Monday, February 9, 2026

Release: Dust Saint

 
Dust Saint
Genre: Drama/Thriller
Director: Rose Glass
Writer: Holden Abbott
Cast: Paul Dano, Jessie Buckley, Nell Fisher, John Hawkes







Budget: $20,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $14,100,200
Foreign Box Office: $12,696,772
Total Profit: -$15,142,454

Reaction: Writer Holden Abbott's LRF career is off to a strong critical start, but unfortunately not as strong of a stop at the box office with his first two films.



"In Dust Saint, Rose Glass expertly applies her knack for creating disturbing atmospheres to the vast, isolating western landscapes. However, I came away most impressed with writer Holden Abbott's sparse approach to telling this story, crafting dread through absence. The accidental false prophet narrative felt fresh and the script itself felt like something we've never seen in LRF before - an increasingly rare feat 35+ seasons in." - Cal Crowe, Washington Globe



"Rose Glass's Dust Saint is anchored by a career-best performance from Paul Dano who delivers an early GRA-contending performance in what turns out to be a stark, punishing drama. The film's ambiguity and final act refuse to comfort the audience, instead leaving things justifiably bleak." - Evan Kane, Buffalo News





"Dust Saint is the kind of slow-burn nightmare that lives more in mood than plot, and Rose Glass clearly knows how to make belief feel suffocating. Paul Dano is excellent at projecting a man collapsing under the weight of accidental myth-making, while Jessie Buckley’s calm, weaponized devotion is the film’s quiet engine of dread. It occasionally mistakes solemnity for depth and leans hard on ambiguity as a catch-all, but when it works, Dust Saint taps into something genuinely unsettling." - Mark Rawls, Seattle Times









Rated R for violence and thematic material






Sunday, February 8, 2026

Top 10 Female Directors

 
Sherman J. Pearson here for another Top 10. Following last season's historic female director accomplishments, I decided to take a look at the top female directors working in LRF today.

Top 10 Female Directors
10. Greta Gerwig - Highlights: Missoula, Love Is...
9. Sofia Coppola - Highlights: Black Dublin, E.P.
8. Karyn Kusama - Highlights: The Black Cat, The Black Cat Strikes Again!
7. Rose Glass - Highlights: Dust Saint, The Woman Upstairs
6. Ava DuVernay - Highlights: Lullabies for Little Criminals, Pudd'nhead Wilson
5. Patty Jenkins - Highlights: Mass Effect: The Shadow Broker, The Water Cure
4. Jennifer Kent - Highlights: Blood Countess, The Sandman: Season of Mists
3. Alma Har'el - Highlights: Material Girl, Gambit and Rogue
2. Lynne Ramsay - Highlights: Tara's Wrath, A Lost Sense of Heaven
1. Kathryn Bigelow - Highlights: Ruby Ridge, Wonder Woman

Now Showing: Dust Saint

 
Dust Saint
Genre: Drama/Thriller
Director: Rose Glass
Writer: Holden Abbott
Cast: Paul Dano, Jessie Buckley, Nell Fisher, John Hawkes

Plot: A stark desert. Bleached bones in the sand. A lone wagon creaks across the empty horizon, painted with the words: HOLY REMEDIES — FAITH, FIRE, AND FORMULA.

Behind the reins sits Elias Mercy (Paul Dano), wiry, sunburnt, and dressed like a traveling preacher whose clothes have seen better days. He hums a broken hymn to himself. His eyes, wide and fragile, flicker with a hint of madness.

Elias rolls into Calico Pass, a nearly abandoned mining town choking on dust. The well is dry. The church collapsed. A few gaunt souls watch him from shaded porches like ghosts. A sign nailed to a post reads: “IN GOD WE STILL TRUST — SOMEHOW.”

At the saloon, Elias is eyed warily. He performs his usual pitch — claims to have been “sent by the Lord to revive the soul of this place.” He hands out bottles of brown tonic, speaks with warmth and poetry. The barkeep spits on the floor. “We’ve seen your type.” But one woman, Clara Halloway (Jessie Buckley), quietly buys a bottle.

That night, Elias sets up a tent revival outside the burned-down church. He preaches into the dark, voice trembling but rising like fire. A few people drift in, drawn by something in his cadence — a sadness that feels holy.

