Thursday, April 2, 2026

Now Showing: The House of Black

 
The House of Black 
Genre: Fantasy/Action/Drama
Director: Chan-wook Park
Writer: Sammy-Jo Ellis
Based on the characters in the Wizarding World created by JK Rowling
Cast: Benjamin Evan Ainsworth, Louis Partridge, Emma Mackey, Nell Hudson, Olivia Williams, Emma Appleton, Paul Kaye, Charles Dance, Cal MacAninch, Laurie Davidson, Kit Connor, Emily Carey, Niamh Cusack, Alun Armstrong

Plot: 1976
The Autumn fog swallows Grimmauld place, and behind the shrunken hedges, number 12 awaits. Cloaked in enchantments and its windows dark. We hear the scowl of Walburga Black (Olivia Williams). Her eyes, not on the street but on the family tapestry, where one of the threads has recently been brought to life. Narcissa Malfoy (formally Black) glows golden. Walburga smooths the silk with trembling finders as she whispers to herself, “One daughter loyal. Just one.”

Sirius Black (Louis Partridge) steps inside Grimmauld Place an hour later, freshly arrived from King’s Cross station. His school robes still on, half-buttoned, the Gryffindor scarf around his neck hangs, and insult to the Black household. Kreacher (Andy Serkis), the house elf greets him with a nod. As Sirius walks upstairs he is met by one of the paintings, Phineas Nigellus Black (Charles Dance), he sneers at the sight of Sirius. As he walks past Walburga she says nothing, just turning away, as if his presence is merely wallpaper.

Dinner is served in silence. Orion Black (Cal MacAninch) reads the Prophet without ever looking up. Regulus Black (Benjamin Evan Ainsworth) sits like a marble bust, his spine straight. Bellatrix Lestrange (Emma Mackey) enters the room, a visitor now, but makes herself at home, lounging across two chairs, eating grapes like a queen at court. Rodolphus Lestrange (Laurie Davidson) just stands by the fire, arms crossed. Then comes a chime, the door creaks again and in walks Narcissa Malfoy (Nell Hudson), she is composed, calm, but almost fearful behind her eyes. “You’re late,” Walburga says. “Lucius keeps me busy,” Narcissa replies coolly. “He sends his regards.” Her voice is silk pulled tight.

After dinner the family go their separate ways within the house. Bellatrix eyes off Narcissa.

As the evening continues a woman apparates into the front corridor of the house, wearing muggle garments. Kreacher is standing in front and snarls at the woman, Andromeda Tonks (Emma Appleton) (formally Black). Sirius, drawn by the disturbance, finds her first. They lock eyes. Neither smiles. Behind them, Walburga’s scream splits the air. Bellatrix appears in an instant, wand raised and drunk. Narcissa follows, less angered than afraid. The confrontation plays out in the parlor, surrounded by portraits that hiss and mutter. “You walk in here dressed like a Mudblood’s concubine,” Bellatrix snarls. “And you expect a welcome?” Andromeda doesn’t flinch. “I came for them,” she says, nodding toward Sirius and Regulus. “Not you.” Bellatrix is furious, irrational. Narcissa is begging them to lower their wands, to not do this “in front of the boys.” Sirius watches in silence. Regulus does too, hidden on the staircase, his eyes wide. He sees not three sisters but three futures. Three exits. None of them like the last, and none of them right. They eventually settle but Bellatrix remains furious, laughing as she walks away.

Later, Sirius and Andromeda walk the upper halls, lit only by the flicker of dying sconces. “They say I’m dead,” she says. “They struck my name from the wall like it was a stain. But I still bleed. I still dream about this house. Do you?” Sirius nods. “Every night.” She presses his hand, she pleads with him not to let them take Regulus. Sirius nods.

Elsewhere, Narcissa sits beside Regulus in his room, brushing dust from the hem of his curtain. “I used to pretend this house was a fortress,” she says. “Turns out it was a prison.” Regulus doesn’t speak. He’s trying to understand it all—Bellatrix’s fury, Andromeda’s exile, Sirius’ absence. Narcissa leans in. “You don’t have to choose today. Just promise me you’ll wait. Listen and think.”

