct traditions and preoccupations of Australian genre cinema. Together, they form a portrait of a year in which horror did not scream — it lingered.


🔪 International Golden Scalpel Awards

🏆 Best Picture

Sinners

Sinners stands as the year’s most formally and thematically complete horror film — a work that understands terror as something inherited rather than encountered. Its horror emerges through the slow accrual of history, guilt, and unspoken violence, binding personal narrative to collective memory. Refusing easy catharsis, the film positions fear as an ethical burden passed down through generations. It is a film that cuts deep precisely because it never raises its voice.


🎬 Best Director

Ryan Coogler — Sinners

Coogler’s direction is defined by restraint and moral clarity. He resists spectacle in favour of atmosphere, performance, and spatial tension, allowing horror to surface organically rather than erupt theatrically. His control of tone and rhythm transforms Sinners into a work of sustained unease, demonstrating how genre cinema can function as historical inquiry without sacrificing emotional immediacy.


✍️ Best Screenplay

Weapons

The screenplay for Weapons is constructed around absence, fracture, and refusal. It withholds clarity not as a gimmick, but as a structural principle, forcing the audience to inhabit uncertainty rather than resolve it. In doing so, it redefines narrative satisfaction as something corrosive and unresolved — a mirror held up to a world where explanation itself has become suspect.


🎭 Best Actor

Michael B. Jordan — Sinners

In a dual role that resists ostentatious differentiation, Michael B. Jordan delivers a performance of remarkable discipline. Rather than signalling contrast, he allows identity to diverge through posture, rhythm, and moral orientation. The horror lies in convergence rather than opposition, as the boundaries between selves erode. Jordan’s work becomes the film’s emotional architecture, embodying Sinners’ meditation on legacy, complicity, and denial.


🎭 Best Actress

Julia Garner — Weapons

Julia Garner’s performance is calibrated to instability. She refuses psychological legibility, offering instead a portrait of a character perpetually in flux. Emotion surfaces without warning and retreats just as quickly, aligning performance with the film’s fractured narrative logic. Garner does not guide the audience — she disorients them, transforming ambiguity into a lived condition. It is a performance that demands intellectual as well as emotional engagement.


🌫 Best Atmosphere

Nosferatu

Through light, texture, and negative space, Nosferatu constructs a gothic world of immersive dread. Atmosphere here is not decorative but structural, shaping perception and emotion at every level. The film demonstrates how horror can operate through mood alone, drawing viewers into a dreamlike state where time, desire, and decay blur together.


🩻 Best Body Horror

Bring Her Back

Bring Her Back deploys body horror not as provocation but as emotional language. Physical distortion is inseparable from grief, obsession, and psychological collapse, lending the film imagery that feels tragically inevitable rather than gratuitous. The horror lingers because it feels earned.


🤖 Best Tech Horror

Companion

Grounded and unsettling, Companion explores the erosion of intimacy in a technologised world. Its horror lies not in speculative futurism, but in recognition — the quiet dread of systems already embedded in daily life. The film’s restraint allows its ideas to fester long after the final frame.


🏅 The Golden Scalpel (Highest Honour)

Sinners

Awarded to the film that most rigorously exemplifies horror as a critical discipline. Sinners cuts through history, identity, and belief with surgical precision, leaving scars rather than answers.


🇦🇺 Australian Golden Scalpel Awards

Australian Horror Excellence

Australian horror in 2025 reaffirmed its defining traits: realism, endurance, and an acute sensitivity to environment and power. These films reject excess in favour of inevitability, positioning fear as something endured rather than escaped.


🏆 Best Australian Horror Film

Dangerous Animals

A survival horror stripped of sentimentality, Dangerous Animals privileges endurance over escalation. Violence is presented as an extension of environment and instinct, aligning the film with Australia’s strongest genre traditions. Its restraint is its greatest strength.


🎬 Best Australian Director

Sean Byrne — Dangerous Animals

Byrne’s direction is marked by spatial clarity and tonal control. Threat is sustained rather than amplified, allowing dread to accumulate through inevitability. His work demonstrates a profound understanding of how environment shapes fear.


🎭 Best Australian Actor

Geoffrey Rush — The Rule of Jenny Pen

Rush delivers a performance of chilling restraint. Authority, calm, and routine become instruments of menace, revealing how cruelty often operates behind civility. It is a precise and disciplined piece of psychological horror acting.


🏞 Best Use of Australian Landscape

Dangerous Animals

Here, landscape is not backdrop but mechanism. Open space becomes isolating, indifferent, and complicit — a reminder that environment itself can be an active participant in horror.


🏅 Australian Golden Scalpel

Dangerous Animals

Awarded to the Australian film that most rigorously embodies horror as endurance, realism, and environmental threat.


Closing Cut

The Golden Scalpel Awards are not intended to settle debate, but to sharpen it. Horror remains one of cinema’s most flexible and intellectually generous modes — capable of interrogating history, technology, and identity with a clarity few genres can match. The films recognised here do not offer comfort. They offer precision.

And sometimes, that is far more unsettling.

  • Saul Muerte

Subscribe

  • Entries (RSS)
  • Comments (RSS)

Archives

  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016

Categories

  • A Night of Horror Film Festival
  • Alien franchise
  • Alliance Francaise French Film Festival
  • Australian Horror
  • Best Movies and Shows
  • Competition
  • dark nights film fest
  • episode review
  • Flashback Fridays
  • Friday the 13th Franchise
  • Full Moon Sessions
  • Halloween franchise
  • In Memorium
  • Interview
  • japanese film festival
  • John Carpenter
  • killer pigs
  • midwest weirdfest
  • MidWest WierdFest
  • MonsterFest
  • movie article
  • movie of the week
  • Movie review
  • New Trailer
  • News article
  • podcast episode
  • podcast review
  • press release
  • retrospective
  • Rialto Distribution
  • Ring Franchise
  • series review
  • Spanish horror
  • sydney film festival
  • Sydney Underground Film Festival
  • The Blair Witch Franchise
  • the conjuring franchise
  • The Exorcist
  • The Howling franchise
  • Top 10 list
  • Top 12 List
  • top 13 films
  • Trash Night Tuesdays on Tubi
  • umbrella entertainment
  • Uncategorized
  • Universal Horror
  • Wes Craven
  • wes craven's the scream years

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Surgeons of Horror
    • Join 228 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Surgeons of Horror
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...