• Pop Culture
    • Movies
    • Television
    • Comic Books
    • Video Games
    • Toys & Collectibles
  • Features
    • News
    • Reviews
    • Articles and Opinions
    • Interviews
    • Exclusives
    • FMTV
  • About
    • About Flickering Myth
    • Write for Flickering Myth
    • Advertise on Flickering Myth
  • Socials
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • Bluesky
    • Instagram
    • Flipboard
    • Linktree
    • X
  • Terms
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy

Flickering Myth

Geek Culture | Movies, TV, Comic Books & Video Games

  • News
  • Reviews
  • Articles & Opinions
  • The Baby in the Basket
  • Death Among the Pines

4K Ultra HD Review – MaXXXine (2024)

November 18, 2025 by admin

MaXXXine, 2024.

Written and Directed by Ti West.
Starring Mia Goth, Elizabeth Debicki, Moses Sumney, Michelle Monaghan, Bobby Cannavale, Halsey, Lily Collins, Giancarlo Esposito, Kevin Bacon, Chloe Farnworth, Deborah Geffner, Sophie Thatcher, Cecilia Yesuil, Kim Charley, Rowan McCain, Susan Pingleton, Uli Latukefu, Ned Vaughn, Larry Fessenden, Marcus LaVoi, and Charley Rowan McCain.

SYNOPSIS:

In 1980s Hollywood, adult film star and aspiring actress Maxine Minx finally gets her big break. But as a mysterious killer stalks the starlets of Hollywood, a trail of blood threatens to reveal her sinister past.

Some filmmakers obsess over certain eras, and Ti West embraces 1985 with the enthusiasm of someone rifling through the last surviving VHS tapes in a closing rental shop. MaXXXine, the final chapter in his X trilogy, dives into Hollywood’s sleaziest corners with a lurid fascination that borders on affectionate parody. Yet while the grime-slicked glamour and synth-soaked bravado make for a heady brew, the film sometimes feels more focussed on its setting than with the woman at its centre.

We find Maxine Minx (Mia Goth) a year on from the bloodbath of X. She has clawed her way from a Texas backroom porn shoot to the fringes of legitimate fame, landing her first studio role in The Puritan 2. Hollywood beckons, and West paints the city as a neon-tinted labyrinth of adult theatres, peep rooms, whispering alleyways and studio lots where uneasy ambition festers. It is, in many ways, the most elaborate playground of the trilogy.

As Maxine edges closer to the limelight, a pair of threats close in. One comes in the form of a private investigator played with swaggering style by Kevin Bacon, all gold veneers and swampy charm. The other is the Night Stalker, whose murders keep inching towards Maxine’s orbit. The set-up promises a sly, pulpy collision of Hollywood myth-making and slasher theatrics. But while West’s sense of period detail is terrific, the plotting itself rarely digs beyond the surface.

Goth once again anchors everything with intensity. Maxine is still brittle, hungry, and resolute, but the script offers her fewer emotional contours than X or Pearl did. Where Pearl’s inner life spilled out in wrenching monologues, Maxine’s psychology is sketched in broad strokes. She moves like someone propelled by ambition alone, which is dramatically coherent but not as compelling. Goth does what she can with it, flitting between hardened resolve and a wounded longing for recognition, yet the film keeps drifting away from her in favour of its own stylistic indulgences.

The supporting cast help fill the space left by that narrative detachment. Elizabeth Debicki offers a dry, imperious turn as the director attempting to mould Maxine into a star, while Giancarlo Esposito runs against type as a brash Hollywood agent. Bacon, though, steals the film outright. There’s a sly crackle of mischief every time he appears, grounding the sleaze in a flavour of danger that the film occasionally reaches for but doesn’t always achieve.

When MaXXXine leans into its violence, West displays the same gleeful nastiness that ran through X. A few kills are outrageous enough to jolt audiences out of their seats, and the film’s climactic explosion of chaos delivers the trilogy’s most unabashedly crowd-pleasing stretch. But between these moments, the story leans heavily on homage. References to De Palma, giallo cinema, Vice Squad, and VHS sleaze aren’t just nods; they are the film’s backbone. And sometimes the backbone stands in for substance.