But Bellatrix won’t wait. She corners Regulus in the drawing room later that night, all smoke and persuasion. “They’re wrong about you, you know,” she coos. “You’re not like Sirius. You understand what this family means. What we could be again. I’ve told the Dark Lord about you. He’s interested.” Regulus doesn’t respond. But he doesn’t walk away either. And always, above it all, Phineas Nigellus watches. His portrait shifts across frames, drifting from one wall to another. He mocks Sirius—calls him a “defector with delusions of grandeur.” He praises Regulus—“the last son worth the name.” He rebukes the sisters like a bitter uncle at a cursed wedding. But when Andromeda calls him out—“You stood for nothing but your own comfort”—his smile slips, if only for a moment.

As the days pass, Sirius grows more restless. The sisters are gone again—Andromeda into hiding, Bellatrix to Knockturn Alley, Narcissa to the Malfoy estate. The house returns to silence. One morning, Regulus walks past Sirius without a word. He’s different, he’s paler, closed off. And Sirius knows.

Sirius packs that night.

His escape is loud. Walburga tries to hex him as he descends the staircase, but Kreacher blocks the spell with an old, twitching hand. Phineas curses him from three different frames. Orion says nothing and Regulus doesn’t come down. The door closes behind Sirius like a vault.

Regulus stands alone in the upper hall, staring at the empty space where the family tapestry used to carry Andromeda’s name. Behind him, Narcissa’s new golden thread gleams faintly. And from the shadows, Phineas whispers: “Two daughters gone. One son fled. And the last one standing? We’ll see what you’re worth.”

Cut to black.

Snow now piles on the iron gate of 12 Grimmauld Place. Christmas passes without celebration. No lights. No warmth. Only silence. Inside, Walburga mourns her son as if he were dead—though her grief is twisted and theatrical, more for the disgrace to her bloodline than for the boy himself. “He made his choice,” she says to the empty hallway. “Let him rot in red.”

But Sirius is alive—and freer than he’s ever been.

Sirius now lives with the Potters, tucked into a warm spare room that smells faintly of potions and old parchment. Euphemia (Niamh Cusack) makes tea and insists he eat second helpings. Fleamont (Alun Armstrong) nods approvingly over the paper. James (Kit Connor) is always nearby—jokes at the ready, midnight cocoa in hand. Lily Evans (Emily Carey) visits often, dropping by after prefect meetings, leaving behind borrowed books and notes written in red ink. Their home is cluttered and kind, filled with love spoken aloud. Still, Sirius can’t settle. He paces at night, stares at owls passing overhead, writes letters to Regulus that are never answered. He dreams of Bellatrix’s laughter and wakes with his wand clenched in a fist.

Meanwhile, Regulus walks deeper into shadows. Bellatrix meets him often now, usually in places without names—fog-drenched alleyways, crumbling ancestral manors, cold fields where owls circle. Rodolphus is always nearby, a ghost with teeth. Bellatrix flatters Regulus, spins prophecy from ideology. She speaks of purity, of legacy, of fire that will cleanse the world. “You could be the youngest in the circle,” she whispers. “The Dark Lord remembers names like ours.” Regulus listens. He does not smile. But once more he does not walk away.

Regulus now walks alone through a narrow wizarding alley just off Knockturn. The fog is thick, and his steps echo. He’s come from a meeting—Bellatrix had summoned him but didn’t stay long. Said “the others” were watching. Told him to walk home alone, to “show resolve.” That night, the streets below Knockturn Alley are damp with fog, the kind that muffles steps and swallows lantern light. Regulus walks alone, his wand tucked beneath his sleeve, heart still pounding from Bellatrix’s words. She told him this path required strength. That people would test it. He doesn’t make it a block. The first spell bursts against the wall behind him, white-hot and deliberate. A second slams into the cobblestones near his feet, knocking him off balance. Regulus spins, barely shielding himself as two masked figures emerge from the fog—neither cloaked like Death Eaters, nor robed like Aurors. These men are something else. The kind that strike first and speak with ash. “We know what you are,” one hisses. “Bloodline coward. Tell her she’s next.” Regulus tries to speak, to defend, but one curses his legs out from under him. He hits the pavement, hard, wind gone from his lungs. One man presses a knee into his back, yanking his arm, while the other readies a killing blow—wand raised. It never lands. The attacker is flung backwards, a jagged slash across his chest. Blood hits the stones in a wet arc. A second man tries to run, but his spine snaps mid-step, dropped like a marionette with cut strings. Bellatrix appears from the smoke like a revenant—wild-eyed, laughing. Her wand still hums with residual magic, vibrating with death. “Pitiful,” she says, kicking one of the bodies aside. “They thought they could touch you?” Regulus doesn’t move. He’s still on the ground, breath shallow, trying to understand what just happened. Bellatrix kneels beside him, wipes dirt from his cloak. Her touch is gentle, almost maternal. “You see now?” she whispers. “They fear what you’ll become. That’s power. That’s the mark of something important.” She cups his cheek briefly, like a proud mother, like a general before a war. Then she’s gone. Apparated into the fog.

