Killer Tales (2023)

Killer Tales is a three-part horror anthology exploring ordinary people driven to kill. Directed by Frank Palangi and starring Sloan Anderson, Brian Benschek, and Jamison Carroll, the film mixes supernatural dread with human cruelty. While the ambition is clear, the execution is uneven, making for a viewing experience that is both frustrating and occasionally intriguing.

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The Once (2023)

Scott Hillman’s The Once is a curious hybrid of nature documentary, interactive-novel-style storytelling, and gentle audiobook narration, and it’s a film that’s equal parts charming and confounding. The story follows Pip, a child who feels disconnected from her family and isolated from the human world, until a mysterious woodland spirit sets her on a transformative journey. Over the course of the film, Pip becomes a series of different animals, each transformation granting her fresh perspectives on life, empathy, and the natural world.

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Borderline (2023)

Rich Mallery returns with Borderline, a raw and uncompromising dive into the life of Charli, a young woman caught in the relentless grip of mental illness and narcotic addiction. Following Mallery’s previous work, Maid Droid, this film eschews buildup or context, thrusting the audience immediately into Charli’s chaotic world. It’s a daring choice that both grabs attention and leaves little room for narrative breathing, but it works to immerse viewers in her unrelenting spiral.

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We Are Wolves (2024)

Cult cinema is alive and kicking, and We Are Wolves is proof that the weird, chaotic spirit of offbeat thrillers hasn’t gone anywhere. Directed and written by Rich Mallery, the film follows Fenix, a lost soul yearning for belonging, as she attempts to rejoin her chosen family—only to find that acceptance comes at the cost of playing some dangerously twisted games. On paper, the film is a mess of formulaic plotting and familiar tropes, and yes, the acting isn’t exactly Oscar-worthy.

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Salton Sea (2018)

Salton Sea is a quietly ambitious indie drama that explores the complexities of marriage, ambition, and personal integrity against the hauntingly beautiful backdrop of the Salton Sea itself. Directed by Michael Stevantoni and co-written with Tim Rousseau and George McCormick, the film follows Brian as he attempts to persuade his wife, Ramona, to move across the country for a promotion. Their journey back to a faded resort town where they once honeymooned forces both characters—and the audience—to confront the fractures in their relationship and the compromises they are willing to make.

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Blue Dream (2013)

From a James Duval perspective, Blue Dream is a triumph. He’s often typecast as either innocent and clueless or comically eccentric, but here he becomes an arrogant, self-centered sex addict, and it’s mesmerizing to watch. His performance captures a slow descent into madness with a rawness and audacity that is unlike anything else in his career.

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Caged Beauty (2016)

Gregory Hatanaka’s Caged Beauty is a cinematic experience that defies easy categorization. Centered on Katarina, a music teacher obsessed with finishing Molcik's unfinished concerto, the film explores her kidnapping at the hands of her deranged ex-husband and the bizarre series of challenges she must endure to regain her freedom. Yet to call it a conventional thriller would be misleading—Caged Beauty is far more an avant-garde, post-narrative exploration than a taut suspense story.

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Amityville Cop (2021)

Amityville Cop attempts to blend supernatural horror with crime thriller elements, but it ultimately struggles to deliver on either front. Directed by Gregory Hatanaka and written by Geno McGahee, the film follows Detectives Miller and Val as they investigate a series of grisly murders in a city haunted by a dark past. The twist: the perpetrator may be a demonic force wearing a police uniform.

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