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!

Monday, February 9, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 6 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Dracula
⭐️
🏆"Hurst So Good" Must-See Bad Movie Award🏆
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Luc Besson
Starring:  Caleb Landry Jones, Christoph Waltz, Zoë Bleu, Matilda De Angelis, Ewens Abid, David Shields, Guillaume de Tonquédec


When I talked about Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein movie last year, I lamented that there wasn't a Dracula movie on the horizon.  Little did I know that Luc Besson had already made one and it had already seen release in France, so I stand corrected.  Now having seen it, I'm probably still likely I'm going to pair Del Toro's Frankenstein with Robert Eggers' Nosferatu primarily because they're of similar artistic passion.  Also, Besson's Dracula is hilariously bad.

This version of Dracula leans into that thing a lot of Dracula adaptations do (most notably the Francis Ford Coppola version) that has Mina Harker as the reincarnation of Dracula's past wife, something that was not a thing in the original book.  But most of the key elements are here.  Jonathan Harker meets Dracula, Dracula keeps him prisoner, Dracula travels to Jonathan's homeland (which is France in this version) and preys upon Mina.  It's an altered variation on the book, which seems to be because Besson's vision is trying to be poetic and operatic.  It's impressive how much he fails at it, turning Bram Stoker's gothic entertainer into artless smut.  A sizable percentage of this movie is senseless trash, while a good portion is also endearing kitsch that one wishes the movie exploited more.  There are a lot of scenes in this movie that are inexplicably weird, including impromptu dance numbers and little gargoyle minions, just like Quasimodo in Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame.  And they act like Munchies.

The only component the movie utilizes to it full potential is the typically outstanding Christoph Waltz, who starred in both a Dracula and Frankenstein movie within months of each other, which makes him this generation's Edward Van Sloan and/or Peter Cushing, if you think about it.  He plays the movie's Abraham Van Helsing, though he is not mentioned by name, opting to be a mysterious priest who is searching for vampires.  He's not the only one who is trying to save this movie, either.  The roles of Renfield and Lucy have been combined and replaced by a new character named Maria, played by Matilda de Angelis, who is the one person in this movie having the most fun.  If more people in this movie followed her lead with the campy sex appeal, this movie could probably be glorious.  Sadly, it's stuck behind Caleb Landry Jones as Dracula.  Jones is not a poor casting choice, he's just a boring one.  He brings no, pardon the pun, blood to the role.  He fills a lot of requirements for a good Dracula, he just plays him without personality.  Without a solid lead and severe inconsistency in its camp value, Besson's Dracula is a spectacular misfire from top-to-bottom.  I don't know if it's the worst Dracula movie because I'm not nearly as obsessed with seeking them out like I am with Frankenstein, but of the ones I have seen, it's bottom tier.  But I hear Dario Argento's was worse.  Maybe I should watch that and give this movie a challenger for the title.


The Moment
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Aiden Zamiri
Starring:  Charli XCX, Alexander Skarsgård, Rosanna Arquette, Kate Berlant, Jamie Demetriou, Hailey Benton Gates, Isaac Powell


Pop star Charli XCX stars in this fictionalized drama version of the tail end of "Brat Summer," which people much younger than I am know more about.  All I know is that it happened in 2024 and "brat" was one of those stigma words that was reclaimed and turned into a positive, like us Millenials saying the word "bad" to mean good when we were tweens.  The Moment isn't always firing on all cylanders as a drama.  Charli XCX's idea for this movie seems to be of the psychological pressures of being a pop artist, which is fair enough.  An actual documentary might have been better for what she wants to get across instead of her scripted situations, which often feel like planned stunts.  To be fair, Charli XCX is a pretty compelling lead and her creative frustrations of everything coming together, falling apart, then being reassembled actually lead to an interesting psychoanalysis of the collaborative creative process.  Some aspects of this feel one-dimensional, especially Alexander Skarsgård's director character, who is a one-note douchebag throughout all of his scenes.  I think if Charli XCX managed to flesh out more of this movie, it could be an artistic triumph.  As is, it's an "Almost had it."


Solo Mio
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Romance
Director:  Chuck Kinnane, Dan Kinnane
Starring:  Kevin James, Kim Coates, Nicole Grimaudo, Alyson Hannigan, Jonathan Roumie


Kevin James gets jilted at the alter.  Why?  The movie doesn't seem to care.  It's just a thing that needs to happen so he can be alone and sad in Italy.  He wanders around until he meets a cafe owner that he begins to have a new romantic spark with, and thus romcom blossoms, despite not being very funny nor romantic.  I guess this movie is harmless enough and not unpleasant to watch.  It's just so empty, meandering, and meaningless.  Instead of telling a story, James just wallows in depression about a woman who won't marry him until he stumbles upon a woman who will.  The movie might as well be a bad reality show competition to see who gets to be his replacement wife.  Maybe the movie would be fine if there were any substance to the blooming romantic couple, but their relationship is too plastic to be charming.  It only exists because a broken heart isn't allowed to exist and in RomComLand it demands to be mended instantly.  It's just a hollow approximation of an emotional bond, and if the emotional bond in one of these movies falls flat, then it has nothing to offer.

