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.

A Hidden Story Told Through Stillness

Ah-Ma Burns

There’s something powerful about a story that doesn’t rush to prove itself. This short lets its premise breathe, finding clarity through quiet moments and unspoken tension. What starts as a story about an older woman marking the anniversary of her husband’s passing evolves into a commentary on presence, change, and the aching human desire to matter. The film leans on performance, composition, and grounded emotion more than spectacle, which gives it a sense of weight—and also reveals some of its missed opportunities.

Tension, Banter, and a Moral Crossroads

The Sentry

Something is refreshing about a short film that doesn’t waste a second establishing where you are and who you’re watching, but still finds the time to surprise you. What begins as a seemingly familiar spy setup takes an unexpected and grounded detour. Set against the backdrop of Cambodia, this story doesn’t use its location as embellishment. Instead, the setting shapes the story’s entire undercurrent. And as soon as the camera starts sweeping through landscapes with a nostalgic grain, it’s clear this isn’t just another international mission with a silent protagonist and a disposable adversary.

Action With the Volume Turned Down

High Rollers

Sometimes a movie lines up all the right ingredients—an iconic lead, a flashy heist setup, a crew of specialists—and still feels like a test run for something that never quite came together. That’s the case here, where a familiar formula gets another outing but lacks the spark to make it worth remembering. With a storyline that leans on every convention in the book, what could’ve been a sleek, character-driven crime caper ends up more like a shrug of a sequel.

Betrayal Comes Back With a Vengeance

The Tale Of Oiwa's Ghost (The Ghost Story of Oiwa's Spirit) (Kaidan Oiwa no borei)

Japan’s most infamous tale of betrayal and supernatural revenge has been told countless times. Still, Tai Katô’s 1961 version of THE TALE OF OIWA’S GHOST is one of the more relentless and grounded adaptations. Newly released on Blu-ray by Radiance Films and MVD Entertainment, this restoration gives the lesser-seen Toei production a fresh coat of dread. While it doesn’t quite reach the dreamlike artistry of KWAIDAN, Katô’s take grabs you by the throat with its raw emotion, pacing, and brutal sense of justice.

Art, War, and Uneven Ambition: a Tale of Two Dutch Films

Mysteries + Pastorale 1943 (Double-Feature)

This Cult Epics double-feature pairs two works from the late 1970s that are connected yet incredibly different. MYSTERIES and PASTORALE 1943 are two films that couldn’t feel more different in tone, focus, and success, yet the presence of Dutch icons Rutger Hauer and Sylvia Kristel anchors both. Released at the height of their respective careers, these films offer a fascinating glimpse into the ambitions of Dutch cinema during a transformative era.

Trading Warmth for Wealth: a Fable With a Cold Center

Heart of Stone (Das kalte Herz)

HEART OF STONE might be a fable, but it isn’t content with being quiet. This East German fairy tale, originally titled DAS KALTE HERZ, filters its lesson through striking visuals, shadowy forests, and the kind of existential consequence you don’t often expect from a children’s fantasy. Newly restored for its Blu-ray debut from Eureka’s Masters of Cinema series, the 1950 film is fascinating both as a work of early color cinema and as a social commentary buried in the framework of folklore. It doesn’t hit every mark, but there’s much to appreciate, especially how it mixes whimsy with something far darker.

A Story Waiting to Happen

I Want To Feel Fun

The moment this short begins, there’s a spark—unfiltered, almost chaotic in its momentum, as if we’re being tossed into someone else’s world and left to ride the confusion alongside them. That unpredictability is both its strength and its ceiling. The film plays with improvisation, character dynamics, and lived-in tension. Still, while it captures a certain emotional honesty, it hesitates to push any of its ideas. There’s charm, chemistry, and a mood worth appreciating, but it feels like it needed just one more try to connect fully.