Elias visits townsfolk one by one. He fixes a broken fence, blesses a dying mule, comforts a sick child with water and a touch. All sleight of hand — practiced tricks from years on the road — but the people want to believe.

A thunderstorm gathers far off in the desert. He calls a meeting that night: “I have been sent to bring rain.” People gather, desperate. He rants in tongues. People weep. And then — as if on cue — it rains.

Just a burst. But it’s enough. The crowd erupts.

Elias collapses behind his tent, panicked, gasping. He hadn’t expected it. “It’s coincidence,” he mutters. “Coincidence.”

But Clara comes to him, soaked and smiling, kneels. “I believe you were sent.”

He’s too shaken to speak.

Over the next weeks, Elias becomes the town’s reluctant shepherd. The sheriff, Malrick (John Hawkes), an old, limping man with failing lungs, warns him: “You get one miracle. Don’t press your luck.”

Elias organizes the rebuilding of the church. Sermons swell in size. Clara teaches hymns to the children. Donations pile up. He blesses livestock, heals stomachaches with sugar water. People whisper his name with reverence.

One night, Elias stands alone at the well. He hears something below — whispers, not wind. When he looks down, the water’s returned.

He doesn’t tell anyone.

Elias begins to dream of a figure made of ash and flame, standing on the hill, watching the town. It never speaks. Just stares. Its face is hollow — no eyes, just black flame.

He wakes trembling. Begins to drink his own tonic.

At a sermon, a man collapses from a seizure. Elias kneels, touches him, prays — it’s a spectacle. The man convulses, then stops. Moments later, he opens his eyes and begins to sing. The crowd roars.

Clara weeps with joy. Elias shakes with fear.

Later that night, Elias vomits behind the chapel. “I didn’t do anything,” he whispers to himself.

The next morning, a quiet, withdrawn orphan girl, age 12, begins to follow Elias. She doesn’t speak. Watches him with calm, unblinking eyes. She’s everywhere — outside his tent, behind the pulpit, in the hills.

Elias gives her a name — Hope. She never repeats it, but she doesn’t object.

One day, she hands him a small notebook. Inside: drawings of the burning man. Identical to Elias’s dream. On the last page: “He walks with you.” Elias burns the notebook.

The town buries Old Caleb Drury, a prospector who’d lost his legs in a cave-in a decade earlier and had taken to preaching apocalypse with a whiskey bottle in hand. Three days after his funeral, children whisper they saw him “walking the hills on new legs.”

Elias dismisses it at first, chalking it up to grief hallucinations or childish fancy. But more townspeople come forward, swearing they saw Caleb — clothed in white, standing in the ravine behind the chapel. Some say he looked joyful. Others say he wept blood.

Sheriff Malrick has the grave dug up. The coffin is open, the body gone. No signs of digging.

A fire breaks out in the saloon that night. No one is hurt, but people take it as a sign. Elias, now plagued by waking visions and insomniac tremors, gives a sermon in which he tries to redirect their faith: “Miracles may comfort, but they do not speak. And they do not save.”

But it’s no use. His words only deepen their belief. “He doubts himself — how humble he is,” Clara says with a reverent smile.

In the back of the crowd, the orphan girl Hope watches him silently, clutching a charred bible missing its cover.

Clara is a widow of three years. Her husband was a miner crushed in a collapse — the same collapse Elias claimed had been “foreseen” in a dream, though privately he admitted he never saw a thing.

Clara has latched onto Elias not as a romantic partner but as a holy purpose. She cooks for him, washes his clothes, arranges his sermons. She reads from scripture with quiet conviction and speaks often of her husband, who she believes is “watching through Elias’s eyes.”

One night, she invites Elias to dinner. The food is rich, almost ceremonial. As he eats, Clara stares at him with unsettling calm.

“You’re shaking,” she says.
“I haven’t slept,” he replies.
“Then rest. Let the Lord carry your burden.”

She kisses his forehead. Then his mouth. Elias begins to protest, but Clara shushes him gently. The moment turns intimate, but not sensual — it feels like ritual. As they lie together in candlelight, Clara whispers, “We’re remaking the world. You and me.”