In the end, if you want a romcom in Italy, there is no shortage of them.  My personal favorite is Roman Holiday, and this one likely won't be the favorite of many.


The Strangers:  Chapter 3
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Renny Harlin
Starring:  Madelaine Petsch, Gabriel Basso, Ema Horvath, Richard Brake, Rachel Shenton, Ella Bruccoleri


In a weird way, this is probably one of my most anticipated movies of the year.  I have become utterly fascinated with the existence of this new Strangers trilogy.  The entire idea is so perplexing to me.  A recognizable and mostly respected horror brand falls into your lap and this is what you chose to do with it?  Craft a three-part story that put on full display just how much you misunderstood the first movie?  I had to bring closure to this, because I just need to see the whole mess, at this point.

Maybe they were counting on people like me to bring in the box office to these movies.

I even went as far to re-watch the last two films in preparation for this.  I didn't really get anything new out of them, though it's weird how noticeably "better" (in a relative term) Chapter 1 is over 2, even though it's just "The Strangers but worse."  What did strike me on re-watch is that Chapter 1 has sturdier plotting, which I realized is because it's using the skeleton of the original movie, so that one thing it does right is not something it can credit to itself.  They finally do their own original take on this story in Chapter 2 and it's just not anything.  It seems to want to be a paranoia thriller but is so distracted by maintaining slasher movie tropes that it never actually soaks in the paranoia.

And now the climax is here.  This movie is guaranteed to suck.  The question is, was there any point to this entire project?  For what it's worth, it's the best of the three films.  Unlike the first, it feels like it has an idea.  Unlike the second, it has a semblance of cohesion.  But it also was set up for failure no matter what movie they made with this one.  The best thing about it is that its honors the previous movies by being terrible.

We last left our exhausted final girl Madelaine Petsch having successfully killed Pin-Up Girl.  Remaining killers Scarecrow and Dollface then take Petsch captive and try to train her to be the new Pin-Up Girl, which is an idea that I'm sure makes sense to them but is in reality really stupid.  The idea of "you killed and now you're a killer" has been done in horror movies before, and much better than it has been done here.  Hell, in this movie it makes even less sense.  They just grab her and put the Pin-Up mask on her, like it's supposed to be Tim Allen's The Santa Clause and she's just supposed to magically turn into a saucy serial killer.

I mean, this kinda happened with Amanda in the original Saw trilogy.  She actually had an arc, though.  This is "You stab someone, you do stab things now."

Probably the most appealing thing about this trilogy is how it seems to have been written with the promise of finally giving a backstory to the serial killers who had no explanation.  The lack of an explanation was kind of their entire point in the first place but we're on the fifth film now, so new info would be kinda nice.  We were teased with Pin-Up flashbacks in the last one, which were odd and simplistic.  This new movie doubles down on it, telling an oddball love story between her and Scarecrow.  And eventually Dollface too, who, spoiler alert, is just some random chick they picked up.  I guess this is as good a backstory as any for them, but the Strangers don't have the personality to carry a Bonnie & Clyde story.  Child's Play characters Chucky and Tiffany, for example, are the right types of personalities for a movie like that.  The Strangers are too static for something like this.  It's like having Michael Myers and Jason Voorhees do Shakespeare.  If you were to ask me what I would have done, I think these sequels would have been better off trying to have Petsch's character try and figure out who the killers are and see that the trail led to mundane people who had normal lives.  That would have been an approach, exploring the abnormal beneath "normalcy."

But no.  The Strangers are just freaks.  And they're obviously freaks, too.  This trilogy feels like it has been trying to subvert the expectations of what we assumed was underneath the original Strangers movie, but all it did was turn it into every other type of slasher movie.  The second movie reveals who Pin-Up Girl is in the first scene, which was the most surprising of any of the killer reveals and they just flat out threw it down like it was notgung.  Then they flaunt the guy who is obviously Scarecrow throughout the rest of the movie, then act like they're being coy about it, only for the third movie to go "Yeah, it's him.  We tricked you, didn't we?"  Then they just rush out a Dollface origin because it feels like they forgot about her.  All of this and a "town lore" too, because it's not enough that the Strangers are just bad people, there has to be a conspiracy around them, too.

If you watched the original Strangers film in 2008 and thought all this shit was going down beneath it, you have a more active imagination than I do.

