2022’s “The Bad Guys” began life as a book series by author Aaron Blabey, but the writer has gone far beyond his original premise of animal hoodlums and their battle with decency. Blabey’s imagination has taken the series into downright cosmic directions, following his creative impulses into challenging narrative territory, making for an unexpected ride of risk-taking storytelling, especially in the world of children’s literature. The brain-scramble approach hasn’t come for the cinematic incarnation of “The Bad Guys,” which remains content to be just a good time for young audiences, keeping up with animal high jinks and heavy action, really playing up the master criminal aspect of the series. “The Bad Guys 2” is more of the same, quietly denying Blabey’s insanity while it moves forward with cartoon bigness, generating a second helping of colorful characters and bright voice work, while animation remains stylish for this return to criminal temptation for the morally dubious bandits. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Naked Gun (2025)
The television show “Police Squad!” debuted in 1982 and only lasted six episodes. It offered broad humor and sharp visual gags, allowing creators David Zucker, Jim Abrahams, and Jerry Zucker to extend their brand of wild comedy after the success of “Airplane!” The trio revived their idea for the big screen in 1988’s “The Naked Gun,” which became a sizable hit for Paramount Pictures, who eventually ordered two sequels that also did significant business. It’s been a long time since Lt. Frank Drebin busted crime on the big screen, and while star Leslie Nielsen has passed away, co-writer/director Akiva Schaffer (“Hot Rod,” “Popstar,” “Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers”) hopes to revive the spirit of his biggest career triumph in, well, “The Naked Gun,” which plops Liam Neeson in the main role of Drebin’s son (don’t do the math). It’s inspired casting, as Neeson has a funny side to his gruff screen presence that doesn’t get much attention, but the bright, silly highs of the 1988 movie are missing in 2025, which certainly commits to the rat-tat-tat approach of the ZAZ creation, but doesn’t share its inspired sense of humor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Trouble Man
Michael Jai White has been steadily building a directorial career over the last 14 years, periodically taking control of his action movies. His last effort was 2023’s “Outlaw Johnny Black,” a mediocre attempt to continue what 2009’s delightful “Black Dynamite” started, with White going weirdly bloated with his light comedy, unable to recapture the same magic. “Trouble Man” finds White returning to the Blaxploitation subgenre, now with an acceptable run time (90 minutes) and a more direct script by Michael Stradford. The production doesn’t win on style or mystery, but it’s a surprising amount of fun, finding White encouraging a certain level of silliness while also overseeing conflicts, including several resolved through martial arts contests. “Trouble Man” maintains a sense of humor, and White does what he can with his limited budget, clearly having a good time bringing the main character and his specific way of doing business with others to life. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Sketch
We don’t get too many kid adventure movies these days. The family film marketplace is loaded with animated offerings and live-action versions of animated offerings, but “Sketch” is trying to provide a different sort of jolt for fans of PG-rated entertainment, returning to the 1980s and the Amblin years for inspiration. Writer/director Seth Worley (making his feature-length debut) concocts an unusual study of panic in the endeavor, which follows the actions of kids and adults finding their real-world troubles replaced by fantasy ones as a child’s drawings come to life, ready to terrorize the community. “Sketch” plays a fun game of humor, heart, and (mild) horror in the effort, and Worley proves himself to be an imaginative storyteller with limited resources. He stays attentive to character and offers some amusing thrills and chills in the picture, making it a pleasant cinematic alternative for those seeking a more adventurous moviegoing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – She Rides Shotgun
“She Rides Shotgun” is an adaptation of Jordon Harper’s 2017 book, tracking the desperation of a man marked for death who’s trying to keep his estranged daughter alive while they figure out a way to make it to some sort of safe space. Screenwriters Ben Collins and Luke Piotrowski embark on a challenge to turn the intimate story into a cinematic experience, bringing the material’s emotional content to the screen while also preserving hits of threat and pursuit to keep the endeavor at least passably exciting. Director Nick Rowland (“Calm with Horses”) has some difficultly knowing when to cut short all the speechifying going on the movie, but he mostly connects with characterization and especially performance. Young Ana Sophia Heger is surrounded by talented actors in the feature, but she manages to best them all with a powerful turn as a girl caught up in a dangerous situation with a father she barely knows. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Together (2025)
