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 MOTHER AND THE BEAR provides us with an emotional premise that could easily tip into manipulation or charm, but instead it chooses restraint. Writer/director Johnny Ma approaches the story from a place of empathy rather than judgment, allowing the film to explore this world as a character study first and a narrative exercise second. What emerges is a quietly emotional dramedy that understands how love, fear, and control often coexist, especially within families shaped by immigration and unspoken expectations.
Most film documentaries only explain the history of how a film was made. HEARTS OF DARKNESS: A FILMMAKER’S APOCALYPSE does something far more unsettling; it shows what making a film can do to a person when ambition, fear, ego, and obsession collide with no safety net. This isn’t a celebration of filmmaking craft so much as it is an autopsy, performed while the subject is still breathing. Even decades later, the experience of watching it feels invasive, exhausting, and polarizing all the same.
There’s a particular kind of greatness that doesn’t declare itself with pageantry. It offers its story with disciplined breath, and a blend so tight it feels like one shared vision. BEYOND GRACELAND: LADYSMITH BLACK MAMBAZO understands that Ladysmith’s power has never been about volume; it’s about control. It’s about intention. It’s about a sound built to survive the night, to travel through fear, and to come out the other side still standing. This documentary frames that truth as both a biography and a cultural graph, tracing Joseph Shabalala’s life and the rise from rural South Africa to global stages, without pretending that success occurred in a vacuum.
RENT is one of those films that carries the near impossible task of translating a cultural phenomenon without sanding down the very rawness that made it matter in the first place. As a film, it is imperfect, emotionally exposed, and occasionally awkward. As a statement of intent, it remains as powerful as ever because it refuses to apologize for its sincerity. Chris Columbus approaches the material not as something to modernize or reinterpret, but as something to preserve, even when that preservation comes at the cost of subtlety.
POSSESSION is not a film that allows you to gain comfort; it corners you, overwhelms you, and dares you to endure it. Andrzej Żuławski’s notorious psychological horror has earned its reputation not for its infamous imagery alone, but for how relentlessly it externalizes emotional collapse. This is a film that treats the end of a marriage as an extinction-level event, where love curdles into something monstrous and irreparable. This is one of those films that I’ve not only owned for a long time, but somehow never watched before. This release gave me the perfect excuse to watch it in the best possible format, finally.
IRISH BLOOD feels familiar; a successful outsider pulled back into a past they were taught to forget. What separates the series from the series it pays homage to is its deliberate prioritization of emotional inheritance over procedural checklists. This is not a show obsessed with clever twists or puzzle-solving for its own sake. Instead, it's interested in the long-term consequences of abandonment, secrecy, and the lies families tell in the name of protection.
RE-ANIMATOR isn’t your traditional horror, comedy, or sci-fi flick. It jumps into the middle of traffic and never looks back. From its opening moments, the film establishes a tone of reckless confidence, barreling forward with a sense of purpose that feels almost confrontational. It never asks for patience or understanding; it demands surrender. That urgency remains one of its most defining qualities, and it is exactly why the film continues to resonate four decades later. This became the film, and the legend that it was meant to be.
WALKING TALL was a unique experience for its time, and even today it’s still something special, although dated at times. It was a film with a message, and it knew exactly what it wanted to say. It is direct and refreshingly unpretentious; a mid-budget studio action film that understands the value of momentum over mythmaking. It moved with a confidence that many longer action films fail to maintain, trusting its star power and simple premise to carry the weight. I don’t know for sure why, but for some reason, this and FALLING DOWN feel like an ultimate double feature of redemption.
NACHO LIBRE has never been a movie that meets audiences halfway; it lets you know what it is and asks you to come to it on its own terms, not just in tone, but in style, performance, and even emotion. Nearly two decades later, that commitment to awkward sincerity remains both the film’s greatest strength and its most persistent limitation. I think I probably appreciated the film more now, watching it for the first time, than I would have 20 years ago.
THE COPENHAGEN TEST is the kind of espionage series that understands restraint as a strength rather than a limitation. Instead of leaning into globe-trotting excess or constant escalation, the show commits to a quieter, more unsettling tension rooted in surveillance, paranoia, and identity (think Tom Clancy). It operates in a space just adjacent to our present moment; close enough to feel plausible, but distant enough to let its ideas breathe. That proximity is what gives the series its edge.
THERE WILL COME SOFT RAINS approaches the climate crisis from a place most films avoid; not through end-of-days scenarios, statistics, or apocalyptic imagery, but through grief, faith, and a single woman’s refusal to accept inevitability. It is a short film with an inspiring premise and the discipline to explore it without sensationalizing it. Rather than asking audiences to fear the future, it asks them to sit with a present that already feels unbearable for those carrying the burden first.
IN THE CLOUDS is an intimate, restrained, and observant; it's a story about displacement that stays focused on the lived reality within a home, not the version of migration audiences have been trained to expect. Even at fourteen minutes, it carries itself like an experience, because it understands exactly where to place the camera and when to let the audience sit with what is not being said.
O.C. AND STIGGS plays less like a teen comedy and more like an act of cinematic vandalism. It does not invite the audience in so much as dare them to keep up. Robert Altman takes the skeletal framework of a National Lampoon story and uses it as an excuse to poke, prod, and openly antagonize the polite surfaces of Reagan-era suburbia. The result is messy, abrasive, occasionally funny, and frequently frustrating; it is also unmistakably the work of a filmmaker who had no interest in making something tidy or universally appealing.
SAGA OF THE PHOENIX arrives with the unmistakable energy of late-1980s Hong Kong fantasy cinema; boundless imagination, fearless tonal shifts, and an almost reckless commitment to spectacle. As a follow-up to THE PEACOCK KING, it occupies an uneasy middle ground. It is more playful, more accessible, and far less interested in sustained menace. That shift does not sink the film, but it fundamentally changes what kind of experience this sequel aims to be.
By the time SCARS OF DRACULA arrived on the scene, the Hammer Dracula cycle was already showing wear. Audiences knew what to expect: the villagers warn new travelers, castles loom, blood flows, Dracula is destroyed, and somehow always returns. What makes this entry interesting is not that it reinvents the formula, but that it seems almost irritated by it. This is a nastier, more aggressive film than many of its predecessors, one that leans into cruelty, violence, and discomfort as if daring the audience to either keep up or look away. Whether that approach works is debatable, but it absolutely gives the film a distinct personality within the series.