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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.

The Trouble With Truth Is What It Costs

The Trouble with Tessa

THE TROUBLE WITH TESSA opens with the eerie quiet of a town that looks just a little too polished. A porch, a welcome, and the kind of friendliness that feels rehearsed. That’s what greets Tessa Fowler—a former documentarian whose credibility is in shambles—when she moves to Lowery looking for peace. What she finds is a half-buried history and a chilling sense that the people around her are playing roles in a much older script.

Memory, Madness, and the Measure of Redemption

Soul to Squeeze

In a landscape where psychological thrillers often lean on tired tropes and flashy aesthetics, SOUL TO SQUEEZE stands out by its restraint—and then slowly, methodically, pulling that restraint apart. What starts as a claustrophobic exploration of one man’s unraveling mental state morphs, quite literally, into something bigger. Director W.M. Weikart dares to build a film not just about perception but shaped by it, allowing form to follow function in a way that elevates the story beyond its roots.

Truth Doesn’t Sell in This Town

Beneath the Fold

BENEATH THE FOLD strips journalism of its romanticism and puts the job back where it belongs: on the floor of a crumbling newsroom, littered with empty coffee cups, exhausted staff, and half-finished stories. Writer-director Neil Thomas Kirby—drawing on his own experience as a small-town reporter—delivers a somber yet honest portrait of a profession gasping for relevance during a financial crisis, where passion runs high but resources run dry.

What Happens After the Headlines Disappear

Tether

In an era where headlines vanish faster than the lives they mark, TETHER refuses to look away. It takes a national nightmare—the kind that’s become tragically commonplace in America—and focuses not on the violence itself, but on what lingers in its wake. With a modest budget, a sharp emotional focus, and the quiet power of two characters, this film is less a portrait of trauma than a confrontation with its long tail. While the story itself and the honesty behind it are incredible, the execution occasionally struggles to match the same level of quality.

Guilt Never Sleeps, Not Even Decades Later

The Nightwatch Collection [Limited Edition]

Ole Bornedal’s NIGHTWATCH remains one of the defining thrillers to emerge from Denmark’s pre-Nordic Noir wave—a slow-burning, sharp-edged puzzle-box of dread that first set the stage for an entire generation of European crime thrillers. Though time has passed since its 1994 debut, the film still buzzes with the unnerving charge of being alone with the dead, and now, thanks to Arrow Video’s new two-film set, both NIGHTWATCH and its long-awaited sequel, NIGHTWATCH: DEMONS ARE FOREVER, arrive packaged together for audiences old and new.

The Webcam Claustrophobia Works

Don't Log Off

In a subgenre that’s been dragged through a sea of low-budget imitators, DON’T LOG OFF manages to do something few COVID-era webcam thrillers have pulled off: it works. Tense, cleverly structured, and balanced, it doesn’t rely on gimmicks—it commits to its format and trusts the strength of its cast and concept to carry the weight. And for the most part, it succeeds.

Cosplayers Versus Carnage in an Undead L.A.

ZombieCON Vol. 1

It’s not every day a zombie movie sets its sights on fan culture and manages to both celebrate and roast it at the same time. ZOMBIECON VOL. 1 lands somewhere between chaos and commentary, blending camp, carnage, and cosplay in a world that feels absurdly heightened and yet oddly timely. While it doesn’t always stick the landing, this genre-mashing indie horror comedy charges forward with confidence, buoyed by a cast that’s enjoying themselves and a concept bold enough to stand out in an overcrowded undead landscape.

Meditative, Haunting, and Quietly Defiant

Divia

There’s a unique bravery in silence, particularly in a time when shouting seems to dominate every corner of modern discourse. DIVIA, directed by Dmytro Hreshko, doesn’t whisper so much as it allows the earth itself to breathe. It offers no commentary, no narration, no voice guiding you through its 79-minute meditation. Instead, it trusts the viewer to witness, absorb, and feel the unspoken weight of what war leaves behind—and what may slowly grow in its aftermath.

Intimacy Beyond Words

A Quiet Love

What does it mean to love across barriers—barriers of religion, orientation, ability, or communication? That question pulses through the heart of A QUIET LOVE, a quietly profound documentary that gives voice—visually, emotionally, and metaphorically—to three Deaf couples whose stories are as personal as they are universally moving. Directed by Garry Keane, the film is not simply a collection of narratives; it's a rich and immersive experience that transforms the screen into a space of shared empathy, offering viewers a perspective rarely depicted with such authenticity and care.

Breaking Barriers, Again and Again

Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore

MARLEE MATLIN: NOT ALONE ANYMORE is more than a tribute—it’s a reclamation. Directed by Shoshannah Stern, the film gives Matlin the space and the language to tell her story on her terms, finally. For a woman whose life has often been filtered through interpreters, interviews, and assumptions, this documentary presents something long overdue: full autonomy. This is her story, as she tells it.

Unflinching, Uncomfortable, Unforgettable

Sovereign

In a landscape where extremism and ideology often get boiled down to caricature, SOVEREIGN emerges as the exception—one that refuses to offer easy answers. What initially appeared to be a standard direct-to-streaming thriller, complete with clipped-out characters pointing in different directions for the poster art, and a vague title, instead delivers a harrowing meditation on radicalization, family loyalty, and the tragic consequences of distorted freedom. Anchored by a career-defining performance from Nick Offerman, SOVEREIGN is one of the most emotionally jarring and socially urgent films of the year.

One Summer Day Changes Everything

Tiny Lights (Svetýlka)

Beata Parkanová’s TINY LIGHTS is a quiet triumph in restrained storytelling, bringing deep emotional resonance without ever raising its voice. Centering the entire film around six-year-old Amálka’s perspective, Parkanová doesn't just direct a narrative—she reconstructs a memory, crafting an experience that feels suspended in time. It's a thoughtful meditation on the moment when innocence begins to fade, not from cruelty, but from the subtle complications of adulthood glimpsed before a child is ready.

Her Escape Plan Starts With Survival First

Push

A new home. A new beginning. A fresh chance. However, in PUSH, that promise quickly turns into a high-stress scenario built on limitations, psychological dread, and an incredibly vulnerable main character. The concept is strong. The tension is built in. Unfortunately, the film only delivers on part of its premise, serving up a lean, effective horror thriller that never quite realizes its full potential.

Secrets, Schemes, and One Dangerous Reunion

Suspicious Minds (Ladrones: La tiara de santa Águeda) S01

Set across six episodes and soaked in sun, SUSPICIOUS MINDS (LADRONES: LA TIARA DE SANTA ÁGUEDA) SEASON 1 is less concerned with reinventing genre formulas than it is with twisting them around two people whose chemistry is as dangerous as any alarm system. It's a series that thrives on contrasts—glamour versus grit, strategy versus chaos, and a love story entwined within a high-stakes con job.