But at least this movie is something.  The last two movies weren't anything.  So, extra credit for that.  Did I waste my time?  Yes.  Was it mine to waste?  Also, yes.  I needed to see what this was because from minute one I couldn't figure out what they were doing.  Now I know what they were doing and I'm more confused than ever, which means I'm somehow even more obsessed with these three stupid movies.  When something grabs my curiosity, I can't shake that.  Congratulations to this awful trilogy.  You stole my attention, which is the most valuable thing I have.


Whistle
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Corin Hardy
Starring:  Dafne Keen, Sophie Nélisse, Sky Yang, Jhaleil Swaby, Ali Skovbye, Nick Frost, Percy Hynes White, Michelle Fairley


Death comes too soon in this soon-on-Shudder horror flick where a group of teens discover a "death whistle," which summons a ghostly entity and kills the summoner by bringing the moment of their death to the present.  It's a little like Final Destination, except with a physical conduit to revolve around.  Whistle exists squarely in the realm of horror that has a concept and grisly death scenes and serves up little outside of that.  As popcorn horror goes, it's pretty entertaining and a little gross, which makes it efficient despite its lack of ambition.  The movie's major selling point has the characters being chased around by entities that take the form of themselves in what form they would take on the day they die, so if you die of old age, a creepy old person chases you, or if you die in a fire, it's a charred corpse.  There's an allure to that creativity because quite a few of them line up with the context clues given, while one in particular is weirdly specific to act just as an excuse to get someone to randomly combust into a shower of blood.  As horror movie junk food, Whistle can be silly and fun, while it also plays with that moral you'd assume Final Destination would have if their characters weren't all paranoid:  you never know what day death comes, so live in today.  And it also utters an exchange that should be an unofficial slogan of the horror genre:

"What if I don't wanna die?"
"Then you shouldn't have been born."

Art Attack


The Voice of Hind Rajab
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Oscars Nominated:  Best International Feature Film
Genre:  Drama, Thriller
Director:  Kaouther Ben Hania
Starring:  Saja Kilani, Motaz Malhees, Amer Hlehel, Clara Khoury


Here to absolutely wreck us is the Tunisian International Oscar Nominee, which uses the real life audio of a six-year-old girl named Hind Rajab who was trapped in Gaza as Israeli forces killed her family in an attack, leaving her trapped in a car trying to phone for help.  The film dramatizes the Palestinian call center who are trying to send a team to rescue her, facing bureaucratic red tape and logistical hurdles of sending an ambulance into a war zone, where they could theoretically have her out in less than ten minutes, delaying the operation for hours.  This is a difficult film to talk about because it's uniquely frustrating and upsetting, making it worse is the fact that we're reminded every minute that this actually happened because of the actual audio.  What did strike me about this film is that if this were a film made in the USA, it would be a film about the perseverance of rescue teams who put their lives on the line and get results, all for a moment of feel-good hero worship at the end after saving the day.  That's not what this is.  What this movie does is fiercely show the reasons why such efforts feel futile in the moment, knowing that if the plan is executed poorly, more than a little girl might be lost.

If one is sensitive to child endangerment, I highly recommend looking up the story of Hind Rajab before going into this movie because the way things turn out might be difficult for some.  I'm not sure if that's a spoiler or not, but this story is public record and so are the audio recordings, which were released on social media to help push people into action.  Part of me thinks the use of the actual audio is a little ghoulish, but it also hammers in the heartache that the film is trying to provide.  It succeeds.  That's one thing I can say for certain.

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 (N/A)
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 ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Clika ⭐️
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
Iron Lung ⭐️⭐️
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Mercy ⭐️1/2
Send Help ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Shelter ⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
The Dutchman ⭐️1/2
Hamnet ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Plague ⭐️⭐️⭐️
We Bury the Dead ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Physical
Keeper ⭐️⭐️

Coming Soon!

Monday, February 2, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 5 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Iron Lung
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Horror, Science Fiction
Director:  Mark Fischbach
Starring:  Mark Fischbach


YouTube's invasion of movie theaters continues.  Following last year's almost depressing total of three movies directed by content creators (where only one of them was any good), now Mark Fischbach AKA Markiplier throws his hat in the ring.  To make matters worse, his movie is also a video game adaptation.  I just suffered through Return to Silent Hill, somebody kill me now.  Iron Lung is an enclosed space indie horror game that apparently Fischbach is very fond of, so he made it his mission in life to bring it to the big screen, even if he had to write, direct, and star in it himself.  Which he did.

I try not to throw around the phrase "self-indulgent" lightly, but...goddamn, dude.