Regulus rises slowly, legs shaking. The alley is quiet again. Too quiet. The blood is already drying. There are scorch marks along the brick, a smear of ash where a man used to be. Regulus retrieves his wand and walks away, head down, steps slow. He doesn’t report the attack. He tells no one. But that night, he lies awake in bed, the red light of Bellatrix’s spell flashing behind his eyes like lightning behind curtains. And for the first time, he begins to wonder what exactly he’s being asked to become.

Narcissa watches from the Malfoy estate, far enough to stay clean, close enough to stay informed. She visits her mother on occasion, bringing expensive wine and excuses. Lucius works late. She is alone, yet complicit. She reads the Prophet with a deadened gaze. When she learns that Regulus has been marked for recruitment, she apparates to Grimmauld Place and finds him in the attic.

But this time, she doesn't speak. She grabs his arm, and with a crack of magic, they vanish. The safehouse she brings him to is an old manor in Wiltshire, cloaked in disuse and dust. No portraits and no watching eyes. Regulus tears his arm free. “What is this?” he asks. “A prison?” “No,” she replies. “A pause.” He moves to leave. She blocks the door. He raises his wand. So does she. The first spell shatters a lamp between them. Dust rains from the ceiling. They circle each other in silence, the air thick with years of unsaid things. Narcissa tries to disarm him. He deflects, then casts a knockback curse that sends her into a couch. She groans, winded, but doesn’t retaliate. She looks up at him from the floor—her eyes wet but steady. “You think power gives you control. It doesn’t. It just changes the shape of your fear.” Regulus lowers his wand. Helps her up. “I can’t be Sirius,” he says. “You don’t have to be,” she replies. “Just don’t become Bellatrix either.” They return to Grimmauld Place together. But Narcissa knows the war has already chosen him.

Elsewhere, Andromeda lives in hiding. A small cottage in Yorkshire. A baby’s cry echoes from the next room—young Nymphadora, pink-cheeked and curious. Sirius visits once, arriving unannounced with muddy boots and tired eyes. Andromeda welcomes him in. Over tea, they speak of family. Of war. Of Regulus. “He’s clever,” Sirius says. “He’s not blind.” “Neither was I,” she replies. “Until it was too late.”

Back in London, the Ministry tightens its grip. Muggle disappearances are rising. Whispers of a secret war trickle through alleys. Phineas Nigellus, still drifting between frames at Grimmauld and Hogwarts, becomes restless. He lectures Regulus on legacy, mocks Sirius for his moralism. “You think your new little Order will save the world?” he says from a crackling frame. “It’ll save nothing. At least the Dark Lord understands power.” But even Phineas has moments of unease now—lingering silences in his frame, as if watching his descendants walk the edge of a cliff he never dared climb.

Bellatrix takes Regulus to a meeting. It’s not a full gathering—not yet—but enough. Mulciber is there. Wilkes. They test him. They speak in riddles. Bellatrix watches, proud and hungry. Regulus passes. He is calm. Controlled. Dead-eyed. When they brand him, he doesn’t scream. The Dark Mark is black and gleaming.

That night, Regulus doesn’t go home. He walks the Thames for hours, the sleeve of his robe damp with blood. A silver coin clutched in his palm—one Sirius gave him when they were boys. He stares at it a long time before casting it into the water.

Meanwhile, Sirius returns to Grimmauld Place in secret. He enters through a hidden passage and moves like a thief. The house is unchanged—stale air, angry portraits, the smell of rot beneath polish. He climbs to the attic. Regulus isn’t there. In the drawing room, Phineas stirs. “Back to burn another name off the wall?” he sneers. “Or just to gloat?”

