Monday, March 2, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 9 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Dreams
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Michel Franco
Starring:  Jessica Chastain, Isaac Hernández, Rupert Friend


Jessica Chastain is having an affair with illegal immigrant ballet dancer Isaac Hernández who she maintains a controlling relationship over.  It's hard to put this movie in a box because I can't quite tell what the intent is.  It's not a movie about ballet.  It's not an erotic thriller.  It's not a story about immigration.  I think it's a steamy sex drama about a toxic power dynamics but it's more interested in the sex than giving the relationship any actual depth.  The movie only has a pulse when it's about frentic fucking, with Chastain and Hernández stripped naked and pawing at each other, faces dug deep into each other's naughty bits.  The film treats everything else is just something to get through until they get naked again.  The lack of real dramatic power hinders the film, especially since Chastain brings her game to her socialite seductress while Hernández feels like a clueless participant.  Hernández is a talented dancer but he's not a very confident actor.  He offers the screen a well-toned body dry-humping Chastain and not much else.  Too much of the movie rides on the shoulders of an admittedly handsome player who just isn't ineresting.  It's a movie that seems written entirely around its ending, which takes some dark and taboo twists and turns that not everybody will be okay with.  When it's just a movie about Chastain graphically describing a blowjob, the movie is serviceable.


Pillion
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Harry Lighton
Starring:  Harry Melling, Alexander Skarsgård


If you ever watched Harry Potter when you were younger and thought to yourself "These movies would be better if everyone was adult LGBTQ, the wizard school was a sex dungeon, and Dudley showed his bare ass in every scene," do I have a movie for you.  Harry Melling plays a shy gay man who meets intimidating hunk Alexander Skarsgård, who takes Melling in as his live-in BDSM sex pet.  Like Dreams, Pillion is about sexual power dynamics, though Pillion is more disecting of them.  Pillion is very into the relationship of the dominating and the submissive, particularly the latter.  Melling is portrayed as a introvert, desperately seeking a romantic connection and, when he finally finds one, it's in a man who's only interested in a relationship where domineering control of the weaker partner is the point.  Melling is both uneasy about it while also pretty into it, which likely has to do with his coddled lifestyle before this point.  There is some agitation, as Melling isn't entirely uncomfortable with the dynamic but grows concerned with the coldness of relationship, longing for something emotional to go with the physical.  It's not quite a love story, but it's an interesting story that examines sex's relationship to love and whether one can be fulfilling without the other.


Scream 7
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Horror, Mystery
Director:  Kevin Williamson
Starring:  Neve Campbell, Courtney Cox, Isabel May, Matthew Lillard, Roger L. Jackson, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Mason Gooding, Joel McHale, Anna Camp, Mckenna Grace, Celeste O'Connor, Michelle Randolph, Jimmy Tatro, Asa Germann, Sam Rechner, Mark Consuelos, Tim Simons


Oh boy.  It's another one of those "elephant in the room" movies, where something about it probably needs to be addressed when bringing it up.  The production of Scream 7 has been so rife with so much toxicity that one wouldn't be blamed for backing away from the movie and just saying "No."  The obvious instance is the firing of Melissa Barrera, who was let go for a sharing "controversial" political opinion that is, in all honesty, boiled down to "Maybe war crimes are bad."  The entire situation was tactlessly handled by the studioheads, with their public shaming of her being one of the grossest things I've ever seen producers do in full view of the public.  With the fallout of that particular incident, it would be easy to wash one's hands of this movie entirely.  Less public was the interchanging directors for the film, with Radio Silence confirming in the book Your Favorite Scary Movie that they were pretty much left behind by the studio because they wanted to make the movie Abigail before they made Scream 7 while the studio wanted to fast-track another movie, which is somewhat ironic because Scream 7 stalled and delayed immediately after the Barrera incident and they would have had plenty of time to finish that and come back.  Instead, Happy Death Day director Christopher Landon was brought on board to meet the deadline, only to leave the movie because of the studio decision to fire Barrera really gutted the story he wanted to tell.  Eventually, the film rebuilt itself at the hands of two people the franchise had previously wronged in the past:  Neve Campbell, who was lowballed in her salary negotiation for her unrealized role in Scream VI, and Kevin Williamson, the original writer of the Scream franchise who sold his rights to the series off after the hellish experience of making Scream 4.  By bringing Campbell and Williamson back, the producers made the bold declaration that they were making amends for the wrongs of the past and exploit these people to cover their asses for the wrongs they were currently doing. 

I swear, between this and the Weinsteins, the Scream franchise really needs to stop being owned by awful people.

I did have an internal discussion with myself over whether I was going to see this movie.  The conclusion I came to is that the creative forces who came in to ultimately make the movie are innocent.  I was interested in what their creative output would be, even if the road to it was a complete bloodtrail.  Was Scream 7 worth all of this?

Sigh.

Okay, let's unpack this.  Scream 7 returns the focus to our favorite final girl Sidney Prescott, who is raising her own teenage daughter, Tatum (named after Rose McGowen's ill-fated character in the original film).  But, you guessed it, a new Ghostface is in town, killing teens at Tatum's high school.  Sydney is extra troubled by this new killer, who claims to be Stu Macher, one of the thought-to-be-deceased killers from the original film.  Sydney races to save her daughter and find out if the killer actually is Stu or if this is an elaborate ruse using A.I.

It's a pretty okay premise, though I'm not sure if I gel with it.  Scream works best when it's a commentary on what the horror genre is currently doing.  Scream 7's meta seems start with A.I., but that's not really horror commentary but future doom-and-gloom culture commentary.  It's not nothing because you can see where they find a Scream movie within it, but it's also not fully developed to work within the stylings of this franchise.  The movie would have been a gutsier turn if it had sidelined the A.I. concept, at least for half the movie, and worked with the mystery of maybe it is Stu until there is reason to belive that it's not him.  But the movie pretty much injects the deep fake concept pretty quickly, which makes Matthew Lillard's return to this franchise feel much more hollow than Skeet Ulrich's return in the previous two films.