Second Sight’s 4K release makes a persuasive case for the film as a visual object, even when it falters as a narrative one. The native 4K presentation embraces digital grain to mimic the rough texture of 1980s low-budget filmmaking, and the effect is surprisingly convincing. The palette is a world away from Pearl: thinner blacks, a cool blue tint, and bursts of red that flood the frame like spilt neon. Detail is excellent, particularly in the practical gore, and the encode is robust, preserving the film’s jittery aesthetic with precision. Atmos audio delivers punchy bass, crisp electronic cues and lively surround activity, though the overhead layer feels more reserved than expected. The disc’s supplements, including multiple new interviews and a fresh commentary, add real value and give the release the weight of a definitive edition.

MaXXXine is stylish, unruly fun with flashes of brilliance, but as a trilogy finale it feels oddly undernourished. It entertains, it dazzles, it occasionally shocks, but it struggles to stand shoulder to shoulder with its predecessors. Still, Goth remains magnetic, and Second Sight’s release lets the film look and sound the best it ever has. And for anyone wanting the full set, now is the time to invest.

SEE ALSO: Read our review of Second Sight’s 4K Ultra HD release of Pearl here

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★ ★

Tom Atkinson

 

Filed Under: Movies, Physical Media, Reviews, Tom Atkinson Tagged With: Bobby Cannavale, Cecilia Yesuil, Charley Rowan McCain, Chloe Farnworth, Deborah Geffner, Elizabeth Debicki, Giancarlo Esposito, Halsey, kevin bacon, Kim Charley, Larry Fessenden, Lily Collins, Marcus LaVoi, MaXXXine, Mia Goth, Michelle Monaghan, Moses Sumney, Ned Vaughn, Rowan McCain, Sophie Thatcher, Susan Pingleton, Ti West, Uli Latukefu

FMTV – Watch Our Latest Video Here

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:

7 Sci-Fi Horror Movie Hidden Gems You Have To See

Revisiting the Star Wars Prequel Trilogy

The 10 Best Villains in Arnold Schwarzenegger Movies

The Essential Modern Day Swashbucklers

From Hated to Loved: Did These Movies Deserve Reappraisal?

10 Great Horror Movies That Avoid the Director Sophomore Slump

The Enviable “Worst” Films of David Fincher

10 Great 80s Sci-Fi Adventure Movies You Need To See

13 Underrated Horror Franchise Sequels That Deserve More Love

Bookended Brilliance: Directors with Great First and Last Films

FLICKERING MYTH FILMS

 

Top Stories:

Movie Review – Wicked: For Good (2025)

Comic Book Review – Star Trek: The Last Starship #2

Movie Review – Sisu: Road to Revenge (2025)

10 Essential 21st Century Neo-Noirs for Noirvember

10 Must-See Legal Thrillers of the 1990s

Movie Review – Rental Family (2025)

10 Actors Who Almost Became James Bond

Book Review – Star Wars: Master of Evil

10 Essential 1970s Neo-Noirs to Watch This Noirvember

4K Ultra HD Review – Caught Stealing (2025)

FLICKERING MYTH FILMS

 

FEATURED POSTS:

10 Great Cult B-Movies of the VHS Era

Essential Demonic Horror Movies To Send Shivers Down Your Spine

Cinema of Violence: 10 Great Hong Kong Movies of the 1980s

8 Must-See Cult Sci-Fi Movies from 1985

  • Pop Culture
    • Movies
    • Television
    • Comic Books
    • Video Games
    • Toys & Collectibles
  • Features
    • News
    • Reviews
    • Articles and Opinions
    • Interviews
    • Exclusives
    • FMTV
  • About
    • About Flickering Myth
    • Write for Flickering Myth
    • Advertise on Flickering Myth
  • Socials
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • Bluesky
    • Instagram
    • Flipboard
    • Linktree
    • X
  • Terms
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy

© Flickering Myth Limited. All rights reserved. The reproduction, modification, distribution, or republication of the content without permission is strictly prohibited. Movie titles, images, etc. are registered trademarks / copyright their respective rights holders. Read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. If you can read this, you don't need glasses.


 

Flickering MythLogo Header Menu
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Articles and Opinions
  • The Baby in the Basket
  • Death Among the Pines
  • About Flickering Myth
  • Write for Flickering Myth