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Vigilante Justice Challenges Perceptions

No Dogs Die

When a detective thriller tackles the complicated morality behind justice and vengeance from a unique angle, it’s already doing something right. NO DOGS DIE does exactly that by introducing us to a murder mystery that doesn't just rely on standard plot devices, instead making the unusual disappearance of the victims’ dogs its defining detail. Detective Williams (William Christopher Watson), a man whose compassion for animals shapes his character, immediately draws us into this intriguing, morally ambiguous storyline. Rather than serving up a typical whodunit, the film questions the nature of justice, highlighting the thin line between avenging wrongdoing and committing wrong.

Displaced in Time, Rooted in Emotion

Nova

Imagine waking up one day and realizing the world went ahead without you—and you didn’t even get the memo. That's the jumping-off point in a sci-fi drama without flashy effects or convoluted time loops. Instead, it turns its focus inward, where the stakes are personal, the pain is quiet, and the urgency is emotional. This one opts for something softer, stranger, and ultimately more human in a genre that often leans on spectacle.

Discovering the Heartbeat of Rock’s Greatest Hits

Count Me In

The spotlight rarely lands on the rhythm keepers of music—the drummers who often lurk quietly behind their kits, overshadowed by guitarists or vocalists. Mark Lo aims to flip that script with COUNT ME IN, a lively documentary designed to let these percussionists take center stage. The movie immediately creates an inviting atmosphere, connecting us all to something familiar. This down-to-earth entry point effectively humanizes its featured artists, showing them as relatable people before revealing their transformation into musical legends.

Good Setup, Uneven Execution, Mixed Results

Black Cab

Sometimes, the simplest premises lead to the most memorable scares—a late-night taxi ride gone wrong is exactly the kind of nightmare scenario that sparks the imagination. BLACK CAB, directed by Bruce Goodison, attempts to turn everyday anxiety into a chilling supernatural thriller. On paper, it's exactly the unsettling setup that audiences love: a bickering couple, Anne and Patrick, find themselves trapped in a cab whose driver has sinister motives. Unfortunately, this intriguing concept struggles to live up to its promise, leaving viewers more confused than genuinely frightened.

Resistance Looks Different in Every Frame

There's Still Tomorrow (C'è ancora domani) (DVD)

Few debuts land with this kind of purpose. From its first moments, THERE’S STILL TOMORROW declares itself a work that knows exactly what it wants to be and how to say it. On the surface, it’s a post-war character study about a woman trapped in an oppressive world—but at its core, it’s a defiant character drama with a spark of rebellion, guided by a confident directorial hand and a strong sense of visual storytelling.

When Past Meets Present: a Tale of Two Friends

Sacramento

There’s something oddly refreshing about watching two characters stumble through emotions with all the grace of a GPS recalculating your route. SACRAMENTO isn’t trying to revolutionize comedy/drama—it doesn’t have to. Instead, it plays with tone, structure, and character work in a way that feels intentionally grounded. It’s not a loud film, but that’s part of the charm: it speaks in quiet, sometimes awkward truths about the bonds we let fade and the moments we try to stitch them back together.

Justice Gets Messy With No Rules

Warden

Occasionally, we get a superhero story that doesn’t try to be bigger—it tries to be something more. WARDEN doesn’t concern itself with world-ending threats or galaxy-spanning villains. It takes the cape-and-power fantasy and reimagines it with a distinctly human lens, stripped of grandeur and spectacle. By shaping the narrative through a faux-documentary style, it doesn’t ask what we’d do with powers—but what the world would do about them.

When Your Past Comes Armed and Dangerous

The Long Kiss Goodnight [Limited Edition]

What begins like a domestic drama with a twist of mystery quickly snowballs into a full-blown genre blender with car chases, explosions, espionage reveals, and a buddy-cop vibe that’s more screwball than procedural. THE LONG KISS GOODNIGHT is the film that doesn’t care if you’re keeping up—it’s too busy shifting gears mid-scene and throwing taunts between gunfire.