Elias weeps quietly.

The next day, Hope is gone. No one saw her leave. No one seems terribly concerned.

Elias panics. He searches her usual haunts — the schoolhouse ruins, the prayer rocks behind the well, the burned oak tree. He finds instead a trail of sketches pinned to fence posts and tree bark, drawn in soot and chalk: images of the burning man.

He follows the trail into the hills. The drawings grow stranger — the burning man flanked by weeping animals, the church levitating, Elias depicted with flames bursting from his eyes. Finally, he sees her: Hope, standing on a ledge, looking out over Calico Pass.

“Hope!” he calls.

She turns. Smiles. Then walks behind a boulder and vanishes.

Elias chases after her — but finds only a makeshift shrine: bones, feathers, and her charred bible, now open to blank pages. A strange wind picks up. In the distance, on a ridge across the valley, the burning man appears. Still, silent. Watching.

Elias collapses. “What do you want?” he shouts. The wind howls. The figure doesn’t move.

He returns to town, hollow-eyed.

Elias stumbles into the church and finds Sheriff Malrick waiting, drunk and holding a shotgun.

“I should’ve run you out the day you arrived,” Malrick says. “You want to see God, I’ll put you close.”

Malrick confesses he’s dying — likely has weeks. He’s not afraid of death, but he’s afraid of what the town’s become. “They’re not people anymore, Elias. They’re moths, and you’re the fire.”

Elias breaks. He confesses everything: the fake tonics, the prison record, the staged healings, the money he skimmed from donations. He begs Malrick to kill him — to end the lie.

Malrick doesn’t shoot. He just spits. “You think death’s punishment? You ain’t even begun to suffer.”

He walks away.

Elias goes to the bell tower and rings the church bell wildly in the middle of the night. The town gathers. He screams the truth. “I’m a liar! A criminal! I don’t deserve your faith!”

They stare in silence. Clara steps forward. “Even Christ wept in the garden,” she says. “Your doubt makes you holy.”

They kneel. One by one.

Elias falls to his knees, sobbing.

Hope’s body is found nailed to a cross-shaped tree at the edge of the desert, arms outstretched. She is covered in strange markings, but her face is peaceful — as if asleep. No blood. No signs of struggle. Just ash where her feet touched the earth.

No one claims to have seen anything. Clara insists, “She was chosen.” The town agrees.

They carry her body to the church. Elias tries to stop them, but he is ignored. She is laid upon the altar.

That night, Elias stands over her, alone. He whispers a prayer, not to God, but to anyone listening.

At the next service, Elias stands barefoot in front of the crowd. His clothes are torn. He hasn’t eaten in days.

“I came here to lie,” he says. “I came here to survive. I sold you false hope because it was all I had. But this? This thing walking among us — it’s not hope. It’s not God. It’s hunger.”

He douses the pulpit in oil. Lights a match. Throws it.

The church bursts into flame. People scream — but do not run.

As the fire rises, the church begins to rebuild itself. Flames curl upward, shaping into wood. Beams reassemble midair. Smoke forms stained glass. It is impossible — and everyone sees it.

The altar glows. Hope’s body is gone.

Elias collapses in the aisle, eyes wide, mouth open. He whispers: “You were real.”

The congregation chants, “Mercy. Mercy. Mercy.”

Days pass. No one sees Elias. The town enters a near-trance state. No crime. No sickness. No speaking above a whisper.

Clara organizes a vigil. People come with candles, offerings, children dressed in white.

At dusk, Elias appears on the cliffside above the town, cloaked in a blood-red robe. He says nothing. Simply raises his arms.

Thunder rumbles.

He drops to his knees. He smiles. Not one of happiness. One of fear, anger. A tear drops down his cheek.


Saturday, February 7, 2026

In Development

 
The Letter Never Sent: Ben Feldman (Little Death, "Superstore") and Alyla Browne (Sonic the Hedgehog 3, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga) will complete the casting of the Scarlett Johansson-led romantic drama The Letter Never Sent. Director John Crowley makes his LRF debut on the project from writer Andrew Doster.

