• Latest
  • Trending
The Cure Review

The Cure Review: David Dastmalchian Shines in This Gilded Medical Thriller

To Philly with Love Review

To Philly with Love Review: Philadelphia as a Romantic Stage

Innato Review

Innato Review: Elena Anaya Carries a Grim Tale of Trauma and Suspicion

Jaripeo Review

Jaripeo Review: Queerness in the Dust and Dusty Boots

Assassin Review

Assassin Review: Shanghai’s Shadowed Streets and Martial Arts Mayhem

Panda Plan 2: The Magical Tribe Review

Panda Plan 2: The Magical Tribe Review: Jackie Chan and Hu Hu Return for a Slapstick Jungle Quest

Dracamar Review

Dracamar Review: Gentle Platforming With Vibrant Style

The Second Coming of John Cooper Review

The Second Coming of John Cooper Review: Comedy That Refuses to Behave

Rain Reign Review

Rain Reign Review: Rural Life and the Complexities of Family

Sigurjón

Locarno Honours Sigurjón Sighvatsson, the Icelandic Producer Who Shaped 1990s Hollywood

6 hours ago
masha and the bear netflix

Netflix Secures Nine Seasons of Masha and the Bear in Expanded Global Deal

6 hours ago
Scary Movie

Scary Movie Tops U.K. Chart With Franchise-Best Opening as Spielberg’s Disclosure Day Prepares to Strike

6 hours ago
Detective Conan: Fallen Angel of the Highway Review

Detective Conan: Fallen Angel of the Highway Review – High-Octane Pursuit in Yokohama

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Sigurjón

    Locarno Honours Sigurjón Sighvatsson, the Icelandic Producer Who Shaped 1990s Hollywood

    Scary Movie

    Scary Movie Tops U.K. Chart With Franchise-Best Opening as Spielberg’s Disclosure Day Prepares to Strike

    Obsession

    A $750K Horror Film Just Became the Highest-Grossing Festival Acquisition in History

    Jason Momoa

    Jason Momoa Drops Out of Sony’s Helldivers Movie — Studio Begins Star Search

    Paper Man

    Netflix’s Paper Man Pits Squid Game’s Park Hae-soo Against Hospital Playlist’s Cho Jung-seok in Korean Crime Drama

    Patrick Bruel

    Patrick Bruel Taken Into Police Custody as Sexual Assault Investigation Grows to 13 Alleged Victims

    Hugh Laurie

    Hugh Laurie Admits He Was Drunk When He Picked a Fight With a House Critic Online

    Hereditary

    Ari Aster Wrote a Hereditary Prequel — and Says the Timing Has Never Felt Right to Make It

    Richard Gere Homer Gere

    Richard Gere Says Son Homer “Can Stay” in Hollywood After Euphoria Breakout

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    To Philly with Love Review

    To Philly with Love Review: Philadelphia as a Romantic Stage

    Innato Review

    Innato Review: Elena Anaya Carries a Grim Tale of Trauma and Suspicion

    Jaripeo Review

    Jaripeo Review: Queerness in the Dust and Dusty Boots

    Assassin Review

    Assassin Review: Shanghai’s Shadowed Streets and Martial Arts Mayhem

    Panda Plan 2: The Magical Tribe Review

    Panda Plan 2: The Magical Tribe Review: Jackie Chan and Hu Hu Return for a Slapstick Jungle Quest

    The Second Coming of John Cooper Review

    The Second Coming of John Cooper Review: Comedy That Refuses to Behave

    Rain Reign Review

    Rain Reign Review: Rural Life and the Complexities of Family

    Detective Conan: Fallen Angel of the Highway Review

    Detective Conan: Fallen Angel of the Highway Review – High-Octane Pursuit in Yokohama

    Gareth Southgate: Changing the Game for Young Men Review

    Gareth Southgate: Changing the Game for Young Men Review: Southgate Finds a New Mission