Forgiveness Doesn’t Come Easy or Cheap

The Eel (Unagi)

Sometimes, the most gripping character dramas unfold not through grand gestures or declarations but in the quietness of everyday life. This story operates with a deceptive simplicity, following a man who’s already faced judgment, served his time, and now lives in the shadow of a single irreversible act. That premise could’ve leaned heavily into melodrama, but instead, what unfolds is a subdued, oddly moving portrait of conflict, caution, and rebirth. THE EEL offers a kind of cinematic slow burn that doesn’t demand your attention with dissonance but earns it through atmosphere, subtlety, and human truth.

Brawls, Bikes, and Backflips

The Lady Is the Boss (Zhang men ren)

Martial arts comedy and ‘80s chaos collide in a wild genre experiment that doesn't always know where it's headed but barrels forward with enough charm, swing, and creative mayhem to stay entertaining. THE LADY IS THE BOSS isn’t trying to be sleek—it’s a bit awkward, very loud, and often off-balance, but that ends up being part of the fun. It might not land every punch, but it throws enough of them unexpectedly to leave a lasting impression.

The Cost of a Better Tomorrow

Hong Kong, Hong Kong (Nam yi nui)

Sometimes, a studio swerves just enough off its usual track to catch you by surprise, and that’s exactly what happens with HONG KONG, HONG KONG. Released in 1983 during a turning point for the Shaw Brothers studio, this gritty, character-driven drama trades out flying kicks and choreographed mayhem for something more grounded and personal. It’s a film about survival—not in the stylized sense we usually expect from Shaw Brothers—but in the unglamorous, day-to-day grind of scraping by on the edge of a city that doesn’t make space for the desperate. The story offers no easy answers, but it leans into the power of storytelling to shine a light on the lives lived just outside the frame of prosperity.

When the Industry Refused to Listen

Goodbye Horses: The Many Lives of Q Lazzarus

What begins as a search for a singer behind a cult track quietly morphs into a moving exploration of identity, loss, and reemergence. GOODBYE HORSES: THE MANY LIVES OF Q LAZZARUS doesn’t unfold like a traditional music documentary—it gradually shapes itself into a deeper reflection on how voices get silenced and what it means to be heard finally. Its stripped-down production and heartfelt storytelling strike a chord long after the credits roll. Even if you don’t recognize the artist or the song's name, I can almost guarantee you’ve heard this song!

The Sinister Side of Pursuing Happiness

Best Wishes to All (Mina ni sachi are)

BEST WISHES TO ALL sneaks up on you. It starts with a familiar tone that makes you almost forget you're watching a horror movie—until it flips expectations in the most unsettling ways. What begins as a slow, quiet visit to the countryside soon morphs into something much darker, asking serious questions about the cost of happiness and who ends up paying for it. Yûta Shimotsu doesn't just want to creep you out—he wants to make you uncomfortable in the deepest ways possible.

Local Drama Outshines the Main Event

The Spirit of Halloweentown

Nobody planned for a Disney Channel movie to shape a town's economic and cultural identity for decades, but that happened in St. Helens, Oregon. In the late '90s, it played host to a modest made-for-TV Halloween movie (full disclosure, I’m a huge fan of the entire HALLOWEENTOWN series), and a lifetime later, it now puts on an elaborate multi-week celebration rooted in that film’s legacy. THE SPIRIT OF HALLOWEENTOWN sets out to document this phenomenon, peeling back the layers of a community that chose to build an identity from the bones of nostalgic pop culture. While the premise should’ve provided fantastic footing for a compelling exploration, the film too often dances around its strongest elements, leaving behind a slightly scattered but occasionally charming portrait.

Be Careful What You Bargain For

Rumpelstiltskin

RUMPELSTILTSKIN charges headfirst into the idea of taking a tale that’s long been tucked away in childhood memory and handing it over to the horror genre—complete with its darker roots intact. This version doesn’t try to soften the impact. Instead, it digs its claws into themes of control, survival, and systemic cruelty, swapping out fairy dust for blood-soaked desperation. Even without a big studio budget, Andy Edwards pulls off something that feels scrappy and deliberate. It is a gritty genre exercise that’s as interested in power dynamics as it is in goblins and spinning wheels.