But as a horror ride, Scream 7 is pretty okay.  Mostly.  This is only Kevin Williamson's second film as a director, after 1999's heavily butchered Teaching Mrs. Tingle.  He has some good instincts for suspense, though I admit to missing Radio Silence's more brutal contemporary take on this franchise, whereas Williamson feels like a step back to the 90's.  The movie is watchable in the same way Scream 4 is watchable, it's cozy without much reinvention.  That's not exactly a problem, because Scream movies have survived through-the-motions presentations before by absolutely nailing the third act.  Scream 7 could have too but hinders itself with the most trash killer reveal of the entire series.  The finale of this movie completely shits its pants.  I'll admit that I had the killer(s) pegged early on (which is actually true of 5 and 6 also, but I was less underwhelmed by those), mostly because I had the thought of "This is an interesting actor/actress for this nothing role, I bet they're the killer" and I also caught an obvious lie in their dialogue.  The only thing I didn't have was a motive.  When the mask comes off and the monologue begins, it's just the stupidest shit I've ever heard.  And I've already sat through "We met on Reddit and hate Rian Johnson" in these movies.  That is the deathblow to any enthusiasm I might have for this movie.  The best things about any Scream movie are the prologue and the climax.  The prologue in this one is fine.  It's not as good as the sixth movie's.  Or the fifth's.  Or any of the other ones.  It's probably the worst prologue but it's a solid setpiece.  The climax, on the other hand, is atrocious.  Those two facts make this the worst Scream movie.

If you're one who loves this franchise but is really struggling with the idea of supporting this particular one, I think you can safely stay home.  Scream 7 has some inspiration but it's never used where it counts.  The entire franchise might have been better off just trying to reboot itself again instead of rushing out something half-baked.  But here we are and the damage is done.  Maybe Scream 8 will be less controversial and actually good.  Or maybe that's asking too much.


Undercard
⭐️
Genre:  Drama, Sports
Director:  Tamika Miller
Starring:  Wanda Sykes, Bentley Green, Roselyn Sánchez, Berto Colón, Estella Kahiha, Xavier Mills, William Stanford Davis


This melodramatic misfire stars Wanda Sykes as a fight trainer struggling with sobriety who desires to reconnect with her son, who is also an up-and-coming boxer.  Sykes is going for a career best performance.  If the production applied itself as hard as her then maybe this movie wouldn't be this fucking boring.  Dullness dooms this movie about recovering from substance abuse and trying to reclaim your life, telling a familiar tale in a weak fashion.  The writing is bland and basic throughout, sometimes rushing through plot points while sticking with the mundane, thinking it's exploring humanity but actually just feeding a soap opera.  The movie does have some zest when it comes to the climactic boxing scene, but it's also just the climax of Rocky or Creed in a dumber package.  I threw in the towel on this one long before it was over.

Netflix & Chill


Frankenstein's Bride
⭐️
Streaming On:  VOD
Genre:  Horror, Action
Director:  Erica Duke
Starring:  Emma de Maria, Tayla Cecere, Nick Launchberry, Connor Kennedy, Lucas Andrews, Lisa Fanto, Rob Wells, Joshua Davies-Thane


Our friends over at the Asylum, the studio that brought us the MST3K classic Atlantic Rim, just dropped their latest mockbuster, this time riding off the coattails of Maggie Gyllenhaal's The Bride! next week.  Guess who paid money to watch this?


I don't always watch their movies but I'm always interested (read:  lightly amused) to hear what's going on at this little studio.  Even still, I don't think I have a definite set of rules as to what I will sit down and watch from them.  I think I'm willing to give them a look if I find the title ticklish (like a Sharknado) or if they're ripping off a movie where an ultra-low budget version sounds really funny to me (like an Atlantic Rim).  I also will probably sit down and watch them if their idea is just really weird (like that time they did a Sherlock Holmes movie with a dinosaur).  Then there are cases like Frankenstein's Bride, where it's tangential to some sort of intellectual property that I have a great fondness for.  The idea of Asylum doing a Frankenstein movie sounded interesting enough to me, but the idea of Asylum doing a Bride of Frankenstein movie...well, that's an instant purchase.  Asylum doing their wonky movies based on public domain gothic literature feels like it's something that they could have chased long ago, but the sad fact is that they leech off of the marketing campaigns of movies much bigger than them and they probably wouldn't assume they could sell them.

If only Asylum did their own version of Wuthering Heights to pair with the Margot Robbie movie.  Just think of how insane that would be.

Asylum's take on the Frankenstein tale starts off at the wedding of the Monster and the Bride, with Victor Frankenstein himself consecrating the marriage personally (not just a mad scientist, he's also a priest, apparently).  The nuptials are stormed by a gang of ruffians, who claim they are the angry cousins of Henry Clerval, which is the first point in the movie where I laughed out loud.  If you haven't read the Frankenstein novel, Henry Clerval is Victor's best friend, who was ignorant of the experiments and was murdered by the monster because Victor decided against creation of the Bride.  The idea that Victor is so in favor of Monster/Bride love and Henry is still murdered for some reason, providing a doorway into a group of antagonist characters was really funny to me.  It turns out that the Henry of this movie was more of a sinister accomplice and sought to use Victor's work to make himself immortal and awaken an army of corpses to do his bidding.

I'm going to consider this official Mary Shelley canon from now on.

