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Latest from Chris Jones

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.

A DIY Crime Film That Actually Feels Dangerous

Rolling

One bad day would be manageable. ROLLING starts with about six of them stacked on top of each other. Alice “loses” her job, gets hit with another rent increase, confronts a landlord who represents everything wrong with her situation (and landlords in general), and then watches a terrible decision create an even bigger problem. From there, the film turns into a frantic scramble for survival, but what makes it work isn't the escalating chaos. It's the feeling that every disaster grows out of frustrations that were already simmering beneath the surface long before the first body hits the floor.

A Spy Story Obsessed With Consequences

Quiet Echoes in the Darkness: A Daybreak Novel

Spy fiction has spent decades teaching audiences to associate a certain level of competence with invincibility. The elite operative enters a room, reads everyone and everything in the room instantly, takes endless levels of punishment like it’s an inconvenience, and keeps moving forward like a machine. Even when those stories pretend to acknowledge trauma, the damage usually functions as just a twist in the story, rather than a true limitation. QUIET ECHOES IN THE DARKNESS pushes against that ideal almost immediately. Jack Caldwaller may be the most capable person in the room, but author Mason Trask never lets readers forget the physical and psychological cost attached to maintaining that reputation. A choice like that ends up defining the entire novel.

Family History Captured One Frame at a Time

Memorizu (メモリィズ)

MEMORIZU handles life with the patience of somebody sorting through an old photo album. Not searching for revelations or life-changing discoveries, but pausing on small details that suddenly carry so much more years later. A glance. A room. The shape of the afternoon light coming through a window. The kind of moments most people barely register while living them, only realizing their value after time has already carried them away. Miiku Sakanishi’s debut feature understands that memory rarely functions through grand events. Most lives are built from accumulation. Tiny moments of ordinary existence that grow more meaningful once distance enters the picture.

Knowledge Has Never Felt This Violent

Imprint

IMPRINT delivers a level of pressure that needs no explanation, as most people already understand it. The fear of falling behind. The panic that somebody else’s child is getting access to opportunities your own child might miss. The constant sense that success has become less about growth and more about survival. Ran Jing’s short film takes those anxieties and pushes them just far enough into speculative sci-fi to become horrifying without ever losing sight of reality.

The Most Uncomfortable Conversation Never Ends

Holo

What makes HOLO so unsettling isn’t the technology itself. Plenty of science fiction stories have explored some form of digital resurrection, artificial likenesses, or simulated grief. What hits differently here is how ordinary everything feels. The office space is clean and corporate. The procedures are treated like customer service. There’s paperwork, scheduling, preparation, and emotion. Alexander DeSouza’s short never presents its central concept like a futuristic breakthrough designed to amaze audiences. Instead, it treats the idea of resurrection as something disturbingly commercialized, like trauma has simply become another service people can purchase by appointment. That approach gives HOLO its identity almost immediately.

The Pre-Internet Struggle Gets Surprisingly Emotional

Last Minute

LAST MINUTE understands something a lot of nostalgia-driven filmmaking misses entirely. Memory becomes far more meaningful when it’s attached to stress, embarrassment, inconvenience, and chaos instead of an idealized version of comfort. Michael Cusumano’s short doesn’t romanticize the late 80s as some perfect lost era untouched by problems. It remembers how frustrating life could actually be before instant access to information, and that honesty gives the film its personality. I think one of the most intriguing ideas the film explores is that, despite the convenience of technology, life presents us with entirely different issues. But it does this in a way that focuses on the issues of yesteryear.

An Animated Sprint Fueled by Defiance

Violet and Marlowe Rob a Bank

VIOLET AND MARLOWE ROB A BANK barely gives you enough time to settle in before it’s already sprinting toward the next moment of chaos, music, and insanity. At just two minutes long, Wesley Wang’s short operates less like a traditional narrative and more like a concentrated shot of energy fired directly into the audience’s bloodstream. And honestly, that’s exactly why it works. I hate the reality of the world we live in. When I first saw the stills from this, I had to question whether it was AI. Thankfully, it wasn’t, and once I watched the short, I didn’t question that; the heart, the passion, and the craftsmanship are so clear! Sadly, we live in a time when anything that looks intriguing almost has to be questioned.

