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.
What stands out at first isn’t the transformation, it’s the fatigue. The kind that settles in quietly and starts to affect everything else, decisions, reactions, even perception. From there, the film begins to push that exhaustion into unfamiliar territory. There’s no easing into this one. From the start, it feels like the system is already collapsing around its lead, and the film doesn’t waste time pretending otherwise. What begins as a grounded look at medical training quickly reveals itself as something far more invasive, less about the external and more about what happens when that pressure finds a way inside your body and refuses to leave.
I was somehow lucky enough not to learn a single thing about this film before getting a copy to watch. That was the best thing that could have ever happened to me, honestly! I had heard a lot of people say they really liked it, and that was about all I had going into it. I would highly recommend not knowing more than you need to. The entire movie hinges on a joke that should collapse under its own weight. Not because it’s too ambitious, but because it’s too stupid to sustain for 100 minutes. And somehow, that’s exactly why it works.
Season two doesn’t open by reminding you where you are. It assumes you remember, and more importantly, it assumes you’re ready to go further. That confidence defines the season, pushing outward instead of reintroducing the rules, and trusting that the audience can keep up with a world that’s only getting more complicated.
She doesn’t argue her way into control; she assumes it. By the time anyone starts pushing back, Ellis has already moved past them, already decided what matters, already reshaped the investigation around her instincts. That quiet takeover defines this second series, and it never once feels forced. What makes ELLIS work isn’t originality in structure, it’s certainty in execution. The show knows exactly what kind of detective it’s building around, and it doesn’t dilute that with unnecessary character theatrics or forced vulnerability. DCI Ellis isn’t there to perform. She’s there to do the job, and the writing trusts that approach enough to let it carry entire episodes.
There’s a point where documentaries about climate change start to blur together. Endless warnings, collapsing ecosystems, political doublespeak, footage of natural disasters cut together with swelling music and exhausted narration about how humanity is running out of time. The message matters, but the format has dulled its impact. That’s what makes GROUNDSWELL stand apart almost immediately. It isn’t built around despair. It’s built around proof. That distinction changes the film's tone entirely.
The first thing MARIE MADELEINE explores is contradiction, not as a theme to gesture toward, but as the emotional and spiritual condition of everyday life. Writer/director/star Gessica Généus builds the entire film around opposing forces constantly colliding like religion and sexuality, freedom and fear, tenderness and violence, survival and self-destruction. Even the city itself feels divided between devotion and desperation. Jacmel, Haiti, becomes a place where churches, spirits, radios, brothels, grief, music, and memory all occupy the same physical and emotional space at once. That tension gives the film a pulse that never settles.
WE ARE ALIENS moves with the patience of memory itself. Not filmmaking memory, where every moment arrives on queue and heightened, but actual memory, fragmented, uneven, specific, and often tied to feelings that become harder to explain with age. Kohei Kadowaki’s film understands how childhood relationships can shape the architecture of an entire life, even when those relationships eventually disappear into distance and silence.
There’s a difference between someone just telling jokes and someone unloading years of perspective that’s funny, because it happened for real. LISA ANN WALTER: IT WAS AN ACCIDENT sits in that second category, and that shapes the entire experience. This doesn’t feel like a carefully polished production with a comedian stepping into the spotlight. It feels like someone who’s been doing this for decades, getting the space to say everything she’s been holding onto without needing to sand off the edges.
Trying to bring something this iconic back without overthinking it sounds simple, but it rarely is. Most revivals either chase the relevance that made the original great or get stuck honoring the past so rigidly that they forget to entertain. What this series does differently is sidestep both traps. It doesn’t try to modernize the characters in any meaningful way, and it doesn’t pretend it can recreate the exact conditions that made the originals untouchable. It just gets to work.
This story does something that I haven’t seen often, a unique exploration that begins from a place of displacement, with a man already disconnected from everything that once defined him. By the time he reaches Vichy, the collapse has already happened. What follows isn’t about whether he’ll fall further, but how far he’s willing to reshape himself to avoid acknowledging what he’s become.
What happens after the story everyone already knows ends? That’s the question sitting at the center of CHE GUEVARA: THE LAST COMPANIONS, and it’s one the film approaches with a clear understanding that the answer won’t be what you’ve set yourself to expect. The revolution has already been immortalized, simplified, and repurposed across decades. What remains here are the fragments left behind, carried by the people who had to keep moving when the symbol they followed fell.
There’s a stillness that defines THE STATION, but it’s not the kind that brings comfort. It’s the kind that feels earned through exhaustion, where every rule in place exists because something worse has already happened. The film doesn’t explain that history directly, because it doesn’t need to do so. You feel it in the structure of the space, in the way people move through it, and in the unspoken understanding that this fragile sense of order could collapse at any moment.
BLAISE doesn’t start with a big moment or a clear turning point. It starts with someone who’s gotten so used to saying yes that it barely registers anymore. That pattern isn’t framed as a flaw right away; it’s just how he is, keeping things easy, keeping things quiet. The shift comes later, and when it does, it doesn’t feel like growth at first. It feels like a disruption.
There’s a clear sincerity running through THE MIDWAY POINT, and it shows up almost immediately. Not in the way scenes are constructed or how the story unfolds, but in the feeling that this is coming from a very specific place in writer/director Lucca Vieira’s heart and mind. It doesn’t feel manufactured or overly cultivated.
There’s no easing into a story like CRADLE OF FEAR. It doesn’t conventionally build atmosphere or slowly guide you into its world. It drops you straight into something abrasive, something that feels more like it’s daring you to keep watching than trying to win you over. That approach defines the entire experience. If it connects, it’s because you meet it on its terms. If it doesn’t, it pushes you away almost immediately.