So anyway, the Clerval gang kills the monster, burns the Bride alive, and kidnaps Victor so he will tell them his secrets and resurrect Henry.  Meanwhile, the Bride is rescued by the family of the blind man the Monster befriended (we know he's blind because the movie wraps his face with a blindfold, otherwise we wouldn't be able to tell).  She then goes on a rampage to take out all of the Clervals and rescue Frankenstein so he'll bring her husband back to life.

So...

...this is certainly...

...a take...

It's not the dumbest thing I've seen a movie do with the Frankenstein storyline (I Frankenstein is probably still reigning champion), though there are certainly some, shall we say, "creative spins" on the Frankenstein mythos.  There seems to be vague familiarity with the source material, by which I mean it feels like people maybe skimmed it and tried to bluff their way through a grade school book report once.  The movie isn't so much a sequel to the Frankenstein tale that we know but rather a sequel to a Frankenstein tale they made up in their heads.  To be fair, the movie does explain its new lore.  Eventually.  The movie takes for granted that everyone knows certain things about Frankenstein, and it's probably right.  Ideas about Frankenstein are iconic:  the Monster, the Bride, the blind man, ect.  However, it's also a mistake because if you don't know this story, you won't know what the hell is going on, and if you do, you still be confused because it is borrowing a handful of elements from the book that it reinterprets for its own needs but it keeps the specifics of its reinterpretation to itself for about an hour.  Victor is less tortured and more optimistic but we don't know this because he has been kidnapped.  The Monster is a person reanimated with memories of his past life but we don't realize this because he is disposed of early in the movie.  Henry is a maniacal evil supervillain.  Pardon us for not knowing this because he's already dead.  The movie eventually lets the audience in on all of this but only after it has run around with its nonsense for a good long while.

I kinda dig that this movie is about the Bride being a rampaging beast who wants revenge on the people who left her for dead.  It feels like Asylum doing their take on Kill Bill or I Spit on Your Grave.  They could have leaned into that more but a good chunk of the movie features the Bride sitting in place, being angry, and eventually the bad guys come to her one by one.  The Bride herself looks like Liza Minnelli with scar make-up glued to her face (sometimes it looks like it came loose and dangles off of her and nobody noticed).  It's pretty funny to watch her stomp around a forest in her tattered mini-dress screaming "CLERVALS!"  There's even a moment where she gets supercharged by electricity and grows to Hulk size to smash an undead army.

That last point draws some contention, though.  I haven't watched Asylum movies in a while, so I haven't been tracking their progress.  Their CGI never looked like anything seen in this movie, though.  This leads me to believe a lot of the effects work in this is AI generated.  This doesn't exactly surprise me.  Asylum seems like the exact type of studio to be an early adopter of AI.  But I get it.  They make cheap movies that nobody takes seriously.  They're pretty much in an "Everything to gain and nothing to lose" mindset because the people who hate Asylum films can't hate them more and the people who actually do enjoy their movies (God bless their souls) probably don't care.  To scold them for this seems pointless.  Still, if you're anti-AI in filmmaking, this movie utilizes a lot of it, especially in the climax with a bunch of zombies fighting a giant woman.  I find myself more charmed by the production when it's just barely under the quality of a syndicated television program in the 90's, utilizing sets that look anacronistic to the time period it's set in, assuming it even has an idea that it's a period piece.

This movie is garbage.  I had a pretty fun time watching it, though.  I watched it because I wanted to see an Asylum Frankenstein movie and to say it wasn't that would be a lie.  I can't make suggestions of what would make it better because Asylum is gonna Asylum.  Love them or hate them, we have to find a way to coexist with them.  They aren't going anywhere.

Oscar Nominations
The Alabama Solution (N/A)
All the Empty Rooms (N/A)
Arco (N/A)
Armed Only with a Camera:  The Life and Death of Brent Renaud (N/A)
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Blue Moon ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Bugonia ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Butcher's Stain ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Butterfly ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Children No More:  "We and Are Gone" (N/A)
Come See Me in the Good Light ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Cutting Through Rocks (N/A)
The Devil Is Busy (N/A)
Diane Warren:  Relentless (N/A)
Elio ⭐️⭐️1/2
F1 ⭐️⭐️
Forevergreen ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Frankenstein ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
A Friend of Dorothy ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Girl Who Cried Pearls ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Hamnet ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
If I Had Legs I'd Kick You ⭐️⭐️⭐️
It Was Just an Accident ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Jane Austen's Period Drama ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Kokuho (N/A)
KPop Demon Hunters ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Lost Bus ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Mr. Nobody Against Putin (N/A)
One Battle After Another ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Perfect Neighbor ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Perfectly a Strangeness (N/A)
Retirement Plan ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Secret Agent (N/A)
Sentimental Value ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Singers ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sinners ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Sirāt (N/A)
The Smashing Machine ⭐️⭐️1/2
Song Sung Blue ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Three Sisters ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Train Dreams ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Ugly Stepsister ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Voice of Hind Rajab ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Weapons ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Crime 101 ⭐️⭐️1/2
GOAT ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Iron Lung ⭐️⭐️
Send Help ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Solo Mio ⭐️⭐️
Wuthering Heights ⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Clika ⭐️
Dead Man's Wire ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Father Mother Sister Brother ⭐️⭐️⭐️
H Is for Hawk ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Shelter ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Voice of Hind Rajab ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!

Monday, February 23, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 8 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


How to Make a Killing
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Thriller
Director:  John Patton Ford
Starring:  Glen Powell, Margaret Qualley, Jessica Henwick, Ed Harris, Bill Camp, Zach Woods, Topher Grace


Glen Powell stands to inherit a lot of money.  There are just a few people in his way.  The bastard offspring of a wealthy family, Powell decides to turn his financial situation around by murdering the line of heirs above him until he becomes sole heir to the fortune.  It seems like a good time at the movies, to me.  Unfortunately, it's a bit of a bland misfire.  The script exists in this odd space where it's amusing but also lazy.  Whether or not it's worth watching depends on whether you can be content with it being the bare minimum without ambition of actually being fun.  What cannot be denied is that it features a stacked cast who all feel like they're ready to bring it at a moment's notice, but they're rarely given much of anything to do that feels worthy of such an acting line-up.  How to Make a Killing could have been a black comedy for the ages.  It settles for being an offbeat distraction that could have been worse but also much better.


