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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.

A Prototype for the Action Revolution to Come

The Angry River (Gui nu chuan)

THE ANGRY RIVER spends a surprising amount of time feeling like a movie caught between generations. You can see the older wuxia style still clinging to it, from the heightened melodrama to the elaborate fantasy elements, but underneath all of that is the early pulsation of something faster, rougher, and more aggressive beginning to emerge. That tension becomes more interesting than the actual plot at times because the film accidentally documents a studio and an entire genre reinventing itself in real time.

A Twisted Love Story Drenched in Blood

Sick Puppy

SICK PUPPY understands something a lot of dark comedies miss entirely. Absurdity only works when the people trapped inside it stop recognizing it as absurd. Jay Reid’s film doesn’t treat murder like a punchline dropped into an otherwise normal marriage. It treats it like rot that’s settled so deeply into the foundation of a relationship that it’s begun reshaping the logic of everyone living inside it. Charlie doesn’t see herself as the wife of a monster. She sees herself as someone trying to save a man she loves from the worst parts of himself, the same way another couple might struggle through addiction, anger issues, or self-destruction. That’s what gives the film its edge. Beneath it all sits a disturbingly sincere portrait of emotional denial, where love has become so tangled with rationalization that even serial murder starts feeling like just another obstacle to avoid.

Body Dysmorphia Gets Turned Into a Ghost Story

Saccharine

SACCHARINE opens with the kind of sensory bombardment that tells you exactly where its head is at. Mouths chewing. Fingers digging into food. Bodies are observed like problems waiting to be solved. Writer/director Natalie Erika James doesn’t ease you into this world delicately because the film itself is about a mindset that never allows people to exist comfortably inside their own skin. Everything feels scrutinized, monitored, optimized, compared, and consumed. That discomfort becomes the movie’s strongest weapon.

Kaiju Chaos Through a Different Lens

Ultraman: Towards the Future + Ultraman: The Ultimate Hero Complete Series Combo

There’s a strange… I’m not sure what to call it that runs through both of these series, and it’s not just tied to the monsters or the extravaganza. It comes from the sense that you’re watching a franchise redefine itself in real time, stepping outside its comfort zone and testing whether its identity can survive that shift. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn’t. That push and pull ends up defining the entire experience.

Exploitation Energy Without Apology

Blood Bitch Baby

There’s no easing into this one. Within minutes, it’s already committed to a tone that doesn’t mitigate, doesn’t rearrange, and doesn’t pretend it’s building toward anything resembling refinement. It plants its flag in the territory of low-budget exploitation and stays there without hesitation. If anything, the film seems more interested in pushing further into that space as it goes, stacking shock on top of shock until the line between intention and excess barely matters. All of that is to say that if this is for you, then this is REALLY going to be for you! You’re either going to love this or hate it. It may not be my jam, but I totally understand what it was going for!

Healing Doesn’t Come With a Deadline

After the Rain: Putin's Stolen Children Come Home

There’s no dramatic entry point here, no rush to frame the importance of the story in a way that feels constructed for impact. Instead, the film settles into something quieter and far more uncomfortable: the space where trauma doesn’t announce itself, where it lingers in hesitation, in body language, in the way a child avoids eye contact or clings just a little too tightly. It’s not trying to convince you that what happened matters. It assumes you already understand that, and it moves forward from there.

A Coming-of-Age Story That Doesn’t Feel Safe

Titanic Ocean

The first thing that stands out isn’t the mermaids. It’s the discipline. Didn’t think that would be a thought I would ever have while writing a review, but here we are! Before the fantasy elements even have room to breathe, TITANIC OCEAN makes it clear this is a world built on structure, repetition, and expectation. Every movement feels instructed, every interaction observed, and that tension between control and identity becomes the real engine of the film.