Body horror pays a visit to couples therapy in “Together,” which is the feature-length filmmaking debut for Michael Shanks. He heads into Cronenberg Country with the endeavor, using the ways of the flesh to explore a corporeal breakdown between two people who’ve stopped communicating with each other, on their way to living separate lives. The universe has other plans, and Shanks labors to create a nightmare to follow on multiple levels of interpretation, spending the first half of the picture creating a successful mystery concerning possible evil and a potential break-up. “Together” makes a few questionable creative decisions as it hunts for an ending, limiting the lasting impact of its dramatic mission, but the movie remains vivid enough to engage, finding pockets of ugliness to investigate, and the writing has a few things to share about the struggles of cohabitation and partner support. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Rich Flu
Co-writer/director Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia (“The Platform,” “The Platform 2”) delivers a fascinating story in “Rich Flu,” which imagines a new global pandemic, but the illness only reaches the most affluent of people. It’s a different kind of fright involving the privileged class, and an absolutely ripe idea for cinematic inspection, opening the door to a satiric take on the true power of the powerful, or perhaps horror could be summoned as desperation sets in for those unaccustomed to struggle. For the first half, Gaztelu-Urrutia pursues a tone of panic, following the main character as she gradually understands the danger coming for her, desperate to make sense of a situation that’s beyond comprehension. Gaztelu-Urrutia can’t maintain suspense in the film’s second half, but “Rich Flu” isn’t even interested in maintaining pace and pressure, eventually reaching for a Big Message that takes an hour for the helmer to investigate, only to finally arrive at a forgone conclusion. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – War of the Worlds (2025)
There have been reports suggesting that “War of the Worlds” was shot in 2020, and the film certainly plays like a production trying to deliver screen intensity while maintaining COVID-19 guidelines. It’s a screenlife take on the 1898 H.G. Wells novel, which has been explored in all forms of media (and will continue to be exploited as a public domain option for B-movie producers), putting music video director Rich Lee in charge of a global alien invasion story that’s explored only through computer and phone screens. Scale normally associated with the brand name isn’t present here, and suspense is missing as well. “War of the Worlds” feels very amateurish and undercooked, out to sell panic and paranoia with limited resources and a script (by Kenneth A. Golde and Marc Hyman) that’s painfully routine, aiming to merge a paint-by-numbers family drama with worldwide destruction. There’s a lot of keyboard action and screen switching, and perhaps there’s a Big Idea on the state of surveillance in America, but it’s all turned into generic mush as Lee has little to work with beyond remote production clumsiness. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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4K UHD Review – Virtuosity
With the development of the internet and virtual reality in the early 1990s, Hollywood wasn't about to let such futuristic fun simply walk on by. Instead, producers dabbled in tech-thrillers, trying to make sense of difficult concepts while playing to the mass audience. One of the most successful of these odd pictures was 1992's "The Lawnmower Man," as co-writer/director Brett Leonard endeavored to transform a bizarre Stephen King short story into a VR nightmare, generating unusual visual effects to create a film that strived to be scary and sensual. The approached clicked at the box office, giving Leonard a career to manage, making himself a valuable player in uncharted cinematic territory. 1995's "Virtuosity" provides Leonard with a bigger budget to examine the ways of digital horrors, but instead of creating another creeper, he goes the action route, working with a promising manhunt tale from writer Eric Bernt that explores the wrath of an A.I. entity in the real world. The feature has the potential to be real fun, and the work has a few moments of B-movie clarity, but Leonard isn't the proper fit for a bruising thrill ride. His vision tends to turn "Virtuosity" into a cartoon, which might connect for certain viewers, but promise of something more suspenseful and demented isn't met in this mediocre offering. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Eat the Night
