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The Roses 2025 – A Brilliant, Emotional, and Unforgiving Portrait of Modern Love

  • Writer: Alysia Khurana
    Alysia Khurana
  • Oct 24
  • 2 min read
The Roses 2025

I just completed viewing The Roses 2025 on flixhq, and to be honest, I just can’t forget about it. One of those movies that starts off looking light, simple, funny, stylish and then slowly becomes more itself, which leaves you looking at something broken, painful, and deeply human. It’s a narrative that reminds you of how love, success and ego can cohabitate… until they can’t.


The story revolves around Theo and Ivy Rose, an affluent couple living what seems to be the perfect life. He is an accomplished architect, and she is a rising star in the kitchen. They have put a beautiful face on the outside of their house, while the inside of their life is falling apart. Ivy is gleefully reaching for the stars in her profession, which leads Theo to feel down as she rises, and after their inner conflicts simmer for a while, even boil over and turn to chaos. What unfolds is their marriage all melt away in excruciatingly funny detail—but it is considerably darker than it seems.



The performances are nothing short of genius. The leads' connection is apparent — you can feel their connection, their frustration, and their heartbreak in every scene. Their switch from tenderness to hostility in no time at all felt painfully authentic. It was like watching a love story told backwards — every look, every silence, every space between them held a history dinged by years of unexpressed resentment.


The composition is studious and precise. Every shot is significant, from the perfectly framed sequences of their extravagant home to the awkward intimacy of their face to face moments. The cinematography depicts their relationship: constructed and splendid on the surface; chaotic and uncertain below. The tone oscillates deftly from dark humor to emotional collapse; you hardly know where you are at different points in the movie.


What I enjoyed most was The Roses (2025) doesn’t over-simplify the message. It doesn’t ask you to pick; who is more right than other or who is more wrong or not. Rather, it observes a universal truth; relationships change - sometimes love isn’t enough to keep two people together. The ending, while not giving too much away, is tragic and appropriate. Its impact lingers as you continue to reflect on your own relationships and how easily we can feel like we are losing ourselves in trying to hold something together.


I watched the movie via flixhq pro, and it was amazing. The quality was sharp, the audio was engaging, and the visuals were beautiful. The platform allowed me to see the finer details too — the silence, the subtle acting, and the emotion felt.


If you're a fan of films about love, power, and the vulnerability of human life told with candor and sophistication, then this is the film to watch: The Roses (2025). It's not just a film about marriage — it's about identity, change, and how two human beings who may have once loved each other have become strangers from the pursuit of their own dreams.


The Roses (2025) made me reflect on how marginalized relationships can function when communication becomes a competition. It's a haunting film, an intelligent film and a film rich with emotional play worthy of the watchlist.

 
 
 

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