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 striking thing about VILLA 187 is how quickly it strips away the illusion that permanence actually exists. A phone notification, a family receiving life-changing news, the realization that decades spent building a home can suddenly become fragile overnight. From there, Eiman Mirghani constructs a documentary that feels less like a recollection and more like an emotional aftershock still unfolding.
THE FLOOR REMEMBERS understands something that a lot of documentaries about disappearing spaces tend to miss: nostalgia alone isn’t enough. Simply reminding audiences that something once mattered doesn’t automatically make it meaningful. Jayme Kaye Gershen’s short never treats the Miami Roller Rink (Hot Wheels Skating Center) (Super Wheels) as a museum frozen in time. The rink isn’t presented as a relic. It’s alive, active, loud, and constantly moving. The film isn’t mourning a dead culture. It’s documenting one that stubbornly refuses to vanish. That distinction gives the documentary its pulse.
MARIANA ANT feels like a children’s story that’s been left out in the sun too long. Beneath the handmade fantasy, exaggerated performances, and theatrical surrealism sits something unexpectedly bitter. Maite Uzal and Rubén Pascual Tardío treat the film’s cruelty with complete sincerity, allowing the darker turns to land without softening them through irony or self-awareness. The result is strange, funny, uncomfortable, and occasionally sad in ways that sit with you longer than you’d expect from a sixteen-minute short.
WE NEVER SLEEP moves fast because it understands modern anxiety already operates at full speed. Writers/directors Rashan Mines and Ren-Horng Wang don’t spend much time explaining the rules of their world before the paranoia starts creeping in through phone screens, smart devices, and endless notifications. The short immediately drops viewers into an environment where surveillance feels constant, and privacy is already half-erased, making the central premise land harder than it would have even a few years ago.
Puberty hits like a psychological car crash in 1981. One minute, Douglas is still in that half-childhood state where birthday parties mean music, junk food, and showing off for friends; the next, he’s trapped in an experience his brain clearly isn’t equipped to process. Andy and Carolyn London turn that confusion into something hilarious, uncomfortable, and strangely sad, using rotoscope animation and agonizingly specific memory to recreate the exact feeling of adolescence arriving too fast and in the worst possible way.
A QUIET STORM opens with stillness, but it never feels calm. Benjamin Nicolas builds the documentary around the tension that sits inside ordinary moments: school hallways, apartment balconies, train rides, dance rehearsals, and silent meals. Maïto Amano moves through all of them carrying pressure that feels far heavier than what most fourteen-year-olds should already understand. The film recognizes this, and instead of turning him into an inspirational child-prodigy narrative, Nicolas approaches him with patience, curiosity, and restraint. That becomes the documentary’s greatest strength.
A lot of martial arts films from the mid-70s survive almost entirely on choreography. The plots are functional, the characters exist mainly to move from one fight to the next, and the stakes rarely matter beyond revenge. THE HIMALAYAN does something unusual. Even when the film stumbles, and it absolutely does at times, there’s a genuine attempt to create scale, atmosphere, and texture beyond the expected framework of a standard kung fu film. Huang Feng approaches the material less as nonstop exploitation and more as an adventure drama that occasionally erupts into violent physical punishment.
THE CREEP franchise works because Josef (The Creep/Peachfuzz) doesn’t feel like a traditional horror villain. He feels like the guy who sets off alarm bells the second he starts talking, but everyone around him keeps trying to convince themselves they’re overreacting. That has always been the real source of tension in these stories. Long before anything violent happens, Patrick Brice and Mark Duplass know how to make a simple conversation feel exhausting, invasive, weird, and unsafe. Season two understands that formula well enough to keep finding new ways to make ordinary interactions spiral into genuine discomfort.
Live from New York, it's Saturday Night! There’s a strange irony at the center of LORNE. It’s a documentary built around a man whose entire reputation has been shaped by distance. For decades, Lorne Michaels has existed less as a “celebrity” and more as a myth, somebody talked about, impersonated, quoted, feared, admired, and analyzed by others, while rarely volunteering much of himself in return. Director Morgan Neville recognizes that contradiction almost immediately within the exploration of this mogul's life. Rather than pretending Michaels suddenly becomes transparent because cameras are nearby, the film leans into his resistance. That reluctance becomes part of the story itself.
THE FRONT approaches one of the ugliest periods in American entertainment history with a level of restraint that makes the material hit harder than a louder, more self-important version probably would have. Martin Ritt and Walter Bernstein understood the blacklist firsthand, and that perspective changes the film's impact. This doesn’t feel like a sanitized Hollywood history lesson assembled decades later by people who have distanced themselves from the damage. It feels personal. Every conversation carries the weight of ruined careers, friendships destroyed, and ordinary people pressured into betraying one another simply to survive professionally.
Slashers from the early 80s often lived or died by one simple question: could the setting carry the tension once audiences already knew the formula? By the time TERROR TRAIN arrived, the post-HALLOWEEN explosion had already started flooding theaters with masked killers, traumatized victims, and revenge-driven body counts. What keeps Roger Spottiswoode’s film from disappearing into that crowded pile is the train itself. Locking a slasher inside a moving setting where escape becomes nearly impossible gives the film an advantage, and for long stretches, it knows exactly how to exploit that claustrophobia.
BUNNY YEAGER'S NUDE CAMERA and NUDE LAS VEGAS come from a period of exploitation filmmaking where presentation mattered almost as much as provocation. These weren’t hardcore productions trying to overwhelm audiences with explicit material. They were carefully packaged nudie-cuties designed to appear playful, glamorous, and just respectable enough to avoid being dismissed outright as pornography. Watching them now feels less like revisiting scandalous cinema and more like uncovering a strange little corner of American pop culture that no longer exists in the same form.
TALK RADIO feels less like a movie about broadcasting and more like a man voluntarily locking himself inside an emotional chaos every night for entertainment. Oliver Stone takes Eric Bogosian’s stage play. He turns it into something claustrophobic, hostile, intense, and weirdly hypnotic, trapping the audience in the same cycle of rage, loneliness, ego, and self-destruction that consumes Barry Champlain in real time. Nearly four decades later, the film plays with the uncomfortable realization that it wasn’t simply examining shock media culture. It was predicting where public discourse was heading long before social media permanently industrialized outrage.
HACKED: A DOUBLE ENTENDRE OF RAGE FUELED KARMA feels like somebody trying to survive a nightmare by converting pure frustration into cinematic mayhem. Writer/director Shane Brady takes a real-life experience and mutates it into a loud, chaotic revenge fantasy overflowing with humor, jokes, emotional breakdowns, and aggressively Florida energy. The film rarely slows down long enough to ask whether each idea works before charging headfirst directly into the next, but that recklessness becomes part of its personality.
American noir often thrives off desperation. British noir tends to move with resignation. The criminals are still greedy, the cops are still exhausted, and the cities are still poisoned by corruption, but there’s usually an added layer of repression hanging over everything. People don’t explode with emotion as much as they decay from within. BRIT NOIR COLLECTION I understands that distinction, even if the three films included vary considerably in execution.