Midwinter Break
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Polly Findlay
Starring:  Lesley Manville, Ciarán Hinds, Niamh Cusack


Lesley Manville and Ciarán Hinds play an aged Irish couple who take a trip to Amsterdam, only to be faced with an existential crisis during their getaway.  Quiet and contemplative, and also very short for a movie that is trying to be this deep.  It's interesting how this film will linger on the mundane but rush through some of its most interesting plot developments.  I think that's part of the worn-down and lived-in aesthetic of two people who are used to each other and are at the point where they don't know if spending all that time together was just a waste of their lives or not.  The movie has that going for it, even if it isn't always engaging.  Manville and Hinds do good work with their characters, with Manville spiraling and Hinds at a loss of just what he is supposed to do about it.  They carry the well-intentioned effort across the finish-line, even if it still seems meager.


Psycho Killer
⭐️
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Gavin Polone
Dtarring:  Georgina Campbell, Malcolm McDowell, James Preston Rogers


Second week in a row with a movie starring Georgina Campbell.  Too bad they can't all be winners.  Psycho Killer has her chasing after the titular Psycho Killer, a satan worshiping masked killer who is leaving a trail of bodies in his wake, including her husband.  The most interesting thing about this movie is how long it took to make, evidently in various stages of production for fifteen years before finally being filmed in 2023 and shelved because it just wasn't very good.  One does understand why a serial killer movie from the screenwriter of Se7en is probably always kept on the table but sometimes it's best to cut one's losses, especially when the screenplay is just not very interesting.  Its attempts to be shocking are mundane.  Its confuses mystery with inanity.  It has a woman getting hit by an exploding semi truck by running directly at it screaming like a lunatic, which is pretty hilarious.  Other than that, it's like following someone who is obviously a serial killer but somehow nobody is sus of this guy, looking like Tyler Mane in the Halloween remake only less approachable.  But that's only half of the movie's problems because it's just a half-hearted production.  It's almost impressive how disinterested the movie is with its own premise, plot twists, gruesome violence, and even its own continuity.  If apathy were a style, Psycho Killer would be an Oscar contender.  It's a barren script with a crew that doesn't seem all that committed to it, making it an experience of tossing your hands up and giving up because why should you believe in a movie that doesn't believe in itself.  It doesn't even have Talking Heads' "Psycho Killer" in it.  I don't say this often, but that means that the Vin Diesel movie Bloodshot is a step above it.


This Is Not a Test
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama, Horror
Director:  Adam MacDonald
Starring:  Olivia Holt, Foy Gutierrez, Carson MacCormac, Corteon Moore, Chloe Avakian, Joelle Farrow, Luke MacFarlane


When you're a teenager, everything seems like the end of the world.  What about when the end of the world happens when you're a teenager?  A zombie apocalypse strikes and a group of students barricade themselves inside their high school, an idea that's basically Dawn of the Dead produced by the CW.  The Walking Dead:  World Beyond already cornered that market of teenage angst with undead backdrop, but sure.  Let's see how this plays out.  Not all that differently than you'd expect, showing little innovation for either zombie flicks or high school drama.  But the film is based on a YA novel, so leaning into tropes and melodramatics is to be expected.  It's those melodramatics that underline most of the film, which is that goth phase "life sucks and I'm sad" vibe.  The film chooses some heavy themes for this, including teenage suicide.  It's the element that seems to be the most central to the plot but it's weirdly underdeveloped.  Main lady lead Olivia Hoult (one of these days her agent is going to stop booking her auditions for high school roles, but that day is not today) has reasons for depression, including abuse and abandonment issues, though her mental process is very muddy throughout most of the movie.  I imagine the source material might have have had more development to what leads her down such dark thoughts but this film is never insightful on the subject.  She's suicidal when it begins and by the end we're supposed to think she's not anymore, though there is little to support that as an actual emotional arc through this story.  It doesn't have the thoughtfulness that such a fragile story deserves.  But if you took it away, the movie would just be a bunch of kids being mopey because people are eating each other outside.  That seems like a genuine reason to be depressed but, according to this movie, it's just an annoyance.  Nobody besides Holt has much of a personality except being sad, angry, and maybe a little horny.  That probably fulfills the desire its audience came for.  That's good because if they came for characterization, they're going to leave pissed.

Art Attack


Oscar Nominated Short Films - Animated

Butterfly
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Based on a true story, this film explores a Jewish Olympic swimmer who lived through the Holocaust.  Beautifully animated using canvas paints, the movie looks like a living piece of amateur artwork that's telling a somber and sad story about life and perseverance.  This is a quality piece.


Forevergreen
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
A bear befriends a pine tree in this touching little film.  The animation feels stopmotion inspired but with a unique CG animation style that also owes a bit to Disney and Pixar in model characterization.  It's brief, happy, sad, and touching, what you'd assume a little cartoon about a bear and a tree would be.


The Girl Who Cried Pearls
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
A dark little fairy tale about a poor boy who was neighbors with a sad girl whose tears turned into pearls, which he sells outside of her knowledge.  Whimsical, if melancholy, easily the most interesting of the animated short selection this year.  The animation is told primarily through dolls, which is either really smooth stop motion or really textured CGI, possibly using digital scanning of handmade dolls.  I can't tell which, which is part of the magic.  The use of CGI to enhance the speech scenes in the bookends is remarkably effective.  One of the most memorable films of the entire Oscar lineup.

