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.
What stands out first isn’t the case; it’s the burden everyone’s carrying before the case even begins to take shape. The series doesn’t introduce its characters as professionals stepping into a challenge. It presents them as people already dealing with something, already worn down in ways that have nothing to do with the investigation itself. That baseline matters because it shifts how everything else is examined from that point forward.
The connection feels like something deeper, almost immediately, and that’s exactly what makes it suspicious. There’s no uncomfortable escalation, no missteps, no sense of two people figuring each other out. It just works. That kind of vibe is usually what these stories build toward, but here it arrives, settling in before there’s time to question it.
There’s a moment early on here where the audience is still trying to figure out how to respond, and the film doesn’t help (rightfully so). It doesn’t guide you toward empathy, nor does it cushion the discomfort. You’re left sitting in it, unsure whether to laugh, pull back, or just stay quiet. That tension isn’t a side effect. It’s the point.
DESERT WARRIOR works best when it’s operating on instinct instead of obligation. The early stretch focuses on clarity, a sense of direction that feels driven by character rather than expectation. A young woman refusing to be bargained like currency isn’t just a plot trigger; it’s a disruption, and the film briefly understands how powerful that disruption can be.
TWO WOMEN doesn’t ease the audience into the conversation. It lays out what it wants to do and builds from there, asking what happens when two people realize they’re no longer fulfilled by the lives they’ve settled into and choose to do something about it. That gives the film its identity. It isn’t hesitant or delicate with its themes, and that confidence carries through nearly every scene.
There’s a very specific kind of vibe that can’t be purposefully built or recreated once it’s gone, and PRETTY UGLY: THE STORY OF THE LUNACHICKS understands that better than most music documentaries. This isn’t a story trying to rewrite history into something for the mainstream audience or celebratory in a traditional sense. Instead, it leans into the chaos, the contradictions, and the reality of what it meant to be a group of women carving out space in a scene that didn’t welcome them, even if it meant breaking a few things along the way.
KANGAROO ISLAND builds a story around a common but effective idea, returning home after things fall apart elsewhere, only to realize that what you left behind never really settled in the first place. The film leans into it with enough sincerity to keep things engaging, especially when it focuses on the emotional fractures at its center.
FUZE doesn’t waste time pretending it’s anything other than a tightly wound, concept-first thriller built around pressure and controlled chaos. Honestly, that works in its favor for a good stretch of the runtime. A bomb unearthed in the middle of London is already a built-in ticking clock (literally), but FUZE doesn’t stop there. It folds in a heist that thrives on that chaos, immediately giving the story a dual-arc structure, with one side driven by public danger and the other by calculated opportunism. That intersection is where the film finds its strongest footing, especially early on when everything still feels like it could spiral in multiple directions.
By its fourth season, ABBOTT ELEMENTARY has more than established what it is and what it isn’t. The show isn’t trying to reinvent the format, and it doesn’t lean on gimmicks to sustain interest. What keeps it working is consistency, both in how it writes its characters and how it understands the environment in which it exists. Season four continues that approach, but it also shows where the show has grown more comfortable, for better and for worse. There are a lot of comedy series that grow too comfortable with routine and fade off into the ether.
HAND keeps a very focused vision and trusts that the weight of its subject will carry the film without added emphasis. It doesn’t build toward some grand reveal. It stays small on purpose, focusing on a single perspective and letting that do the work. Short films' success comes from the impact that they can create, and even more so, the impact that they can leave with you. HAND does that in strides, taking an intimate story that understands the impact it's having on audiences.
BASIC PSYCH builds itself up around a premise that doesn’t need all that much setup to land. A psychiatrist is forced to treat a patient who may pose a real threat, all while being bound by confidentiality. That creates a situation where every decision can lead to something more, leaving risk at every turn. The film understands that from the start and doesn’t waste time getting into it.
WATCH ME SLEEP has a core reason for existing, which is a premise that does most of the heavy lifting on its own. A man installs a camera inside his mother’s coffin after she’s buried so he can keep watching her. That idea doesn’t need much embellishment. It’s invasive in a way that immediately puts the viewer on edge, and it carries enough emotional and psychological weight to sustain a full film if handled with precision. The issue isn’t the concept. It’s the follow-through.
MISTURA starts from a place that doesn’t ask for an easy connection. Norma Piet is introduced with a level of detachment that feels intentional. She’s shaped by privilege and comfortable in a world that’s never forced her to look beyond it. When that world collapses, the film doesn’t rush to make her likable. It lets her sit in the fallout, and it doesn’t soften that impact to make that transition easier to accept.
AMERICAN GLADIATORS knows its role, and to its credit, it doesn’t waste time pretending to be anything else. This reboot understands that the brand carries a built-in thrill, the kind tied to oversized personalities, punishing events, and the simple pleasure of watching regular people throw themselves into a larger-than-life arena. It taps into that, even if it never feels quite as wild as it could. The result is an entertaining comeback that delivers enough muscle and momentum to work, while still leaving room for the series to become something bigger, louder, and more unhinged in a future season.
KEVIN should get a lot messier than it does. A very self-aware housecat has decided he’s done with human ownership and wants to build a new life on his own (until he finds a home away from home). It opens the door to something much stranger, meaner, and more warped than the series ultimately becomes. What KEVIN delivers instead is an entertaining adult animated comedy with a strong voice cast, a solid emotional hook, and a sense of personality that keeps it watchable, even when it feels like it’s pulling back from its most chaotic instincts.