Discovery: Cooper Hoffman (The Long Walk, Saturday Night) will make his LRF debut in Discovery from director Damien Chazelle. Josh O'Connor (Songbird, Challengers) and Riz Ahmed (Paki, Sherwood) are also joining the project which depicts the ethical drama between a group of neuroscientists who have discovered a mind-reading device. Jimmy Ellis and Chad Taylor penned the project.

Blood and Glory: Director Tarsem Singh's historical war epic Blood and Glory, which depicts the war between Darius III and Alexander the Great has added Said Taghmaoui (Tin Soldier, The Family Plan) as Bessus, Paz Vega (Deathstroke, Rambo: Last Blood) as Stateira, Aiysha Hart (Desert Warrior, "A Discovery of Witches") as Barsine, Milo Gibson (Falling on the Cross, Clawfoot) as Cleitus, and Laurie Davidson (The Hammer of Thor, "The Girlfriend") as Ptolemy. Jack Brown is the man behind the script for the film.

Running from the Spotlight: The latest teen drama film from writer Jacob Jones has continued filling out its cast with the additions of Sadie Munroe "The Hardy Boys", "Workin' Moms"), Michela Luci (Dino Dana: The Movie, "Endlings"), and Isaac Arellanes (A Million Miles Away, "My Life with the Walter Boys"). Michael Fimognari is directing the film.

Unreasonable Doubt: Cristin Milioti (Starlight, Patient Zero) and Channing Tatum (The Hammer of Thor, Roofman) are set for the lead roles in the R-rated romantic comedy Unreasonable Doubt. Milioti will play a woman summoned for jury duty who develops feelings for a man on trial for murder, played by Tatum. Raymond Lee (Jazzy, "Quantum Leap") and Kurtwood Smith (Firestarter, "That '90s Show") have also signed on to the film as a fellow juror and the judge, respectively. Andrew Fleming (Hamlet 2, Ideal Home) has been tapped to direct from a script by Walter McKnight (Anastasia, The Hunchback of Notre Dame).

Vultures: The creative duo behind Season 32's Bigfoot, writer Clive Steinbeck (Night Stalker, Texas Chainsaw Massacre: Flesh and Blood) and director Rob Zombie (ID, Bigfoot), are reuniting for the new horror film Vultures about a violent biker gang who hide out in a strip club and clash with the staff. Sheri Moon Zombie (Bigfoot, 3 from Hell), Bella Thorne (Eye of the Scarecrow, Bigfoot), Richard Brake (Twisted Metal, Texas Chainsaw Massacre: Flesh and Blood), and Danny Trejo (Twisted Metal, Cecil) are all set to star in the project.

From the Desk of Alfie Ellison, VP of International Development: The Line

 

Last Resort Films has set Jake Gyllenhaal (LRF's Batman, Torso, Control) to lead The Line, a psychological war thriller adapted from the 2011 video game Spec Ops: The Line. Academy Award–nominated filmmaker Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front, Conclave) will direct, bringing his acclaimed mastery of wartime storytelling to the project.

Released in 2011, Spec Ops: The Line earned a reputation as one of the most daring narrative-driven video games of its era, deconstructing traditional military shooter tropes by forcing players to confront the moral and psychological costs of violence. The story follows Captain Martin Walker and his Delta Force team as they venture into a sandstorm-ravaged Dubai to investigate the disappearance of a rogue U.S. battalion - only to spiral into hallucinatory horror, shifting loyalties, and the collapse of Walker’s own moral compass.

Gyllenhaal will play Walker, a role that industry insiders describe as one of the most challenging of his career - an unflinching descent into the psychology of a soldier undone by the very ideals he swore to uphold.

“Edward Berger and Jake Gyllenhaal are a dream pairing for a project like this. Edward brings an unparalleled ability to portray war with both scale and intimacy, and Jake has consistently proven himself as one of the most fearless actors of his generation.”

Berger, who drew widespread acclaim for his visceral and humane take on All Quiet on the Western Front, sees The Line as a continuation of his exploration of war’s psychological toll, but through the prism of a modern, fractured landscape. “What struck me about the source material,” Berger said, “was its refusal to simplify. It’s a story that begins as a rescue mission and unravels into something much darker, accountability, delusion, and the stories we tell ourselves as soldiers and nations. That’s the kind of narrative I’m compelled to tell.”

