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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 Remake That Reshuffles Motives and Morality

Silent Night, Deadly Night

For a series with eight or nine films (depending on what you count), this new version of SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT walks a tightrope between homage and reinvention — and often it teeters dangerously, but it never quite falls off. Under Mike P. Nelson’s direction and screenplay, the film strips away much of the ’80s cult-slasher’s sleazy exploitation. It replaces it with a more emotionally fraught, character-driven origin of horror. The result is a remake that respects the legacy but isn’t afraid to rework its roots; one that aims for more than cheap shocks and holiday taboos.

For Cult Cinema Lovers, a Treasure Trove of Weirdness

Shawscope Vol 4 [Limited Edition]

SHAWSCOPE VOL. 4 has hit the point in the series where the veneer of classic martial-arts prestige drops away, and Shaw Brothers’ strangest takes in their catalog take center stage. This extraordinary sixteen-film set captures a period when the studio was throwing everything at the wall—superheroes, curses, demons, jiangshi, possession, sci-fi, wuxia fantasy, and supernatural horror. What emerges isn’t a thematic set of curated classics, so much as a snapshot of an industry evolving (and unraveling) in real time. The result is messy, unhinged, and irresistible.

A Thriller That Pushes Until It Snaps

Influencers

INFLUENCERS is exactly the kind of sequel most genre fans hope to get but rarely do. Instead of repeating the same storyline in a different location or clinging to the original's safer elements, the film builds outward in ways that feel more daring. Kurtis David Harder targets the emotional core and even the moral balance of the story, resulting in something darker, stranger, and more confident. While the first film explored online performance and the constructed identities influencers rely on, this sequel delves deeper into the consequences of building an entire life on manipulation, deception, and curated charm.

A Weekend in the Woods That Spirals Fast

Afraid?

AFRAID? offers up a premise that can easily sink or swim depending on how seriously it treats its setup, and writer/director SkyDirects chooses to lean hard into an emotional interpretation of fear rather than a simple body count. It’s a small-scale horror outing built around five teenagers who head into the woods for a Halloween weekend, only to find their party games turning into something far more lethal. What keeps the film interesting is that it isn’t chasing elaborate mythologies or supernatural lore. Instead, it examines the kind of fear that comes from tension between people, decisions that spiral out of control, and the ways trust collapses when we start questioning everything, including each other.

A Short That Understands the Weight of Intention

The Escort

THE ESCORT takes a setup that starts with familiarity and uses its limited runtime to explore the hidden intentions that can surface when two people enter a room for entirely different reasons. At just 15 minutes, the film avoids the usual pitfalls that plague short-form dramas by refusing to oversell its premise or rely on shock. Instead, it draws its tension from the evolving dynamic between its two characters. Tommy, fragile and hesitant, hires Lucy for companionship, yet the encounter gradually shifts into something different. The film is concise, focused, and grounded in performance without ever drifting into melodrama.

Wong Kar-Wai Before the Mood Struck

Rosa

ROSA opens with a chaotic, good-natured confidence that helped define mid-’80s Hong Kong action comedies: momentum, humor, and officers sprinting toward a case they may not fully understand. It’s a setup that suggests mayhem, anchored by Yuen Biao at maximum physicality. What the film actually delivers is a loose-limbed comedy that circles its premise for almost an hour before unlocking the exact thing audiences came for — a tightly choreographed fight sequence that proves why everyone involved is still remembered.

A Film That Understands the Power of Sound As Legacy

Monk in Pieces (Blu-ray)

MONK IN PIECES is the kind of documentary that understands how to observe an artist without smothering them in over-explained reverence. Instead of shaping Meredith Monk into a wrapped-up narrative, the film approaches her career the way she approaches sound — through fragments, repetition, variation, and purposeful gaps. That makes this a rare documentary about a major artist that doesn’t treat her as an artifact but as a living, evolving presence. The film stands in the territory of works that feel both informative and—maybe more importantly—alive.

When Belonging Becomes the Most Dangerous Desire

Familia

FAMILIA feels like a memory that refuses to fade, touching every part of the story, no matter how hard its characters try to cover it up. Francesco Costabile’s film approaches violence and generational trauma with unflinching realism, never leaning on sensationalism but instead embracing a grounded, emotional tone that makes every choice feel weighted. It’s a film that builds pressure quietly, allowing its characters to sit in the lingering aftermath of choices made long before the opening scenes. The kind of drama that proves more compelling in reflection, particularly because of the precision of its performances and the layers Costabile threads through the narrative.