Retirement Plan
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Brief short features Domhnall Gleeson as a man daydreaming of his retirement and everything he plans to do, though curiously he might not have enough time to do it.  Creative, though I'm not entirely inspired to remark upon it.  It's easily the least impressionable short I've seen for this year's line-up.


The Three Sisters
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Three sisters live on an island together, and they all begin fighting over a man who has recently moved in.  It's cute and restrained.  It's fun how expressive this story is when it is told through small gestures and grunts.  I enjoyed it.

BONUS SHORT!

Éiru
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
This year's showcase ran short (lol pun), so they threw in a little bonus.  This short I had actually already seen because Éiru was paired with the screening of Little Amélie or the Character of Rain that I went to, which also seemed to be because the film wasn't very long.  Éiru is a tale of a viking child who dreams of becoming a warrior who has to venture out to find out why their village has no water.  It's a very entertaining tale, fueled with little morals of what fuels life and how war takes it away.  It's colorful and vibrant, making it an easy watch with children.

Oscar Nominated Short Films - Live Action

Butcher's Stain
⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Academy very much likes these movies about the collateral damage of Israel's war in Palestine, which finds this short film adjacent to it.  A Palestinian butcher is accused of tearing down a poster of Israeli hostages at his workplace, which he claims innocence of.  The working environment grows more tense as more people see him as an enemy sympathizer.  It's a simplistic look at the prejudice that comes with wartime, where those who sympathize with the people who are hurt by conflict are seen as an "other" and the hurt such a brand does.  There is more that can be said about this that is never touched, but the film only has a basic story of a man who was resented outlined.

A Friend of Dorothy
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Cute story of an old lady who befriends a youth and encourages him to follow his passions.  It has more star power than most of its competition, including Miriam Margolyes and Stephen Frye, though it might be the most basic of the shorts in the line-up.  It's still a very amusing watch.

Jane Austen's Period Drama
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I may not know much about art but I know what is fun, and if Jane Austen's Period Drama isn't the upset of the night, then this entire Oscar thing is a wash and we should erase all of it and start from scratch.  This parody film starts out as a Jane Austen romance themed film with sophomoric double entendre names for every character.  A man is about to propose marriage to his fair maiden, only for him to notice that her dress is stained with blood.  Heroically, he races her to medical care, as she struggles to explain to him why this particular bleeding isn't an emergency.  Nominating Jane Austen's Period Drama for the Best Short Oscar is like nominating Splitsville for Best Picture (which it should have been, but I won't get into that).  The short is so snappy, intelligently constructed in its parody (even with its lowbrow subject matter), and is hilarious from start to finish.  Maintaining that laugh quota from start to finish, even for a twelve-minute film, is a very rare achievement.  The short feels very Monty Python inspired, servicing absurdist comedy against a traditionally dramatic backdrop, highlighted with wry British accents taking the shenanigans just seriously enough to give the punchline more power.  This is superbly done comedy filmmaking, and probably my favorite thing I've seen from the Oscar line-up this year.  Suck it, Hamnet.

Will it win?  What I will say is that it brought the house down at the theater I saw it in.  The mostly full theater roared so loud that I'm sure we missed a few jokes in several spots.  That doesn't guarantee that it will steal the spotlight on the big night, but it was certainly the showcase stealer in that theater.  It's hard to tell where the Academy might swing in the shorts categories because they're pretty inconsistent as to what they favor.  Last year, the award went to I Am Not a Robot, which was easily the most outrageous short of the bunch.  Are they still in that mood?  I would love nothing more than to say this is an Oscar winner, especially when a movie as mid as One Battle After Another is lined up to win Best Picture.  I'd love to have this one little win in a night that's sure to be disappointing.


The Singers
⭐️⭐️⭐️
A lowley tavern full of depressed men holds into a singing contest, which spirals into men impressing each other with their vocals.  Pretty fun, if basic.  The film is about how music provides human connection as we try to drown our sorrows.  Not much to say about it, but it's a good time.

Two People Exchanging Saliva
⭐️⭐️1/2
One of the reasons I always look forward to the annual short film screenings is that I never know what I'm getting.  They're always full of surprises and some are shamelessly weird.  Two People Exchanging Saliva is one of the weirder ones.  This expressionistic flick takes place in a world where kissing (and maybe physical intimacy itself) is forbidden.  Why?  Dunno.  Honestly, the idea is absurd since procreation is a basic key to human survival.  But the discouragement exists here for some reason, as two women fight their romantic attraction to one another in fear of being "boxed."  The use of the queer lensing is interesting because it shapes the movie as a metaphor for being judged for loving the person you have chosen.  This idea is deflated in that everyone is discouraged from loving, including the heteros, so that messaging becomes murky.  Add in the odd little quirks, including the use of slaps as a currency, which I assume is some French thing that flew over my head because I sincerely don't understand what that is supposed to be.  It's certainly the most stereotypical "artsy" movie that has been nominated this year, to the point that it almost feels like a self-parody.  I'd think that this is just me being dense but nobody in my audience seemed to have a positive opinion of this one, even causing a few walk-outs, which is something I've never seen at these short film screenings.  If you can't sit through a half-hour, that probably says something.  It's too bad that those people missed out on Jane Austen's Period Drama because of this one.  But all of this probably means it's going to take home the trophy, because if I don't get it, that means the douchy film nerds probably love it.


