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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.

Chemistry Carries More Than the Story

Magic Hour

Two people, one location, and a relationship already under strain. MAGIC HOUR keeps its setup simple, almost to a fault, dropping Erin and Charlie into the desert with the expectation that everything unresolved between them will rise to the surface. It’s an intimate framework that should be filled with tension, but the film spends more time circling its ideas than digging into them.

When Curiosity Becomes the Real Competition

All In

Eight episodes, thirty minutes each, and not a single second drags. ALL IN moves fast, but it never feels rushed, which is a harder balance to pull off than it looks. ALL IN builds its entire identity around that idea, and it’s what keeps the series from feeling like just another inspirational sports documentary. Tyler Turner isn’t chasing validation here. He’s chasing something unfamiliar, and that makes all the difference.

Between Alarmism and Optimism

The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist [Blu-ray]

It doesn’t open like a traditional documentary, and that’s probably one of the smartest decisions it makes. Instead of positioning itself as an authority on artificial intelligence, THE AI DOC: OR HOW I BECAME AN APOCALOPTIMIST starts from a place of uncertainty. That perspective shapes everything that follows, for better and worse. This isn’t a film built on answers. It’s built on someone trying to catch up to a conversation that’s already moving faster than anyone seems comfortable admitting.

Hollywood Satire Through a Broken Lens

Desperate Teenage Lovedolls & Lovedolls Superstar: The Complete 4K Remastered Collection

The camera almost never rests, the sound drifts in and out, and half the performances feel like they were figured out seconds before the take. DESPERATE TEENAGE LOVEDOLLS doesn’t try to smooth any of that over, and that’s exactly why it works. It throws you into its world with no filter, no polish, and no interest in making itself accessible to anyone who isn’t willing to meet it on its level. A film that keeps you guessing whether it's a documentary or a group of friends just having a weekend of chaos.

The Evolution of Camp, Competition, and Confidence

Bring It On 7-Movie Collection [Blu-ray + Digital]

By the time a series stretches across seven films, the expectation usually shifts from growth to maintenance at best. That’s where this cheerleading franchise settles in. It doesn’t try to outdo itself with each entry, and it doesn’t pretend the formula needs a major overhaul. Instead, it keeps circling the same structure, adjusting tone, cast, and setting just enough to keep things in motion without breaking what already works. That’s why, despite most of these being direct-to-video, the core energy of the series was always there (well, part seven was a different spin, but still.)

A Film That Dares You to Keep Up

Vampire Time Travelers [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition]

Trying to evaluate something like VAMPIRE TIME TRAVELERS on traditional terms feels like you’re missing the point almost immediately. It’s not just low-budget or rough around the edges; it’s actively rejecting the idea that it should function like a “normal” film in the first place. That’s either going to be the entire appeal or an immediate dealbreaker, and the film seems perfectly aware of that divide.

Still Funny, Still Influential, Still Untouchable

I Love Lucy – Complete Series (75th Anniversary Edition) - DVD

There’s something almost surreal about sitting down with a show this old and realizing how little it’s aged, and how little would need to be changed to be relevant in today’s world. No recalibration, no “for its time” caveats, no need to excuse pacing or style. I LOVE LUCY doesn’t feel like a relic you’re revisiting out of respect. It feels alive in a way that most modern comedies struggle to replicate, let alone surpass. That’s in large part thanks to the cast, Lucille Ball, & Desi Arnaz, along with Vivian Vance & William Frawley, who were so far ahead of their time that they still can hold the attention of almost any fan of comedy.

A Digital Lifeline Between Artist and Audience

Charli XCX: Alone Together (Blu-ray)

There’s a point early on in a career where the usual distance between artist and audience just collapses. Not gradually, not through some carefully managed reveal, but all at once. What’s left isn’t a refined persona or a curated behind-the-scenes look, but something far less controlled and far more revealing. CHARLI XCX: ALONE TOGETHER doesn’t ease into that reality; it lives there from the start, and that decision shapes everything that follows.

Where Truth and Delusion Collapse

The Ugly (Limited Collector's Edition)

Some films don’t invite you in so much as they drag you into a space you don’t understand and refuse to explain the rules. THE UGLY operates exactly like that. It doesn’t build anxiety through what might happen next. It builds it through uncertainty, forcing you to question whether what you’re seeing even belongs to the same reality from one moment to the next.

A Creature Feature Built on Determination

Saurians [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition]

There’s a unique process of filmmaking that exists entirely outside the usual conversations about quality, structure, or even basic technical competence. SAURIANS inhabits that space. It’s not trying to compete with anything, not even the films it clearly draws inspiration from. Instead, it exists as a record of someone deciding to make a dinosaur movie with whatever resources were available and refusing to let limitations get in the way of finishing it. That spirit defines every frame. If you know the name Mark Polonia and are familiar with his films, that will give you a starting point, although even this tends to be a bit crazy, even for him.

Memory Isn’t a Straight Line

Hearse Chasing

There’s a hushed risk baked into deeply personal documentaries, especially ones built around trauma that never found complete resolution. Push too hard, and it can feel invasive. Hold back too much, and it risks becoming distant. HEARSE CHASING lands somewhere amongst those extremes, not always perfectly balanced, but consistently grounded in something that feels real rather than shaped for easy consumption.

Friendship at the Bottom of a Glass

The Last One for the Road (Le città di pianura)

THE LAST ONE FOR THE ROAD never moves like it’s in a hurry to prove anything. It takes its time, lets conversations expand, lets moments sit, and trusts that something will build from simply staying there long enough. At first, it can feel like it’s lost without direction, but the longer it holds that pace, the more it starts to reveal its purpose. What seems casual on the surface is carrying something heavier underneath, shaped by people who don’t quite know where they’re going but keep moving anyway.

Late-Night Nostalgia Wrapped in Fangs

Nightlife (Blu-ray)

When nostalgia hits, it can mean more than the item itself. It doesn’t take long for NIGHTLIFE to settle into that strange, slightly off-center space where late-night cable used to thrive. The kind of movie you’d find while flipping channels late at night, without context, halfway through, and still stay with just to see where it goes. There’s something about its tone that feels out of step in a way that’s hard to manufacture, unpredictable, and just odd enough to stick. It’s not about refinement. It’s about that feeling of seeing something you weren’t supposed to, and not wanting to change the channel.

When Budget Limits Become the Whole Show

Creepy-Creatures Double-Feature (The Slime People + The Crawling Hand) [Collector's Limited Edition 4K Restoration]

Some films feel like they’ve been sanded down until nothing rough remains. This isn’t that. What you get here is something far more exposed, where every limitation is visible, and every creative swing is shown for exactly what it is, for better or worse. Instead of hiding those seams, the films push them forward, turning constraint into personality. That rawness becomes the hook, not something to overlook, but the very reason they hold your attention.