The Python Hunt: Snake Eyes in the Everglades

The Python Hunt drops you straight into the Everglades and never really lets you leave. From the jump, Todd Rundgren’s “Tiny Demons” hums over the opening credits and sets the tone for something that feels less like a traditional nature doc and more like a swamp-born fever dream. Think Tiger King filtered through bug spray and headlamps.

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Driver’s Ed: A Familiar Ride That Still Finds a Few Laughs

There’s something comfortingly familiar about Driver’s Ed, Bobby Farrelly’s throwback teen comedy about a group of high schoolers who steal their driver’s ed car and hit the road in a desperate attempt to win back a girlfriend. It’s built on a premise that feels pulled straight out of the late-90s and early-2000s playbook: dumb kids, impulsive decisions, and a chaotic road trip full of escalating nonsense. If you grew up on Road Trip, EuroTrip, or Sex Drive, you’ll recognize the formula immediately.

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Fetching Nostalgia: Revisiting Wishbone and the Magic of PBS

Some documentaries exist simply to catalog a thing that happened. What’s the Story, Wishbone? exists to explain how something that should have been impossible not only worked, but worked so well that it is still lodged deep in the collective memory of an entire generation. This is the story of a television show that took an absurd amount of effort, coordination, and risk, yet somehow made all of that chaos look effortless on screen.

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The Inverts: Screenlife Paranoia With Its Eye Wide Open

The Inverts is a zero-budget screenlife short that punches way above its weight, using paranoia, texture, and surgical editorial control to get under your skin in just six minutes. Written, directed, edited, and starring Evan Jordan, the film presents itself as a personal archive. An abductee assembles video evidence, testimonies, and found footage that suggest a hidden truth about the world and about himself.

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Pretty Pictures and Shaky Cons: Finding the Cracks in Forge

Jing Ai Ng’s Forge wastes no time easing the audience in. It drops you straight into the shady mechanics of the art trade, a world of quick handshakes, quiet reputations, and paintings that change identities faster than their owners. That opening is sharp and confident, almost deceptively so, because once the initial jolt fades, the film settles into a long stretch of careful setup that never quite regains that early intensity.

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Cosmic Kink With Feelings: Addison Heimann’s Touch Me Is Horny Horror Done Right

There are films that dare you to tap out, and then there are films that dare you to stay open. Touch Me very firmly belongs to the latter category. Addison Heimann’s psychosexual sci-fi horror comedy is loud, horny, emotionally sincere, and deeply strange, and somehow all of those things coexist without the movie collapsing under the weight of its own ambition.

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