  • Game Reviews
    Dracamar Review

    Dracamar Review: Gentle Platforming With Vibrant Style

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review – Psychological Horror Refined

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Empire City Review

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Empire City Review – A VR Adventure with Friends

    Forbidden Solitaire Review 1

    Forbidden Solitaire Review: FMV Horror and Card Combat

    TerraTech Legion Review

    TerraTech Legion Review: Modular Mayhem Gives Bullet Heaven a Fresh Engine

    The Spell Brigade Review

    The Spell Brigade Review: Chaotic Co-Op Magic With a Grind Problem

    Monster Crown: Sin Eater Review

    Monster Crown: Sin Eater Review – Darker Than You Expect

    The Last Gas Station Review

    The Last Gas Station Review: A Cozy Sim With Petrol, Pixel Art, and Paranormal Weirdness

    Sudden Strike 5 Review

    Sudden Strike 5 Review: Historical Warfare Reimagined

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

    Locarno Honours Sigurjón Sighvatsson, the Icelandic Producer Who Shaped 1990s Hollywood

    Scary Movie

    Scary Movie Tops U.K. Chart With Franchise-Best Opening as Spielberg’s Disclosure Day Prepares to Strike

    Obsession

    A $750K Horror Film Just Became the Highest-Grossing Festival Acquisition in History

    Jason Momoa

    Jason Momoa Drops Out of Sony’s Helldivers Movie — Studio Begins Star Search

    Paper Man

    Netflix’s Paper Man Pits Squid Game’s Park Hae-soo Against Hospital Playlist’s Cho Jung-seok in Korean Crime Drama

    Patrick Bruel

    Patrick Bruel Taken Into Police Custody as Sexual Assault Investigation Grows to 13 Alleged Victims

    Hugh Laurie

    Hugh Laurie Admits He Was Drunk When He Picked a Fight With a House Critic Online

    Hereditary

    Ari Aster Wrote a Hereditary Prequel — and Says the Timing Has Never Felt Right to Make It

    Richard Gere Homer Gere

    Richard Gere Says Son Homer “Can Stay” in Hollywood After Euphoria Breakout

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    To Philly with Love Review

    To Philly with Love Review: Philadelphia as a Romantic Stage

    Innato Review

    Innato Review: Elena Anaya Carries a Grim Tale of Trauma and Suspicion

    Jaripeo Review

    Jaripeo Review: Queerness in the Dust and Dusty Boots

    Assassin Review

    Assassin Review: Shanghai’s Shadowed Streets and Martial Arts Mayhem

    Panda Plan 2: The Magical Tribe Review

    Panda Plan 2: The Magical Tribe Review: Jackie Chan and Hu Hu Return for a Slapstick Jungle Quest

    The Second Coming of John Cooper Review

    The Second Coming of John Cooper Review: Comedy That Refuses to Behave

    Rain Reign Review

    Rain Reign Review: Rural Life and the Complexities of Family

    Detective Conan: Fallen Angel of the Highway Review

    Detective Conan: Fallen Angel of the Highway Review – High-Octane Pursuit in Yokohama

    Gareth Southgate: Changing the Game for Young Men Review

    Gareth Southgate: Changing the Game for Young Men Review: Southgate Finds a New Mission

  • Game Reviews
    Dracamar Review

    Dracamar Review: Gentle Platforming With Vibrant Style

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review – Psychological Horror Refined

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Empire City Review

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Empire City Review – A VR Adventure with Friends

    Forbidden Solitaire Review 1

    Forbidden Solitaire Review: FMV Horror and Card Combat

    TerraTech Legion Review

    TerraTech Legion Review: Modular Mayhem Gives Bullet Heaven a Fresh Engine

    The Spell Brigade Review

    The Spell Brigade Review: Chaotic Co-Op Magic With a Grind Problem

    Monster Crown: Sin Eater Review

    Monster Crown: Sin Eater Review – Darker Than You Expect

    The Last Gas Station Review

    The Last Gas Station Review: A Cozy Sim With Petrol, Pixel Art, and Paranormal Weirdness

