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 BOYS FROM BRAZIL has the confidence of a thriller and the blood of something stranger. It walks into the room wearing prestigious clothing, carrying the names of Gregory Peck, Laurence Olivier, James Mason, Franklin J. Schaffner, Ira Levin, and Jerry Goldsmith, then reveals that its real interest lies closer to conspiracy, nightmares, and speculative horror. That tension between presentation and imagination is what keeps the film alive nearly five decades later. It’s too odd to be treated as a simple era thriller, too controlled to dismiss as pure exploitation, and too focused to let its wildest ideas collapse into cheap sensationalism.
Death has terrible timing in LIFE GOES ON. Bill is ready for it, maybe even eager for it, but the universe keeps hitting reset like someone is playing a twisted game. That could turn grim fast, and in a lesser short, the setup might have leaned too hard into either darker humor or sentimentality. Writers/directors Daniel Audritt and Kat Butterfield take the stranger route by making the repetition funny first, sad second, and healing by the time it’s over.
ESCAPE TO ATHENA has the sunny, overstuffed personality of a movie that knows half its appeal is watching famous faces wander through wartime Greece with explosives nearby. Roger Moore as a morally flexible Austrian officer, Telly Savalas as a resistance leader, David Niven as an archaeology professor, Elliott Gould as a captured entertainer, Claudia Cardinale as a brothel madam with political ties, Richard Roundtree in soldier mode, Stefanie Powers brings old-Hollywood showmanship, and Sonny Bono as an Italian cook shouldn’t all belong in the same World War II adventure. The fact that they do is absolutely why the film has so much charm and the source of nearly every problem I have here.
The dust, cannon smoke, and George Peppard’s confidence do so much of the depth of work in CANNON FOR CORDOBA, a 1970 western that knows exactly what kind of movie it wants to be, even when it doesn’t always know how to make every piece matter. It has a dangerous trek into hostile territory, revenge simmering inside the group, a fortress waiting in the distance, and enough explosions to keep the screen busy whenever the story starts to sag. That combination doesn’t make it an overlooked legend, but it makes it a piece of genre filmmaking that offers plenty of lessons.
Anthony Selvon doesn’t need a stage that looks expensive. He doesn’t need a wall of screens, a roaring crowd, or the artificial polish that usually comes with men who sell certainty for a living. Give him a brick wall, a room, and enough silence between sentences, and he can still make his audience lean forward. That’s part of what makes I AM THE PRIZE anxious from the start. The film understands that influence isn’t always dressed like a pageant. Sometimes it comes through the door calmly, in a fitted suit, with carefully chosen language and a face that suggests he already knows the answer to every insecurity in the room.
The most memorable parts of FABRIC aren’t the runway images, though those have their own appeal. The film is at its strongest when it watches hands at work. Measuring, cutting, stitching, adjusting, correcting, because they all become more than technical gestures. They’re evidence of people building their lives through precision, patience, and skill in a world that too often talks about refugees as a problem to be managed rather than as people with talent, ambition, and futures worth investing in.
Action movies set against real-world conflict have to walk a narrow line. Push too far into exhibition, and the pain becomes decoration. Push too far into seriousness, and the movie can start acting embarrassed by the genre it belongs to. MAN OF WAR doesn’t always avoid those, but it does understand that every firefight needs something human underneath it. William Kaufman constructs the film as a tactical rescue thriller, then keeps trying to drag the violence back toward people who can’t simply walk away from the battlefield.
Hoku’s track “Perfect Day” has always felt inseparable from LEGALLY BLONDE, not just because it’s attached to one of the most recognizable openings of an era, but because it captures the fantasy of Elle Woods. The sun is out, the world feels open, and her confidence moves like it has a soundtrack of its own. That’s the shadow ELLE has to step into, and honestly, that made the series a little scary going in. A prequel to LEGALLY BLONDE (and its sequel) could’ve easily become a parade of easter eggs, a pink checklist of future traits, or a younger version trying too hard to make us forget Reese Witherspoon. Thankfully, Lexi Minetree’s portrayal doesn’t do that, and that’s why this works. She doesn’t erase Witherspoon’s Elle; she gives us the girl who could grow into her. ELLE is absolutely part of the same larger story. It also becomes its own story, finding room for high school ambiguity, family, heartbreak, and the early signs of a woman learning that being underestimated might someday become her greatest strength.