Work, Power, and the Illusion of Stability

Trace of Stones (Spur der Steine) (Masters of Cinema) Limited Edition Blu-ray

There’s a dissolution to TRACE OF STONES that feels almost rebellious, not in a loud, confrontational way, but in how casually it allows disorder to exist within a system that’s supposed to reject it. The film doesn’t present its world as broken. It presents it as functioning exactly as designed, and that’s where the heightened anxiety comes from.

Horror That Doesn’t Waste a Second

The Trick

This short film opens with a feeling more than a premise. Something is off, even before the situation takes shape. The setting is simple, the dynamic familiar, but there’s an immediate sense that this isn’t going to play out predictably. THE TRICK doesn’t spend time establishing comfort; it starts from a place of quiet tension and builds from there. This feels more like a thought in a larger journey than a complete story, but it’s that thought that’s so powerful that it works on its own.

Being Seen Isn’t Guaranteed, Even Today

Birthday Boy

This film doesn’t ease you into the story. There’s no warm-up, no introduction to the family dynamics, no time to settle into who these people are before everything starts to collapse. BIRTHDAY BOY throws you into a situation that already feels unstable, then keeps tightening the pressure without offering relief. The result isn’t just uncomfortable, it’s recognizably uncomfortable in a way that sticks.

A Sharp Portrait of Survival and Self-Destruction

Shana

There’s a frantic kind of momentum running through SHANA that almost feels self-destructive. The film rarely pauses long enough for its lead to process what’s happening around her before another responsibility, argument, humiliation, or emotional collision arrives to knock her sideways again. That constant motion becomes the film’s identity. The film's writer/director, Lila Pinell, doesn’t frame Shana as somebody searching for herself. She frames her as somebody trying to stay upright while life keeps changing direction beneath her feet.

Desire Found Between Exhaust and Isolation

Flesh and Fuel (Du fioul dans les artères) (Made of Flesh and Fuel)

FLESH & FUEL understands something that many working-class dramas spend an entire runtime trying to show. It examines how and why labor shapes people's experience of time. Writer/director Pierre Le Gall’s first feature isn’t simply about truck drivers, loneliness, or even romance. It’s about what happens to life when work consumes nearly every available hour, every physical movement, and eventually even the way someone understands themselves. The film treats exhaustion almost like an atmosphere hanging over its characters, not in a melodramatic sense, but as a permanent condition of modern survival.

Emotional Distance As a Living Space

Forever Your Maternal Animal (Siempre soy tu animal materno)

Elsa’s return to Costa Rica doesn’t reopen old wounds so much as expose how little they healed in the first place. Everyone in FOREVER YOUR MATERNAL ANIMAL is already living inside their own version of emotional distance long before the story begins. Her younger sister has started pulling further inward; their father drifts through life with a detachment; and their mother seems more invested in revisiting the past than in confronting what’s happening directly in front of her. What makes the film so compelling early on is how calmly it presents all of this. There’s no explosive announcement that something is wrong. The tension comes from watching a family continue to function while clearly struggling to reach one another truly.

Stories That Should’ve Been Heard Decades Ago

Our Planet, The People, My Blood

There’s a difference between a documentary that informs and one that carries a sense of urgency. OUR PLANET, THE PEOPLE, MY BLOOD doesn’t ease you into the subject. It arrives with the weight of years behind it, shaped by testimony, persistence, and a reality that never went away; it was just ignored. From the opening stretch, there’s a clear understanding that this isn’t just about revisiting history. It’s about confronting something that’s still happening.

When Confidence Replaces Competence

Chet Bond: License To Chill

Bond, Chet Bond… cue the music. Or more accurately, cue the version of a spy thriller where the world’s fate somehow ends up resting in the hands of an underqualified nepo baby stumbling through missions he shouldn’t survive. CHET BOND: LICENSE TO CHILL understands that the funniest thing is the gap between how Chet sees himself and how everyone else sees him. He moves through the world with confidence, convinced he belongs in the same conversation as legendary secret agents, while the people around him are usually just trying to contain the damage. The mockumentary setup only makes that disconnect funnier, turning every failure at looking cool into something increasingly awkward, chaotic, and weirdly endearing.