"Eat the Night" has crime story momentum, observing rising tensions between drug pushers looking to protect their territory, but it's also an interesting study of isolation in the digital age. Co-writer/directors Caroline Poggi and Jonathan Vinel (who made their helming debut in 2018's "Jessica Forever") attempt to merge more visceral encounters with intimate ones in the endeavor, as it details a collection of characters trying to find some form of stability and love as human connection enters their lives. "Eat the Night" goes a little deeper into private thoughts and feelings, giving it a fascinating understanding of the personalities as they deal with so much in their lives. There's texture to the writing to sustain the viewing experience, and gaming elements to help create a diffe Read the rest at Blu-ray.comrent appreciation of loneliness, especially when it comes to an end-of-life situation occurring in a virtual world. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Not an Artist
Co-writers/directors Alexi Pappas and Jeremy Teicher were previously focused on the wide world of sports. They explored the troubles of a long- distance runner in 2016's "Tracktown," and spotlighted an outbreak of love for a cross-country skier in 2020's "Olympic Dreams." They ditch athleticism for a different kind of competition in "Not an Artist," which follows the general anxiety and collision of personalities that occurs at a retreat for creative minds and all the insecurities they can carry. It's another winner for Pappas and Teicher, who do very well with characterization and mood, exploring the semi-comical ways of the getaway and all the internal chaos it inspires. "Not an Artist" eventually moves too far away from humor, but up to this point, it connects, presenting an amusing take on self-imposed pressures and life woes, sold with terrific performances that capture a few complex emotions. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Count of Monte Cristo
There's been no shortage of "The Count of Monte Cristo" adaptations across all forms of media. The 1854 adventure novel by Alexandre Dumas offers a lengthy and intricate revenge story to dramatize, making it irresistible to storytellers, and many have tried to construct excitement with the material, which was notably adapted in a 1975 television movie starring Richard Chamberlain, and a 2002 feature with Jim Caviezel. A plan of vengeance returns in the new "The Count of Monte Cristo," and directors Matthieu Delaporte and Alexandre de la Patelliere take the filmmaking challenge very seriously. The helmers intend to go epic with the offering, overseeing a nicely produced, three-hour-long take on the return of Edmond Dantes and the many scores he plans to settle after being imprisoned for crimes he didn't commit. The French production hopes to bring a little more action and psychological gamesmanship to the screen, and while the run time is a bit much, the effort is polished and strongly performed, finding a few peaks of suspense. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Happy Gilmore 2
After the minor box office success of 1995’s “Billy Madison,” Adam Sandler was a comedy star with potential. He was quickly gifted another starring vehicle, and 1996’s “Happy Gilmore” went on to become an even bigger hit, helping to launch his big screen career with arguably one of his best movies, and a title that’s gone on to amass a huge fanbase. The best time for a “Happy Gilmore” sequel would’ve been 1998, but instead of a quick turnaround to remain in Sandler’s youthful ways with silliness, “Happy Gilmore 2” arrives 29 years later, and not a lot has changed for the character or the screenwriting (credited to original writers Sandler and Tim Herlihy). Growth, comedic or otherwise, isn’t the creative goal of the follow-up, as director Kyle Newacheck (2019’s “Murder Mystery”) is basically making “Callback: The Movie,” setting up a recycling factory for the star, who reworks almost every bit from the previous endeavor, deflating the fun factor of seeing Happy back in action. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Fantastic Four: First Steps
After this much practice, it’s about time Marvel got this one at least somewhat right. There have been four previous cinematic adventures for the comic book family The Fantastic Four, and none of them really clicked. A 1994 version was doomed from conception, though it worked extremely hard to pull off amazing things without a budget. Iterations in 2005 and 2007 weren’t nearly as fun as they could’ve been, held back by an unadventurous director. And a revival in 2015 was downright awful, killing off future interest in the brand name. The Marvel Cinematic Universe tries again with “The Fantastic Four: First Steps,” and the production is a lot more confident with its fantasy vision this time around, creating a screen space big enough to handle heroism and gigantic villainy, with director Matt Shakman (a television veteran) mostly in command of the material’s sense of threat. It’s a lumpy endeavor that doesn’t always connect the dramatic dots, but it’s periodically huge, capturing a significant comic book battle previous “Fantastic Four” offerings couldn’t manage without falling apart. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Oh, Hi!