Sirius says nothing. But as he passes the tapestry, his hand brushes it. The burn where Andromeda once was. The gleaming new thread of Narcissa. The untouched thread of Regulus. He stares at it a long time. He leaves a letter for Regulus in his old trunk. A simple note. “You don’t have to die for them. I’ll come back for you.” Then he's gone again. Before he can mobve anymore, a footstep echoes from the corridor. The room darkens—not from light, but from presence. Bellatrix stands in the doorway, her silhouette electric with fury. “Back so soon, cousin?” she purrs. Sirius raises his wand. She strikes first. The spell misses his chest by inches, scorching the drapes. He fires back, and within seconds, the hallway is a warpath—paintings shrieking, curses ricocheting. Sirius is quicker, wilder, but she’s been sharpening her rage for years. Kreacher tries to intervene and is thrown aside, crumpling near the stairwell. The duel breaks into the upper corridor—banisters splinter, wallpaper curls with flame. Sirius stumbles through the old servant’s passage and barely escapes into the night. Bellatrix’s laughter follows him, echoing like a curse. The camera lingers on Kreacher, who gets up slowly, walks toward where Sirius put the note, he finds it and hides it in a drawer.

Regulus watches the frost collect on the inside of his bedroom window, the world beyond it quiet and brittle. His mother calls him the family's pride. Bellatrix sends word of new raids and praises Voldemort’s genius. But Regulus has stopped responding. Something inside him has turned. He no longer speaks much. He no longer sleeps.

Kreacher notices first. He follows his master with cautious eyes, always a few steps behind. One night, Regulus calls him close and whispers of a cave by the sea, a hidden place Voldemort brought Kreacher to once before—how he’d forced Kreacher to drink a potion and left him for dead. But Kreacher returned. And that, Regulus realizes now, was a mistake Voldemort didn’t expect. A window.

Together, they begin planning. Regulus orders Kreacher to take him back to the cave. He tells him that they will switch the real locket with a decoy. But only one of them will return. “You must obey me,” he says, looking Kreacher in the eyes. “You must come home and destroy it. That’s your order.”

At the same time, Sirius hears nothing. He’s begun to pull away from everything that reminds him of Grimmauld Place. James jokes that he’s lucky to be rid of them, but Sirius doesn’t laugh. He carries guilt beneath his swagger, and something in his gut tells him Regulus is drifting somewhere he can’t reach.

One final morning, Regulus dresses carefully. His robes are dark and formal. He eats nothing. He writes no letter. No grand farewell. The tapestry will remain untouched. He leaves only with Kreacher by his side, and a fake locket hidden in his cloak. No one sees them go. The cave is just as Kreacher remembered—cold, slick, hidden by ancient magic. They cross the black lake in silence, the boat summoned by blood. At the basin, Regulus drinks the potion himself. It burns like acid, rakes down his throat. He gasps and claws, but drinks it all. When the final drop vanishes, the water behind them stirs. Pale hands emerge—then faces. Inferi, rising from the depths. Kreacher screams. Regulus stands, barely able to move, and casts fire, his spells lashing across the cave like lashes. The Inferi keep coming. One snags his arm. He burns it back. Another claws at his chest. He stumbles, coughing blood. He lifts the real locket, drops in the fake. Then he presses the true Horcrux into Kreacher’s palm. “Take it. Go.” Kreacher won’t move. Regulus whispers, “You must obey me.” And with the last of his strength, he forces Kreacher to Disapparate. Alone, Regulus turns toward the swarming dead. And he does not scream.

Kreacher arrives at Grimmauld Place alone, collapsing near the hearth with the locket clutched to his chest. He hides it in a cupboard beneath the sink, behind piles of rotting heirlooms. He keeps the promise. He tells no one. Not Walburga, who assumes her son died nobly. Not Phineas Nigellus. Not Sirius.

Walburga enters a fugue of grief and glory. She mourns a son she never truly knew, praising his loyalty while polishing his empty chair. She never asks questions. Orion dies not long after, silently, without ceremony. Bellatrix does not return. Narcissa writes a single note, folded and left unanswered.

Sirius receives the news days later—Regulus is dead. No body recovered. Presumed lost in service to the Dark Lord. He says nothing. He crumples the parchment, and walks out of the Potters’ house into the snow. James doesn’t follow. Sirius stays gone for hours.

