Monday, March 09, 2026

Rendez-Vous ’26: The Money Maker

One of Czeslaw Jan Bojarski’s forged 1,000 Franc notes sold at auction for 7,000 Euros in 2015. That means it held its value better than the currency Bojarski was counterfeiting. The press dubbed him the “Cezanne of counterfeit money,” but he remained relatively unknown, both inside and outside France, until the domestic release of Jean-Paul Salome’s The Money Maker (a.k.a. the Bojarski Affair), which screens again during the 2026 Rendez-Vous with French Cinema.

Bojarski didn’t exactly chose to live in France. The Polish Home Army veteran eventually landed there after the Nazis and Communists divided up his homeland. To survive, he forged identity papers. Yet, ironically, he remained “undocumented” for the first ten years after the war. Consequently, he was unable to find employment as an engineer. However, his old black-market boss had a job for him.

Frankly, Bojarski never really liked him, so he doesn’t really mind when Commissioner Andre Mattei’s bust turns him into a freelance counterfeiter. Instead of bloody shootouts to hijack paper enroute to the mint (as seen in the prologue), Bojarski devises a way to make his own, repurposing cigarette papers. However, hiding his real business from his French wife Suzanne will be the tricky part—especially when his conspicuous deception puts stress on their marriage.

The Money Maker
might be screening at film festivals, but it is also a movie, in that it serves up an accessible and suspenseful crime story. It has the hubris of high tragedy and the bullet spray of gangster movies. Reportedly, Jean-Pierre Melville was an influence on Salome’s approach, which definitely computes. Yet, what most drives the film is the terrific chemistry shared by Reda Kateb (whom jazz fans will recognize for portraying Django Reinhardt) and Sara Giraudeau, as the Bojarskis. It is a rather appealing romance—that he endangers through his compulsive risk-taking.

Sunday, March 08, 2026

Whoever Steals This Book (NYICFF '26), in Cinema Daily US


WHOEVER STEALS THIS BOOK (screening at NYICFF'26) promotes literacy in a roundabout, counterintuitive way. However, it also has manuy of the staples anime fans love (including shapeshifting, magical libraries, and a plucky young heroine) in an endearing, bittersweet genre-hopping fantasy. CINEMA DAILY US review up here.

Scooby-Doo! & Batman: The Brave and the Bold, on Cartoon Network

Batman has many nicknames: the Caped Crusader, Dark Knight, and World’s Greatest Detective. Mystery Incorporated also has a few: the Scooby Gang and those “meddling kids.” Frankly, Batman kind of likes the last one. They get along fairly well—maybe because this isn’t their first meeting. The characters had crossover team-ups in “The Dynamic Scooby-Doo Affair” and “The Caped Crusader Caper,” two installments of The New Scooby-Doo Movies, which was really just another Scooby TV series, even though it pretended its episodes were movies. Their most recent on-screen collaboration really is a movie—that even had a theatrical premiere before releasing direct-to-DVD. Having laid the groundwork for the Batman & Scooby-Doo Mysteries comic book that launched in 2021 (and still regularly revives with special issues), Jake Castorna’s Scooby-Doo! & Batman: The Brave and the Bold airs this coming Saturday on the Cartoon Network.

Mystery Incorporated’s unmasking successes finally convinced Batman to recruit them for the Mystery Analysts of Gotham City. They simply had to pass a test he arranged with the help of Martian Manhunter and Detective Chimp. Honestly, the real mystery is why Warner Animation hasn’t used Detective Chimp more often. (His guest appearance in
Wonder Woman #16 was a delight.) Then, they gang also must sleuth their way to the meeting, where they also meet the Question, Plastic Man, and Black Canary. As it happens, Fred Jones is totally gob smacked by her, which should put to rest a lot of rumors. For the record, the ascot does not help his cause.

Naturally, they want to help solve Batman’s only unsolved case, which coincidentally might be related to Gotham’s latest break-in. It seems the spectral Crimson Cloak’s theft of radioactive isotopes might be related to the unstable teleportation device from Batman’s notoriously open case. It turns out he saved the wrong lab assistant. The innocent one remains missing in the ether, but the other has been remanded to Arkham Asylum, under the name The Riddler. So off to Arkham they go, even though bad things always happen there.

Obviously, there are a lot of jokes in
Scooby: The Brave and the Bold. It is a Scooby-Doo movie. However, it features the voices of Diedrich Bader and horror legend Jeffrey Combs as Batman and the Question, neither of whom get the credit they deserve for their DC animated work. Indeed, Bader’s Batman hits the right sardonic notes, indicating he is in on the jokes, at least to the extent he is constitutionally capable of acknowledging humor.

Arguably, the one character who suffers from Paul Giacoppo’s screenplay treatment is Aquaman, who comes off looking and sounding like a clumsy, obtuse meathead. Plastic Man is the same Plastic Man from the 1979
Plastic Man Comedy/Adventure Show. On the other hand, Black Canary and the Question should have seen their fandom stock rise from their appearances in this film.

Saturday, March 07, 2026

Doc Fortnight ’26: The Vanishing Point

It didn't start in 2026. It didn’t start with the women life freedom movement. It didn’t even start with the Green protests of 2009. It certainly wasn’t anything Trump created. For decades, Iranians have resisted their oppressive Islamist regime. A painful case in point would be filmmaker Bani Khoshnoudi’s dissident cousin, who was arrested and eventually executed, leaving behind only a small bag of effects. For years, her family grieved her in silence. However, like so many bereaved parents, Khoshnoudi finally speaks out, paying tribute to her cousin and condemning the regime’s human rights abuses in The Vanishing Point, which screens again today as part of the 2026 Documentary Fortnight at MoMA.

In 1988, Khoshnoudi and her husband tried to covertly return to Iran, but she was betrayed by her in-laws. The rest of her life was spent in Evin prison, with no contact with the outside world. When her family retrieved her possessions, they were warned to stay quiet, which they did.