Iron Lung takes place in the distant future where irrelevant bad stuff has happened.  It's lore so complicated that it takes the Wiki synopsis six full paragraphs to explain it before getting to the actual movie.  Long story short, space colonies dying, ocean of blood for some reason, submarine missions into blood ocean.  Fischbach plays a convict who has been sent into the ocean for a bone sample of a giant creature.  The mission goes sideways, likely because there are giant sea monsters swimming in blood, and now he's trapped on the ocean floor.  But, as important as this mission seems to be, Fischbach's actual set-up seems almost intentionally impractical.  The idea is that he's a disposable asset just dumped in a death trap but given that a lot seems to hinge on his success, you might want to give him a little more to work with than a fancy x-ray camera and lackluster navigation.  That in mind, the movie isn't without its interesting qualities, being that of a slow-burn, enclosed space thriller.  The film's biggest problem lies with pacing, where the film circles itself in redundancies until it finally stumbles to a bizarre conclusion.  A good half hour of this movie could be cut and all you would lose is dead air and irrelevant psychological mumbling to oneself.

On the positive side, Fischbach does carry the film quite well and he throws himself into the role.  Direction is not without promise, though sequences where the little sub is capsizing fail to convince because while Fischbach does commit to flinging himself around, cinematography is so inert that it feels as if nothing is happening.  Some of the film's camera pics are suitably creepy, even if the film is not very scary.  There is probably something promising here, though Iron Lung feels like the most base version of it.  It's full of nonsense and doesn't really support the elements it needs to to succeed bit I can't say the movie is actually a failure.


Shelter
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Action, Thriller
Director:  Ric Roman Waugh
Starring:  Jason Statham, Bodhi Rae Breathnach, Bill Nighy, Naomi Ackie, Daniel Mays


Jason Statham is back and playing the most Jason Statham character of all time, a former Black Ops agent who is now on the run from the government who used to employ him.  His cover is finally blown when an orphan girl stumbles into his life, and the duo go on the run together.  Insert gunplay and father figure allegories.  Shelter meets pretty much most standards that it sets for itself, exceeding at very few of them.  The action is solid, though the plotting is safe, generic, and not very elaborate.  We get details to help understand why this is all happening but not enough for it to really be juicy.  The flavor of the movie instead lies in Statham's relationship with Bodhi Rae Breathnach, who didn't get the memo that she is in a time-killing action movie and decides to go for a heavily emotional performance.  Breathnach steals the movie and makes it more heartfelt than it should be.  I never thought I'd be able to say a Jason Statham thriller succeeded in getting me emotionally invested but Shelter proved me wrong.  If the rest of the movie lived up to that, this movie could have been quite exceptional.


Tafiti:  Across the Desert
⭐️
Genre:  Adventure, Comedy
Director:  Nina Wels
Starring:  Cosima Henman, Bürger Lars Dietrich


It's hard to imagine that Tafiti:  Across the Desert's inception was anything other than "store brand Timon and Pumba," as a meerkat and a hog go on a comedic adventure.  It's primary selling point is likely to be reminding young children that The Lion King exists and this might be something similar.  Tafiti is a meerkat who journeys across a desert to find a blue flower to save his ill grandfather, joined by Bristles, a goofy pig with a good heart that Tafiti has been conditioned by his family to avoid.  The moral of the movie is the idea of trusting and making friends outside of one's comfort zone but it chooses to word this through a character who is warned "Don't trust strangers" then finding out strangers are good actually.  Y'all really need to reword this message because impressing upon young children the idea that strangers just want to be their friend is very dangerous.  On top of that, as children's entertainment, the movie isn't very good.  It's comedy is oddball and often just trying to be gross for the sake of being gross while its adventure aspects are pretty barren, meaning the movie fails with both its moral center and it's entertainment value.  If a children's film can do neither, it's value is nothing.


Worldbreaker
⭐️
Genre:  Science Fiction, Horror
Director:  Brad Anderson
Starring:  Luke Evans, Milla Jovovich, Billie Boullet


A Quiet Place meets The Last of Us in this personality-lacking misfire where Luke Evans survives the apocalypse with his teenage daughter on an island while wife Milla Jovavich leads a girl-power army against giant bug critters that can turn men and sometimes women (but not always) into mutant monsters.  The movie is really weird about this tidbit of worldbuilding because one would assume this would be setting up some sort of storyline about procreation and species survival but the movie has little value in it.  The only reason it's brought up is so it can have the image of an all-women army at the beginning of the movie.  Otherwise, it plays very loosely with this "sometimes" rule that doesn't have any bearing on what is actually happening.  Most of the movie is Evans training his daughter and telling her tall tales, which doesn't amount to much.  Nothing in this movie does, to be honest.  The movie feels like it doesn't have a story to tell.  It mumbles out lore and hopes people find it cool enough to not notice that nothing is happening.  It doesn't really start to come alive until the last ten minutes when the movie finally makes it understood what it thinks it's doing, being a tale of parentage and how they influence the person we become and the great things we might accomplish.  It's a shame it's not in a better movie because young actress Billie Boullet is really throwing herself into this role and occasionally the movie throws in some horror framing that is inspired.  The movie is eighty minutes of dud and about five minutes of "Yeah, I guess."