Kreacher watches silently as the house empties. He begins to tend the hidden locket like an altar—dusting around it, muttering to it, guarding it. He tells himself that he will destroy it, but he doesn’t. He can’t. He isn’t strong enough. And Regulus never taught him how.

The final shot lingers on the cupboard in the kitchen—quiet, unremarkable, sealed with age. Inside, the locket pulses faintly, like a heart trapped under glass. Regulus Arcturus Black lies dead beneath a nameless cave. No one will know what he did. Not yet.


HISTORY LESSON (SEASON 12)

 

Welcome to History Lesson, where we take a closer look at the movies that dare to tackle real-life events with varying levels of accuracy, drama, and WTF casting choices. These films promise to educate and entertain, but more often than not, they rewrite history with the subtlety of a sledgehammer. We’ll be your guide through the land of miscast biopics, dramatic embellishments, and historical “inspired-by” liberties, breaking down whether these flicks are Golden Reel Award-worthy masterpieces or just a big-budget Wikipedia summary. Either way, it’s more fun than your high school history class—and there’s popcorn.

This time around we will take a look at Season 12's fact-based slate....




HISTORY LESSON: TORSO
Denis Villeneuve’s Torso takes us back to 1936 Cleveland — a city apparently so bleak even the Great Depression wanted out — where Jake Gyllenhaal’s Eliot Ness trades Al Capone’s bootlegging empire for a far less glamorous gig: cleaning up body parts from Lake Erie. Based on the graphic novel (and loosely on the real-life “Torso Murders”), the film blends true crime with moody noir, showcasing Cleveland as the kind of place where the sidewalks are paved with corruption and severed heads.

While Torso plays fast and loose with historical accuracy (spoiler: the real Torso Killer was never caught, and Ness definitely didn’t shoot his way out of a flaming warehouse), it captures the era’s grim aesthetic with style. Gyllenhaal broods effectively, but it’s Cameron Britton as Gaylord Sundheim — the killer hiding in plain sight — who steals the show, adding unsettling charm to a character with hobbies that include decapitation and taunting law enforcement with postcard insults. Villeneuve pulls no punches, delivering a dark, atmospheric thriller that’s one part Zodiac, one part “Cleveland, don’t visit us.” Historically fuzzy but thoroughly riveting, Torso proves that sometimes, reality is stranger — and bloodier — than fiction.



Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Release: Wrong Turn

 
Wrong Turn
Genre: Horror
Director: Christopher Landon
Writer: Ben Collins
Cast: Sophie Thatcher, Tanner Buchanan, Caylee Cowan, Rohan Campbell, Devyn Nekoda, Emily VanCamp, Penn Badgley





Budget: $20,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $32,991,076
Foreign Box Office: $21,590,114
Total Profit: $20,998,900

Reaction: While it didn't reach the slasher hit heights of recent LRF reboots like Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Friday the 13th, but considering its source material was cult/DTV series these numbers are strong.




"Christopher Landon’s Wrong Turn is a viciously effective reinvention of the backwoods horror formula, trading simple slasher tropes for something far more sadistic and layered. Sophie Thatcher anchors the chaos with a grounded performance, even if the rest of the cast fail to rise to her level. I'd be interested in seeing what Landon and writer Ben Collins have in store for sequels." - Trent Hollow, Grindhouse Revival Weekly



"Like many horror franchises that overstay their welcome, this latest entry in the Wrong Turn universe struggles to justify its existence. It does have redeeming qualities—chief among them Sophie Turner, who once again proves she’s an actor worth paying attention to. But the relentless brutality, predictable scares, and a downright deflating ending make the film feel like it slipped away from both Landon and Collins. The result is a surprisingly tough sit." - Marcus Davis-Jobbes, Austin Chronicle


"In trying to reinvent Wrong Turn, Christopher Landon strips away what made the original work in the first place: simplicity, atmosphere, and primal fear. The introduction of an organized “hunt” and layered mythology feels overthought and distracts from the raw, backwoods terror fans expect from the franchise. Worse, the late-film pivot toward a second, more grotesque threat muddies the narrative entirely, turning what should have been a tight survival horror into something bloated and unfocused. Despite a committed lead performance from Sophie Thatcher, the film feels like it’s constantly fighting against its own premise—proving that sometimes, the straight road was the better path all along." - Calvin Rourke, Appalachian State Horror Archive








Rated R for strong bloody violence, and language.