Khoshnoudi, who immigrated to the U.S. with her parents after the 1979 revolution, was banned from returning to Iran in 2009, after directing a film addressing the Green protests. She was probably safer that way, judging from her mother’s anecdote, explaining how she once outsmarted Basij morality police, a story that is both absurdly funny and chillingly frightening.

This film does not focus on Khoshnoudi’s cousin, but she is the inspiration and the catalyst. The grief her family had to hide also helps her relate to the anguished mothers seen in the protest footage she incorporates throughout the film.

Frankly,
The Vanishing Point is a little of this and a little of that. There is visceral video of the Iranian police and Basij militia beating and even shooting protesters at point blank range. There are also family interviews and even meditative interludes filmed in the abandoned homes left behind by dissenting Iranians made to disappear.

Friday, March 06, 2026

My Grandfather is a Nihonjin (NYICFF '26), in Cinema Daily US


MY GRANDFATHER IS A NIHONJIN illuminates the Japnese-Brazilian immigrant experience through its charming hand-drawn animation and vibrant tropical colors. It incorporates very real history in an easily relatable family story. CINEMA DAILY US NYICFF '26 review up here.

Rendez-Vous ’26: The Stranger

Albert Camus never revealed his first name, but the character known simply as Meursault introduced generations of high school students to the concept of existentialism. If you haven’t read The Stranger, then you shame your school district. By its nature, Camus’s novel has bedeviled attempted film adaptations, but Francois Ozon finally embraces its philosophical and psychological essence (at least until he suddenly doesn’t) in The Stranger, which was the opening night film of the 2026 Rendez-Vous with French Cinema.

Meursault’s mother recently died, but it hardly seems to phase him. The French-Algerian settler’s lack of apparent grief is most definitely noticed by the residents of her retirement home—and they will remember it later. Returning to Algiers as if nothing had happened, Meursault spends a day at the beach, where h rekindles a relationship with Marie Cardona, a former co-worker. She clearly considers him a potential future husband, but for Meursault, it is clearly just sex to break up his boredom.

Similarly, Meursault “befriends,” or rather passes the time with his thuggish neighbor Raymond Sintes, because his abusive behavior towards his Arab Algerian lover means nothing to the younger man. However, the vendetta launched by the battered woman’s brother will eventually precipitate a moment of feverish violence that forever changes Meursault’s fate.

So, yes, this is
The Stranger. Plus, Ozon incorporates the narrative of Camus’s The Misunderstanding, which Meursault reads in an old newspaper and philosophically expounds upon when Cardona visits him in prison. Yet, whether Camus would approve of Meursault’s interpretation is highly debatable.

Indeed, Ozon suddenly loses the plot during the third act, while Meursault awaits a ruling on his appeal. Meursault is supposed to exist outside conventional emotions and social niceties. (Indeed, the novel’s title has sometimes been translated as
The Outsider.) He truly lacks the ability to forge human connections and feels no inclination to fake it. There is something unknowable about Meursault. He is simply different (and perversely, perhaps more honest) than the rest of us.

At least that is Camus’s Meursault. In a radical departure from the novel, Ozon suggests late in the eleventh hour that Meursault’s extreme existential aloofness was largely a function of early life trauma. Just like that, the unknowable becomes easy to grasp—arguable even trite and cliched. The “Stranger” is back in the human fold, which irreparable softens the film’s impact, making it all safely digestible.

It is a shame, because Ozon’s
The Stranger could have potentially ranked as the greatest Camus film produced to date. The bracing early discipline, from both Ozon and lead actor Bejamin Voisin, is boldly true to Camus’s vision. Manuel Dacosse’s stark black-and-white cinematography also perfectly suits the story, like a sunny film noir. Truly, every shot was painstakingly composed by Ozon—so much so, true cineastes will find themselves marveling at the film’s austere beauty.

Voisin is also perfectly cast as Meursault. Despite his high-profile work in Apple TV+’s
Careme, he is largely an unknown quantity in the United States and therefore carries no baggage into the film (unlike Marcello Mastroianni in Visconti’s 1967 adaptation). Again, “discipline” is a word that aptly applies to his performance, as well as “brooding intensity.”

Thursday, March 05, 2026

Pendragon Cycle: The Last True Bard

When Merlin talks about the “Summer Kingdom” his tone and imagery are not so different than Ronald Reagan’s vision of a “shining city on a hill.” However, to realize such lofty ambitions, the men of Britain must fight—and many will likely fall in battle. However, if they submit to the Saxons now, all their dreams of independent dignity will surely die. They are not quite ready, but the battle must be joined anyway in “The Last True Bard,” the first season finale of creator Jeremy Boreing’s Pendragon Cycle: The Rise of Merlin (based on Stephen R. Lawhead’s novels) which premieres today on Daily Wire+.

Even though Merlin returns from the North with King Custennin’s reinforcements, King Aureliius’s army is still badly outnumbered. However, desperate times call for desperate battle strategies. Uther and Custennin devise a high-risk plan that could work, but the battle chief would feel more confident if Merlin led their armies—even though a resulting victory would likely elevate him to the throne of Britain’s new High King, rather than his brother, Aurelius. However, this is exactly the kind of temptation Merlin has struggled to resist.

There will be no avoiding the bloodshed in “The Last True Bard,” so fittingly, the final episode is helmed by action movie specialist Jesse V. Johnson. Things will truly get Medieval.
 Yet, the highlight might be Merlin’s inspirational song, which is too haunting to compare to a pre-game pep talk. It is hard to describe, but it might be the best staged scene of the first season.

The finale also drops a small but significant revelation that completely changes viewers’ understanding of many previous scenes—yet it makes perfect sense in the context of the show. The season closer also faithfully reflects the spiritual dimensions of Lawhead’s novels by emphasizing not all conflicts are physical in nature. Tantalizingly, it also leaves viewers wanting more with a massively Arthurian tease for the next anticipated season.

