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Hurry Up Tomorrow poster

Reality lies deeper than you think.

Hurry Up Tomorrow (2025)

May 14, 20251h 45mEN
5.1

161 votes

Official Site

Overview

A musician plagued by insomnia is pulled into an odyssey with a stranger who begins to unravel the very core of his existence.

Where to Watch

Streaming availability for India

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Amazon Prime VideoAmazon Prime Video with Ads
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Top Billed Cast

Status

Released

Original Language

English

Budget

$15.0M

Revenue

$7.8M

Production Companies

Manic PhaseLive Nation Studios

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User Reviews

r96sk

r96sk

5.0

<em>'Hurry Up Tomorrow'</em> isn't a movie that I found any enjoyment in. Jenna Ortega is the only plus for it that I do hold, her performance is solid and the most watchable part of this 2025 release; early on, with the seperated viewpoints, it was like night and day in terms of interest. Barry Keoghan is another star name attached, though his character is quite forgettable; at least until the end. Abel Tesfaye (aka The Weeknd; his latest album serves as the movie's soundtrack) is the film's lead, this is my first time seeing him act and he's alright, I guess, just not all that interesting…

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Manuel São Bento

3.0

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://movieswetextedabout.com/hurry-up-tomorrow-movie-review-fame-depression-and-a-stylistic-blur-of-misfires/ "Hurry Up Tomorrow is one of the most convoluted, frustrating movies of the year. A glaring example of how style can drown substance, and how unchecked artistic ego can turn a potentially compelling work into an exercise in hollow self-indulgence. Despite some undeniable visual qualities and earnest performances from the cast, Trey Edward Shults and Abel “The Weeknd” Tesfaye fall short on all essential fronts: narrative, structure, emotion, and purpo…

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CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

5.0

And here was me thinking that “Gen. Klytus” has been impaled on some spikes back in 1980, but no. Here he returns singing some of the songs of “The Weeknd” (a.k.a Abel Tesfaye) in this confused and messy dawdle into the realms of pop star, drug/drink-induced delirium. He’s clearly a man in distress as we discover his girlfriend has dumped him and his rather obsessive manager “Lee” (Barry Keoghan) is only bothered about him getting on that stage. To be fair, when he does the cinema sound of the man’s array of hits does some justice to the impressive light shows but once we get off the stage, we…

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