SOCIAL SPOTLIGHT

 

Actors don’t just light up the screen — they light up the feed. Social Spotlight takes a look at how today’s stars promote their movies through the platforms that matter.

This round we have an Instagram post from Wrong Turn star Sophie Thatcher....



Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Now Showing: Wrong Turn

 
Wrong Turn
Genre: Horror
Director: Christopher Landon
Writer: Ben Collins
Cast: Sophie Thatcher, Tanner Buchanan, Caylee Cowan, Rohan Campbell, Devyn Nekoda, Emily VanCamp, Penn Badgley

Plot: The moon is partly obscured by clouds as a thin mist winds through the trees. A pair of hikers, a man and a woman, dressed in technical clothing and camping backpacks, advance cautiously along a path lit only by their flickering headlamps. The woman looks around nervously, clutching her companion’s arm tightly. Their breathing is labored and their faces are sweaty despite the cold. Their whispers seem broken by fear. The two turn around often, hearing something or thinking they hear it. Suddenly a branch breaks behind them, then another, closer. A guttural sound, almost an animalistic breath with a human tone is heard by the two hikers. The man’s eyes peer between the trees. The torch shines through the trees but there is nothing except that light mist. They take a step forward… and the earth gives way. The man sinks into a hole camouflaged by leaves and dry branches. The woman turns around screaming when she sees the man's body impaled on long, sharp stakes driven into the ground. The woman kneels on the edge as she hears a noise behind her. Something suddenly grabs her ankle. The camera follows her as she is dragged away, her heels digging into the earth as her nails try to grasp anything. Then a muffled scream is lost among the trees as the woman disappears into the fog.

The sun is high on a scenic, winding road, surrounded by thick conifers. A dark SUV speeds along the asphalt. Inside, the atmosphere is lively and light. Lena (Sophie Thatcher) drives with one arm relaxed out the window. Her black hair is pulled back in a ponytail with a pair of large, round sunglasses that reflect the landscape. A faint smile creases her face as she drums her fingers on the steering wheel to the beat of the music. Next to her, Zane (Tanner Buchanan) leans casually against the open window, staring out at the view, then turns to say something that makes everyone laugh. In the backseat Riley (Caylee Cowan) takes a selfie with Jude (Rohan Campbell), who tries to ruin it by making faces. Maya (Devyn Nekoda) moves to the beat, raising her hands and tossing her hair as if she’s already at the festival.

Suddenly, Lena slows the vehicle to a stop. Ahead of them, a line of vehicles stops in the middle of the road. Some drivers are out of their cars, others are trying to reverse around the obstacle. A distant horn blares. In the distance, visible through the trees: an overturned truck, lying on its side, its cargo strewn across the asphalt, blocking both directions of travel. The group turns off the music. Windows roll down, heads poking out to see what’s happening. Zane and Maya exchange a bored look. After a moment, Jude opens the door.

A little time passes and some of them get out of the car to stretch their legs. Riley, Lena and Zane walk along the shoulder, passing other stopped vehicles. Other people are out there talking, smoking and taking shelter in the shade. The atmosphere is patient but frustrated. Lena looks around as she sees a couple leaning against an old, lived-in olive green van. Daniel (Penn Badgley) is relaxed, with an attentive look and a friendly smile. Claire (Emily VanCamp) a very pretty blonde woman is next to him, holding a steel canteen and calmly observing everything. Zane comes over to make a sarcastic joke to which Claire laughs naturally, while Daniel responds with a friendly wave. Claire offers the boys cold drinks with a spontaneous gesture. The group relaxes a bit. They start to chat calmly. What seems like a random connection forms. Meanwhile, the camera pans up to an aerial shot. We see the line of cars stuck in the middle of nowhere.

Maya runs nervously toward the group, waving her hands, her voice cracking with urgency. The boys turn as Maya struggles to explain. A thin column of grayish smoke rises from the hood of the SUV. Lena and Zane carefully open the hood and a dark cloud hits them. They notice the broken radiator and green liquid on the ground. Daniel and Clare also approach, curious as to what is happening. They then offer a solution: they know of an alternate route and an old rest stop a little further back, where they can leave the SUV safely. Daniel points with a crumpled map while Claire smiles encouragingly. Some of the group hesitates, but the alternative would be to be stuck for who knows how long.

