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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.

More About Loss Than Survival

We Bury the Dead

Somehow WE BURY THE DEAD feels like it’s actively avoiding being the movie it was marketed as, and whether that works for you depends entirely on what you came in expecting (that’s not a negative). On the surface, it's a zombie film? (military disaster, mass casualties, the dead rising) But almost immediately, it starts pulling away from those moments, as soon as they appear. What you get instead is something quieter, more introspective, and definitely more interested in grief than survival. That’s the film's personality, but it will also push some people away and pull others in.

A Story Defined by What It Holds Back

The History of Sound

There’s a version of THE HISTORY OF SOUND that feels like it should hit you a lot harder than it actually does, and that gap between intention and impact ends up defining the entire experience. On paper, this is exactly the kind of film that should knock you over, a story about two men, a shared love of music, a fleeting connection shaped by time, distance, and repression, all set against the backdrop of a changing world. It has all the ingredients of something devastating. But what you actually get is something far more restrained, almost to a fault, where the emotion never quite breaks through the surface.

He Wanted In, No Matter the Cost

Lurker

There’s some deep discomfort that comes from watching someone try too hard to belong, and LURKER understands and explores that with an almost surgical precision. It doesn’t rely on twists or shocking reveals to get under your skin. Instead, it builds tension through awkward silences, calculated interactions, and the realization that the person at the center of it all is always one step ahead, even when he pretends not to be.

A Prototype for the 80s Rescue Action Boom

Uncommon Valor (4KUHD)

There’s a very specific blueprint that UNCOMMON VALOR follows, and it would go on to define an entire subgenre of 1980s action cinema. A group of misfit soldiers, a dangerous rescue mission (sound familiar?) A ticking emotional core is driving the whole thing forward. It’s familiar, sometimes to a fault, but there’s enough sincerity underneath the surface to keep it from feeling disposable. (to be fair, this wasn’t the first, but it was before many of the copycats that followed.)

An Offbeat Story That Lives in Its Characters

Randy & the Mob

There’s a charm that rises naturally from a film that knows exactly where it’s from, even if it doesn’t always know exactly where it’s going, and RANDY & THE MOB leans into that identity. This is a deeply Southern story, not just in its setting but in its attitude, humor, and character. While it doesn’t always connect, it carries enough personality to keep things engaging.

A Real-Time Thriller That Knows Its Limits

Mercy

High-concept thrillers live and die by how well they commit to their own rules, and MERCY wastes no time locking itself into a very specific construct. A man sits in a chair, accused of murder, with a ticking clock counting down to his execution. That setup could feel restrictive, but the film leans into it, building tension through confinement rather than trying to escape it. This isn’t a new story, but it’s handled here in a way that creates something more than the sum of its parts.

A Story Built on Inherited Trauma

The Testaments

THE TESTAMENTS shifts the focus of Gilead away from survival and toward indoctrination, and that change immediately alters how the story feels. Instead of watching characters fight against the system from the outside, this series focuses on those who have been raised within it, shaped by it, and, in some cases, still believe in it. That perspective alone gives the narrative a different kind of tension, one rooted less in escape and more in realization. There’s something in this series that understands the assignment and turns it up to eleven. While it may be a slower burn than THE HANDMAID’S TALE, the series understands what it is and lets that impact sit with you. A series that turns observation into confrontation, and refuses to let you look away. Margaret Atwood’s original vision still runs through every part of this, not as a blueprint, but as a warning that continues to prove itself right.

Pure Hanna-Barbera Madness From Start to Finish

Scooby's All-Star Laff-A-Lympics Complete Collection

I’m biased, I’ll admit that 100%, something is freeing about getting to revisit your childhood nostalgia in an unlocked way. This show never cared about logic, structure, or even “fairness”; instead, it built its entire identity around chaos, personality, and pure animated excess. SCOOBY’S ALL-STAR LAFF-A-LYMPICS is trying to create an event, and decades later, it still feels like one. I was born after this series ran its original broadcast, but I was able to catch it in syndication. It was always one of those shows I’d just stumble on, though. It was never one that had a traditional broadcast timeslot.

Not the Story You Remember, and That’s the Point

Scott Pilgrim Takes Off: The Complete Limited Series

When you think of SCOTT PILGRIM, you set yourself with expectations that come with anything tied to the property, and SCOTT PILGRIM TAKES OFF knows that going in. It doesn’t ignore those expectations; it actively messes with them, setting up something familiar before pulling the rug out from under it in a way that’s either going to completely win you over or leave you trying to recalibrate what you thought you knew and thought you were getting.

A Neo-Noir That Refuses to Play by the Rules

Cutter's Way

Some films age into relevance; others feel like they were born into it. CUTTER’S WAY is a bleak, cynical, and deeply character-driven neo-noir that feels just as sharp now as it did in the early 1980s. It’s less interested in solving a mystery than it is in dissecting the people caught inside it, and that distinction is what gives the film its lasting power.

A Family Film That Knows Its Audience

Papa Bear (Moy papa - medved)

Sometimes, a family film will lean on a magical premise to explore something surprisingly grounded, and PAPA BEAR fits squarely into that lane. It doesn’t want to reinvent the wheel, but it does commit to the formula in a way that makes its intentions clear from the start. This is a story about connection, patience, and understanding, wrapped in a premise that’s just strange enough to keep younger audiences engaged. Shockingly, there’s something in here, even with some of the struggles; there’s a heart here that’s undeniable.

Performances That Carry the Weight of Time

Merrily We Roll Along

Trying to translate a stage production into something that works at the same level on screen has always been a challenge that’s often hit or miss, and MERRILY WE ROLL ALONG leans hard into that challenge rather than avoiding it. This isn’t a traditional film adaptation, and it doesn’t pretend to be one. Instead, it’s more somewhere between a recorded theatrical experience and a cinematic reinterpretation, and whether that works for you depends almost entirely on what you expect going in.

Messy, Unpredictable, and Completely Its Own Thing

Mermaid

MERMAID wastes absolutely no time making it clear that this isn’t going to be a whimsical fantasy or some offbeat romantic creature feature. It drops you into the life of a man who’s already falling apart, then pushes him even further when the impossible enters that chaos. What follows isn’t a story about wonder or discovery, but about desperation, obsession, and the fragile line between purpose and self-destruction. Whatever your expectations, this will meet you on a different level.

A War Epic That Embraces the Cost of Failure

A Bridge Too Far

There are war films that focus on the individual, and then there are war films that attempt to capture the machinery of war itself. A BRIDGE TOO FAR belongs to that second category, and it embraces that identity from the very beginning. This isn’t a story built around a single hero or a simple story. It’s a sprawling, deliberate reconstruction of a failed operation, and it leans into the idea that scale can be just as powerful as intimacy.