Two Tales of Vengeance, One Brutal Double Feature

Exact Revenge (The Eunuch + The Deadly Knives Double Feature) [Limited Edition]

Shaw Brothers fans know revenge has never been a subtle concept in their filmography. With EXACT REVENGE, Eureka Classics uncovers two underappreciated entries from the studio’s vault that explore a burning drive for justice from different stylistic angles. THE EUNUCH and THE DEADLY KNIVES may not sit at the same level as some of the studio’s most iconic releases. Still, together they offer a snapshot of a transitional moment in martial arts cinema—and provide enough grit, bloodshed, and drama to justify a slot on your shelf.

You’ll Feel the Fear Before You See It

The House of the Devil Blu-ray Collector's Edition Steelcase

Horror can hit differently, especially when it trusts its audience to sit with discomfort and draw fear from familiarity. That’s the kind of confidence this film runs on. With deliberate style choices and an eye for the understated, it manages to build tension out of stillness, suspense out of silence, and danger out of the mundane. From its framework to its methodical pacing, this one doesn’t beg for attention—it earns it on its terms.

History Isn't Just a Backdrop—It's the Wound That Never Heals

Hong Kong 1941 [Limited Edition]

HONG KONG 1941 doesn’t just look into the past—it confronts it. There’s no romantic glossing over of war, no polish on tragedy. Instead, this 1984 drama leans into the tension of survival with unflinching honesty. Set during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, the film filters sweeping trauma through the lens of intimate human choices. What emerges is a story less about battlefield heroics and more about the quiet courage of trying to live, love, and escape when the world has lost its mind.

What If You Could Rewrite Your Past?

Guacamole Yesterdays

Heartbreak doesn’t wait for the credits to roll—it loops, replays, and lingers long after the screen fades to black. That’s the emotional pull that GUACAMOLE YESTERDAYS steps into. For two-thirds of the film, it handles that terrain with sharp dialogue, offbeat charm, and just enough sci-fi edge to elevate a grounded story about fractured relationships. But as the film inches toward its conclusion, it opts for a hard narrative swerve that, while ambitious, undercuts some of the groundwork it so effectively lays early on.

Seventies Sleaze Gets the Buddy-Cop Treatment

The Nice Guys Limited Edition 4K UHD and Blu-ray

THE NICE GUYS is the kind of movie that doesn’t just resurrect the buddy-cop formula—it sucker punches it, drags it through a pile of cigarette butts, and shoves it into a polyester leisure suit before sending it to a party nobody remembers leaving. Instead, what could’ve been another throwaway homage to the mismatched-duo genre becomes one of Shane Black’s sharpest works, loaded with acidic wit, crumbling masculinity, and a surprising sense of sadness that makes its chaos feel oddly personal. And that cast! It’s aged like a fine wine, with Crowe and Gosling as leads and a young Angourie Rice and Margaret Qualley. The film knows exactly what it wants to be and is cast perfectly for it.

Everything Changes When the Past Refuses to Stay Buried

Revival

Death stops meaning what it used to when the people you’ve mourned walk through the door like nothing happened. That’s the unsettling starting point for a story that doesn't scream its horror but lets it crawl slowly up your spine. What could’ve easily been another reanimated-body horror fest takes a more calculated, character-driven route, where the supernatural is just the backdrop for something more personal.

Bleeds Style, but Struggles With Substance

Bogieville

A brutal cold open can be a gamble, but this one wastes no time throwing viewers into the thick of it—no mood-setting montage or gentle build-up. A single woman in a restroom and a very specific, visceral kind of bloodshed kick things off with a jolt. The moment screams for attention and dares you to keep watching. Unfortunately, the promise of such an unapologetically raw beginning doesn’t translate into sustained momentum, and while the premise is bold, the execution can’t always keep pace.

Age, Identity, and Saying What Matters

Confessions of a Menopausal Femme Fatale

There’s something galvanizing about a performance that doesn’t wait for permission to tell its truth. CONFESSIONS OF A MENOPAUSAL FEMME FATALE doesn’t ease its way into vulnerability—it bursts in with humor, and a kind of creative control that feels earned. What begins as a return to a former home evolves into a much deeper excavation of identity, self-perception, and the fallout that comes with life changes that are too often pushed to the margins. This isn’t a special-interest project aimed at a niche audience—it’s a bold, sharply crafted spotlight on stories that rarely get told.