Oscar's Trash Can


If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Oscars Nominated:  Best Actress in a Leading Role - Rose Byrne
Genre:  Drama, Comedy
Director:  Mary Bronstein
Starring:  Rose Byrne, Conan O'Brien, Danielle Macdonald, Christian Slater, A$AP Rocky


Adulting is hard.  Rose Byrne gets it.  This movie sees her as a mom on the edge, dealing with a flooded apartment, an ill child, an absent husband, a disengaged therapist, and her own therapy clients who are piling their own problems on her when she can't even figure out her own shit.  That dam is about to burst, and we witness the catastrophic act happen as Byrne is constantly screaming for help at those who could listen yet nobody will answer.  The movie also takes into account self-responsibility, as a good chunk of Byrne's spiraling is within her control but she indulges herself for the sake of taking the edge off (a little wine, a little weed, a little black market substance abuse).  The film is very visceral in its depiction of life becoming too much for one person to handle, at times probably so much so that it can be difficult to take in.  It's a movie that every mom should probably watch.  It will induce one of two reactions.  The first is a traumatic response, where it physically hurts them to watch it because they don't want to think about this crap.  Or they'll just look at it and go "Oh my god, I feel seen."


It Was Just an Accident
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Oscars Nominated:  Best Writing (Original Screenplay, Best International Feature Film
Genre:  Drama, Thriller
Director:  Jafar Panahi
Starring:  Vahid Mobasseri, Mariam Afshari, Ibrahim Azizi, Madison Pakbaten, Majid Panahi, Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr, Delnaz Najafi, Afssaneh Najmabadi, Georges Hashemzadeh


It Was Just an Accident begins with a mother calming her child after her husband accidentally hits a dog with their car, claiming that somehow that was a part of God's plan and they just need to see how it unfolds.  God's plan, as it happens, is kinda weird, because that accident starts a domino effect that results in the man being kidnapped by Iranian prison camp survivors who accuse him of being an ranking official who tortured them.

I gotta admit, when I looked at the poster, this is not what I assumed this movie would be about.  Consider my expectations thoroughly subverted.

This is the latest film from renegade Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, claimed by France for International Oscar contention because, like most of Panahi's works, the Iranian government would rather see it burn than be an awards contender.  As per usual, the film is a scathing commentary of the regime of Panahi's home country while also being a story about trauma, what we are able to move past and what stays with us.  There comes a point in the film whether it doesn't seem to matter whether the man is who these people suspect him to be because he is representing a conduit for past horrors that haunt them.  The movie is very unpredictable and emotionally engaging, with the only sour mark being that it stalls as the second act is booting up, going through one too many variations of "Is it him?"/"I don't know."  It's a hurdle that's well worth getting past because the whole package is pretty fabulous.


The Perfect Neighbor
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Oscars Nominated:  Best Documentary Feature Film
Genre:  Documentary
Director:  Geeta Gandbhir
Starring:  Ajike Shantrell Owens, Susan Lorincz


The Perfect Neighbour starts out like the worst episode of Cops you've ever seen.  It's a lot of frivolous calls to the police from Susan Lorincz, a woman who doesn't seem to know how the suburbs work.  Told mostly through bodycam footage, we come out to her house time and time again to hear her complain about her neighbors, while her neighbors offer up more reasonable stories along with frustration over her attitude.  Did I mention she's white and they're African American?  Stick a pin in that because that might be important.  Anyway, we see these mundane complaints over and over until it's not a mundane complaint anymore.  One night, the cops come because shots are fired and Ajike Shantrell Owens has been killed.  Susan Lorincz is now detained for manslaughter, claiming self-defense.  The Perfect Neighbour is an analysis of the escalating situation, from the minor complaints to her eventual trial.  The film is primarily a criticism of Florida's Stand Your Ground laws which open up the question of whether or not she was within her rights to just open fire because she felt threatened.  She says she was.  Following the psychology of Lorincz is an interesting avenue because my impression of her is that she is prone to lashing out through traumatic stress responses, and when addressing people of authority, she tends to scale-down of her own actions while hyperbolizing other people into being the aggressors.  This is pretty much confirmed when she is informed of her arrest and she just freezes in place, telling the officers that she won't comply, turning the tragedy on its head and trying to recontextualize it in her own perceived victimhood.  Then there is the underlining racism of what is going on, which remains subtextual until the question of the "n-word" being used in the confrontations with her neighbors is raised.  She claims that she never used it but if she did, she used it in the proper context that her upbringing defined, which is the most telling statement she makes.

