About Honey Bunch
Honey Bunch (2025) is a uniquely unsettling genre hybrid from Canada and the UK that blends sci-fi, thriller, horror, and dark comedy into a story about memory, trust, and identity. The film follows Diana, who awakens from a coma with severe memory loss. In a desperate attempt to reclaim her past, she and her devoted husband retreat to an isolated facility for radical experimental treatments. As the procedures grow more intense and invasive, the foundation of their marriage begins to crack under the strain, and Diana starts to suspect her husband's motivations may not be as pure as they seem.
The film's strength lies in its atmospheric tension and psychological ambiguity. The remote, clinical setting becomes a character in itself, amplifying the paranoia and isolation. The central performances effectively sell the deteriorating dynamic, making viewers question every interaction and half-remembered detail. While the IMDb rating of 5.8 suggests a divisive reception, the movie's ambition in weaving together comedy, fantasy, and horror elements into a marital thriller is commendable. It plays with familiar sci-fi tropes but grounds them in a relatable, emotional conflict.
For viewers seeking something off the beaten path, Honey Bunch offers a compelling, 113-minute journey into the fragility of the mind and the secrets that can hide within the closest relationships. It’s a film that asks how well we can truly know anyone, even ourselves, and is worth a watch for fans of psychological genre-benders.
The film's strength lies in its atmospheric tension and psychological ambiguity. The remote, clinical setting becomes a character in itself, amplifying the paranoia and isolation. The central performances effectively sell the deteriorating dynamic, making viewers question every interaction and half-remembered detail. While the IMDb rating of 5.8 suggests a divisive reception, the movie's ambition in weaving together comedy, fantasy, and horror elements into a marital thriller is commendable. It plays with familiar sci-fi tropes but grounds them in a relatable, emotional conflict.
For viewers seeking something off the beaten path, Honey Bunch offers a compelling, 113-minute journey into the fragility of the mind and the secrets that can hide within the closest relationships. It’s a film that asks how well we can truly know anyone, even ourselves, and is worth a watch for fans of psychological genre-benders.
