    Sudden Strike 5 Review

    Sudden Strike 5 Review: Historical Warfare Reimagined

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
The Cure Review

Heartbreak High Season 3 Review: Class Warfare and the High Price of Redemption

Bone Keeper Review: Practical Effects Shine in This British Indie Gem

Home Entertainment Movies

The Cure Review: David Dastmalchian Shines in This Gilded Medical Thriller

Marcus Thorne by Marcus Thorne
1 month ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

The Malibu coastline becomes a false paradise for Ally Braun, a teenager enclosed within the high-resolution walls of a glass-and-steel refuge. At sixteen, she lives inside a curated infirmary, a vast estate arranged as palace, clinic, and private experiment for her debilitating Lupus. The place has the polish of a home and the soul of a containment unit. Her hairless, frail body is watched with the precision reserved for a prized asset, every movement measured, every risk converted into parental policy.

Her adoptive parents, Jeff and Georgia, move through this sterile habitat with philanthropic poise, the kind that seems designed for an expensive profile spread. They give Ally comfort, treatment, and protection, while keeping freedom outside the gates. Her rare condition becomes the permanent rationale for isolation. Then Ally slips past security and reaches the beach, where she meets Brooke, a rebellious peer whose rough, unvarnished energy disrupts the managed purity of Ally’s life like a speck of grit in a surgical tray.

That encounter starts the film’s descent into medical gaslighting and the grotesque entitlement of the ultra-wealthy. The Malibu mansion functions as a specimen jar, a clean container for a dirty moral equation. Youth feeds age. Care masks ownership. Love becomes a legal fiction with good lighting.

The Performative Weight of Survival

The film’s strongest asset is Samantha Cochran’s physical commitment as Ally. She plays her as a porcelain figure held together by medication, surveillance, and fear, with makeup emphasizing a sickly pallor and the mobility chair carrying the weight of a sentence. Cochran makes Ally’s fragility tactile. Then the performance begins to harden. Her metamorphosis has a visceral charge, as the passive patient gives way to a sharper, self-directed presence. The autonomy feels earned, scraped out from beneath years of control.

David Dastmalchian and Ashley Greene work opposite her with frightening synchronization. Dastmalchian gives Jeff a quiet, high-frequency menace. His line readings about health and safety arrive with surgical detachment, as if Ally’s body were a luxury vehicle requiring careful maintenance. A grimly efficient man. Probably terrible at family game night.

Greene’s Georgia supplies a cold aesthetic counterpoint. She plays a modern wicked stepmother filtered through calculated wellness culture, looking like someone untouched by biological stress. Her composure has the gleam of a spa brochure printed on poisoned paper. Together, Jeff and Georgia share a silent language of control, a choreography of glances, pauses, and managed concern. They embody an existential horror in which parental affection and property management occupy the same emotional address.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • best 2025 tv shows
    Gazettely's 30 Best TV Shows of 2025
  • Ginny & Georgia Season 3 Review
    Ginny & Georgia Season 3 Review: Survival Is a…
  • best sci fi movies
    30 Best Sci Fi Movies Ever: Gazettely's Ultimate…

Sydney Taylor gives the film needed friction as Brooke. Her raw, unrefined energy cuts through the Braun household’s lacquered menace. She serves as the viewer’s surrogate once she begins detecting the rot under the mansion’s expensive floorboards. Her scenes with Cochran carry the film’s most human charge, offering breath, warmth, and suspicion in a story otherwise governed by calculation.

Cinematic Hygiene and Narrative Atrophy

Director Nancy Leopardi and cinematographer Andrew Russo approach the setting with a clinical, unblinking gaze. The film resists the heavy shadow play often associated with thrillers and classic noir. Chiaroscuro gives way to overexposure. Moral darkness survives under bright light, which may be the film’s sharpest visual joke.