The film's motions of viewing the process of such a situation proves to be very timely, considering the recent violence in Minnesota that is also not seeing proper justice being served.  The Perfect Neighbour is frustrating in how gently the authorities treat this woman, which could be because of her age but could also easily be because she's white.  The fact that justice seems to be weening her is angering.  This movie is at times fascinating, perplexing, and ultimately just downright upsetting.  It's a tough watch if you have any sort of empathy.

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 (N/A)
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 (N/A)
Weapons ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Anaconda ⭐️⭐️
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Clika ⭐️
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Mercy ⭐️1/2
Send Help ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Testament of Ann Lee ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Anaconda ⭐️⭐️
Ella McCay ⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Physical

Coming Soon!

Monday, January 26, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 4 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Clika
⭐️
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Michael Greene
Starring:  Jay Dee, Laura Lopez, Peter Greene, Eric Roberts


Clika is a movie that seems to be made by music producers trying to sell a new artist named Jay Dee.  I don't know why they think they'll sell music with a cliche amateur drama but at least this movie is more coherent than Hurry Up Tomorrow, so Jay Dee can say he did at least one thing better than The Weeknd.  Jay Dee stars as a peach farmer who becomes a parttime drug runner to make money fast so he can work on his music or something.  To be frank, this movie comes off as a fake soap opera that would be playing on TV in other movies.  Jay Dee doesn't sell it, as he is a flat actor with no charisma who is just floating around from place to place.  The film looks and feels like a dailies reel of random scenes the director collected because they needed to shoot something because they'd otherwise get fired, tied together with a rambling narration in hopes to convince the audience that there is a narrative.  There is nothing of value in this movie, especially since its primary purpose is to sell Jay Dee albums and it doesn't even show off his music that well.  I don't know what they expected me to get out of this movie.  The moral of this movie seems to be you can get rich by either selling drugs or becoming instantly famous, so do one or both.  And with that money you can buy a Playstation 5.  Thanks for the advice.


H Is for Hawk
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Philippa Lowthorpe
Starring:  Claire Foy, Brendan Gleeson, Denise Gough, Sam Spruell, Lindsay Duncan


Based on the autobiography of the same name, Claire Foy stars as writer Helen Macdonald, who is grieving the death of their father and during this period, they train a Goshawk as a companion.  This is a movie made for people who like watching movies breathe, as the film progresses with a soft casualness.  It almost produces a feeling of lost daze, replicating the uncertainty of its main character, sparking to life during the hawk training scenes because those are the points where they feel alive.  It's a quality drama, though its grief themes are similar to many movies of its type, which makes the film a bit small potatoes in the wider picture.  Whether one appreciates it will likely depend on if one resonates with the journey, and there is enough humanity here to make it worth a look.


Mercy
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Science Fiction, Mystery
Director:  Timur Bekmambetov
Starring:  Chris Pratt, Rebecca Ferguson, Kali Reis, Annabelle Wallis, Chris Sullivan, Kylie Rogers


Look, all I'm saying is that if I had only ninety minutes to live, I'd want to spend it staring at Rebecca Ferguson too.  That's the starting idea behind Mercy, where Ferguson plays an AI judge who is tells Chris Pratt that he has an hour-and-a-half to prove that he's innocent of a crime that he is accused of.  The entire idea is weird, if only because ninety minutes is a bullshit amount of time to do an actual investigation, let alone put together a defense strategy.  But it's kind of a high concept idea that you need to roll with because, if done well, a movie like this could underline how important due process is.  That's something the movie seems aware of, though opening with lines of dialogue like "guilty until proven innocent" are probably way too on-the-nose.  Still, I was willing to enjoy the ride, even if the movie had little to offer than to be a dumber variation on movies like Minority Report and Source Code, with a dash of Searching for good measure.  For a good hour, the movie had base entertainment value, telling a real time investigative mystery that also had satirical commentary on the differences between the ways a human intelligence acts and an artificial intelligence acts.  These are all good qualities no matter how redundant a movie is.  When its third act begins, the movie starts to get loopy.  The investigation begins piling on too many twists that start to become absurd and it starts getting flummoxed, seemingly unsure of how it's supposed to end.  The movie's mistakes are summed up when it empathizes Ferguson's AI character.  She becomes so humanized that it feels like the movie has completely forgotten it's entire point.  When a movie undercuts itself that thoroughly in the home stretch, it's hard to really maintain enthusiasm for it.