Wednesday, March 04, 2026

The Hunt, on Apple TV+

Sure, Franck and his cronies are French, but they own guns, hunt, and drink heavily, all at the same time. They are not the only ones. During a Sunday hunting excursion, a rough, somewhat legally questionable hunting party opens fire on Franck’s friends, so they shoot back, killing one of them. It was self-defense, but it ignites a feud worthy of hill country in writer-director Cedric Anger’s six-part The Hunt, which (finally) premieres today on Apple TV+.

The Hunt
was delayed several months due to legal issues when the rights holders of Douglas Fairbairn’s novel Shoot and the 1976 film adaptation (starring Cliff Robertson and Ernest Borgnine) objected to similarities. Yes, they share common elements, but if they were truly actionable, hundreds of films should have paid clearance fees to Richard Connell’s estate for The Most Dangerous Game, before it fell out of copyright in 2020.

Regardless, Franck, Xavier, Simon, and Gilles all find themselves in a fire-fight that fateful day. The gang shot first, giving a Xavier a profusely bleeding trump-like bullet wound to the ear, but apparently Franck’s group are more accurate shots. Fearing the consequences of their actions, the ambushed hunters hope to return to their lives and pretend it never happened. However, the outlaws soon start stalking and threatening Franck and friends.

Clearly, Franck is the alpha male of their pack, so the well-heeled hardware store owner takes the lead sleuthing out their rivals. In contrast, Xavier, Simon, and Gilles are all quite sad and rather passive. Leo is easily the next most formidable member of their circle. He did not accompany them on that particular trip, but he immediately rallies behind them. As a medical doctor, he can also treat Xavier’s wounds off the books.

Logically, Franck also has the most to lose, starting with his more sophisticated wife Krystel, Leo’s medical partner. They also have a young son with discipline problems and a teen daughter who just started dating a suspiciously older boyfriend. However, Franck’s greatest vulnerability might be the mistress he has kept out of sight.

Anger’s non-adaptation is a presentable thriller, but a tighter, shorter presentation would have thrilled even more. Frankly, this could and probably should have been a feature, because Anger gives us more than enough scenes of Franck driving on endless errands and tripping around the thugs’ roadhouse. However, the subplot following Krystel’s efforts to find a missing runaway teen pay-off better than expected.

Tuesday, March 03, 2026

NCIS Sydney: South of Nowhere

Considering how many hostile foreign powers are currently targeting the U.S. and our allies, would the Navy’s resources truly be best spent on Antarctic climate research? This episode of CBS’s mega-procedural franchise makes a good case for the negative (probably unintentionally). Regardless, when a wave of violent madness sweeps through the scientific station, NCIS Agent Michelle Mackey’s lucky team happens to be the closest, so they must respond in “South of Nowhere,” the mid-season premiere of creator-showrunner Morgan McNeill’s NCIS Sydney, which premieres tonight on CBS.

According to the initial report, one scientist suddenly went nuts, killing another, but was quickly subdued. However, when Mackey and her team arrive (minus the high-strung Blue Gleeson, who has dog-sitting duties), they find a bloodbath. They immediately suspect an airborne “zombie virus,” until they find a survivor.

Nevertheless, the Agents must make contingencies in case some of their comrades turn into rabid killers. Much to the credit of McNeill and co-writer Josh Sambono, this episode directly references the classic
The Thing Another World. However, given the context, they probably really mean to name-drop John Carpenter’s 1982 re-conception, The Thing, which is also a great film.

Either way, the Antarctic setting is relatively ambitious for a weekly procedural series—even without extensive outdoor location shots. This episode also builds urgency with a countdown to the six months of solstice night due to engulf the polar region in less than four days. As a bonus, it also acknowledges the duplicitous nature of one of Putin’s closest allies.

Monday, March 02, 2026

The Hole: 309 Days Before the Tragedy

Suppose Linton never existed in Wuthering Heights, so Earnshaw arranged a marriage between Catherine and Heathcliff. Then imagine their story turns into a horror movie that culminates in a notorious national trauma. That is the sinister and complicated fate in store for Sugeng and Arum in director-screenwriter Hanung Bramantyo’s The Hole: 309 Days Before the Tragedy, which EST N8 is repping internationally, following its Rotterdam festival premiere.

Lubang Buaya is a village in East Jakarta, not far from an Air Force base, where the Indonesian Communist Party murdered seven Army officers and unleashed chaos during their failed coup attempt. Frankly, the CIA had its doubts regarding the official story, but Sukarno, who had been flirting with the Communists with his anti-imperialist rhetoric, used the incident to decidedly turn against them. Frankly, even when Bramantyo finally reveals all, it is rather hard to see how the Sugeng and Arum’s story ultimately leads into that historical controversy—but somehow it does.

Arguably, even Sugeng’s marriage to Arum seems a little iffy, since Sukarya raised them both as his children. However, since Sugeng, the former street urchin, is not a blood relation, the local Imam gives his blessing. Unfortunately, the celebration will be short-lived. Since he knows the region, the national police assign Sugeng the investigation into the gruesome ritual murders of several prominent local citizens. Tellingly, each victim was denounced by the local Communist newspaper as part of their shameful gang of seven.

That would certainly constitute motive, but it does not explain the spectral woman who starts terrorizing Arum. As the bodies pile up, the Imam suggests it might be the work of curses cast from a Moorish Andalusian book of black magic. There also might be reason to suspect the local Imam could be somewhat complicit in the village’s sins.

Frankly, horror fans should make a point of watching
The Hole whenever the opportunity arises, because it is frighteningly easy to imagine campaigns to censor it, for both religious and political reasons. Bramantyo takes some big, fearless swings and tackles some highly protected sacred cows. Its gutsy filmmaking, to the point of even thrilling with its defiant iconoclasm.

However, Bramantyo still takes care of genre business, building suspense out of an atmosphere of corruption and foreboding. There is definitely bad karma at work, to the point that viewers’ sympathies start to flip, or at least become considerably more complicated.