The Cure Review

The Malibu mansion is lit with a high-key glare that makes every surface look scrubbed, expensive, and faintly hostile. This lighting scheme mirrors the film’s fixation on hygiene and clean living. Secrets have nowhere to hide, so the household simply trains everyone to ignore them.

The camera movement stays static and deliberate, reinforcing the rigid architecture of Ally’s existence. Frames feel arranged, monitored, sealed. Expressionistic framing appears less through distortion than through sterile symmetry, a modern noir grammar built from glass walls and wellness minimalism.

That visual precision cannot fully conceal the script’s structural weakness. At ninety minutes, the film should move with a sharper pulse, yet the second act frequently loses pressure. Repeated sequences of Ally and Brooke sorting through old home movies create a loop that feels like narrative stalling. The tension should tighten. It idles.

The sound design is sparse, and the lack of a stronger score leaves several slower passages without the dread needed to carry them. Audience perception in thrillers depends on rhythm, pressure, and carefully managed sensory information. Here, silence sometimes works as unease, then starts to feel like empty space. Suspense needs oxygen, certainly, yet it also needs a hand on the throat.

The film’s internal logic also falters. One scene presents the parents as digital ghosts, then a later search reveals abundant public data that should have surfaced much earlier. The gap weakens the mystery. Strange vignettes create further drift, including a beach-side encounter with a deranged woman that feels like a remnant from a stranger, more experimental draft. The moment vanishes without payoff, leaving a faint aftertaste of unrealized ambition. The film looks expensive, yet its narrative corners are cut so tight that the seams begin to show.

Bio-Hacking the Fountain of Youth

The final act shifts from domestic captivity drama into satire about elite obsession with life extension. The medical mystery resolves with a reveal that is predictable and conceptually potent: Ally is not sick in the way she has been told. She is a harvest. Her rare blood sustains her parents’ unnatural youth, aligning the film with modern bio-hacking fantasies and the “blood-boy” transfusion fixation associated with the tech elite.

The violent confrontation arrives fast and without apology. Ally’s recovery after stopping her medication happens with startling speed, a choice that trades medical realism for the blunt satisfaction of revenge. As genre mechanics go, it is efficient. As medicine, best left off the brochure.

The hidden underground facility gives the film a needed visual break from the polished surfaces above. The cold industrial space beneath the Malibu dream literalizes the film’s moral architecture: luxury on top, extraction below. This is where the thriller lineage sharpens. The mansion’s clean light gives way to a harsher underworld, and the story’s ethical gray zones become physical space. Ally’s arc turns on identity and free will, since her entire sense of self has been manufactured through diagnosis, dependency, and fear. Her escape becomes an act of self-definition.

The film stumbles in its final moments by revealing a vast warehouse of clones. The stinger aims for scale, yet it weakens the personal victory Ally has just won. A tight psychological thriller about parental betrayal suddenly opens into an expansive sci-fi premise with little room for examination. The eat-the-rich sentiment remains clear, though its force thins once the film gestures toward franchise architecture.

By the credits, the film has exposed the moral bankruptcy of Jeff and Georgia while leaving Ally inside a world far worse than she understood. The ending reaches for a cinematic gasp and lands closer to a shrug. The questions raised by the scale of the operation receive too little space to breathe. The thematic line survives, yet the emotional payoff is offered up to a cheap cliffhanger, which feels fitting in a story about people who treat youth as a renewable resource. Even the ending wants another body.

The Cure premiered in early 2026 as a biotech-themed psychological thriller that explores the intersection of medical ethics and the extreme wealth of the billionaire class. Centered on a chronically ill teenager who suspects her parents’ philanthropic exterior hides a darker genetic agenda, the film was released theatrically and on VOD platforms like Amazon and Apple TV by Vertical. You can currently stream or rent the movie on most major digital storefronts, where it has gained attention for its satirical take on life-extension technology.

