As a massive fan of the first two seasons of The White Lotus, I was eager to dive headfirst into season three. Mike White’s Emmy-winning series has always thrived on the delicate mix of satire, mystery, and simmering tension, and relocating the story to the lush backdrop of Thailand only heightens that formula. The DVD release now gives fans the chance to relive all eight episodes, plus bonus content, and it is well worth adding to the collection.
Read MoreThe Paper: Season 1 (2025)
When Greg Daniels announced a new mockumentary set in the same universe as The Office, expectations soared. Now that The Paper has landed on Peacock, fans finally get to see what the documentary crew behind Dunder Mifflin is up to, this time following a historic Midwestern newspaper, The Toledo Truth-Teller, and its attempt at revival. The result is a mix of familiar laughs, uneven storytelling, and a show that is easy to put on in the background but struggles to find its own identity.
Read MoreMayfair Witches: Season 2 (2025) #BluRay
Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches returns for its second season, now available on Blu-ray, DVD, and digital from Acorn Media International. Following its BBC premiere, the series continues to expand Rice’s gothic universe with heightened stakes, new characters, and the kind of lush atmosphere that fans have come to expect. Season 2 picks up with Rowan Fielding navigating the horrors and responsibilities of motherhood after giving birth to the embodiment of the demonic Lasher.
Read More7eventh 7irkle (2025)
Ty Brueilly’s 7eventh 7irkle is not just a short film—it’s an unsettling journey into the subconscious, a fever dream that dares its audience to wrestle with fear, faith, and the fragile boundaries between salvation and damnation. As the eleventh entry in Brueilly’s ever-evolving Shucks Cinematic World, this 16-minute experimental horror short pushes further into the symbolic and surreal, immersing viewers in a kaleidoscope of images drawn from Dante’s Divine Comedy while layering in the filmmaker’s signature raw intensity. From its opening imagery of serpents, owls, and horses to its haunting circus and masked gatherings, the film brims with allegory.
Read MoreThe Threesome (2025)
Romantic comedies often thrive on awkward beginnings, but Chad Hartigan’s The Threesome pushes that discomfort into uncharted territory. What starts as a spontaneous hookup between longtime crushes Olivia and Connor, joined by Jenny during a night out, spirals into something far more complicated: both women wind up pregnant. The result is a messy, funny, and unexpectedly heartbreaking film that embraces the chaos of adulthood without ever reaching for easy answers.
Read MoreTwinless (2025)
James Sweeney’s Twinless is a harrowing yet funny exploration of grief, connection, and the fragile ways people seek meaning after loss. The film opens with a melancholy, Garden State-like atmosphere where conversations unfold with such natural ease that they feel lived-in, not performed. Clever framing tricks, mirrors, shifts in lighting, and sly compositions give the film a cool, offbeat texture that matches its tonal tightrope between comedy and despair.
Read MoreThe Toxic Avenger (2023)
Macon Blair’s The Toxic Avenger is both a tribute to Troma’s midnight-movie legacy and a bizarre reinvention that feels like it escaped from the wrong decade. Somehow, it manages to feel like Troma and not like Troma at the same time. It is gruesome, brutal, cheap-looking in an oddly expensive way, and packed with over-the-top performances.
Read MorePig Hill (2025) #FF25
Kevin Lewis has built a reputation for fearless genre filmmaking, and his latest, Pig Hill, arrives at FrightFest 2025 with plenty of anticipation. After the cult success of Willy’s Wonderland, Lewis trades in tongue-in-cheek animatronic mayhem for something much darker: an adaptation of Nancy Williams’s novel rooted in Meadville, Pennsylvania’s unsettling urban legend of the “pig people.” The setup is promising.
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