Daniel and Clare maneuver and reverse, followed slowly by Lena’s dying SUV. Soon the vehicles stop in a hidden clearing where abandoned vehicles such as cars, vans, and trailers lie among weeds and moss. Some are rusted, covered in leaves, others are almost intact and practically new. Zane and especially Lena take a quick look at the cars around them. They notice an old child seat, a suitcase still closed in the trunk of a station wagon, a shoe on the seat of a pickup. She narrows her eyes, thoughtful, but says nothing. One by one, the kids transfer backpacks and jackets to Daniel and Claire’s olive green van.

The van starts to move. After a while the paved road gives way to gravel, then dirt. The sun begins to set. The inside of the van is fairly quiet, apart from the tinny sound of the suspension and the low music coming from an old cassette radio and the soft snoring of Riley as she falls asleep. Daniel and Claire speak to each other in low voices, holding hands, laughing like two lovers on a journey. The tranquility is suddenly shattered by a sharp bang, followed by a second explosion of rubber. The van skids slightly on the loose ground and comes to an abrupt stop. Two tires are completely destroyed, punctured by a series of homemade nails nailed to a board hidden in the dust. Daniel and Claire get out and check the tires. Claire picks up her backpack and, in a reassuring tone, tells the group that they know someone nearby who can help them and that if they get hungry they can get supplies from the trunk. Then they walk into the woods, walking side by side, holding hands. Claire turns and makes a light gesture with her hand as if to say they will be back soon.

The group stays by the van. Zane opens the trunk looking for something to eat. There is a cooler, some supplies, but also a small metal box with a handwritten note inside, carefully folded. Lena reads it aloud. The boys gather around her curiously. "If you're reading this, it means you've been chosen. Every year, our community organizes a sacred event: The Hunt. And this year, you've been chosen as the prey. You have an hour's head start... or maybe not. Good luck." The group remains frozen. Maya tries to laugh, thinking it's a joke. Jude shakes his head, but Riley immediately silences him, terrified. Zane instead tries to rationalize while Lena instead looks at the woods and listens, signaling the others to be quiet. A hunting horn echoes in the distance and after a few seconds, wild cries rise from the woods. A mix of war cries and tribal chants, distant but approaching. A few moments later, a sudden hiss. An arrow shot from a very long distance cuts through the air and forcefully sticks in a tree, a few inches from Maya's head, who remains petrified before her legs give out for a moment. Jude helps her to get back on her feet. Riley watches in the distance as the figures move armed with crude weapons, dressed in rags and skins with faces masked by skulls and woven branches. The group begins to run through the undergrowth.


The group runs panting through bushes and twisted roots, pursued by hunters. Suddenly, as they pass between two narrow trees, a metallic click is activated. A barbed fence snaps sideways, suspended on a rudimentary system. The ropes creak but the mechanism jams at the last moment: the fence stops in mid-air, brushing the boys. Lena stumbles but Zane picks her up in an instant. Maya screams to stay together as much as possible. A moment later another sharp sound. Jude, in the center of the group, is dragged up by a vine, suddenly lifted between the trees like a puppet. The boy thrashes, screams, kicks into the void. The others rush beneath him, trying to cut the rope, but a moment later a second mechanism hidden among the branches is triggered: a series of guillotine blades shoot out from multiple directions. Jude is cleanly sliced ​​in the torso and legs. Blood explodes from above like a scarlet rain, spraying Maya in the face, who screams and falls backwards. Zane is paralyzed while Lena whirls around in shock. Jude, split in two, hangs high above. But there is no time to cry: in the distance the hunters are approaching, screaming in excitement.

The four survivors move blindly without knowing where to go, careful where they put their feet. Maya sobs, still shaken. Riley, further back, loses her rhythm and trips on a wet log, hitting her face on the ground. As she gets up and puts her foot on the ground, a metal trap snaps, clamping her ankle with a horrible crack. Riley screams with all her strength. None of the three in front hear her. She tries desperately to open the trap with her bloody hands. She looks at the wound: torn flesh and blood dripping. Her breathing becomes labored, for a moment she thinks about the movie “Saw” and for a moment she really considers whether it is worth looking for something to amputate her foot with.

