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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.

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.

A Cult Movie Built From Pure Obsession

The Screaming [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition Blu-ray + CD]

Most shot-on-video horror movies from the late 1990s and early 2000s feel like they were assembled by people who barely wanted to make them (that’s gonna piss some people off, but it's true). You can almost sense the exhaustion baked into every shot. The lighting feels flat, the pacing drags endlessly, the performances feel half-conscious, and the entire production exists purely because somebody realized horror fans will watch almost anything once. THE SCREAMING somehow survives that same chaos of regional microbudget horror because writer/director Jeff Leroy actually seems excited to be there. That enthusiasm matters.

Young Professionals Spiraling in Designer Shoes

Not Suitable for Work

New York has always been one of television’s favorite lies. Not because the city itself is fake, but because so many series built around young professionals treat exhaustion as a personality trait and financial survival as a quirky inconvenience. The apartments are impossibly clean, everyone lands dream jobs by accident, and emotional collapse usually arrives wrapped in a perfectly timed punchline, only to reset the following week. NOT SUITABLE FOR WORK understands that fantasy well enough to weaponize it against itself. The series still delivers the glossy Manhattan chaos audiences expect, but beneath the polished surface lies something noticeably more bitter, anxious, and emotionally restless than the marketing initially suggests. That edge carries the show!

One of the Year’s Most Fascinating Animated Experiments

Jinsei (無名の人生)

JINSEI feels less like a normal animated film and more like somebody emptying decades of anxiety, loneliness, ambition, media obsession, political dread, personal memory, and existential confusion directly onto the screen before the feeling disappears. There are moments where it barely seems interested in coherence at all. Entire stretches drift through fragmentation, abrupt stylistic pivots, and surrealism with almost reckless confidence. Yet somehow, by the end, the film leaves behind an impression far stronger than many more polished animated features ever manage. That’s because JINSEI understands something a lot of coming-of-age epics don’t, that identity rarely develops in a straight line.

A Comedy Built on Mutual Destruction

Alice and Steve

I have to start by saying that this was one of the most easily bingeable shows I’ve ever watched. Most series built around chaos like this want you to choose a side. They might pretend to operate in morally gray territory, but eventually they start nudging viewers toward a favorite, easing one character’s arc while sharpening another's flaws. ALICE AND STEVE never pretend to do that. It commits to the ugliness of the situation from every possible angle, then keeps finding new ways to make everybody involved look slightly worse than they did five minutes earlier. That could’ve turned the series into an exhausting exercise in cruelty. But there was something about Sophie Goodhart’s writing that understood something vitally important! People don’t become irrational because they’re evil; they become irrational because humiliation screws with their judgment. That distinction gives the show a spine unlike most dramadies made for streaming.

Alien Contact As Intellectual Catastrophe

Signal One

SIGNAL ONE approaches alien contact less like an adventure and more like a slow psychological fracture. The film isn’t interested in heroic discovery or chaos. Interestingly, at the moment, human curiosity turns into fear. The deeper the characters delve into communication with something beyond their understanding, the more the film questions whether humanity is emotionally or intellectually prepared to hear an answer at all.

The Fragile Distance Between Connection and Isolation

Love Letter (with All About Lily Chou-Chou in most theaters)

There are filmmakers who tell stories, and then there are filmmakers who seem to recreate the journey through emotion itself. Shunji Iwai belongs firmly in the second category. Watching LOVE LETTER and ALL ABOUT LILY CHOU CHOU together creates an almost overwhelming portrait of how differently people process absence, loneliness, longing, and emotional survival. One film reaches toward healing through remembrance. The other stares directly into collapse and asks whether music and connection can keep somebody from disappearing inside themselves.

The Ocean Isn’t the Scariest Thing Here

Chum

A lot of modern shark movies die the second they start treating the shark like the entire focus. Once the novelty wears off, there’s usually nothing underneath besides floating bodies, fins, and characters so disposable you spend half the runtime hoping the movie finally gets around to feeding them to something. CHUM works better than most because it understands the shark isn’t actually the main threat. It’s just the pressure point that causes things to boil over. The true focus is forcing already unstable people into a situation where every selfish instinct surfaces.

Two Ninja Movies Vibing on Pure Delirium

Born A Ninja / Commando The Ninja Double Feature [Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition]

BORN A NINJA and COMMANDO THE NINJA feel like somebody recorded a fever dream onto a stack of damaged VHS tapes, duplicated them fifty times, then accidentally created cult cinema gold in the process. Within minutes, ninjas are vanishing into smoke, people are screaming about stolen germ-warfare formulas, and a martial-arts style called “Hocus Pocus” is being taken seriously. None of it should work. Most of it barely makes sense. Yet both films attack the screen with such relentless, low-budget conviction that resisting their charm eventually becomes impossible. Logic stops mattering. Structure becomes optional. Dialogue sounds like it was translated through six different versions of Google Translate before arriving at the dubbing booth. Yet somehow, against every reasonable instinct, the experience becomes hypnotic. These aren’t high-end martial arts classics or forgotten gems waiting to be rediscovered as misunderstood masterpieces. They’re messy, ridiculous, aggressively low-budget fragments of 80s ninja exploitation operating entirely on raw enthusiasm, and that enthusiasm becomes impossible to resist.

The Pain of Belonging Somewhere Temporary

Villa 187

The most striking thing about VILLA 187 is how quickly it strips away the illusion that permanence actually exists. A phone notification, a family receiving life-changing news, the realization that decades spent building a home can suddenly become fragile overnight. From there, Eiman Mirghani constructs a documentary that feels less like a recollection and more like an emotional aftershock still unfolding.

A Love Letter to Spaces That Refuse to Die

The Floor Remembers

THE FLOOR REMEMBERS understands something that a lot of documentaries about disappearing spaces tend to miss: nostalgia alone isn’t enough. Simply reminding audiences that something once mattered doesn’t automatically make it meaningful. Jayme Kaye Gershen’s short never treats the Miami Roller Rink (Hot Wheels Skating Center) (Super Wheels) as a museum frozen in time. The rink isn’t presented as a relic. It’s alive, active, loud, and constantly moving. The film isn’t mourning a dead culture. It’s documenting one that stubbornly refuses to vanish. That distinction gives the documentary its pulse.

A Fable Built From Beauty and Misery

Mariana Ant (Mariana Hormiga)

MARIANA ANT feels like a children’s story that’s been left out in the sun too long. Beneath the handmade fantasy, exaggerated performances, and theatrical surrealism sits something unexpectedly bitter. Maite Uzal and Rubén Pascual Tardío treat the film’s cruelty with complete sincerity, allowing the darker turns to land without softening them through irony or self-awareness. The result is strange, funny, uncomfortable, and occasionally sad in ways that sit with you longer than you’d expect from a sixteen-minute short.