• Latest
  • Trending
All the Lost Ones Review

All the Lost Ones Review: Drowning in Its Own Plot Holes

Mob Cops Review

Mob Cops Review: All Exposition, No Execution

A Vanishing Fog Review

A Vanishing Fog Review: Finding Beauty in the Coming End

Among The Whispers - Provocation Review

Among The Whispers – Provocation Review: More Detective Than Ghost Hunter

Heavenly Ever After Season 1 Review

Heavenly Ever After Season 1 Review: An Afterlife of Inconsistent Rules

Treading Water Review

Treading Water Review: A Phenomenal Performance in a Fractured Film

A Normal Family Review

A Normal Family Review: Four Performances in a Pressure Cooker

Drop Dead City Review

Drop Dead City Review: Portrait of a City as a Dying Animal

Into the Restless Ruins Review

Into the Restless Ruins Review: An Architect of Your Own Demise

The President's Wife Review

The President’s Wife Review: Catherine Deneuve Reigns Supreme

Kieran Culkin

Culkin Tells Fans to “Lower Expectations” for His Caesar Flickerman

10 hours ago
Jared Leto

Nine Women Detail Sexual-Misconduct Claims Against Jared Leto

10 hours ago
David E. Kelley

Kelley Says Cast Ready but Contracts Pending for ‘Big Little Lies’ Season 3

10 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Sunday, June 8, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Kieran Culkin

    Culkin Tells Fans to “Lower Expectations” for His Caesar Flickerman

    Jared Leto

    Nine Women Detail Sexual-Misconduct Claims Against Jared Leto

    David E. Kelley

    Kelley Says Cast Ready but Contracts Pending for ‘Big Little Lies’ Season 3

    Twelve Moons

    Tribeca Crowd Rallies Behind Victoria Franco’s Fertility Drama Twelve Moons

    Gerard Butler

    Gerard Butler Boards Live-Action How to Train Your Dragon as Stoick

    american psycho

    Mary Harron Confronts American Psycho’s Unwanted Wall Street Fanbase

    Death Does Not Exist

    Annecy Debut for Félix Dufour-Laperrière’s Death Does Not Exist

    Martin Scorsese

    Scorsese Shuns Cinemas, Citing Distracting Audiences

    Sarah Jessica Parker

    Sarah Jessica Parker Confronts Fan Fury While AJLT Moves On Without Che

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Mob Cops Review

    Mob Cops Review: All Exposition, No Execution

    A Vanishing Fog Review

    A Vanishing Fog Review: Finding Beauty in the Coming End

    Heavenly Ever After Season 1 Review

    Heavenly Ever After Season 1 Review: An Afterlife of Inconsistent Rules

    Treading Water Review

    Treading Water Review: A Phenomenal Performance in a Fractured Film

    A Normal Family Review

    A Normal Family Review: Four Performances in a Pressure Cooker

    Drop Dead City Review

    Drop Dead City Review: Portrait of a City as a Dying Animal

    The President's Wife Review

    The President’s Wife Review: Catherine Deneuve Reigns Supreme

    All the Lost Ones Review

    All the Lost Ones Review: Drowning in Its Own Plot Holes

    Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror Review

    Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror Review: Grief Without a Deeper Why

  • Game Reviews
    Among The Whispers - Provocation Review

    Among The Whispers – Provocation Review: More Detective Than Ghost Hunter

    Into the Restless Ruins Review

    Into the Restless Ruins Review: An Architect of Your Own Demise

    Lies of P: Overture Review

    Lies of P: Overture Review – A Perfect, Paradoxical Prelude

    Star Wars Outlaws: A Pirate’s Fortune Review

    Star Wars Outlaws: A Pirate’s Fortune Review – Hondo’s Best Outing Yet

    Mario Kart World Review

    Mario Kart World Review: The Thrill of the Race, The Emptiness of the Road

    POPUCOM Review

    POPUCOM Review: A Creative Co-op Masterpiece with Flaws

    Without a Dawn Review

    Without a Dawn Review: Introspection in a Cabin of Shadows

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review: Precision Platforming with a Divine Twist

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review: A Painter’s Tale in Bohemia