A Haunting Look at the Price of Relevance

The Ego Death of Queen Cecilia

If a fall from grace used to come with front-page headlines, now it’s more likely to be buried under an outdated YouTube banner and a forgotten TikTok soundbite. THE EGO DEATH OF QUEEN CECILIA takes that modern tragedy and crafts it into a gripping, sometimes bleak, sometimes darkly funny drama that pushes its central character to the brink of obscurity—and then keeps going. This isn’t a story about losing relevance. It’s about how dangerously easy it is to think relevance is all you have.

When Auditions Turn Into a Fight for Survival

A Certain Method

There’s something uniquely thrilling about watching a film embrace its weirdness with a full heart—and then use it to say something real. A CERTAIN METHOD is a story that sneaks up on you with a wild premise and turns it into a biting reflection on creative survival instead of playing it for cheap thrills. This sort of horror-comedy hybrid has more to say than you'd expect—and says it with just enough madness to leave a lasting mark.

Sex Work, Power, and the Weight of Survival

The Oldest Profession (Confidential: Secret Market)

There’s a certain kind of movie that doesn’t try to grab your attention—it slowly pulls you into its characters until you’re trapped in its perspective. THE OLDEST PROFESSION fits that mold perfectly. Marketed under a label associated with erotica, this 1974 entry is anything but ordinary. It takes the studio-mandated requirements—frequent sex scenes, provocative settings—and flips them into something bolder, more unsettling. The result is less about desire and more about survival, with a story that digs into exploitation and social abandonment systems with a sharp, unflinching eye.

Pressure, Identity, and the Space Between

One Day This Kid

ONE DAY THIS KID doesn’t just tell a story—it gives you the sense that you’ve been allowed to overhear something rarely said out loud. There’s an unassuming boldness in how it moves, scene by scene, not trying to strike but instead asking you to reflect, to remember, and maybe even to see yourself differently. It’s not concerned with checking boxes or fitting into the usual dramatics—it’s focused on truth, the quiet kind often ignored in favor of something more polished. And that truth hits hard.

Unveiling the Real Woman Behind the Fame

Liza: A Truly Terrific Absolutely True Story

Few Hollywood stories capture as much heart, grit, and glamour as the life of Liza Minnelli, and Bruce David Klein’s documentary LIZA: A TRULY TERRIFIC ABSOLUTELY TRUE STORY does an impressive job balancing the spectacle with personal sincerity. Rather than just another celebrity documentary ticking off career highlights, this one offers a fresh perspective on what makes Minnelli an unforgettable entertainer and an intriguing human being. Klein carefully crafts a narrative that feels like discovering the person behind the performer, rather than merely a chronological account of her celebrity status.

Birthday Bash Becomes Nightmare on Wheels

Don't Turn Out the Lights

DON’T TURN OUT THE LIGHTS opens with a clever sleight-of-hand. Right from the opening scene—a child's gentle humming twisted into something quietly menacing—there’s a promise that the film intends to keep you with that uneasy feeling. This supernatural horror outing is ambitious in its attempt to fuse familiar scary-movie tropes with an unnerving, closed-in atmosphere, though it stumbles more often than succeeds.

When Opposites Attract and Cultures Collide

A Nice Indian Boy

Romantic comedies often promise a charming escape but rarely deliver something genuinely memorable. Too often, they're predictable, serving familiar scenarios without depth. Yet, a film surprises us now and then—not by reinventing the genre but by genuinely investing in its characters, creating authentic and relatable connections. Roshan Sethi’s A NICE INDIAN BOY is a delightful surprise, blending humor and genuine emotion within a vibrant exploration of culture, identity, and the modern dating experience.

Punk, Rap, and Redemption Collide

Freaky Tales

The kind of project that only gets made when two directors cash in on their blockbuster cred and decide to get weird, FREAKY TALES is the right kind of chaos. Directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, this multi-genre anthology doesn’t just look back at 1987 Oakland—it energizes it. It’s messy, loud, and a little all over the place. But it’s also bursting with creative vision, cultural specificity, and a refreshing willingness to take wild swings. It’s the kind that doesn’t always hit center field, but the crowd still jumps out of their seats.