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.
Sometimes, a family film will lean on a magical premise to explore something surprisingly grounded, and PAPA BEAR fits squarely into that lane. It doesn’t want to reinvent the wheel, but it does commit to the formula in a way that makes its intentions clear from the start. This is a story about connection, patience, and understanding, wrapped in a premise that’s just strange enough to keep younger audiences engaged. Shockingly, there’s something in here, even with some of the struggles; there’s a heart here that’s undeniable.
Trying to translate a stage production into something that works at the same level on screen has always been a challenge that’s often hit or miss, and MERRILY WE ROLL ALONG leans hard into that challenge rather than avoiding it. This isn’t a traditional film adaptation, and it doesn’t pretend to be one. Instead, it’s more somewhere between a recorded theatrical experience and a cinematic reinterpretation, and whether that works for you depends almost entirely on what you expect going in.
MERMAID wastes absolutely no time making it clear that this isn’t going to be a whimsical fantasy or some offbeat romantic creature feature. It drops you into the life of a man who’s already falling apart, then pushes him even further when the impossible enters that chaos. What follows isn’t a story about wonder or discovery, but about desperation, obsession, and the fragile line between purpose and self-destruction. Whatever your expectations, this will meet you on a different level.
There are war films that focus on the individual, and then there are war films that attempt to capture the machinery of war itself. A BRIDGE TOO FAR belongs to that second category, and it embraces that identity from the very beginning. This isn’t a story built around a single hero or a simple story. It’s a sprawling, deliberate reconstruction of a failed operation, and it leans into the idea that scale can be just as powerful as intimacy.
There’s a noticeable shift happening in documentaries about climate change, and WE HAVE TO SURVIVE leans into it. Instead of asking what might happen, it focuses on what has and continues to happen. That distinction shapes everything about how the film operates, grounding it in lived experience rather than distant warnings or abstract data.
There’s nothing conventional about a childhood built around power, fear, and the illusion of safety, and DEAR KILLER NANNIES understands that from the very first episode. Instead of approaching the Pablo Escobar story from the usual angle of crime, politics, or law enforcement, the series narrows its focus to the perspective of a child who doesn’t understand the world he’s growing up in. That decision separates it from the countless other narratives tied to Escobar’s legacy, giving it a more intimate and psychologically complex foundation.
Some bands chase success. Others redefine what success means. BORN INNOCENT: THE REDD KROSS STORY makes it clear early on that this isn’t going to be a documentary about chart-topping hits or industry dominance. Instead, it’s about longevity, identity, and the kind of stubbornness that keeps a band going long after the spotlight moves on.
WHAT WE DREAMED OF THEN is the kind of film that quietly sneaks up on you. It builds through small moments, quiet conversations, and the uncomfortable reality of a life slowly unraveling. Empathy, heartbreak, desperation, and longing drive Taylor Olson’s drama, which focuses on realities that rarely receive this level of attention, blending family dynamics with those of someone experiencing homelessness. Through a deeply personal narrative, the film explores how easily someone can fall through the cracks while still trying to maintain a sense of normalcy for the people they love.
SURRENDER TO IT sees a group of old friends reunite for a weekend retreat in the Welsh countryside, hoping to reconnect after years of distance and personal growth. But beneath that setup lies a far darker story about grief, regret, and the emotional baggage people carry long after life has moved forward. Tim Bryn Smith’s thriller uses the isolation of the British countryside to create a tense atmosphere in which unresolved trauma slowly creeps to the surface.
PIZZA MOVIE never pretends to be smarter than it is, and that ends up being the best thing about it. Built on a premise so ridiculous it almost sounds like a parody of college comedies, the film sets out on a basic mission. It spins into a chaotic night of hallucinations, misunderstandings, and absurd encounters. What could have easily collapsed under the weight of its own nonsense instead turns into a surprisingly effective comedy that understands exactly how far it can push its premise without losing the audience.
JIMMY & THE DEMONS doesn’t try to mythologize the kind of devotion of spending your life following your passion, and that restraint becomes one of its greatest strengths. Instead of building James Grashow into an untouchable artistic figure, the film sits with him, listens to him, and lets the reality of his process speak for itself. What comes through isn’t just admiration, but exhaustion, doubt, and an understanding that creating something meaningful often comes at a cost that never goes away.
DRAGN is a stripped-down survival thriller built around a concept that tells you what it is, then spends the rest of its runtime examining and exploring that idea further than it naturally wants to go. A group of coworkers, a remote forest, a rogue AI drone hunting them one by one. It’s direct and, honestly, pretty effective for about the first half, when the film leans into the tension rather than trying to be something bigger. An interesting experience that leaves you with a lot to think about.
Samurai films have long occupied a vital place in Japanese cinema, often celebrating the ideals of loyalty, sacrifice, and honor that define the legendary code of bushido. Yet CRUEL TALE OF BUSHIDO, directed by Tadashi Imai, takes a dramatically different approach. Rather than glorifying the traditions of the samurai class, the film dismantles them piece by piece, presenting bushido not as a noble philosophy but as a rigid and often destructive system that demanded unquestioning obedience.
Jess Franco’s VAMPYROS LESBOS stands as one of the strangest, most mesmerizing entries in the long lineage of vampire cinema. Released in 1971 during a period when European genre filmmaking was pushing boundaries in both sexuality and style, the film represents a collision between gothic horror, art film, and exploitation cinema. The result is a movie that often feels less like a traditional story and more like a dream that slowly explodes in fragments.
Few directors in cult cinema (or really cinema in general) inspire reactions as polarized as Jesús “Jess” Franco. His filmography spans hundreds of projects, many of them rushed, low-budget productions, yet every so often, Franco delivered something that captured lightning in a bottle. SHE KILLED IN ECSTASY lands in that fascinating middle space where his chaotic style, hypnotic visuals, and provocative storytelling actually come together to form a strangely compelling experience.