Sunday, March 01, 2026

NYICFF ’26: The Scarecrows’ Wedding (short)

Who needs a brain, if you’ve already found the one? Harry O’Hay and Betty O’Barley are perfect for each other, but he could lose her, because he is a little slow—in more ways than one. Hopefully the titular ceremony still happens in Samantha Cutler & Jeroen Jaspaert’s animated short, The Scarecrows’ Wedding, the latest BBC & Magic Light Pictures adaptation of a Julia Donaldson children’s book, which screens as part of the Shorts for Tots block at the 2026 New York International Children’s Film Festival.

It used to just be O’Barley in the field, but it attracted more crows than she could shoo, so the farmer added O’Hay. They immediately make a good team. Soon, they also discovered they make a good couple. Despite his shyness, O’Hay proposes and she accepts. Of course, even in a field, a wedding requires a lot of preparation, but unfortunately, O’Hay mistakenly accepts help from some of the lowest animals in the local ecosystem.

His long absence starts to alarm O’Barley, especially when the farmer replaces him with Reginald Rake, a smarmy ladies’ man scarecrow. O’Barley can tell he is bad news, but he keeps hitting on her, in less and less charming ways.

Rob Brydon has been a mainstay of the Magic Light Pictures Donaldson adaptations. In this case, he sounds hilariously sleazy as Rake. He gives this short film the infusion of personality its lead voices, the blandly vanilla Jessie Buckley and Domhnall Gleason can’t supply.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Scream 7, in Cinema Daily US


SCREAM 7 finally understands you can't have a Ghostface rampage without Sidney Prescott. The franchise successfully makes ammends for past on-screen and off-screen blunders by bringing back Neve Campbell and Kevin Williamson for the best installment since the Wes Craven films. CINEMA DAILY US review up here.

Kimo Stamboel’s Janur Ireng: Sewu Dino the Prequel

Sabdo and Intan Kuncoro are like the poor relations of a gothic novel. After their father dies and their house burns down, their wealthy Uncle Arjo takes them into his home. The hyper-class-conscious might suspect the hardscrabble siblings will never be considered full members of Arjo’s family, but their uncle and his wife Lasmini are only too eager to accept them. Of course, there are terrifying reasons for this in Kimo Stamboel’s Janur Ireng: Sewu Dino the Prequel, which just opened in Cambodia and Vietnam (with EST N8 currently repping other territories).

Don’t worry if you haven’t seen Stamboel’s
Sewu Dino. This is the prequel, so newcomers can easily follow the story, based on SimpleMan’s online story (just like Stamboel’s Dancing Village: The Curse Begins)—at least until the final scene somewhat bafflingly links it back to the prior (subsequent) film.

Regardless, orphaned Sabdo and Intan are rather intimidated by their stately new home. Indeed, despite the luxury, the Kuncoro manor absolutely drips with bad vibes. The decidedly gothic set-up soon takes a rather folk horror turn when Uncle Arjo forces Sabdo to sacrifice a goat. In fact, such ceremonies become a bizarrely regular thing.

It turns out their late father had good reasons for cutting ties with his brother’s branch of the family. These Kuncoros are scary people and Sabdo’s prospective role will be especially ominous, involving rites and literal demons. What transpires probably holds a great deal of tragic irony for those who have seen the original
Sewu Dino (which currently streams on Prime). However, it probably lands with even greater force for those who haven’t.

Either way, there is an extended scene of third act lunacy that is so jaw-droppingly over-the-top, it ought to make
Janur Ireng a cult classic and a perennial favorite for midnight movie screenings. You’ll know it when you see it. Yet, before that, Stamboel crafts a moody folk horror film, rich with atmosphere and foreboding.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Baki-Dou: The Invincible Samurai, in Cinema Daily US


Martial arts fans will appreciate how Netflix's BAKI-DOU: THE INVINCIBLE SAMURAI explores the techniques and philosophies of various disciplnes. It even offers some lessons in the history of the Bushido Code, but keep in mind, this action-driven series is all about the fighting. CINEMA DAILY US review up here.

Marshals, in The Epoch Times


CBS's MARSHALS lacks the complexity and biting wit of the original YELLOWSTONE, but it is a rugged, outdoorsy procedural, featuring sympathetic veteran characters, energetically executed action scenes, and an appreciation for the western way of life. EPOCH TIMES review up here.

Capital Irish ’26: Sanatorium

To quote Jobim’s “Waters of March:” “It’s the mud, it’s the mud.” For decades, Ukrainians visited the Kuyalnyk Sanatorium because the mud from the surrounding beaches is thought to have medical value. Traditionally, it served as a combination rehab center and luxury resort. During the Communist Era, only the well-connected could book a room, even though the hulking towers had several thousands. Today, occupancy is below 20%. Understandably, the Russian shelling greatly hurt their business, but even before that, the property had seen better days. Irish filmmaker Gar O’Rourke observes the staff as they try to hold the Kuyalnyk together for another season in the documentary Sanatorium, which screens Sunday during the Capital Irish Film Festival.

When it was constructed, all big Soviet-era buildings were supposed to look like the Kuyalnyk, but time is harsh on this kind of Brutalist architecture. The Soviet construction materials haven’t exactly aged well either. Consequently, Dmitriy, the burly general manager (who seems to hold at least a partial ownership stake), must constantly oversee repairs, which more often involve short-term patches rather than long-term fixes.

The guest rooms are spartan and the common areas look threadbare. Yet, its faded grandeur clearly appeals to some clients. Once you acclimate to the Kuyalnyk, it starts to look and feel like the sort of place where Chekhov characters would settle in for extended residences.

O’Rourke takes a scrupulously observational approach, but he breaks up his shots and seeks out colorful staff conversations.
Sanatorium might be comparatively quiet, but it never qualifies as static “slow cinema.”

Although not entirely preoccupied with Putin’s dirty war, inevitably the war periodically intrudes on the Kuyalnyk and their guests. Anyone who stays for more than a day or two is bound to visit the sanatorium’s bomb shelter. Since the invasion, they have also hosted many rehabbing soldiers.