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Kieran Culkin

    Culkin Tells Fans to “Lower Expectations” for His Caesar Flickerman

    Jared Leto

    Nine Women Detail Sexual-Misconduct Claims Against Jared Leto

    David E. Kelley

    Kelley Says Cast Ready but Contracts Pending for ‘Big Little Lies’ Season 3

    Twelve Moons

    Tribeca Crowd Rallies Behind Victoria Franco’s Fertility Drama Twelve Moons

    Gerard Butler

    Gerard Butler Boards Live-Action How to Train Your Dragon as Stoick

    american psycho

    Mary Harron Confronts American Psycho’s Unwanted Wall Street Fanbase

    Death Does Not Exist

    Annecy Debut for Félix Dufour-Laperrière’s Death Does Not Exist

    Martin Scorsese

    Scorsese Shuns Cinemas, Citing Distracting Audiences

    Sarah Jessica Parker

    Sarah Jessica Parker Confronts Fan Fury While AJLT Moves On Without Che

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Mob Cops Review

    Mob Cops Review: All Exposition, No Execution

    A Vanishing Fog Review

    A Vanishing Fog Review: Finding Beauty in the Coming End

    Heavenly Ever After Season 1 Review

    Heavenly Ever After Season 1 Review: An Afterlife of Inconsistent Rules

    Treading Water Review

    Treading Water Review: A Phenomenal Performance in a Fractured Film

    A Normal Family Review

    A Normal Family Review: Four Performances in a Pressure Cooker

    Drop Dead City Review

    Drop Dead City Review: Portrait of a City as a Dying Animal

    The President's Wife Review

    The President’s Wife Review: Catherine Deneuve Reigns Supreme

    All the Lost Ones Review

    All the Lost Ones Review: Drowning in Its Own Plot Holes

    Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror Review

    Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror Review: Grief Without a Deeper Why

  • Game Reviews
    Among The Whispers - Provocation Review

    Among The Whispers – Provocation Review: More Detective Than Ghost Hunter

    Into the Restless Ruins Review

    Into the Restless Ruins Review: An Architect of Your Own Demise

    Lies of P: Overture Review

    Lies of P: Overture Review – A Perfect, Paradoxical Prelude

    Star Wars Outlaws: A Pirate’s Fortune Review

    Star Wars Outlaws: A Pirate’s Fortune Review – Hondo’s Best Outing Yet

    Mario Kart World Review

    Mario Kart World Review: The Thrill of the Race, The Emptiness of the Road

    POPUCOM Review

    POPUCOM Review: A Creative Co-op Masterpiece with Flaws

    Without a Dawn Review

    Without a Dawn Review: Introspection in a Cabin of Shadows

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review: Precision Platforming with a Divine Twist

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review: A Painter’s Tale in Bohemia

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
All the Lost Ones Review

Culkin Tells Fans to “Lower Expectations” for His Caesar Flickerman

The President's Wife Review: Catherine Deneuve Reigns Supreme

Home Entertainment Movies

All the Lost Ones Review: Drowning in Its Own Plot Holes

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
10 hours ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

The genre of near-future apocalypse has become a crowded field, a cinematic landscape littered with the husks of failed societies and cautionary tales. Mackenzie Donaldson’s “All the Lost Ones” wades into this territory, presenting a North America not shattered by alien invasion or nuclear fire, but fractured from within.

The catalyst is frighteningly plausible: a crisis over contaminated tap water spawns a political schism. On one side are the environmentalist resistors, proponents of a life-saving “Clean Water Bill.” On the other, the United Conservancy, a right-wing militia that has, through means left entirely to the imagination, seized control of the Northeastern seaboard.

The film wisely narrows its focus from this continental conflict to an intimate stage. We are not with the generals or politicians. We are in a remote Ontario lake house with a small group of resistors in hiding. They are a blended family of fugitives, attempting to survive both the enemy without and the tensions within. Here, the war is not one of armies but of whispers, of dwindling supplies, and of the terrifying uncertainty of who might appear at the edge of the woods.

A World of Premise Decay

A film’s internal logic is its constitution; violate it, and the whole structure collapses. “All the Lost Ones” begins with a specific, potent idea—a war over water—and then promptly forgets about it. This is a story suffering from an acute case of what might be termed premise decay.

The very characters fighting because of a contaminated water supply repeatedly swim and wash in a local lake with a shocking lack of concern. It is not just an oversight; it is a fundamental betrayal of the narrative’s own stakes.

The larger world-building is just as porous. A militia has occupied a significant portion of two countries, a feat of logistics and force that apparently occurred while the entire US military was on vacation. This shaky foundation supports a story of jarring tonal lurches. The group is introduced celebrating six months of survival with a boisterous party, only to be suddenly reduced to hunting rats for food.

A dead body, gruesomely mutilated, appears in the lake for a moment of shock, then vanishes from the plot and the characters’ minds forever. The audience cannot invest in a world whose rules are so casually discarded. The film sets a stage for high-stakes drama and then asks us to ignore that the stage itself is on fire.

The Cardboard People

A crisis reveals character, or so the saying goes. In “All the Lost Ones,” it reveals a collection of archetypes seemingly assembled from a kit. Our protagonist is Nia, a pregnant resistor who feels conflicted about hiding.

All the Lost Ones Review

Her partner, Ethan, wants to settle down. Her sister, Penny, is a doctor. These are not people; they are functions. The script withholds the most basic details that would grant them life—what did they do before the world fell apart? What skills do they possess beyond looking worried?

