Jujji and the Weight of Shadows: A Crime Thriller That Bleeds Humanity

Habib Shahzad’s Jujji begins with a quiet kind of darkness, the sort that seeps into a place rather than crashes into it. Rawalpindi is introduced not as a backdrop but as a living pressure system, a city where shadows cling to the edges of buildings and linger in the pauses between a detective’s footsteps. Much like the best modern crime dramas, the film isn’t really concerned with the killer’s identity so much as the emotional residue he leaves behind.

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Pearl (2025) 4KUHD

Ti West’s Pearl has always stood apart from the rest of the X trilogy—at least for me. While X delivers retro-slasher grit and MaXXXine goes full neon fever dream, Pearl is the one that lodged itself under my skin and refused to leave. Maybe it’s Mia Goth’s fearless, feral performance.

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MaXXXine (2025) #4KUHD

Second Sight Films has built a reputation for giving modern genre standouts the premium treatment, and their new Limited Edition 4K UHD release of MaXXXine might be one of their most elaborate yet. The studio pulls out all the stops to showcase the glam-soaked, neon-drenched finale of Ti West’s celebrated X trilogy, complete with new artwork, a 120-page book of essays, and a wide slate of newly produced special features that dig into the craftsmanship behind the film. Even though MaXXXine was my least favorite entry in the trilogy, that says more about the sky-high expectations than the film itself

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Citizen Sleuth (2023)

Chris Kasick’s Citizen Sleuth explores the rise and unraveling of Appalachian podcaster Emily Nestor, whose hit true crime series Mile Marker 181 investigates the mysterious death of a young woman in her community. What begins as a gripping chronicle of an amateur sleuth fighting for answers gradually evolves into something far more complicated: a portrait of how the pursuit of truth, fame, and justice can become dangerously entangled. Kasick sets the tone early with striking B-roll and stylized interview setups that reflect Nestor’s grassroots approach.

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Christy (2025)

David Michôd’s Christy tells the remarkable true story of Christy Martin, a woman who fought her way out of small-town West Virginia with nothing but grit, raw athleticism, and a will to survive. The film opens with Tears for Fears, an inspired needle drop that immediately sets the tone. What follows is an ambitious 135-minute biopic that delivers powerful performances and emotionally intense storytelling, even as it struggles with pacing and familiarity.

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Murder Before Evensong: Season 1 (2025) #DVD

Murder Before Evensong arrives as a charmingly atmospheric new mystery series, blending gentle humour, small-village intrigue, and a classic whodunit structure that feels right at home in the long tradition of British cozy crime. Adapted from Reverend Richard Coles’ Sunday Times bestselling novel, the six-part series leans into picturesque 1980s rural England, complete with gossiping parishioners, simmering scandals, and a church at the centre of more trouble than anyone in Champton ever expected. It’s always fun to see a familiar face doing something new, and Harry Potter alumnus Matthew Lewis makes a genuinely engaging pivot here as Canon Daniel Clement, a kind-hearted, slightly beleaguered clergyman who unexpectedly finds himself in detective mode.

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Tales of the Walking Dead: Season 1 (2025) #BluRay

Even as someone who’s never fully fallen under The Walking Dead spell, I have to admit that Tales of the Walking Dead makes a strong case for revisiting its world. My parents are big fans, and for once I can see the appeal: this anthology spin-off brings an impressive lineup of actors and a refreshing variety of storytelling styles that might tempt even the skeptics. Arriving just in time for spooky season, the series unfolds over six standalone episodes, each venturing into different emotional and psychological corners of the post-apocalyptic universe.

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Dream Eater (2025)

Eli Roth’s The Horror Section continues its mission to spotlight bold, boundary-pushing voices in genre filmmaking with Dream Eater, the latest feature from Canadian trio Jay Drakulic, Mallory Drumm, and Alex Lee Williams under their Blind Luck Pictures banner. Already an award winner, including Best Feature at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival, and drawing comparisons to The Blair Witch Project and Paranormal Activity, the film will arrive digitally on November 18, 2025, making it a timely addition to horror fans’ late-fall watchlists. Dream Eater follows documentary filmmaker Mallory as she retreats to a remote cabin in the snowy Laurentian mountains with her boyfriend Alex to document his violent parasomnia.

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