Fear Becomes a Form of Survival

The Haunting of Pennhurst

THE HAUNTING OF PENNHURST starts like a ghost story, but the longer it goes, the clearer it becomes that the film isn’t interested in ghosts at all. It’s interested in systems. Institutions. Memory. The ways societies bury cruelty beneath euphemisms like “care” and “treatment” until the language itself almost starts to sound haunted. By the time the documentary settles in, the abandoned Pennhurst State School & Hospital stops feeling like a horror setting and begins to resemble an accusation.

Rarely Has Heartbreak Sounded This Chaotic

General Admission

GENERAL ADMISSION moves at the speed of a panic attack. Before the audience even has time to settle in, Kelly is already unloading a metric ton of emotional wreckage onto a room full of strangers with the kind of honesty that immediately crosses the line from relatable into socially catastrophic. The short understands exactly how uncomfortable that situation is, and more importantly, how funny discomfort becomes once somebody loses the ability to stop talking. That’s where the magic is; there’s something undeniably relatable to that spiral.

A Civil Rights Landmark Reclaims Its Voice

The Lorraine

THE LORRAINE begins with a necessary moment of education. For many people, the Lorraine Motel exists in public memory as the place where Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, a site reduced in a way by history books, photographs, and collective grief to one balcony and one devastating moment. Sam Pollard’s documentary refuses to let that be the whole story. It doesn’t diminish the horror of what happened on April 4, 1968, but it pushes back against the way tragedy can consume everything that came before it. The film insists that the Lorraine wasn’t important because a great man died there. It was already important because Black life, artistry, entrepreneurship, safety, and resistance had been flourishing there long before the world turned its eyes toward Room 306.

The Future Comes With Wrinkles

The A-Word: The Future of Aging

THE A-WORD: THE FUTURE OF AGING knows the quickest way to make longevity science feel less abstract. Just stop treating it like a billionaire fantasy and put an older man alongside an older dog. That gives Greg Kohs’ documentary a necessary emotional connection point because the subject itself could easily have drifted into the terminology of biotech conferences, medical forecasting, and future-facing optimism. Instead, the film keeps returning to George Betke, an 87-year-old widower in Maine, and Monica, his senior rescue dog. Their walks, their quiet moments, and their bond give the film a shape that no chart or expert interview could provide on its own. The science matters, but it matters because aging has a face, a body, a home, a schedule, a history of grief, and a companion moving a little slower with each passing year.

Pure Backyard Horror Madness in Its Final Form

Fungicide [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition]

Some movies fail because they aim high and collapse under the weight of ambition. Then there are movies like FUNGICIDE, where the ambition itself becomes the entire experience. Not because the film succeeds, but because every decision feels powered by unfiltered enthusiasm that eventually bulldozes past limitations and lands in a bizarrely entertaining experience.

A Family Rewrites Its Own Survival

Matininó

MATININÓ doesn’t treat healing as some easy trip back home. It treats it as labor, argument, imagination, discomfort, performance, memory, and invention occurring simultaneously. Gabriela Díaz Arp’s documentary begins from a place of real pain, but it refuses to confine these women to testimony alone. Instead, it hands them masks, costumes, language, myth, movement, and the authority to reshape what has been carried through generations. That choice gives the film its heartbeat. This isn’t a documentary that simply observes survivors as they explain what happened to them. It’s a film about women taking the raw material of their own histories and building a new world from it.

The Match Happening Off the Court

Fault

Sports films often build themselves around visible pressure. Championships, rankings, public expectations, physical exhaustion, and the constant demand to keep performing no matter what’s happening on the inside. FAULT understands that there’s too often something more unsightly beneath all of that. Sometimes the real pressure comes from maintaining the version of yourself that allowed you to survive in the first place. That sits at the center of Misha Calvert’s short film, turning what could have been a straightforward trauma narrative into something far more emotionally volatile.

Healing Arrives One Track at a Time

Sara Bareilles: Good Grief

SARA BAREILLES: GOOD GRIEF doesn’t approach grief as just an emotional arc, which is exactly why its most peaceful moments land with so much force. Josh Alexander’s documentary follows Sara Bareilles as she returns to the recording studio for the first time in seven years, bringing with her a new collection of songs shaped by personal loss, creative uncertainty, and the courage it takes to share pain before you’ve figured out how to manage it. The film isn’t built around a famous artist explaining herself from a safe distance. It stays close to the work, the room, the conversations, and the people trusted enough to be present while something takes shape.