It seems like the medical director, Dr. Olena, practices legit medicine, but the mud treatments look like big messy placebos. Much of the equipment also appears retro in the wrong kind of way. However, the Kuyalnyk’s repeat customers swear by the mud.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

George Orwell’s Animal Farm, Graphic Novel Adaptation

George Orwell was a socialist, who wrote the most insightful and devastating critique of socialism in the history of English literature. He was complicated. Nevertheless, reports the upcoming animated adaptation of Animal Farm will be reconceived as a satire of corporate capitalism is frankly Orwellian. It is like transmuting Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale into an indictment of radical feminism. Happily, this graphic novel adaptation gets Animal Farm right. Socialism is hypocritical, wasteful, oppressive, and often alarmingly violent in Christina Dumalasova & Katerina Horakova’s faithful adaptation of George Orwell’s Animal Farm, illustrated by Michael Purmensky, which goes on-sale this coming Tuesday.

If you do not the story of
Animal Farm you truly need to read this graphic novel—or better yet, Orwell’s original novella. Regardless, it allegorically represents the Russian Revolution, when the animals of Manor Farm rise up against their abusive drunkard farmer, Mr. Jones.

Inspired by the venerable boar Old Major, the revolution initially appears to be a smashing success. However, once Old Major dies, a power struggle emerges, between two pigs, the earnest Snowball and the Machiavellian Napoleon. Frankly, Snowball might not fully realize he and Napoleon are rivals, until it is too late. Regardless, Napoleon and his sycophant pigs soon consolidate power, with the help of the attack dogs they raised from puppies.

Instead of finally enjoying some rest, the animals find themselves working even longer hours—except the pigs, of course. This seems to contradict the Revolutionary Laws painted on the barn wall, but every time the animals check, they find a mysterious new addendum to explain it away.

Honestly, Dumalasova and Horakova do both Orwell and readers full justice. Their adaptation brilliantly exposes the methods of totalitarian regimes, as well as the ruinous economic implications of socialism. Orwell always described himself as a “democratic socialist” with the emphasis on the democratic, but he constantly cautioned socialism without democratic safeguards would inevitably descend into totalitarianism. Seeing Orwell’s words so vividly illustrated can only inspire skepticism of and aversion to the crooked ideology it ruthlessly satirizes.

Indeed, socialism often gets called out throughout the graphic novel. It also fully explores the corrosive consequences of propaganda. Unlike the 1954 animated film, Purmensky’s animals are never cute. Yet, some, like tireless Boxer the horse, are invested with such dignity, the tragedy of their fates hits even harder.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

How to Shoot a Ghost (short), on Criterion Channel

There are scary ghosts like The Changeling and The Haunting, funny ghosts like Topper and Blythe Spirit, and sad, regretful ghosts like Casy Affleck in A Ghost Story. These two ghosts are definitely the latter. You could almost call them depressing, but they deserve a little slack, since they are newly dead. Sadly, their lives did not work out as they hoped. Spending their afterlives in a strange city also seems like a tough break, but they find some kind of companionship with each other in Charlie Kaufman’s short film How to Shoot a Ghost, which premieres Sunday on Criterion Channel.

He is a translator and she is a photographer, but both were profoundly unhappy. (According to the closing credits, they are Anthi and Rateb, but you wouldn’t know that from listening to their monologues). It seems vaguely implied they both also self-medicated through the hedonistic Athens nightlife, which may have in some ways led to their demise. They were expats largely unfamiliar with the city, but now they are evidently stuck there. Apparently, ghosts can’t travel.

Rather logically, the ancient city has many ghosts (whose pictures Anthi constantly snaps—call it ghost photography), but you’d want to give a lot of them a wide berth. Maybe those are the one screenwriter Eva H.D.’s anti-American narration blames on “CIA torture chambers.” In contrast, she expresses no such sympathy for those assassinated by Communist paramilitaries, like journalist Nicholas Gage’s mother Eleni Gatzoyiannis (as documented in the film
Eleni).

Maybe Kaufman’s short should have talked less, because Ella van der Woude’s score is quite expressive, especially the eloquent tenor, alto, and bass clarinet solos contributed by Hristo Goleminov. Jesse Buckley and Josef Akiki voiceovers for the photographer and the translator are appropriate meditative and mournful, as well. The disembodied rendering of their voices is initially distracting and distancing, but it is also admittedly quite ghostly.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Smother: The Horror of Austrian Motherhood

Michaela is a bad mother, but it runs in the family. Her mother was the notorious crazy lady who killed herself. Maybe being the drunk driver who nearly accidentally killed herself and her daughter isn’t so bad in comparison. It still isn’t great—as her husband constantly reminds her. Regardless, when Michaela finally returns home, she will either face her ghosts or succumb to them in Achmed Abdel-Salam’s Smother, which releases Friday on IndiePix Unlimited.

Hanna still hasn’t forgiven her mother for the accident and her father Alex isn’t exactly letting it go either. Unfortunately, Alex caters to Hanna’s neurotic behavior and psychosomatic illnesses, which dramatically escalated after the incident. However, she enjoys the countryside when the family returns to Michaela’s ancestral home for her grandfather’s funeral.

Michaela hasn’t been home for years—and it is easy to see why. The crass locals still openly gossip about her mother’s notorious suicide. Understandably, Michaela repressed many of her childhood memories of that tragic day, but they start rushing back when she starts seeing vision of her mother. Her Grudge-like mother seems to have unfinished business with her—or maybe Hanna.

Smother
is the kind of so-called “elevated” horror movie that devotes all its time to elevation, shortchanging the horror. There are some creepy elements introduced, but Abdl-Salam allows them to wither on the vine. Some might euphemistically describe Smother as a “taut slow burn,” but the truth is it often drags, which is a real drawback for a horror film. Rather confusingly, the film also clearly implies Peppi, the elderly neighbor abuses his partially dementia-afflicted wife Gerti, but then completely ignores the implications.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Scout Taylor-Compton’s Bring the Law

Det. Desmond Mitchell’s new Chatsworth-area territory is so lawless, it makes him miss Oakland. Frankly, crimelord Glen Gargos considers it his territory. Most of the cops tend to agree, perhaps including a member or members of Mitchell’s new team. However, Mitchell is too hardheaded and has too little to lose, so he refuses to play ball in Scout Taylor-Compton’s Bring the Law, which releases this Friday in theaters and on-demand.

