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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.

Survival at the Edge of Control

Runaway Train (4KUHD)

There’s a version of RUNAWAY TRAIN that could have existed as a more straightforward, almost generic action film. The film is about two escaped convicts stuck on a train with no brakes, racing toward disaster. The setup alone is enough to sustain tension, and in lesser hands, that would have been the entire point. What makes the film hold up decades later is how little interest it had in staying that simple; that’s why it worked so well.

When the Fight Isn’t Just Physical

Constant Battles

Ambition is easy to celebrate when it comes with victories and milestones, but CONSTANT BATTLES focuses on everything that happens before those moments ever arrive. It centers on the kind of pursuit that may not feel triumphant in real time; the “win” here isn’t a gold medal, it’s where progress is measured in small steps forward, and setbacks carry just as much weight as achievements.

Justice Isn’t Built to Handle This

Confessions of a Police Captain (Confessione di un commissario di polizia al procuratore della repubblica)

Power doesn’t always show itself through violence. Sometimes it hides behind process, paperwork, and a system designed to protect itself. CONFESSIONS OF A POLICE CAPTAIN builds its entire personality around that idea, presenting a world where justice exists in theory but collapses the moment it’s tested against influence, control, and institutional loyalty.

Confidence, Chaos, and Complete Transparency

Nikki Glaser: Good Girl

Stand-up is at its best and most brutal when it’s done right. There’s nowhere to hide, no cut to save you, no one else to blame when something doesn’t land with the audience. NIKKI GLASER: GOOD GIRL doesn’t just understand that, it weaponizes it. This is a set built on control, but not the kind that plays it safe. It’s the kind that knows exactly how far it can push before people start shifting in their seats, and then goes a little further anyway.

When Justice Exists Only on Paper

Let Our Mountains Live

The most unsettling part of LET OUR MOUNTAINS LIVE isn’t the conflict it builds around, it’s what happens after the supposed victory. The film moves toward a legal outcome that should signal resolution, only to dismantle that expectation almost immediately. What remains isn’t closure, but a clearer understanding of how little a ruling can matter when enforcement never follows. That shift defines the entire experience. It reframes the story from one about justice to one about its limits.

The Cost of Making Everyone Laugh

Come What May

Telling the story of someone who lived as intensely as they performed on stage comes with a built-in risk, especially when the people closest to them are shaping that narrative. COME WHAT MAY doesn’t try to mitigate that challenge or reshape it into something more comfortable. It accepts the contradictions upfront, presenting Ralphie May as both a commanding comedic presence and a person whose personal struggles were inseparable from his rise.

A Film Defined More by Context Than Content

The Stewardesses

THE STEWARDESSES is almost easier to talk about as an idea than as a film. The experience of watching it and the significance of what it represents rarely sit in the same place, and that gap never really closes as you watch. One side carries real historical weight, tied to exhibition, technology, and a specific moment in audience demand. The other is what’s actually on screen, and that side struggles to justify itself on its own terms. The strain between those two realities becomes the defining feature of the entire experience.

A Slow Burn That Holds Back the Horror

Itch!

The idea behind ITCH! is uncomfortable in a way that works and really sticks with you. It doesn’t rely on scale or a deeper backstory to hook you. It goes straight for something physical and instinctive, the kind of reaction you can feel in your own body just hearing it described. That directness is what gives the film such a strong pull. You understand the threat instantly, and more importantly, you understand how quickly it could spiral.

Surviving the End of the World, One Episode at a Time

Didn't Die

DIDN’T DIE doesn’t open with panic, and that choice tells you everything you need to know about how it sees the world it inhabits. The apocalypse has already happened, the rules are there, and instead of chaos, what’s left is routine. People have conversations, they process the terror around them, they try to maintain some version of normal life, even as the world continues to erode. It’s a deliberate shift away from what the zombie genre typically leans on, and for a while, that shift feels genuinely refreshing.

Infidelity Has Consequences, Sometimes With Teeth

Colony Mutation [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition]

There’s no easing into an experience like COLONY MUTATION. Within minutes, it’s clear you’re dealing with a film that doesn’t just stretch its limitations, it practically tears through them in pursuit of an idea that’s bigger than the production can reasonably support. And yet, that’s exactly what makes it worth talking about and, more importantly, worth experiencing!

Stillness As Storytelling

Two Seasons, Two Strangers (Tabi to Hibi)

TWO SEASONS, TWO STRANGERS doesn’t ever stretch for attention. It sits back and waits to see if you’re willing to meet it where it exists. There’s no push, no urgency, no signal telling you what you’re supposed to expect while watching. What you get instead is a series of moments that feel disconnected at first, almost resistant to interpretation, until the accumulation starts to settle into something more defined.

A Legacy Entry That Still Trips Over Itself

The Return of the Pink Panther (4KUHD)

Without question, THE RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER is one of, if not the best, films in this series. After quite a break, it doesn’t try to reintroduce itself or justify its existence. It assumes you already understand what Inspector Clouseau is, what he does, and why that works. Instead of rebuilding the foundation, it jumps straight into the deep end, trusting that the character alone is enough to carry the experience. That trust is mostly rewarded, even if everything surrounding him doesn’t quite reach the same level.

A Forgotten Experiment That Still Works

The Paranormal [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition]

THE PARANORMAL doesn’t ever try apologizing for what it is. It doesn’t try to disguise its shot-on-video roots or ease you into the expectation that you’re about to watch something rough around the edges. It just starts, confident in the idea it’s built around, and lets that do the work. That confidence matters so much in this case, because without it, this would’ve blended into a long list of late-’90s SOV releases that never found a way to stand out.

Less About the Crime, More About the People

Task: The Complete First Season

What stands out first isn’t the case; it’s the burden everyone’s carrying before the case even begins to take shape. The series doesn’t introduce its characters as professionals stepping into a challenge. It presents them as people already dealing with something, already worn down in ways that have nothing to do with the investigation itself. That baseline matters because it shifts how everything else is examined from that point forward.