A glass of water shouldn’t feel like a warning, but ANIMALS. makes even the smallest act of hospitality seem dangerous. The short takes us into a house already marked by absence, where Zoya is sorting through the emotional aftermath of her mother’s death. Her grief isn’t presented as some grand breakdown. It’s in the air, in the quiet, in the sense that this place still belongs to someone who isn’t there anymore. Then Amelia arrives at the door with a story about an Airbnb mix-up, and the film turns the familiar into a trap. Zoya doesn’t invite disaster in because she’s foolish. She does it because most decent people have been trained to apologize for someone else’s inconvenience.
Lucile Hadžihalilović’s films don’t have any desire to explain themselves so much as seal the viewer inside a room and change the temperature, degree by degree. THE WORLDS OF LUCILE HADŽIHALILOVIĆ gathers four features that feel connected by instinct rather than formula: INNOCENCE, EVOLUTION, EARWIG, and THE ICE TOWER. Each one has its own rules, rituals, and textures, though all of them expand on childhood, control, desire, fear, and transformation without turning those ideas into easy resolutions. This Severin collection works because it understands that Hadžihalilović isn’t a filmmaker working strictly with plot mechanics. She’s a filmmaker of environments, thresholds, and things left unsaid.
SHADOWS OF WILLOW CABIN feels less interested in the workings of horror mechanics than emotional excavation. Writer/director Joe Fria’s debut feature uses supernatural horror almost as an extension of collapse, where ghosts, time looping, and whispering walls become manifestations of shame, repression, loneliness, and self-denial that have been rotting beneath the surface long before either character sets foot in the cabin.
Some movies make more sense when treated as rescued artifacts than as a lost classic. MAGNIFICENT BODYGUARDS is exactly that kind of discovery, a strange, unruly, fascinating martial arts adventure that’s easier to appreciate when you stop expecting it to be like everything else. This isn’t top-tier Jackie Chan, and it isn’t one of the genre’s great buried triumphs. It’s a scrappy 1978 curiosity with weapons flying at the camera, bandits crawling out of every corner, a story that keeps tripping over its own twists, and enough energy to make the chaos feel like part of the attraction.
By the time Hollywood finally figured out Jackie Chan, he’d already spent decades making the argument that he was more than just a clone of Bruce Lee. JACKIE CHAN’S BREAKOUT HITS catches him in that strange, exhilarating stretch where the rest of the world was catching up, but he wasn’t waiting for anyone. These six films, gathered from the mid-to-late 1990s, don’t just show a star on the verge of larger American fame. They show an artist, stunt performer, comic actor, choreographer, and daredevil technician doing what he needed to translate himself for a global audience without surrendering the thing that made him different in the first place.
IT’S GETTING LATE WITH OWEN REED understands that nobody has enough time, money, or emotional stability, and everyone somehow still believes the next decision might make everything work. Ryan Dougall’s 44-minute episodic pilot is built around a failing late-night show, though the talk show itself is almost less important than the people around it. The cameras follow Alex Teller, a first-time showrunner trying to rescue a chaotic workplace from cancellation, bad instincts, inflated egos, and the terror of being the person everyone expects to know what to do next.
WAKE IN FRIGHT begins with the outback stretching in every direction, the horizon looks endless, and John Grant should be passing through on his way to something better. Instead, Ted Kotcheff turns that sunburnt emptiness into a trap. The film doesn’t need ghosts, masked killers, or elaborate plotting to become unnerving. It only needs a teacher with too much pride, a town with too much beer, and a social setting where refusing another drink feels more dangerous than taking one.