Gargos’s Red Flag gang runs the drugs and human trafficking in the area. They have also branched out into the protection racket, but they aren’t as good at it—judging from the bodega bodies they left behind. Mitchell’s team cautions against “rocking the boat,” but he prefers to enforce the law. (Even weirder, his new office happens to be in the Los Angeles MDC Federal Prison, at least judging from the exterior shots.)

It is pretty clear someone is on the take, especially when a hit squad reaches a potential witness right after Mitchell. Unfortunately, one of gunmen happens to be Laura Sanchez’s junkie brother. Mitchell is not exactly close with her, but the diner waitress is one of the few people in the neighborhood who will talk to him. So far, his best source of intel is Olaf, the homeless curmudgeon, who doesn’t expect Mitchell to live much longer.

Bring the Law
is unusually gritty and cynical, even by the standards of Mickey Rourke VOD movies. That is not necessarily a bad thing, but the decidedly cheap look is a real drawback. In her directorial debut, Taylor-Compton (best-known for starring in Rob Zombie’s Halloween movies) seems to be going for throwback grunge, which isn’t a terrible strategy. Yet, despite Rourke’s creepy preening as Gargos, the themes and subject matter are too conventional to appeal as exploitation nostalgia. It is just a conspicuously low budget cop movie.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins, on NBC

Poor New York football fans. Recent years have been tough and there is plenty of blame to go around. At least in this show, Jets fans can focus their anger on one man. That would be All-Pro running back Reggie Dinkins, who was banned for gambling right before the Super Bowl, which the Jets went on to lose—badly. Dickins still wants the color commentary gigs and his rightful place in the Hall of Fame, so he hired semi-disgraced documentarian Arthur Tobin to rehabilitate his image. It might just work, but not in the way he hopes, because the embarrassing moments Tobin captures, of both Dinkins and himself, could go along way towards humanizing them in creators Robert Carlock & Sam Means’ The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins, which starts its regular run tomorrow on NBC.

This is not an American remake of
The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, despite the weirdly similar titles. This Reggie is essentially the Pete Rose of football. He says he only bet on himself, but his media apology tour was a disaster. Initially, his ex-wife manager Monica Reese-Dinkins was against hiring Tobin, but she starts to warm to the filmmaker and his methods in the second episode, “Nittany Means Big.” The title refers to a disastrous prank Reese-Dinkins covered up for her then fiancé during their college years. It is an example of the show’s football references, which should be sufficiently specific for fans, but not too deep in the weeds for more casual viewers.

The pilot, which previously premiered after an NFL playoff game is very much a getting-to-know-you episode, introducing Dinkins, his ex, their son Carmelo, and his influencer fiancée, Brina, as well as his wacky “neighbor,” Rusty Boyd, Dinkins’ best friend (the former back-up kicker), who lives in his basement. We also learn about Tobin’s disgrace, when a video of his meltdown trying to helm a Marvel movie starts going viral again.

Frankly, the next three episodes are somewhat sharper and funnier than the premise-setting pilot. The title of episode three, “Put it on Your Cabbage,” refers to an amusing subplot, wherein Dinkins loses his final endorsement. It also allows co-leads Tracy Morgan and Daniel Radcliffe to build some chemistry as their characters both endure public humiliation, at a New Jersey restaurant and a documentary film festival. (Those scenes were filmed on location outside the Elinor Bunin Monroe Film Center.)

“Save the Cat,” written by Grace Edwards, features a funny guest appearance by Corbin Bernsen as Dinkins’ bitter former coach Duck Donovan, who will hopefully become a recurring character. Bobby Moynihan also mines plenty of humor from his schlubby Boyd tutoring the reluctant Reese-Dinkins on dating app strategy.

Altamont, Graphic Novel

Three people died during Woodstock, yet people talk about it like it was a triumph of peace and love. In contrast, four people died at Altamont, which has been described as the “death” of hippy “innocence.” That’s only a difference of one death, but to be fair, it was a murder. Regardless, Matt “Doc” Malanski and his friends are headed to the disastrous 1969 concert expecting another Woodstock, but instead they get Altamont in Herik Hanna’s Altamont, illustrated by Charlie Adlard.

Like a character from
Hair, Malanski embraced the counter-culture, but was drafted anyway. After serving his tour of duty as a medic (and losing an eye in a friendly fire incident), he rejoined his girlfriend Jenny and their hippy circle of friends. As soon as they reach Altamont Speedway, they pick up on the negative vibes. However, they are determined to stay to hear the Stones—even when they hear Jagger was slugged in the mouth when he arrived.

They really should have left after their first dust-up with the Hell’s Angels, but Malanski figures they should be fine when he recognizes his former Army buddy Charlie is one of the senior Angels policing the show. As readers should know (and Charlie duly explains), the Angels were hired to handle Altamont’s security, because they agreed to be paid in beer.

Unfortunately, Eddie the Angel takes such an unhealthy interest in Jenny, so Charlie fires him. Yet, that probably makes him even more dangerous. Malanski also must constantly corral their friend Schizo, who even under the best of circumstances is usually extremely stoned and unstable.

Clearly, Hanna (and presumably Adlard) considers the legacy of the 1960s to be rather mixed. They largely bought the New Left propaganda regarding Viet Nam, but still recognize there was a dark side to the movement that Altamont fatally exposed. It builds to a surprise ending that is genuinely shocking, in a good way. Hanna never hints that it might be coming, but it makes perfect sense when it comes.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Wild Boys: Strangers in Town, in The Epoch Times


Not exactly true crime, Paramount+'s WILD BOYS: STRANGERS IN TOWN chronicles the brouhaha that erupted when two brothers claiming to have been raised in a remote cabin with no contact with human society emerged from the Canadian woods. Its compassionate but honest treatment (to its credit) leaves viewers with highly ambiguous feelings towards its deceptive subjects. EPOCH TIMES review up here.

