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.
How much discomfort do we tolerate in everyday interactions before acknowledging that something is actually wrong? That uneasy question is the core powering WITH ARMS RAISED, a short that understands something basic about fear; it doesn’t always equal a jump or a scream. Sometimes it shows up as forced friendliness, awkward laughter, and a driver who keeps choosing to “smooth things over” because that feels safer than honesty.
What does it mean to bear witness when the world would rather move on, and what responsibility does that place on the person who survived when so many others didn’t? ELIE WIESEL: SOUL ON FIRE builds itself around that question with a permanence that feels both deliberate and necessary, refusing to frame the tale with moral clarity. Rather than positioning Wiesel as a fixed historical icon, the film presents him as a man shaped by memory that never stopped encroaching, a survivor who understood that remembrance was not a passive act but a discipline that had to be practiced, defended, and repeated even when audiences grew tired of listening.
"Photographer Breaks in New Model" is a hot, surprisingly nuanced take on the classic MILF-and-young-stud dynamic, elevated by a stellar performance from the legendary Tiffany Foxx. The scene operates on two levels: a straightforward, high-energy fuck fest, and as a clever, behind-the-scenes tutorial on the art of porn performance itself. Tiffany isn't just a performer; she's a seasoned veteran, an award-winning model-turned-photographer who sees raw potential in the brand-new Rico Hernandez. Her decision to "show him the ropes" is the perfect narrative twist, transforming the encounter from a simple casting couch scenario into an intimate, master-apprentice workshop where the subject is the art of fucking.
Do stories survive because they are remembered, or because forgetting them would force us to confront what we’ve lost? There’s a specific level of creative ambition that rarely survives modern distribution models. It’s the kind that assumes an audience is willing to listen actively, sit with ideas, and follow a work through tonal shifts without being held by the hand. THE MUSEUM OF THE OMNIVERSE: DRAGON EXHIBIT lives in that space. It isn’t content designed for multitasking or background consumption. It’s an audio anthology that asks for time, attention, and curiosity, then rewards those investments with a structured experience that feels intentional and deeply human.
What if Camelot wasn’t merely a presidency remembered, but an image constructed, shaped by a man whose camera defined how a nation would remember its promise? CAPTURING KENNEDY understands something many documentaries miss: history is not only determined by events, but by who is allowed close enough to witness them. This film doesn’t position itself as another examination of the Kennedy presidency, nor does it attempt to reexamine a legacy that has already been dissected from every imaginable angle. Instead, it shifts perspective, placing the camera in the hands of a man whose proximity to power shaped how the world remembers an era. That choice proves to be the film’s greatest strength.
OUTLAWS & LAWMEN: 10 TV WESTERNS COLLECTION was never trying to reinvent the genre or reframe the mythology of the American frontier. What it does instead is something far more honest and, in many ways, more valuable. It preserves a specific era of television storytelling where character, restraint, and moral clarity mattered more than excess or revisionism. This is a collection that understands the Western as a space for reflection as much as for action, and its cumulative effect is stronger than any single title. I’ll be the first to admit that westerns aren’t my favorite genre. Still, there was something uniquely telling about how these films built upon one another into a collection with a distinct voice and an experience that knew what it was trying to get across.
THE SHOP ON HIDDEN LANE feels like a novel written by an author who knows exactly what her audience expects and still finds room to refine the formula. Jayne Ann Krentz has spent decades balancing romantic tension with mystery and paranormal intrigue, and this entry reflects a writer who understands how to let the genre enhance the story rather than overwhelm it. The result is a confident, engaging read that rewards patience and attention without demanding prior knowledge of her wider universe. Which is good, I haven’t read any of the previous books, but I felt like the story was self-contained enough that I wasn’t missing out. I am curious, though, I would love to know what type of connections there are!
Season two of THE HUNTING PARTY manages to tackle something the first season only flirted with: confidence. Where season one often felt like a show still negotiating its identity, balancing high-concept aspirations against procedural awareness, the sophomore run tightens its grip and commits to what makes the series so compelling. This is no longer just a crime show with a clever hook. It’s a story about institutional rot, moral compromise, and the psychological toll of treating human beings as problems to be managed rather than lives to be reckoned with.
OBEX is a unique viewing experience in almost every way. The black-and-white imagery, the deliberate stillness, and the tactile presence of outdated technology all suggest it's not interested in guiding an audience. Instead, it asks for patience, curiosity, and a willingness to sit inside discomfort. Albert Birney has built a career around idiosyncratic, deeply personal projects, and this feels like one of his most distilled expressions yet; intimate, strange, and intentionally alienating in ways that feel purposeful rather than careless.
THE R.I.P MAN comes onto the scene with grandiose ideas of franchise aspirations (and to be fair, the sequel is already in pre-production). From its title to its marketing language, this is a film that wants to introduce a new horror villain, one meant to linger, provoke, and justify sequels. Unfortunately, what it delivers instead is a rough, uneven slasher whose central idea never quite survives contact with execution.
STORK OF HOPE carries an enormous emotional burden, one shared by countless World War II dramas before it. What distinguishes it, and what ultimately limits it, is its determination to frame unimaginable trauma through gentleness rather than confrontation. This is a film driven by memory and moral clarity, one that prioritizes accessibility over historical abrasion, sometimes to its benefit and sometimes to its detriment.
JAMARCUS ROSE & DA 5 BULLET HOLES never pretends to be interested in reassurance. From its first frames to its devastating last, the film positions hope as fragile, real, and deeply vulnerable to interruption. What makes the short hit as hard as it does isn’t just the tragedy at its center, but the care taken to make that tragedy feel preventable right up until the instant it isn’t.
“I have had it with these motherfucking snakes on this motherfucking plane!” That line of dialogue, although not from the original screenplay, may indeed be more famous than the film itself. SNAKES ON A PLANE exists in a very specific cultural moment; it’s less a movie than a reaction, a studio scrambling to harness lightning in a bottle after the internet decided the title alone was enough to justify the experience. That context matters because it explains both why the film works at all and why it never fully becomes the unhinged cult object people remember it as. The movie knows what audiences want; the problem is that it rarely goes far enough to give it to them truly.
Hong Kong crime films don’t just flirt with darkness; they commit to it, then keep tightening the screws until everyone on screen is running on instinct. ON THE RUN fits that mold with a deep confidence. It’s harsh and emotionally damaged; the movie doesn’t ask you to admire its heroes so much as understand why they stop believing the system will ever protect them. What makes it connect is how it blends procedural paranoia with full-on survival mode; it’s not a showcase for flashy set pieces, it’s a pressure cooker where every decision feels like it could cost a life.
There’s a confidence to BEEN HERE STAY HERE that shows itself almost immediately. Not through urgency, not through performance, and certainly not through the familiar checklist of talking points that dominate so much climate-focused nonfiction. Instead, the film settles in, measured and observant, and asks something far more radical of its audience: to listen without preparing a rebuttal. (trust me, that’s harder than I thought!)