Humanity and Hostility Share the Same Horizon

Tarika

Some films unfold at a pace that demands patience, not because they’re unfocused, but because they’re interested in small moments of human behavior rather than constant escalation. TARIKA is built in that tradition. It’s a story about a father and daughter living on the outskirts of a Bulgarian village, surrounded by people who respond to anything unfamiliar with hostility rather than empathy. That premise alone is heavy, but Milko Lazarov approaches it with an understated tone, anchoring the film in a relationship that feels deeply personal. The film’s quietness isn’t a stylistic pose; it’s an extension of the characters' isolation.

A Story About Choice, Fear, and Unspoken Loyalties

Rosalie

There’s a certain kind of short film that doesn’t aim to shock through twists or visuals, but through honesty. ROSALIE is one of those stories. It presents a situation that could play out behind any closed door in America, and it carries the weight of something deeply human: Nadine, a woman who’s overwhelmed, stretched to the extremes, and fighting the internal storm of an unplanned pregnancy she doesn’t want. At the same time, her closest friend, Carolyn, carries her own heartache — an infertility struggle that shapes every reaction she has to Nadine’s decision. With only twenty minutes to work with, the film doesn’t waste time circling its themes. Instead, it moves with precision, grounded in realistic dialogue, and the painful contradictions that arise when two people love each other but want entirely different outcomes.

A Decade of Disasters, Preserved and Restored

Airport: The Complete 4-Film Collection (4KUHD)

If there’s one franchise that defines ’70s disaster cinema—all its ambition, excess, sincerity, and unintended comedy—it’s this one. AIRPORT: THE COMPLETE 4-FILM COLLECTION isn’t just a lineup of big-cast thrillers; it’s a snapshot of how the industry embraced spectacle before CGI, leaning entirely on elaborate sets, recognizable faces, and the promise that danger at high altitude automatically meant an event film. Watching the four movies together is like watching the decade itself change: the melodrama, the procedural vibes, the escalation of spectacle, and eventually the unrestrained theatrics of a studio system intent on outdoing itself at any cost.

A Chaotic Sprint Toward Redemption

100 Liters of Gold (100 litraa sahtia)

The first thing that strikes you about 100 LITERS OF GOLD is how it leans into the reality of everyday people who make questionable choices for understandable reasons. Writer/director Teemu Nikki, who has built a career on mixing empathy with sharp-edged satire, brings that same sensibility to this story of two middle-aged sisters whose lives revolve around the small traditions that define their identity. In this case, that tradition is sahti — the rustic, unfiltered, almost mythical farmhouse beer that carries an outsized level of pride in rural Finland. Nikki’s personal connection comes from a family of brewers and regards the drink as a cultural anchor, not just a beverage.

Wealth, Status, and the Slow Erosion of Control

The Gilded Age: The Complete Third Season

The third season of THE GILDED AGE offers the confidence of a series that has settled into its identity. The world is grounded, the characters established, and the show is no longer working to convince the audience of its worth. Instead, this season focuses on escalation. The aftermath of the Opera War leaves the old order weakened, and the Russells step into the vacuum with a level of determination that transforms the social landscape of 1880s New York. The tension between tradition and progress has always been the backbone of this series, but Season 3 pushes those contrasts further, showing how ambition can reshape an entire community.

A Biography Made Out of Shattered Glass

Yes Repeat No

Stories about identity often pretend clarity exists. YES REPEAT NO doesn’t. It opens in a rehearsal space—blank walls, no escape—and immediately confronts you with the impossibility of its own assignment. Three actors arrive to audition for one role: Juliano Mer-Khamis, a Palestinian-Jewish actor, director, activist, and political contradiction who lived his life refusing to fit into a narrative easy to summarize. Instead of shaping a linear biopic, the film traps its cast in a room where identity becomes something volatile, argumentative, and agonizingly fragile. The goal isn’t to recreate Mer-Khamis; it’s to force each performer to collide with the truths he embodied.

A Christmas Eve Story With Real Human Warmth

Stationed at Home

STATIONED AT HOME feels like one long exhale—the kind of film that settles into its own early and never forces its way into sentimentality. Set across a single frostbitten Christmas Eve in 1998, it follows Ralph, a quiet night-shift taxi driver who wants one simple thing: to finish his shift in time to witness the International Space Station glide overhead at 5:47 a.m. It’s a small wish, almost painfully modest, but the film treats it like something sacred. That decision defines the entire experience. Rather than turning Christmas Eve into a hectic, fate-changing night, the movie allows its stillness to become its center. It’s aimless in a purposeful way—reveling in humanity, unexpected intersections, and the kind of fleeting connections that add up without ever announcing themselves.