Slamdance ’26: It Means Hope (short)

They are filming the sort of dishonest regime propaganda too many Western extremists chose to amplify out of perversely misplaced prejudices (against Israel, the West, Jews, Trump, take your pick). Hanie Taheri can tell poor Sonia is lying under duress, because as the assigned makeup artist, her job largely entails covering-up the woman’s black eye in Shadi Karamroudi’s short film, It Means Hope, which screens during the 2026 Slamdance Film Festival.

Taheri had no idea of the true nature of today’s gig until she got there. Whenever she sees the battered Sonia, she feels overwhelming shame, but it isn’t like she has any choice. It isn’t just a question of her safety. There is also her young son and her unborn daughter to worry about. As she explains to Sonia, while fixing her makeup, she intends to call her Hiva, because it means hope.

One way or another, the “director” will force Sonia to disavow reports of her sister’s murder while in police custody. Instead, she must blame her death on an overdose of anti-depressants, which she had supposedly been taking for some time. However, the words literally stick in Sonia’s throat. The unseemly business is also profoundly disgusting Taheri.

Karamroudi’s film is tragically timely and horrifyingly grounded in reality. Indeed, it echoes many reports of the Iranian regime’s atrocities and the crude propaganda they produced to deny their crimes against their own citizens. This is a work of fiction, but it is based on truth. Indeed, the screenplay, co-written by Karamroudi and Arian Vazirdaftari is unusually well-crafted, saying much, quite eloquently, even though the dialogue is rather economical.

Friday, February 20, 2026

56 Days, on Prime Video

Catherine Ryan Howard’s novel was not just another unreliable narrator thriller. It had two unreliable narrators. The supporting characters were not exactly dependable either. Much was withheld from each shift of perspective. That is always harder to translate to the screen, but some, like Fincher’s Gone Girl, pulled it off quite dexterously. In this case, we will regularly flashback to when Ciara Wyse met Oliver Kennedy, in search of clues as to which one of them is the shapeless body decomposed to near-nothingness in the bathtub by household solvents. Their brief affair was passionate, but both ignore plenty of red flags in co-creators Karyn Usher & Lisa Zwerling’s 8-eepisode 56 Days, based on Howard’s novel and executive-produced by James Wan, which is now streaming on Prime Video.

Kennedy and Wyse meet cute in a Boston hipster market—except was it really so random? Kennedy seems to have the financial stability Wyse craves, while she offers the emotional support he needs. They seem perfect for each other during the first episode, until the final cliffhanger revelations.

Obviously, we will learn more over time, but Kenndy apparently has a notoriously violent past, which has left him an erratic and somewhat paranoid basket case. Oliver has assumed an alias (ironically, he chose the surname of a notorious clan of wealthy womanizers, whose infidelities have also led to fatal tragedy), while maintaining contact with his headshrinker.

As for Wyse, it turns out she engineered their “chance” meeting. Basically, that means she was stalking him. Wyse (not her real name either) is keenly aware of “Kennedy’s” past. In fact, she has a family score to settle.

So, who became the ooze in Kennedy’s bathtub? That is the question Detectives Lee Reardon and Karl Connolly must answer. They work together well, but their private lives are a mess. Currently, Connolly is in the doghouse with their Captain, because his random Tinder hook-up found his gun and posted suggestive photos posing with it. Unfortunately, Connolly is still more together than his partner, whose personal improprieties threaten to derail their investigation and her career.

Frankly,
56 Days is like two very different shows spliced together. Reardon and Connolly’s slightly degenerate buddy cop procedural work is consistently entertaining and often dryly droll. Karla Souza (in a role much like her scene-stealing performance in El Presidente) and Dorian Missick have great chemistry verbally sparring and playing off each other.

However, the him-or-her storyline focusing on Wyse and Kennedy features plenty of sex, but not lot of common sense. Yet, the greatest cardinal sin of their fractured arc is the way Usher, Zwerling, and their battery of co-writers answer the central mystery far too early. As a result, halfway through the seventh episode, viewers find themselves watching and waiting for Reardon and Connolly to catch up with the rest of us.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

American Masters: Sun Ra, on PBS

Forget Madonna. No artist ever reinvented themselves more thoroughly and profoundly than Herman “Sonny” Blount. The relatively successful regional big bandleader declared himself an angel from the planet Saturn—and people believed him. In the process, he became a jazz legend and arguably the most significant figure in Afro-Futurism. He definitely had multitudes, as viewers will quickly pick up from Christine Turner’s Sun Ra: Do the Impossible, which premieres tomorrow as part of the current season of PBS’s American Masters.

Sun Ra’s rendition of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” is a shrewd choice to introduce to the musician-composer-bandleader to viewers, because it is free in an exploratory avant-garde sense, yet also barrelhouse bluesy. In fact, Sun Ra’s accessibility is the one aspect of his music Turner’s experts largely underplay. They make much of his experimentation with sonic distortion and Moog synthesizers. However, he always remained a big bandleader, who idolized Fletcher Henderson.

As Sun Ra, Blount incorporated elaborate space-age costume and concepts into his stage show, as well as ancient Egyptian imagery. In an effort to create a mythology for Black America, Sun Ra developed his own personal mythology, which he lived every day. Aptly, one of Turner’s commentators describes his life as an extended work of performance art. Yet, bassist Alex Blake also reluctantly (and with all due respect) likens the experience of being a member of Sun Ra’s communal Arkestra to being in a cult. That shows a rare critical evenhandedness that elevates
Do the Impossible above most PBS profiles.

Notably, Turner features commentary from several longtime band-members, including Blake, John Gilmore, and stalwart Marshall Allen, the 101-year-old reed player, who succeeded Sun Ra as leader of the Arkestra. Last year, at the age of 100, Allen released his first session as a solo-leader. He has also been honored as an NEA Jazz Master, which should put the Arkestra’s musical significance in proper perspective.

