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 most powerful documentaries rarely feel the need to scream the message they’re sharing. They invite you to slow down, listen, and notice the connections shaping the world around you. DAUGHTERS OF THE FOREST operates in exactly that space, building an emotional and intellectual experience that feels both intimate and expansive. By the time the film reaches its final moments, it becomes clear that this isn’t simply a documentary about fungi or ecology. It’s about the fragile relationship between knowledge, culture, and survival.
The premise behind BAD VOODOO sounds like the kind of horror setup that should practically write itself, filled with tension and escalation. Escaped convicts break into a secluded home, believing they’ve found a refuge from the law. Instead, they walk straight into a trap built by a grieving couple who have turned to dark spiritual practices to punish those responsible for the death of their children. Grief, revenge, and ritual collide inside a single house over the course of one long night. That foundation has the bones of a vicious revenge horror story. Unfortunately, what follows is far more talkative than terrifying.
Endurance stories often revolve around athletes chasing records, trophies, or glory. ROAD TO L’ÉTAPE DU TOUR takes a very different approach. Instead of focusing on competition, the film centers on a personal battle between fear and ambition. For its protagonist, the race isn’t about winning. It is about deciding whether to live life the way she wants, even when the future feels uncertain.
In the Faroe Islands, a remote archipelago where community and culture are deeply intertwined, the stage becomes something more than a place for performance. In BIRITA, it becomes a space where memory, identity, and family collide in deeply intimate and heartbreaking ways. Director Búi Dam turns the camera on his own family in a documentary that centers on an emotionally complex idea, the idea of staging Shakespeare’s KING LEAR with his mother, legendary Faroese actress Birita Mohr, even though she is living with advanced Alzheimer’s disease.
Expectations can be dangerous when approaching older martial arts films, especially ones with a reputation but not necessarily the same mainstream recognition as genre staples. DUEL TO THE DEATH sounded like it might fall into that familiar category of historical swordplay films that revolve around honor, rivalry, and a handful of well-staged fights. What Ching Siu-tung actually delivers is something far more ambitious. The film takes a basic duel premise and expands it into a whirlwind of ninjas, politics, philosophical reflection, and some of the most imaginative action staging that Hong Kong cinema produced during that era.
JITTERS opens like a grounded procedural and almost dares you to underestimate it. Detective Collymore isn’t introduced as a horror protagonist. He’s introduced as a man, exhausted. A single father. A detective who’s seen too much and carries it on his shoulders. Fabrizio Santino plays him with restraint, leaning into exhaustion rather than melodrama. That choice anchors the film with an idea that’s locked into being something human before it spirals into something darker and disturbing.
Some films are built around extravaganza, while others are built around memory. THE TIME IT TAKES belongs firmly to the second category. Directed by Francesca Comencini, the film is a deeply personal reflection on her relationship with her father, legendary Italian filmmaker Luigi Comencini. What could easily have become a sentimental tribute instead becomes something far more complex and intimate: a story about love, disappointment, reconciliation, and the emotional distance that can exist even within the closest families.
Before THE GIRL WHO LEAPT THROUGH TIME became internationally famous through its beloved 2006 anime adaptation, the story had already made a huge impact in Japan through Nobuhiko Obayashi’s 1983 live-action film. For many viewers discovering it decades later, the experience feels strangely familiar. The core premise is nearly identical, seeing a teenage girl who suddenly finds herself slipping backward and forward through time, reliving moments she can’t control. But the way Obayashi approaches that idea gives the film its own personality, rooted firmly in the emotional sincerity of early-1980s Japanese cinema.
The premise behind RECOLLECTION immediately grabs your attention because it taps into one of science fiction’s most unsettling questions. What happens when technology gives society the power to erase painful memories? In theory, it sounds like mercy. In practice, it raises uncomfortable possibilities about control, identity, and who gets to decide what parts of a life are worth remembering. That idea gives the film an intriguing foundation before a single scene or plot twist begins.
The late 1980s were a fascinating moment for Hong Kong fantasy cinema. Filmmakers were experimenting with wild swings that could jump from comedy to martial-arts action to tragic romance without warning. That era produced one of the genre’s most beloved films, A CHINESE GHOST STORY. Once that film exploded in popularity, it didn’t take long for similar supernatural romances to appear. PICTURE OF A NYMPH is one of the most obvious examples. Rather than feeling like a cheap imitation, though, it plays more like a companion piece built from the same creative DNA.
The zombie you think you know isn’t even the beginning. That iconic imagery, cemented by Hollywood over decades, is only a drop in the bucket of the larger history that has, as per usual, been whitewashed and torn to pieces, becoming a shadow of its origins. The zombie doesn’t, and never has, belonged to Hollywood. That’s the quiet but powerful thesis at the heart of BLACK ZOMBIE, and Maya Annik Bedward wastes no time making that clear. This isn’t a nostalgic genre retrospective. It isn’t a love letter to gore. It’s a cultural excavation. And it digs deep.
ZODIAC KILLER PROJECT drops us into absence. There’s no dramatic reenactment. No archival bombshell. No grieving family framed in soft focus. Instead, Charlie Shackleton narrates a film that never got made. And somehow, that very documentation becomes the film. The premise is unpretentious. Shackleton had the makings of a traditional true crime documentary, centered around a highway patrolman’s obsessive theory about the Zodiac Killer. He gathered interviews. He shot moody California B-roll of freeways and parking lots where violence once lingered. Then the rights fell through. The project collapsed. What remains is what we see, with a twist, a reconstruction of an unrealized documentary and a dissection of the genre that might have contained it. That concept alone could’ve turned into an indulgent exercise in self-worth, but it doesn’t.
The road to stardom is full of obstacles, egos, and opportunists. In STALKER JANE, the most dangerous obstacle doesn’t come from rival bands or industry gatekeepers. It comes from the person who believes in the band the most. Roger Glenn Hill’s low-budget horror thriller leans into a simple yet effective premise, looking at what happens when fandom turns into ruthless ambition. The film may operate within the boundaries of indie horror, but its central performance gives the story a spark that elevates it beyond its modest production.
There’s something uniquely unsettling about watching belief unravel in real time. And possibly even more so in watching that belief being wrapped into something that makes you trust in it, just to have it pulled out from under you while you’re still grasping for that trust. TWISTED YOGA isn’t interested in sensationalism. It’s interested in seduction. How does a global tantric yoga movement promise empowerment and belonging, then slowly morph into something coercive, secretive, and allegedly criminal? The series doesn’t rush to answer that. It slowly reconstructs the path and lets you see what broke.
There’s a version of this story that could have left permanent bruises on your heart. REGRETTING YOU flirts with that version, but unfortunately never commits to it. Adapted from Colleen Hoover’s bestselling novel and directed by Josh Boone, the film centers on Morgan Grant and her teenage daughter, Clara, after a devastating accident exposes not just loss, but betrayal. The premise promises emotional chaos. What we get instead is something far more controlled.