Lena, Zane and Maya emerge from the vegetation in a small clearing. In front of them, a worn wooden hut, with a corrugated iron roof and broken windows. They stop, debating whether to go in or not. Maya looks back realizing that Riley is not with them. They look around, unsure whether to go back or not.

Riley in the meantime is still there. Her breathing heavy and with shaking hands. When she hears footsteps, she raises her head. Some figures surround her with masks of bone and wood and clothes of skins holding weapons of various types.
Riley begins to insult them, throwing rocks, pieces of bark and even her canteen. One laughs in her face. Another passes her a stick, speaking in a serious voice "You have ten seconds. If you can get free… you are free." Riley looks at the stick. Time begins. With a burst of pure adrenaline, she forces the trap, using the stick as leverage. Her flesh tears again, but the metal jaw opens wide enough to let her foot out. Riley collapses, cursing the hunters, then smiles, her face sweaty and bloody, looking at her executioners.
For a moment they seem shocked. Then a sharp whistle. A first arrow pierces her side. Then another. And another. And another. Riley collapses, to her knees. She is breathing hard, blood dripping from her nose and mouth, her face contorted with pain.

The camera zooms in on her right eye: a tear falls as her gaze fixes on the hunters dancing and screaming with joy. Suddenly one of them is grabbed by the neck, thrown to the ground and dragged away. Another is hit in the head by something massive. Large, misshapen, humanoid shapes, covered in mud and sewn cloth, emerge from the trees. In a few moments all the hunters are slaughtered. One of the mutants, huge and deformed, with only one eye and protruding jaws, approaches Riley. In his hand he holds a rusty cleaver. Riley, already dying with short gasps, looks at him before breathing her last.


Top 10 World War II Films

 
Sherman J. Pearson here for another Top 10. Films about World War II have been a part of Hollywood since, well, World War II. I took a deep dive down the studio's history of WWII films for this round's Top 10 list.


Top 10 World War II Films
10. Nation's Pride
9. Tokyo Rose
8. Sgt. Fury
7. Nick Fury and His Howling Commandos
6. The Molander Case
5. Wolfenstein
4. Captain America
3. Hiroshima
2. Solution
1. To the White Sea

Monday, March 30, 2026

Release: The Molander Case

 
The Molander Case
Genre: Drama/War
Director: Christian Petzold
Writer: Wyatt Allen
Based on the novel Lichtspiel by Daniel Kehlmann
Producer: Christoph Waltz
Cast: Daniel Bruhl, Jonas Dassler, Christian Friedel, Sandra Huller, Lazar Simaifar, Burghart Klaussner, Christoph Waltz



Budget: $28,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $13,490,005
Foreign Box Office: $27,155,348
Total Profit: -$11,003,130

Reaction: A historical war/drama about a German filmmaker in Nazi Germany probably never had huge box office hopes, so this one probably did about as well as it possibly could have - which we have to be okay with.



"The Molander Case is a haunting meditation on artistic compromise under authoritarianism, rendered with the quiet precision that defines Christian Petzold’s best work. Daniel Brühl gives a devastating performance as G.W. Pabst, portraying a man who convinces himself that survival and art can coexist, even as both slip irreparably through his grasp. By the time the film circles back to its framing device, it becomes clear that this is not just a story about a lost film, but about the lies people tell themselves to live with what they’ve done. The Molander Case, based on the novel The Director by Daniel Kehlmann, is easily one of the better novel adaptations in recent LRF memory." - Dave Manning, Ridgefield Press


"The Molander Case is an absorbing but uneven historical drama, carried by strong performances and Christian Petzold’s reliably cool visual precision. While the film’s moral questions about art, compromise, and collaboration are compelling, the pacing often drags and certain narrative threads feel underdeveloped. It’s a film filled with impressive moments rather than a fully cohesive whole, but those moments linger and they linger for a long time." - Lina Hartmann, Die Zeit 



"While The Molander Case is undeniably rich in atmosphere and anchored by strong performances, its deliberate pacing and elliptical storytelling may test the patience of many viewers. Daniel Brühl is excellent, but the film’s focus on suggested and uneven internal conflict over the absolutely fascinating real external stakes occasionally leaves the narrative feeling overly distant." - Greta Vale, The Silver Screen Almanac









Rated R for thematic material, war-related violence, and brief language.