Where to Watch The Cure (2026) Online

Apple TV Store
4k
Apple TV Store
$ 3.99
Source: JustWatch

Full Credits

  • Title: The Cure

  • Distributor: Vertical, Signature Entertainment, Front Row Filmed Entertainment

  • Release date: March 20, 2026

  • Rating: R

  • Running time: 91 minutes

  • Director: Nancy Leopardi

  • Writers: Jonathan Bernstein, James Greer

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Nancy Leopardi, John Ierardi, Rock Jacobs, Natalie Marciano, Bo Youngblood, Steve Bencich, Michael Breen, Luke Daniels, Michael Leon Cassault

  • Cast: David Dastmalchian, Ashley Greene, Samantha Cochran, Sydney Taylor, Tyler Lawrence Gray, Alex Veadov, Marisa Echeverria, Bunny Levine

  • Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Andrew Russo

  • Editors: Anders Hoffman

  • Composer: Roy Mayorga

The Review

The Cure

6 Score

The Cure operates as a sleek, clinical examination of the dark side of longevity. It benefits immensely from the physical commitment of Samantha Cochran and the calculated menace of David Dastmalchian. While the visual storytelling effectively utilizes its Malibu setting to create a sense of gilded isolation, the narrative frequently stalls during its middle act. The final shift into sci-fi expansion feels more like an attempt at a franchise stinger than a cohesive thematic conclusion. It remains a polished, watchable thriller that unfortunately sacrifices psychological depth for a predictable, oversized twist.

PROS

  • David Dastmalchian and Ashley Greene deliver chilling, high-frequency performances as the adoptive parents.
  • The high-key cinematography by Andrew Russo perfectly captures the sterile, "wellness" obsession of the elite.
  • Samantha Cochran provides a visceral, physically demanding portrayal of survival and transformation.
  • The "eat-the-rich" satire regarding bio-hacking is timely and conceptually sharp.

CONS

  • The 90-minute runtime is hampered by repetitive pacing and narrative stalling in the second act.
  • Internal logic flaws regarding digital footprints and unexplained vignettes distract from the tension.
  • The final clone revelation feels tacked on and undermines the personal stakes of the protagonist.
  • The score is practically absent, leaving many scenes feeling emotionally hollow.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Alex VeadovAshley GreeneDavid DastmalchianFeaturedHorrorNancy LeopardiSamantha CochranSci-FiSydney TaylorThe CureThrillerTyler Lawrence GrayVertical
Previous Post

Heartbreak High Season 3 Review: Class Warfare and the High Price of Redemption

Next Post

Bone Keeper Review: Practical Effects Shine in This British Indie Gem

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Connect with
Login
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
Notify of
guest
Connect with
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1050 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Alice and Steve Review: Six Episodes of Escalating Madness

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Michael Jackson: The Verdict Review: Strong Interviews Meet Familiar Ground

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Clarkson’s Farm Season 5 Review: Diddly Squat Faces Its Own Success

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Tip Toe Review: Channel 4’s Five-Part Drama Turns Everyday Politeness Into Dread

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Cape Fear Review: A Slow-Burn Thriller About Fear, Privilege, and Moral Rot

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Stop! That! Train! Review
Movies

Stop! That! Train! Review: Ginger Minj and Jujubee Keep This Camp Comedy on Track

23 hours ago
Chum Review
Movies

Chum Review: A B-Movie Without Enough Bite

3 days ago
Office Romance Review
Movies

Office Romance Review: Jennifer Lopez Deserves Better Material Than This

4 days ago
Scary Movie Review
Movies

Scary Movie Review: Parody of a Parody, With Diminishing Returns

4 days ago
Clarkson’s Farm Season 5 Review
TV Shows

Clarkson’s Farm Season 5 Review: Diddly Squat Faces Its Own Success

6 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

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.

© 2021-2026 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

wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply