Armington‘s Hometown News Site

Latest from Chris Jones

Chris Jones
Entertainment Editor

Chris Jones, from Washington, Illinois, is the Mail Entertainment Editor covering Movies, Television, Books, and Music topics. He is the owner, writer, and editor of Overly Honest Reviews.

Where Music Exists Beyond Sound

SŪNNA (Listen)

A life built around sound doesn’t just disappear, and SŪNNA (LISTEN) understands that loss in a way that feels closer, more personal, and uncomfortably real. This isn’t a film interested in sentiment or quick emotional shortcuts. Instead, it plants itself in the disorientation that comes with losing something so foundational, then begins rebuilding from that absence. At just over thirteen minutes, it moves with a sense of purpose that never feels rushed, allowing each moment to carry weight without overstaying its welcome.

The Miniseries That Proved Television Could Terrify

Salem's Lot [Limited Edition]

Some horror films linger not because they overwhelm the viewer with pure terror, but because it quietly infects the world they inhabit. SALEM'S LOT remains one of the clearest examples of that approach. When the two-part television event first aired in 1979, it proved that network TV could deliver imagery just as unsettling as anything appearing in theaters. Decades later, the story still holds that power, because it understands that fear spreads most effectively when it begins somewhere familiar.

Brigitte Nielsen’s Debut Still Carries the Film

Red Sonja [Limited Edition]

Fantasy cinema in the mid-80s was still riding the wave created by Conan the Barbarian. Studios were eager to replicate that mixture of mythology, physical heroism, and operatic scale. RED SONJA arrived as one of the more intriguing entries in that cycle, positioned as both a continuation of the sword-and-sorcery craze and a bold attempt to center a female warrior in a genre that rarely allowed women to lead the charge. What the film delivers is an experience that often feels torn between ambition and limitation. It wants to stand beside the Conan films, yet it rarely finds the strength to match that reputation.

A Samurai Trilogy That Rejects Samurai Mythology

Eiichi Kudo's Samurai Revolution Trilogy [Limited Edition]

Samurai cinema has spent decades building up the myth and legends that make it work. The noble warrior draws his blade to protect the innocent; honor is sacred, and loyalty to the ruling class is rarely questioned. EIICHI KUDO’S SAMURAI REVOLUTION TRILOGY exists almost entirely to dismantle that idea. Across three films released between 1963 and 1967, Kudo subverts the romanticized icon of the samurai, forcing it into the harsher, more political reality of the Tokugawa shogunate. The result is a trio of films that treat feudal Japan less like a stage for heroics and more like a system built on fear, corruption, and loyalty.

A Birthday Party From Another Dimension

The Birthday [Limited Edition]

THE BIRTHDAY is the kind of movie that feels like it slipped through a crack in film history. It premiered in the mid-2000s, baffled audiences who saw it, and then spent years drifting through the depths of cult cinema as mentions of it slowly built its reputation. Watching it now, especially in Arrow Video’s new 4K restoration, it becomes clear why the film developed that strange afterlife. Eugenio Mira’s film isn’t trying to be any traditional genre movie. It’s a collision of tones and ideas that almost feels designed to make viewers unsure how they’re supposed to react.

The Spirit of DIY Cinema

Highway To Hell [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition]

Certain movies feel inseparable from the era that gave them life. HIGHWAY TO HELL belongs to the world of regional American filmmaking that thrived during the VHS boom of the late 1980s and early 1990s. Long before digital cameras made independent production more accessible, filmmakers working outside the Hollywood system relied on determination, borrowed resources, and sheer stubbornness to bring their stories to life. Bret McCormick was one of those filmmakers. Operating out of Texas with limited budgets but plenty of ambition, he carved out a niche in the underground genre scene with projects that embraced the rough edges rather than hiding them.

Blood, Loyalty, and the Cost of Power

Agitator (Araburu tamashii-tachi)

Takashi Miike has built a career on unpredictability. One film offers viewers a twisted exploration through horror, while the next takes them into a surreal comedy or extreme violence that pushes the limits of comfort. Because of that reputation, a film like AGITATOR can initially feel surprising. Instead of leaning into the chaos that made ICHI THE KILLER and VISITOR Q infamous, this film gives us a slower, more deliberate rhythm. What Miike delivers here is less about exhibition and more about the machinery of organized crime itself. The result is a dense, methodical gangster drama that prioritizes character and power dynamics over shock value.

A Year Inside a Community Still Searching for Truth

The Bulldogs

The most revealing documentaries rarely chase the moment itself. The experience catches up later, after the television trucks pack up and the national attention drifts somewhere else. THE BULLDOGS understands that idea instinctively. Rather than revisiting the moment that thrust East Palestine, Ohio, into the global spotlight, the film focuses on what happened after the headlines faded. The residents are left to live with the consequences.

A Shot-on-Video Spell Cast With Real Devotion

Coven Of The Black Cube

There’s a certain kind of underground horror movie that doesn’t care if people think it's popular or if it fits any norm. It knows exactly who it’s for, knows exactly how it wants to look, and knows that any idea of perfection is far less important than conviction. COVEN OF THE BLACK CUBE has that kind of confidence. Directed by Brewce Longo and co-written with Zoe Angeli and Josh Schafer, this is the sort of handmade, shot-on-video genre picture that feels like it was willed into existence by people who love scrappiness, love tape-era horror, love queer subculture, and love the idea that cinema can still feel dangerous, horny, funny, and deeply personal all at once.

A Goo-Soaked Fever Dream of Chaos

Busted Babies

Some movies are meant to be carefully analyzed, frame by frame, critiqued for every possible piece of craft put into the production, and then others are meant to be experienced somewhere between disbelief and laughter at two in the morning while your brain tries to process what it just witnessed. BUSTED BABIES clearly belongs in the second category. Kasper Meltedhair’s directorial debut doesn’t simply bend the rules of traditional storytelling; it shatters them with a sledgehammer, assembling a chaotic collage of underground horror, surrealist humor, and low-budget DIY madness that feels less like a conventional film and more like an audiovisual fever dream.

The Story Behind the Only Survivor

Where Silence Lies

Contained thrillers live and die by tension. Strip away the elaborate locations, car chases, and sprawling ensembles, and what remains has to be strong enough to carry the entire experience. WHERE SILENCE LIES embraces that challenge, focusing on building its story almost entirely around conversation, suspicion, and the psychological space between what someone says and what they might be hiding.

Family Trauma Meets Demonic Chaos

The Containment

Demonic possession films occupy one of the most crowded corners of modern horror. Audiences have seen the rituals, the contorted bodies, the priests losing their faith, and the families pushed to the edge of desperation so many times that any new entry into the subgenre carries a heavy burden. THE CONTAINMENT steps directly into the path of that oncoming train, presenting a story about grief, faith, and supernatural terror that tries to balance familiar genre mechanics with the fallout of family trauma.

The Lingering Echo of One Tragic Night

Let Dan Go

LET DAN GO focuses on something many stories about grief overlook, examining the conversations that happen years after a loss, when the initial shock has faded, but the questions remain. Directed by Arielle Carroll and written by Timothy J. Cox, the film focuses on the aftermath of loss rather than the event itself, creating a reflective drama about two people trying to understand what it means to move forward.

A Gritty Love Letter to Slasher Cinema

Lady Parts

There’s a very specific kind of vibe that comes from a film made by people who genuinely love what they’re doing. Passion projects can overcome so much in filmmaking. If you love what you’re doing, it shows. Jared Campbell and Spring Lane Studios continue to prove that passion and creativity can take you a long way, and LADY PARTS is another strong entry in a growing catalog that thrives on doing more with less. If you’ve followed their work, you already know what they bring to the table, and this film leans into that while continuing to push things forward.