Oscar Nominations
The Alabama Solution (N/A)
All the Empty Rooms (N/A)
Arco (N/A)
Armed Only with a Camera:  The Life and Death of Brent Renaud (N/A)
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Blue Moon ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Bugonia ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Butcher's Stain ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Butterfly ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Children No More:  "We and Are Gone" (N/A)
Cutting Through Rocks (N/A)
The Devil Is Busy (N/A)
Diane Warren:  Relentless (N/A)
Elio ⭐️⭐️1/2
F1 ⭐️⭐️
Forevergreen ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Frankenstein ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
A Friend of Dorothy ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Girl Who Cried Pearls ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Hamnet ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
If I Had Legs I'd Kick You ⭐️⭐️⭐️
It Was Just an Accident ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Jane Austen's Period Drama ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Kokuho (N/A)
KPop Demon Hunters ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Lost Bus ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Mr. Nobody Against Putin (N/A)
One Battle After Another ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Perfect Neighbor ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Perfectly a Strangeness (N/A)
Retirement Plan ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Secret Agent (N/A)
Sentimental Value ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Singers ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sinners ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Sirāt (N/A)
The Smashing Machine ⭐️⭐️1/2
Song Sung Blue ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Three Sisters ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Train Dreams ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Two People Exchanging Saliva ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Ugly Stepsister ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Voice of Hind Rajab ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Weapons ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Cold Storage ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Crime 101 ⭐️⭐️1/2
Dracula ⭐️
GOAT ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Iron Lung ⭐️⭐️
Send Help ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Solo Mio ⭐️⭐️
Wuthering Heights ⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Mercy ⭐️1/2

New To Physical
Deathstalker ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Predator:  Badlands ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Regretting You ⭐️⭐️1/2
Rental Family ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sisu:  Road to Revenge ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Song Sung Blue ⭐️⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!

Monday, February 16, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 7 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Cold Storage
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Horror
Director:  Johnny Campbell
Starring:  Georgina Campbell, Joe Keery, Liam Neeson, Sosie Bacon, Vanessa Redgrave, Leslie Manville


Liam Neeson continues to flex his funny bone in parodies of the action/thriller persona that he has developed over the last few decades, here playing a government agent who is the only one in the system who takes a mutated fungus outbreak seriously, aided by two hapless warehouse workers who happen to stumble upon the apocalyptic event.  The movie is basically just Return of the Living Dead but not as full-throttle, offering a lighter and more animated take on a horror/comedy, closer in tone to Slither.  Those who like their spooky laughs to come with gooey gore and rambunctious characters get exactly that.  Characterization and plot may be on the light side, but you'll get fungus zombies exploding left and right.  And isn't that the important thing?


Crime 101
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Thriller
Director:  Bart Layton
Starring:  Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Halle Berry, Barry Keoghan, Monica Barbaro, Nick Nolte, Corey Hawkins, Jennifer Jason Leigh


Chris Hemsworth does crime.  He's good at crime.  And he has a system for it in this thriller that sees him as a serial jewel theif who has contacted disgruntled insurance woman Halle Berry for an inside to his next job while detective Mark Ruffalo follows his pattern.  Crime 101 is a pretty basic crime film, featuring a perfectionist crime master and a cop with a Magnum P.I. mustache.  It has no intention of adding to the formula and there is little argument that it should.  Most of the interest in the film lies in seeing how his next plan begins laying itself out in front of him, seeing Ruffalo connect the dots, and Barry Keoghan storms into the film as a wildcard that will offset both of their missions.  In contrast to the efficiency of the main story, the romance scenes with Monica Barbaro feel in a vacuum and of little value, adding a romantic interest to Hemsworth's character because he's otherwise pretty sexless for such a sexy man.  They are so self-contained and meandering that one wouldn't even be faulted if they theorized that they were late-production reshoots because they don't feel like they were always in this script.  They weren't reshoots, because as far as I can tell Barbaro was in this cast before production began, but they just stick out.  It doesn't hurt the film, except with it being probably a half hour too long and those scenes being easy material to cut.  Still, it's a solid crime flick for people who dig crime flicks.


GOAT
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Sports
Director:  Tyree Dillihay
Starring:  Caleb McLaughlin, Gabrielle Union, Aaron Pierre, Nicola Coughlin, David Harbour, Nick Kroll, Jenifer Lewis, Patton Oswalt, Jelly Roll, Jennifer Hudson, Sherry Cola, Eduardo Franco, Andrew Santino, Bobby Lee, Stephen Curry


Better than you'd expect for a movie whose entire existence is based upon a pun, GOAT is about a young goat who is enlisted for his local professional sports team and surprisingly sparks a winning streak for the failing franchise.  They play a sport called "Roarball," which is just basketball only with quirky hazards like a Mario sports game.  There's not a lot else to say about this movie because it's basically the "fresh blood inspires group of misfits to come together" archetype that most sports movies do in an enjoyable package.  The movie is fun and funny, with messages of teamwork and self-belief for the wee ones.  It's probably a prime counter to either Space Jam movie if you want to watch a family-friendly sports movie, and its vibe is a dash of Kung Fu Panda.  It continues what seems to be Sony's animation division finally finding its niche in the wake of Spider-Verse, Mitchells vs the Machines, and KPop Demon Hunters.  GOAT isn't as good as those movies but it stands tall in its own two shoes.


Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Science Fiction
Director:  Gore Verbinski
Starring:  Sam Rockwell, Haley Lu Richardson, Michael Peña, Zazie Beetz, Asim Chaudhry, Juno Temple


Sam Rockwell is basically John Conner and Kyle Reese rolled into one in this comedy that's basically Terminator meets The World's End.  Rockwell runs into a diner looking like a crazy homeless man, claiming to be from the future, asking attendees to stand up with him and help him prevent the apocalypse that is happening because Gen Z uses smartphones.  This movie feels like a movie I should dig because I love many movies like it but it just did not land for me.  To be frank, this could potentially be the most "old man yells at cloud" movie of the year, telling its satire through the eyes of writers who seem confused and frightened by how different the next few generations are from them and displays it as an enemy to rebel against.  It's chosen lens is a message of the consequences of screen addiction but they way it chooses to frame it make it feel muddled.  This film features smart phones turning people into zombies to war against their elders, which feels like thin-skinned messaging from people who don't like being criticized by teenagers.  But at least that's a coherent message, because another sequence has school shooting victims being cloned and turned into brainless drones that are seemingly Conservative.  I have absolutely no clue what the movie wants me to take away from that.  I can identify individual ideas that they're sending up in this section but they don't go together and the movie just shovels them down it's own throat and vomits them onto the screen, yelling "PARODY" as if that makes it makes sense.  That about sums up my entire experience with this film because it feels like it had a lot of ideas and just threw them out all at once, making its messaging a thick mess of conflicting nonsense.

That's not to say the movie can't be a good time.  I found the movie's more superficial elements to be enjoyable.  If you engage this movie as an idiosyncratic ride as opposed to a work of thematic value, the movie is enjoyable to play with, though two-and-a-half hours is really pushing it for a film like this, especially with so much indulgiant fluff that the movie doesn't need.  But the movie is destined to be that sort of cult classic of people who call it an underground gem, like Cabin in the Woods, another cult classic I didn't care for.  I anticipate that, similarly to Cabin in the Woods, there will be a lot of people shouting how people "don't get" this movie.  Also like Cabin in the Woods, I get it.  It's just not anything worth taking note of.


The Mortuary Assistant
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Jeremiah Kipp
Starring:  Willa Holland, Paul Sparks


We're only halfway through February and we've already had three movies based on horror video games.  I'm hoping this isn't a trend, but if it's going to be, maybe we can squeeze in a better Until Dawn movie somewhere in there.

The Mortuary Assistant centers on a, ya'know, mortuary assistant played by Willa Holland, who finds herself working late one night and in the middle of spooky shenanigans.  Ghosts, demons, possessed corpses, and twitchy guys with giant toothy grins, the works.  And apparently her boss knows what's going on but won't tell her.  What a jerk.  There are things in this movie that work, as some of the film's scare tactics can be rather raw and chilling at times.  The film is more concentrated on style, not noticing that its script is messy and its actors look disengaged.  Holland at least looks as if she's putting in an attempt to fulfill the movie's need from her, but it's constantly switching what it is up on her.  At times, it wants to be a slow-burn psychological haunting and others where it goes full-blown Evil Dead.  The movie switching between the two on a dime is charming in its confidence, even if it overestimates itself.  When it can't tie the two together, the script melts into a messy pile of puss.  The best aspects of the movie make me feel there is something intriguing at its center, though the movie fumbles the ball in trying to do too many things at once.


Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy
Director:  Matt Johnson
Starring:  Matt Johnson, Jay McCarrol, Jared Raab


I don't know what this is.  I enjoyed it, though.  It's like if Spinal Tap and The Office had a socially awkward child who lives in the basement.

I had to go on a rabbit hole hunt to figure out what the hell this was, because I couldn't tell if it was a Nirvana concert or a documentary and the synopsis said some shit about time travel and my head exploded.  Turns out there is the underground Canadian comedy series called Nirvana the Band that started as a webseries in 2007 and eventually became a TV show ten years later called Nirvana the Band the Show.  This whole premise centers on two dudes in Toronto who have a band and are doing absurd publicity stunts to promote it, in a very Lucy Ricardo or Ralph Kramden kind of way.  One of which is calling themselves "Nirvana the Band," which will bring to mind a certain other band called Nirvana.  They do these as little back-and-forths in their apartment or out in the street doing stuff that looks awkward.  Sometimes they incorporate passersby into the bit who are obviously not in on the joke.  It's very Impractical Jokers.  The premise of the movie is a step beyond that, as the duo accidentally turns their RV into a time machine and jumps back into the year 2008, coinciding with the original webseries, which they bump into in a very Back to the Future Part II fashion.

If this whole thing sounds appealing, I bet you'll love this movie.  Most of what was going on flew over my head, but even I had a good time during this.  It's like uncovering some secret that your comedy buff friends have been keeping from you for years and going "Why wasn't I aware of this?  I totally would have binged this with you."  And the good news is that there is a backcatalog to explore now.  It's not a huge one, consisting of eleven ten-minute websites and sixteen half-hours of TV, but its still something that might be worth looking into.  This seems to be a weird project these guys dust off every decade or so.  I guess that means whatever the next incarnation will be will hit in 2035.


Wuthering Heights
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Emerald Fennell
Starring:  Margot Robbie, Jacob Elordi, Hong Chou, Shazad Latif, Alison Oliver, Martin Klunes, Ewen Mitchell


The advertisements for this new adaptation of Wuthering Heights call it "the greatest love story of all time."  Honestly, calling Wuthering Heights that particular statement feels like you read the book upside down.  I mean, technically Wuthering Heights centers on a love story but the book is told through such bitterness and resentment that any notion of "love" in it is suffocated out of it.  It's one of the most passively angry books ever written, which is why it's pretty much a goth community sacred text.  Of course, Wuthering Heights isn't exactly known for its great film adaptations, as most choose to omit the entire second half of the book (including this one), which arguably is the portion that lays out the entire point of the story.  But I think we can all agree that the best adaptation of Wuthering Heights happened within the first five minutes of Evil Dead Rise.