Pendragon Cycle: Ganieda

This will be a tough episode for Merlin, but it helps explain how he became the magical man viewers now know. It also formally introduces us to the woman whose visions he often sees, even though we could easily guess her general significance. This will be her episode, as viewers should deduce from the title, “Ganieda,” the sixth installment of creator Jeremy Boreing’s Pendragon Cycle: The Rise of Merlin (based on Stephen R. Lawhead’s novels) which premieres today on Daily Wire+.

This is indeed the flashback story of when Merlin met Ganieda. Over the course of their courtship, Merlin became her people’s protector and heir apparent. Indeed, when Merlin foils a sneak attack on the castle-keep, her father, King Custennin’s gratitude moves him to appoint the Christian druid his successor. However, we also learn why Custennin is understandably less than thrilled to see Merlin in the previous episode.

Although there are magical and mystical elements throughout the series, episode six might be the most “fantasy”-like yet. It also might feature the most brutal hack-and-slash action thus far. Some viewers might be surprised to find Merlin in the thick of it—perhaps because years of
Dungeons & Dragons has conditioned us to expect vastly different roles and weaponry for wizards versus warriors. However, Merlin reaches a point where he will wield anything with a sharp edge or a pointy end with lethal intent. Consequently, the action makes a strong impression, worthy of some of the series’ bigger budgeted grimdark competitors.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Blue Skies, on Up Faith & Family

Honestly, Blue is way cuter than Joe Pickett or Eric Bana in Untamed. Yet, he still has skills to offer the Park Service, particularly his nose for tracking. Just how he found himself in fictional Crystal Ridge National Park (implied to be America, but filmed in Canada) is a mystery his “handler” will presumably solve over the course of the first season, but for the time being, he will help her find lost children and fugitives in the new series Blue Skies, which premieres tomorrow on Up Faith & Family.

Jodi Larsen’s last day in the Army is traumatic, but not too traumatic, because this is a Faith & Family show. She returned to Crystal Ridge to reconnect with nature (those “blue skies”) and her widowed father. As a Park Detective, Larsen investigates the crimes that come with record park attendance, but she prefers to work alone. She might have to make an exception.

One morning, Blue breaks into her cabin and helps himself to her food. He then invites himself along when she leaves for work. He is a big, overly friendly distraction, whom her new boss, Liza King, does not fully appreciate. However, Larsen has a hunch that Blue’s odd behavior could hold Lassie-like implications for the missing boy the Crystal Ridge station has mobilized to find.

The first episode, “The Trail of the Missing” probably devotes as much time to introducing Blue as it allots for the search, but Blue can carry his co-stars just fine. The second episode, “Fugitive in the Wild” (of the two provided to the press for review) really gives viewers our first taste of Blue and Larsen working a full case. She is not an idiot, so at this point, she is already convinced Blue was meant to track people in the Park. Yet, King and Larsen’s obnoxious colleague Alex Meeks remain obstinately slow to embrace his talents and charm.

Of course, Larsen could not work the case of Federal fugitive Daniel Cross without him, even if she tried. Somehow, Cross escaped from U.S. Marshal Erin Vaughn while the transport cut through the Park. Larsen can empathize with Vaughn since they have similar backgrounds and she is also sort of in her boss’s doghouse, thanks to Blue’s chaos.

Frankly, the first two episodes, particularly the second, show a lot of promise. Jessica Sipos and Kevin Mundy are memorable guest stars, as Vaughn and Cross, while the series regulars do some nice procedural work.

Scarlet Hunter is also an incredibly good sport playing Larsen, because her co-star steals all the scenes they share. Referred to simply as Blue in promo videos, the canine performer has major screen presence. Blue is a charmer, but director David Straiton and writers Zach Grossman, Victoria Rose, Fernando Viso never portray him as excessively precious or ridiculously silly. He is a handful, but if you’ve ever had a willful dog, you can easily believe every bit of mischief—only too well.

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Frontier Crucible, Starring Thomas Jane

There was a time when you could easily find paperback westerns written by Harry Whittington in most drug stores and supermarkets. Unfortunately, book distribution has changed drastically, leaving behind “category” authors like him. Yet, people still enjoy a good western. Sixty-one years after the debut of the last movie based on a Whittington novel (the Spaghetti Western Adios Gringo), Travis Mills’ Frontier Crucible, based on Desert Stake-Out, releases today on DVD and BluRay.

Merrick Beckford is so hardnosed, he even has street cred with the Apache. That is why Major O’Rourke enlists the gunslinger to shepherd a wagon loaded with medical supplies to a border town facing an epidemic. There will be no cavalry to attract attention—just him. It is a tall order, but Beckford must agree he represents their best hope. Indeed, sometimes a man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta do—and Beckford is all man.

He also instantly recognizes Mule Charlie McKee and his son Billy are bad news—and their trail mate Edmund Fisher is even worse. However, the innocent couple they were escorting need his help. Jeff Butler was badly shot when an Apache war-party attacked their wagon, while his wife Valerie decidedly does not like the way Fisher looks at her—and neither does Beckford.

The taciturn gunfighter also suspects he might have personal reasons to dislike the McKees and Fisher, but he agrees to doctor Butler as best he can. However, things grow increasingly awkward, because Beckford remains adamant on heading south, whereas everyone else wants to head north.

Frontier Crucible
is a highly functional western that fully capitalizes on its Monument Valley backdrops. It truly looks archetypal. However, the two-hour-plus running time is a bit excessive. It would probably be quicker to read Whittington’s novel.

Nevertheless, Miles Clohessy and Thomas Jane are terrific circling each and intermittently sparring as Beckford and McKee. Jane has become one of the leading big-screen cowboys of his time, in films like
The Last Son, Apache Junction, and DC Showcase: Jonah Hex—and its pretty clear why. Once again, he struts and snarls with authority. Likewise, Clohessy broods with forceful resolve as Beckford. This is the same Clohessy who is a standout in Pendragon Cycle as the hotheaded Uther, he has nice range as a potential action genre leading man.