Return to Silent Hill
⭐️
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Christophe Gans
Starring:  Jeremy Irvine, Hannah Emily Anderson


Silent Hill is a video game series that I have very limited exposure to.  I know that they exist, are very foggy, and apparently get much, much worse as they go.  That's it.  I saw the original film adaptation when it hit DVD in 2006 and remember next to nothing about it except that I found it very dumb and boring.  That movie has accumulated a decent cult fanbase over the years, mostly of Silent Hill video game players who say it's a faithful recreation of the series.  I don't know if this means the games are also dumb and boring but that's what I've assumed.  There was a sequel that I never watched, but everyone hated it so I probably didn't miss out.  Now there is a brand new "true" sequel directly based on the original Silent Hill 2 that was made by the original creatives of the first movie, and that game is hailed as one of the greatest video games ever made.  Everyone hates this one too.

I feel like I just can't win here.

For what it's worth, Return to Silent Hill features few references to the previous films, so I there was little reason to be lost from that perspective.  But don't worry because the movie will totally confuse you of its own accord.  The story is mostly just surrealism without a plot, but what little that is here has to do with some guy who journeys into the foggy spot of oddities to find his missing girlfriend.  It's very clear that his girlfriend is likely dead and he knows it, but shush, let the man have his mental breakdown in peace.  Once we get to Silent Hill, we find that the town is littered with monsters, glossy backdrops, and populated by randos that either have bad hair or bad wigs.  As to why it's like this, there is no explanation present in this particular movie.  There might have been one in the first one or the video games, but Silent Hill in this movie is mostly an excuse for a surrealist grief and PTSD metaphor than anything to be taken literally.  I can get behind that but I also need the movie to put in the work.  Surrealism is something that can get out of hand quite easily, and if you don't check yourself, you're going to find that it can turn into nonsense pretty easily.  Return to Silent Hill turns into a barrage of baffling bullshit almost as swiftly as it begins and doesn't even have the buffer of being well-made to sugarcoat it.  The movie looks like ass, is poorly acted, and it isn't even fun to try and decipher because it's both obvious in its themes and perplexing in its execution.  I just can't with this movie.

I feel like when I put up with a movie this nonsensical, the only way to address it is in a nonsensical way.  Ergo, if you were to ask me my thoughts on this movie, my response has to be that the CGI spider had a nice ass.


Send Help
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Thriller
Director:  Sam Raimi
Starring:  Rachel McAdams, Dylan O'Brien


An early access screening for the new Sam Raimi movie?  I am so there!  And he's back doing what he does best, as Rachel McAdams survives a plane crash with her asshole boss Dylan O'Brien.  Between this and Red Eye, McAdams should really start avoiding planes altogether.  But as the sole survivors on an island, McAdams suddenly finds herself in a position of power as she clearly has better survival skills than her boss does.  The film is clearly about the nature of power dynamics and what skills are treasured in civilization as opposed to nature.  That's clear just from the advertisements.  What the advertisements don't show is just how funny the movie is, to the point that its comedy outweighs it's thriller elements.  The first act is pure cringe comedy, as McAdams stumbles through work in her socially awkward way.  The second sees her flip the power arrangement on its head and show that she's now in her element.  The third act is pure Sam Raimi chaos, offering up unpredictable turns and absolute splatstick comedy, making this the purest Raimi film since Drag Me to Hell.  Send Help also parallels that film in thematic ways, being about "weak" people proving strength through cruelty.  It's his patented "revenge of the meek" story, probably in its purest form because this film relies heavily on a power struggle between the abrasive and the soft-spoken.  Who wins?  Whoever bleeds less.  Those who know what a Raimi film looks like will get exactly what that promises.  Those who don't should be warned that the movie is much wackier (and bloodier) than you'd assume but is absolutely worth the ride.


The Testament of Ann Lee
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama, Musical
Director:  Mona Fastvold
Starring:  Amanda Seyfried, Thomasin McKenzie, Lewis Pullman, Stacy Martin, Tim Blake Nelson, Christopher Abbott


Oh, good.  It's a movie about religious zealots.  My favorite thing ever.

The Testament of Ann Lee is a semi-musical biography of the the titular founder of the "Shaker" sect of Christianity, notable for practicing celibacy and pacifism.  This group is much smaller today.  Who would have thought that not having sex would have led to a lack of population?  But the movie treats it's subject with respect, choosing to focus on the Ann Lee's life with a lens of fascination.  And it is a pretty interesting life, and her story allows the filmmakers to explore a variety of topics including the religious fanaticism, influence of personal experience on spirituality, oppression of sexuality, spreading gospel, and martyrdom.  What the movie chooses to really lean into is the way the church-goers pray, with a very seismic-like body movements, which the movie uses as an excuse to portray through elaborate dance choreography.  This is also the thing that makes me not want to think about this movie ever again.  I appreciate how exceptionally passionate and well-made the movie is, but the amount of chanting, lunging, flailing, and wailing in the movie's setpieces makes the experience of watching it almost like being trapped with Florence Pugh in Midsommar.  I'll be honest, this movie gave me a headache.  Technically, this movie is great and I should be singing it's praises but I also need to point out that it's an excruciating experience.  I hesitate in saying it's for the right reasons because I'm not convinced the movie knows how shrill it can get when it's fully locked in on what it's doing.  Because of that, I can recommend the movie but only just barely, because I never want to watch it again.