Actress Molly Gordon has been making a positive impression over the last five years. She nailed a supporting role in 2020’s exhilarating “Shiva Baby,” and 2023’s “Theater Camp” found Gordon also accepting responsibilities behind the camera, making her directorial debut with the wonderful film. “Oh, Hi!” presents a different acting challenge for Gordon, who’s tasked with portraying a slightly manic woman trying to process a horrible turn in her romantic life, getting in deep with her partner while he’s chained to a bed. Writer/director Sophie Brooks (“The Boy Downstairs”) doesn’t set the scene for a horror experience, going darkly comedic instead, while retaining some sensitivity around fragile emotions involved in the end of a relationship. “Oh, Hi!” doesn’t really have enough substance to fill a feature-length run time, but it connects in spots, and Gordon is terrific in a complicated role involving pain and pleasure, keeping the feature as compelling as possible. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Monster Island (2025)
Writer/director Mike Wiluan heads to the fringes of World War II to inspire his latest film, “Monster Island.” With a title like that, images of rampaging creatures doing battle in a remote part of the world come to mind, but the helmer isn’t aiming for a kaiju battle royal. What’s here is actually small in scale, putting two soldiers from vastly different backgrounds against a sea creature who’s intent on defending its terrain. A long game of survival and communication makes up most of “Monster Island,” though Wiluan is attentive to genre needs, delivering a decent amount of blood and guts for horror fans, and he doesn’t follow a digital path for the most part, making sure the ghoulish beast at the center of the story maintains plenty of man-in-suit appeal. The endeavor certainly strains to reach its already short run time, but there’s a modest amount of entertainment value in the offering, especially for those who enjoy creature features. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Home (2025)
When we last saw director James DeMonaco in action, it was 2021’s “This Is the Night,” which pulled the helmer away from his duties overseeing “The Purge” franchise to make a coming-of-age movie about the wild night when “Rocky III” opened in Staten Island. At least it wasn’t another “Purge” sequel. DeMonaco tried a dramedy on for size, and it didn’t quite work, urging him back to horror for “The Home,” co-scripting the endeavor with Adam Cantor. The tale concerns a young man and his battle with the unexpected inside a senior care center, and one might expect DeMonaco to find an actor of true dramatic might to help give the fright film some gravitas. Instead, we have Pete Davidson in the lead role, and boy howdy does he look uncomfortable to be there. “The Home” (which was shot three years ago) asks way more of Davidson than he’s capable of giving, and DeMonaco’s no help, submitting a poorly constructed offering of screen terror. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Osiris
Screenwriters Paul Reichelt and William Kaufman clearly like action movies from the 1980s, working to update the formula with “Osiris,” which often plays like a blend of “Aliens” and “Predator.” It’s derivative stuff from Kaufman, who’s been in the business of B-moviemaking for many years now, and he returns to the realm of limited lighting and locations in the endeavor, which is mostly set inside tiny, dark rooms. “Osiris” is small-time sci-fi, and it’s passably interesting to watch Kaufman treat the offering with seriousness, out to create an exploratory bruiser that pits human warriors against alien hunters. The feature isn’t big enough to really do its premise justice, and Kaufman isn’t clever enough of a filmmaker to make the routine of gunplay and exposition compelling. The picture means to pack a punch, but it rarely excites, and while actress Linda Hamilton is the sole focus of the marketing, it’s best to temper expectations for what’s nothing more than a glorified cameo for the once and future Sarah Connor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Lifeguard
1976's "Lifeguard" visits Californian beach life for some fun under the sun…and an early midlife crisis. Screenwriter Ron Koslow examines the heart of a seasoned lifeguard as he confronts the reality of his employment and life choices, aiming to cut a little deeper when it comes to a character study of a man in professional and personal turmoil. Director Daniel Petrie ("Fort Apache, The Bronx," "A Raisin in the Sun," "Cocoon: The Return") is clearly fighting to preserve a more meaningful examination of doubt, but there's always time for a little goofiness in the endeavor, which keeps introducing high jinks involving the crazy people out to enjoy the water (and participate in some crimes), though the material never quite commits to the silliness. "Lifeguard" is uneven at times, but when it attempts to grasp the struggles of the main character and his emotional battles, it finds interesting places to go, boosted by fine acting from star Sam Elliott, who really captures the push and pull of a guy living a breezy life until the day his age catches up with him. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Hundreds of Beavers
Co-writer/director Mike Cheslik takes on an unusual filmmaking challenge with "Hundreds of Beavers." He's resurrecting a silent movie approach to a cartoon-style study of survival and fur-trapping in the 1800s, going wild and wacky with the story of a man and his desperate need to bring in enough beaver pelts to win the hand of a young woman in the middle of a frozen forest. Silliness is the name of the game in "Hundreds of Beavers," which is non-stop nonsense from Cheslik, who shows remarkable creativity with his limited budget, working with whatever he can to bring his war of animal vs. man to life. It's a wild ride, and an exhausting one too, but before the feature loses steam with its parade of shenanigans, the production achieves an enjoyable level of madcap antics, sold via a charmingly tireless lead performance from Ryland Brickson Cole Tews (who co-scripts with Cheslik). Read the rest at Blu-ray.com




