Their interactions are stilted, their dialogue a minefield of unnatural pronouncements. When Nia finds herself in a firefight, she quips a political slogan (“My body, my choice”) in a moment so bizarrely out of place it shatters any existing tension. The film’s central romance lacks any discernible heat, and a subplot involving Penny and a much younger man is more uncomfortable than insightful.

The actors do what they can with the material. Jasmine Mathews, as Nia, brings a raw emotional energy that the script does not earn. Yet even her commitment cannot salvage scenes built on such flimsy foundations. The antagonists fare no better. Led by Devon Sawa’s snarling Conrad, they are one-dimensional monsters, their villainy as deep as a puddle.

A Polished Surface on a Hollow Core

For all its narrative failings, the film is not without its technical merits. There are moments when the craft on display almost tricks you into believing in the story. Trevor Yuile’s musical score is a standout, a genuinely effective tool for building suspense and dread where the script cannot.

All the Lost Ones Review

The cinematography, too, has flashes of quality, capturing the menacing beauty of the Canadian wilderness. Small details in the production design, such as a radio broadcasting the weather in Fahrenheit instead of Celsius, offer clever hints of the militia’s cultural encroachment.

The action itself is a mixed bag. Some sequences achieve a brutal, frantic energy, a tense cat-and-mouse game with bloody consequences. Others devolve into nonsensical shootouts where characters with supposedly limited ammunition fire wildly into the trees.

“All the Lost Ones” is constructed around a potent, painfully relevant idea about how easily societies can crumble along ideological fault lines. These few bright spots of technical skill cannot mend the deep fractures in the story’s foundation. The film is ultimately a handsome vehicle with a sputtering engine, crippled by its own illogical plot and populated by characters too thin to cast a shadow.

All the Lost Ones premiered at the Cinéfest Sudbury International Film Festival on September 19, 2024, followed by a limited theatrical release on November 29, 2024, and wider theatrical distribution on April 18, 2025 and is available for digital rental and streaming on platforms like Fandango at Home and Prime Video as of April 2025.

Full Credits

Director: Mackenzie Donaldson

Writers: Anthony Grant, Cheryl Meyer

Producers: Yipeng Ben Lu, David J. Phillips, Yas Taalat, Mackenzie Donaldson, Chantal Kemp

Cast: Jasmine Mathews, Devon Sawa, Vinessa Antoine, Douglas Smith, Lochlyn Munro, Steven Ogg, Matthew Finlan, Anthony Grant, Sheila McCarthy, Devon Sawa

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Ashley Iris Gill

Editor: Sydney Cowper

Composer: Trevor Yuile

The Review

All the Lost Ones

4 Score

"All the Lost Ones" is a classic case of concept over execution. It presents a terrifyingly plausible scenario for societal collapse, only to abandon its own rules with frustrating inconsistency. Despite some effective filmmaking, particularly its tense musical score and moments of slick cinematography, the narrative is too riddled with contradictions to be believable. The characters are too hollow to be affecting. It stands as a significant missed opportunity, a film with a potent, relevant idea that lacks the storytelling discipline to see it through.

PROS

  • A relevant and gripping premise for a modern civil war.
  • An effective and suspenseful musical score.
  • Moments of strong cinematography and clever production design.

CONS

  • The plot is undermined by major logical inconsistencies.
  • Characters are one-dimensional and lack meaningful backstories.
  • Dialogue is often unnatural and clunky.
  • The central conflict of the story is frequently ignored.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: ActionAll the Lost OnesDevon SawaDouglas SmithDramaElectric Panda EntertainmentFeaturedJasmine MathewsLevelfilmLochlyn MunroMackenzie DonaldsonSteven OggThrillerVinessa Antoine
Previous Post

Culkin Tells Fans to “Lower Expectations” for His Caesar Flickerman

Next Post

The President’s Wife Review: Catherine Deneuve Reigns Supreme

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Boglands Review

    Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Amongst the Wolves Review: A Gritty yet Compassionate Directorial Debut

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Stick Season 1 Review: Owen Wilson Drives a Heartfelt, Flawed Dramedy

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mad Unicorn Review: Ambition and Its Echoes in the Global Stream

    3 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Black Forest Murders Review: Beyond Spectacle, Into the Grim Expanse

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Death Valley Review: A Witty Welsh Wander into Cosy Crime

    3 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Survivors Season 1 Review: A Town Drowning in Secrets

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Mario Kart World Review
Reviews Games

Mario Kart World Review: The Thrill of the Race, The Emptiness of the Road

1 day ago
Echo Valley Review
Movies

Echo Valley Review: Moore Shines in a Flawed Thriller

1 day ago
Lost in Starlight Review
Movies

Lost in Starlight Review: Almost Reaches the Stars

2 days ago
Ginny & Georgia Season 3 Review
TV Shows

Ginny & Georgia Season 3 Review: Survival Is a Brutal Art Form

2 days ago
Tires Season 2 Review
TV Shows

Tires Season 2 Review: More Than Just a Blue-Collar Gag-Fest

2 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version