Oscar's Trash Can


KPop Demon Hunters
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Oscars Nominated:  Best Animated Feature Film, Best Music (Original Song) - "Golden"
Genre:  Musical, Action, Comedy, Horror
Director:  Maggie Kang, Chris Appelhans
Starring:  Arden Cho, Ahn Hyo-seop, May Hong, Yunjin Kim, Daniel Dae Kim, Ken Jeong, Lee Byung-hun


Full disclosure, I didn't know KPop Demon Hunters was a thing until well past when it dropped.  I'm pretty sure I heard the title at some point but I think I got it confused with Demon Slayer and thought it was a movie spin-off of an anime show that I didn't watch.  At some point in the aftermath, it became clear that not only was this movie a thing, it was the thing.  It was the one movie of 2025 that was rivaling Sinners as the defining cultural touchstone film of the year.  I probably would have watched it earlier but never found the time and I knew I was going to likely watch it for the Oscar roundup anyway, so here I am.  I know nothing about KPop except what I learned from Joy Ride, but I'm going to give this everything I've got.  Let's do this.

I'm going to tell my children that these were the KPop Demon Hunters.

The titular KPop Demon Hunters are a trio known as Huntrix, who entertain the world with their music by day and fight demons by night.  The demons then eventually fight back by creating their own KPop boy band to steal the fans that give them power.  I think there is more to it but the lore of the film is so fast and loose that it's hard to grasp at times.  Huntrix seems convinced that by winning some award they'll be able to seal off the demon world.  I might have missed something, or it's the power of fan love or whatever, but I'm not exactly clear on why that would be a thing.  The movie is very vague and a little scatterbrained, often feeling like it was getting distracted from its own plotline for the sake of digressive humor.  The good news is that a lot of the humor is very funny, but it just seems nothing is getting accomplished at times.

The aspect that resonates most is that it's pure visual stimulus.  The movie itself is the visualized vibrations of an actual pop concert, Korean or otherwise.  And in premise, the movie is the most Buffy the Vampire Slayer-coded thing I've seen since Buffy the Vampire Slayer.  I grew up with a lot of things like KPop Demon Hunters, so it's easy to see why it's so beloved.  I think it was too busy massaging my eyeballs to tell when it was losing me mentally.  That being said, I'd watch it again because it's a little bit of a blast.


Train Dreams
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Oscars Nominated:  Best Picture, Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay), Best Cinematography, Best Music (Original Song) - "Train Dreams"
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Clint Bentley
Starring:  Joel Edgerton, Felicity Jones, Nathaniel Arcond, Clifton Collins Jr., John Diehl, Paul Schneider, Kerry Condon, William H. Macy


Netflix's third big Oscar contender probably has less of a shot at taking home a trophy than Frankenstein or KPop Demon Hunters but it's worth checking out what is probably the least talked about Best Picture nominee on the list.  The movie centers on a logger in early 20th century who lives a quiet life away from civilization.  The film celebrates the undervalued and unwritten people who lived their lives and left this Earth, not leaving a legacy other than being here.  The film starts out about a simple life but becomes about just continuing past the point where your concieved purpose might have long past.  Contemplative, melancholy, and sometimes just downright sad, the movie is a rather enveloping work that sucks you in with its quiet study of the "unimportant."  It might frustrate some with its lack of a traditional plot structure, and is often lacking closure on a lot of elements, but all of this is with purpose as it tells the story of someone who might have walked into someone else's life but kept his own to himself.

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 (N/A)
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 (N/A)
It Was Just an Accident (N/A)
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 Neighbour (N/A)
Perfectly a Strangeness (N/A)
Retirement Plan (N/A)
The Secret Agent (N/A)
Sentimental Value ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Singers (N/A)
Sinners ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Sirât (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 (N/A)
Weapons ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Anaconda ⭐️⭐️
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Dead Man's Wire ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Hamnet ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
Is This Thing On? ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
No Other Choice ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
One Battle After Another ⭐️⭐️1/2
Primate ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sinners ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital

New To Physical
Fackham Hall ⭐️⭐️1/2
One Battle After Another ⭐️⭐️1/2
Roofman ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Truth & Treason ⭐️⭐️1/2
Wicked:  For Good ⭐️⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!