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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.

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.

Growing up While Directing Your Own Story

Kids Like Me

Many documentaries about disability position themselves around education, inspiration, advocacy, or emotional endurance so aggressively that the people at the center begin to feel flattened into something like a symbol long before the audience gets to know them as people. KIDS LIKE ME avoids that because Cynthia Lowen and Jon Cohrs understand something simple but surprisingly rare. Oliver is not interesting because he has a disability. He’s interesting because he’s funny, obsessive, imaginative, dramatic, creative, stubborn, emotionally complicated, and consumed by the idea of making movies. That shapes the entire documentary in the best possible way.

Revolution, Delusion, and the Death of Certainty

The Year Before the War (Gads pirms kara)

THE YEAR BEFORE THE WAR opens like a warning disguised as a hallucination. Before the film introduces philosophy, war, nationalism, or revolution, it establishes a sense of instability. Ice cracks. Bodies drift through frozen landscapes. Crowds gather with the energy of people unknowingly approaching catastrophe. Dāvis Sīmanis doesn’t frame pre-World War I Europe as a world on the verge of collapse in a historical sense. He presents it as a civilization already infected long before the first trench is dug.

A Satire Spiraling Toward Total Collapse

Hi, Mom! [4K UHD + Blu-ray]

Some filmmakers spend years learning how to smooth out what makes a legend. Brian De Palma spent the beginning of his career throwing everything he could at the screen. HI, MOM! feels less like a carefully assembled studio production and more like a filmmaker testing every boundary he can before someone tells him to stop. That gives the film a strange kind of durability. Even when the movie struggles, and it absolutely does, it never feels cautious. More than fifty years later, that recklessness still carries a charge.

One of These Films Became Immortal for a Reason

Film Noir Classics Double Feature: Borderline (1950) & D.O.A. (1949)

Film noir has always carried a strange relationship with exhaustion. These are movies filled with people who look like they haven’t slept in days, trapped inside systems that stopped caring about them long ago. Everyone lies. Everyone walks into rooms already doomed by choices they haven’t made yet. Even when the stories drift toward romance or procedural vibes, there’s usually a quiet understanding beneath it all that fate has already made its decision before the first scene even starts. That feeling hangs heavily over D.O.A., and it’s the reason the film still feels alive more than seventy-five years later.

A B-Movie Premise Played Surprisingly Straight

Hungry

HUNGRY gets a surprising amount of mileage out of the fact that hippos are absolutely terrifying animals. Creature features usually lean on sharks, crocodiles, giant snakes, or mutated insects, while hippos rarely get treated like the potentially violent animals they actually are. These things are basically living tanks with terrible tempers, capable of tearing people apart with ease. Writer/director James Nunn recognizes that immediately, which helps the film avoid collapsing into pure self-aware parody. The premise could’ve easily turned into disposable nonsense built entirely around the novelty of a killer hippo movie, but HUNGRY plays the danger straighter than expected. Instead of chasing camp in every scene, the film keeps pushing toward something meaner, uglier, and more chaotic, and that choice gives the attacks far more weight than they probably should have in a movie like this. Instead of following along the line of the increasingly long list of board game adaptations, this one treats it more like a wink and nod to nostalgia instead of what it could have been.

This Reimagining Wants to Hurt You

Cape Fear

The easiest mistake this version of CAPE FEAR could’ve made would’ve been leaning into nostalgia. Recreating the infamous moments, taking the shortcut of familiarity, or, worse, treating the series as a scene-by-scene remake, or even trusting the legacy to do most of the heavy lifting. Instead, the series drags the material through the dirt, catches it on fire, and lets it come out the other side somewhere far more somber and far more vile. This isn’t a prestige-thriller remix of a recognizable title. It’s psychological horror with its hands wrapped tightly around the audience’s throat for nearly every second.

Disney’s Anime Experiment Actually Has Some Teeth

Dragon Striker

I’ll be the first to admit, I’m not a big soccer fan, and I’m pretty reserved on what anime I like. So to say that this series has won me over so far is really saying something! DRAGON STRIKER asks viewers to buy into magical soccer matches, dragon-powered attacks, ancient prophecy, and emotionally overloaded kids screaming across glowing stadiums without flinching for a second. What keeps the series from collapsing under all of that is its sincere commitment to the material. A lesser version would’ve relied entirely on chaos and sensory overload. This show understands that the action only lands if the characters treat every victory, rivalry, and emotional breakdown like the most important thing in the world. That sincerity gives the chaos real momentum instead of reducing it to empty visual clutter.