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.
RE-ANIMATOR isn’t your traditional horror, comedy, or sci-fi flick. It jumps into the middle of traffic and never looks back. From its opening moments, the film establishes a tone of reckless confidence, barreling forward with a sense of purpose that feels almost confrontational. It never asks for patience or understanding; it demands surrender. That urgency remains one of its most defining qualities, and it is exactly why the film continues to resonate four decades later. This became the film, and the legend that it was meant to be.
WALKING TALL was a unique experience for its time, and even today it’s still something special, although dated at times. It was a film with a message, and it knew exactly what it wanted to say. It is direct and refreshingly unpretentious; a mid-budget studio action film that understands the value of momentum over mythmaking. It moved with a confidence that many longer action films fail to maintain, trusting its star power and simple premise to carry the weight. I don’t know for sure why, but for some reason, this and FALLING DOWN feel like an ultimate double feature of redemption.
NACHO LIBRE has never been a movie that meets audiences halfway; it lets you know what it is and asks you to come to it on its own terms, not just in tone, but in style, performance, and even emotion. Nearly two decades later, that commitment to awkward sincerity remains both the film’s greatest strength and its most persistent limitation. I think I probably appreciated the film more now, watching it for the first time, than I would have 20 years ago.
THE COPENHAGEN TEST is the kind of espionage series that understands restraint as a strength rather than a limitation. Instead of leaning into globe-trotting excess or constant escalation, the show commits to a quieter, more unsettling tension rooted in surveillance, paranoia, and identity (think Tom Clancy). It operates in a space just adjacent to our present moment; close enough to feel plausible, but distant enough to let its ideas breathe. That proximity is what gives the series its edge.
THERE WILL COME SOFT RAINS approaches the climate crisis from a place most films avoid; not through end-of-days scenarios, statistics, or apocalyptic imagery, but through grief, faith, and a single woman’s refusal to accept inevitability. It is a short film with an inspiring premise and the discipline to explore it without sensationalizing it. Rather than asking audiences to fear the future, it asks them to sit with a present that already feels unbearable for those carrying the burden first.
IN THE CLOUDS is an intimate, restrained, and observant; it's a story about displacement that stays focused on the lived reality within a home, not the version of migration audiences have been trained to expect. Even at fourteen minutes, it carries itself like an experience, because it understands exactly where to place the camera and when to let the audience sit with what is not being said.
O.C. AND STIGGS plays less like a teen comedy and more like an act of cinematic vandalism. It does not invite the audience in so much as dare them to keep up. Robert Altman takes the skeletal framework of a National Lampoon story and uses it as an excuse to poke, prod, and openly antagonize the polite surfaces of Reagan-era suburbia. The result is messy, abrasive, occasionally funny, and frequently frustrating; it is also unmistakably the work of a filmmaker who had no interest in making something tidy or universally appealing.
SAGA OF THE PHOENIX arrives with the unmistakable energy of late-1980s Hong Kong fantasy cinema; boundless imagination, fearless tonal shifts, and an almost reckless commitment to spectacle. As a follow-up to THE PEACOCK KING, it occupies an uneasy middle ground. It is more playful, more accessible, and far less interested in sustained menace. That shift does not sink the film, but it fundamentally changes what kind of experience this sequel aims to be.
By the time SCARS OF DRACULA arrived on the scene, the Hammer Dracula cycle was already showing wear. Audiences knew what to expect: the villagers warn new travelers, castles loom, blood flows, Dracula is destroyed, and somehow always returns. What makes this entry interesting is not that it reinvents the formula, but that it seems almost irritated by it. This is a nastier, more aggressive film than many of its predecessors, one that leans into cruelty, violence, and discomfort as if daring the audience to either keep up or look away. Whether that approach works is debatable, but it absolutely gives the film a distinct personality within the series.
There’s a special kind of panic that only exists inside a community theater; the kind that starts as “we’ll figure it out” and ends with someone handing off a switchblade because of a prop malfunction while another person argues about blocking like it’s a national security briefing. COMMUNITY THEATER CHRISTMAS understands that panic, and it builds the comedy around the idea that a stage can be both a sanctuary and a pressure cooker. The premise is simple: a struggling small-town theater needs a grant to stay alive, and the path to that grant runs straight through an original Christmas production that has no business being this hard to pull off.
THE MIGHTY OAKS approaches the story with a clarity that many sports documentaries chase but rarely succeed in. Rather than framing the narrative around a single season or a simple pursuit of victory, the film positions that final 2024 campaign as the emotional endpoint of something much larger. This is not a documentary about a team suddenly discovering greatness; it is about what happens when belief, patience, and responsibility are tested over nearly a decade. By the time the season begins, the audience already understands that the outcome matters less than what the program has come to represent.
PAULA TAKES THE STAGE is a small, scrappy short that understands a very specific truth about performance: the stage is not always a sanctuary; sometimes it is a pressure cooker, sometimes it is a mirror you cannot look away from. Set inside a 1940s theater and built around a once-celebrated actress attempting to reinvent herself, the film focuses on the quiet terror of being perceived. Not just watched, but judged; not just remembered, but compared to whatever version of you the crowd decided on.
ELWAY, without question, is the definitive documentary on one of the NFL’s most iconic quarterbacks, and in many ways, it fulfills exactly what it promises. The film traces John Elway’s career with an obvious reverence for its subject, moving from his early dominance at Stanford through the defining highs and lows of his sixteen seasons with the Denver Broncos. For longtime football fans, the stories will feel instantly recognizable. For casual viewers, the film provides a clean, accessible timeline of a career that helped shape modern quarterback mythology. What it does not attempt, however, is to reinterpret that mythology or challenge it.
DAN CURTIS’ GOTHIC TALES brings together two made-for-television literary adaptations that embody both the strengths and the limitations of 1970s broadcast horror. Produced for ABC’s Wide World of Mystery and shot on videotape, these works feel unmistakably bound to their era. Yet they also reflect a genuine seriousness about horror as a psychological and moral inquiry rather than a cheap chaos. This is not horror designed to startle. It’s horror meant to linger, to unsettle through implication, repression, and rot beneath polite surfaces.
THE NINJA TRILOGY exists in a very specific pocket of 1980s cinema where sincerity, excess, and outright insanity collide without apology. Taken together, ENTER THE NINJA, REVENGE OF THE NINJA, and NINJA III: THE DOMINATION form a progression that feels less like a planned arc and more like a gradual surrender to escalation. What begins as a relatively grounded martial arts action picture evolves into something delirious, supernatural, and proudly unhinged. That evolution is the trilogy’s greatest strength.