This particular version of Wuthering Heights is brought to us by Emerald Fennell, who brought us Promising Young Woman and Saltburn.  If anybody can deliver something as twisted and toxic as Wuthering Heights to the big screen, it's her.  Like many versions of it, this film concentrates solely on the relationship of Cathy and Heathcliff, two people in love who pushed each other away and only to reunite years later, Cathy married to a man Heathcliff despises, and the tension between the two leads Heathcliff to dark places.  It also leads him to sexy places, as the film basically adds a full blown sexual affair between the pair.  It's here where Fennell starts to lose her grasp on this movie, as she tries to find the Fifty Shades of Grey within the story and it feels like she completely whiffed the ball.  Recontextualizing Whuthering Heights as a sexual awakening story feels like a broken concept to begin with, but if you're going to do it, utilizing Margot Robbie in a role of a naive sexually curious woman is spectacular miscasting.  It's not that she's a thirty-something playing a girl who was nineteen at the height of the book's narrative, it's not the first time Hollywood has done this and it won't be the last, but the use of a modern Hollywood It Girl Sex Symbol for such a role soaks the virginity out of the virgin girl she's supposed to be playing.  Her eyes lack the cautious curiosity that such sequences desire.  She's better at playing the older Cathy, but even with that, while the sex scenes are filmed with ferocity, she and co-star Jacob Elordi don't exactly ignite the screen with chemistry.  I tend to single out Robbie here because Elordi does play Heathcliff with this growing intensity of a love that is making him grow angrier with each passing day where he cannot act on it.  Robbie doesn't give Cathy any such nuance, and while she's serviceable in the role, the only thing she offers the film is star power.

If I'm harping on Robbie too much, then I need to also emphasize that she probably would have been fine if the production weren't frustrating.  Fennell is a confident director and I love that about her, and the vibe she lays down is absolutely the perfect vibe for a Wuthering Heights movie.  When it comes to her own screenplay, it's half the perfect adaptation and half an odd indulgiance of creative liberties that don't pay off in the film's favor.  The fact that the movie is neither one nor the other in its entirety makes watching it a bit of a whirlwind.  I found myself watching this movie going "Oh, that's great" one minute and contrasting with "Um...that was a choice" the next.  You can tell Fennell poured her whole heart into this movie and put passion in the right places, but sometimes got so into the heat of the moment that she gives an interpretation of the story that is a laughable representation of it.  This especially happens deeper into the narrative, as Heathcliff starts to become a more toxic character, as Fennell shows off his toxicity but also softens it by making a recipient of his abuse a more willing participant.  It's a relationship that's trying to be yucky that only comes off as unbalanced for the sake of being weird.  Maybe we should be thankful Fennell opted to not cover the later portion of the book, because Heathcliff's actions get more reprehensible as the story continues and I probably don't want to see what this particular vision of the story would have done with it.

Wuthering Heights a beautiful movie to look at, a messy movie to follow, and a frustrating movie to try and keep on your good side.  I liked just enough of it to think it's probably worth a cautious rental at the very least.  It's certainly provokes a reaction, and that's what Fennell likes to do.

Oscar's Trash Can


Come See Me in the Good Light
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Oscars Nominated:  Best Documentary Feature Film
Genre:  Documentary
Director:  Ryan White
Starring:  Andrea Gibson, Megan Falley


This is one of those documentaries that shows off the last years of a dying person and providing the outlook on life of a person who has reached their sunset.  I'm not sure if it offers anything beyond similar documentaries like this, but it does have a queer icon as it's subject:  spoken word poet Andrea Gibson.  The film follows Gibson and their partner Megan Falley as they navigate the last few years of Gibson's life after they were diagnosed with cancer in 2020.  The film offers up their history in spurts, such as how they got their start in poetry and how they met their partner, though it's not incredibly thorough.  The film is more contemplative than that, mostly sitting with Gibson on their good days where life feels normal and bad days where they're taking in how few days they have left, offering up some of their poetry as transition pieces.  It all comes to a climax as they try to temper their cancer down enough to perform just one last poetry show.  The film offers some nice life-affirming viewpoints in the end, along with a few tears on the way.  Gibson passed away after the film was completed and released to film festivals but before it was released widely.  The film was never updated to make note of this, opting to end their story with the hopeful ideal of every day being a blessing and every single one they had to look forward to being savored.  That's probably the exact message this film needed.

Oscar Nominations
The Alabama Solution (N/A)
All the Empty Rooms (N/A)
Arco (N/A)
Armed Only with a Camera:  The Life and Death of Brent Renaud (N/A)
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Blue Moon ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Bugonia ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Butcher's Stain (N/A)
Cardboard (N/A)
Children No More:  "We and Are Gone" (N/A)
Come See Me in the Good Light ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Cutting Through Rocks (N/A)
The Devil Is Busy (N/A)
Diane Warren:  Relentless (N/A)
Elio ⭐️⭐️1/2
F1 ⭐️⭐️
Forevergreen (N/A)
Frankenstein ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
A Friend of Dorothy (N/A)
The Girl Who Cried Pearls (N/A)
Hamnet ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
If I Had Legs I'd Kick You ⭐️⭐️⭐️
It Was Just an Accident ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Jane Austen's Period Drama (N/A)
Kokuho (N/A)
KPop Demon Hunters ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Lost Bus ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Mr. Nobody Against Putin (N/A)
One Battle After Another ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Perfect Neighbor ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Perfectly a Strangeness (N/A)
Retirement Plan (N/A)
The Secret Agent (N/A)
Sentimental Value ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Singers (N/A)
Sinners ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Sirāt (N/A)
The Smashing Machine ⭐️⭐️1/2
Song Sung Blue ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Three Sisters (N/A)
Train Dreams ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Two People Exchanging Saliva (N/A)
The Ugly Stepsister ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Voice of Hind Rajab ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Weapons ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Dracula ⭐️
Iron Lung ⭐️⭐️
Mercy ⭐️1/2
The Moment ⭐️⭐️1/2
Send Help ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Solo Mio ⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
I Was a Stranger ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Is This Thing On? ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Night Patrol ⭐️1/2
Primate ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Physical
Nuremberg ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Coming Soon!