For any inquiries please contact LRF Vice President of International Development Alfie Ellison

The Line
Project Details
Based on the 2011 Video Game Spec Ops - The Line
Attached Talent
Star Jake Gyllenhaal
Director Edward Berger

Friday, February 6, 2026

Release: Man of God

 
Man of God
Genre: Drama/Thriller
Director: James Mangold
Writers: Sammy-Jo Ellis & John Malone
Cast: Josh Brolin, Robert Aramayo, Michael Shannon, Melissa George, Jon Voight, Billy Howle, Emma Myers, Tim Blake Nelson





Budget: $30,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $47,494,656
Foreign Box Office: $16,000,012
Total Profit: $2,017,490

Reaction: This one just narrowly managed to break even, but given the film's subject matter and adult-oriented story we are happy with any profits.




"James Mangold’s Man of God is a grim, morally abrasive thriller that weaponizes restraint, allowing faith, guilt, and obsession to grind against each other until something finally breaks. Josh Brolin delivers one of his most controlled performances in years, playing John Simonette not as a crusader but as a man quietly hollowed out by certainty, while Michael Shannon’s brief but chilling appearance sets the film’s dread into motion. Robert Aramayo’s late-film turn is genuinely disturbing without tipping into caricature. The film’s refusal to offer easy redemption or moral clarity may frustrate some, but its final act lands with a cold, unsettling confidence that lingers well after the credits." - Vince DeSalvo, Empire State Tribune


“Part inspiration porn and part harrowing tale of redemption and religion, Man of God is a haunting tale that shows the depths that people will go in order to find salvation. Yet, in spite of its religious exterior, those who explore its interior will find something for everyone.” - Mitchell Parker, New York Times 





"Man of God is a deliberately paced moral thriller that often feels more interested in spiritual inquiry than narrative propulsion, sometimes to its own detriment. Mangold frames West Texas as a purgatorial landscape, and Brolin’s stoic performance anchors the film. Michael Shannon’s early scenes cast a powerful shadow the film never quite escapes, and while Robert Aramayo brings unnerving conviction to the final movement, the escalation arrives almost too late. Thoughtful and competently crafted, Man of God provokes serious questions about faith and responsibility, even if it doesn’t always dramatize them with equal force." - Evelyn Shadwell, The Lexington Herald









Rated R for strong violence, language, and intense thematic material





A Second Look: Nexus

 

Welcome back for another edition of A Second Look with Jeff Stockton! In this segment I will take a "second look" at a past LRF release with a fresh set of eyes. 

When Nexus first hit in Season 10, I remember landing in a pretty specific middle ground: I didn’t dislike it across the board, but I couldn’t shake the sense that it was an ambitious original sci-fi trying to explain itself into greatness rather than earning it. The core setup is clear enough—Arda, year 2500, a once-prosperous society now crushed under the decades-long tyranny of Commander Only (Jeremy Irons). After Only discards his longtime general Scathal (Ben Kingsley) in the wake of his wife’s funeral, Scathal links up with rebel Milo (Joel Edgerton) and forms “Nexus,” gradually recruiting Kassidy (Natalie Dormer), Orion (Michael B. Jordan), Tyrin (Rob Gronkowski), and Sergio (Daniel Kaluuya) to chase Only across hostile regions (desert Ranel, the monarchy of Ilvania, the island Zadiv) before storming his ship, the Red Mark, for a final confrontation that ends in an escape-and-sequel-tease. Back then, my biggest positives were fairly specific: it was refreshing to see Kingsley in a big-budget genre piece as something other than the obvious villain, and some of del Toro’s world-building instincts do peek through the haze - enough that I could see the movie it wanted to be. But it also felt overly convoluted and sluggish out of the gate, with far too much runway devoted to narration and setup, and not nearly enough to making me care - even something as fundamental as the wife’s death is treated like a plot memo rather than a dramatic event. 

Taking "A Second Look" my opinion is a bit harsher - and honestly, I think the film earned that harsher look. The exposition isn’t just heavy; it’s structural, as if the script is terrified we’ll miss a detail, so it keeps talking instead of dramatizing, and the “Nexus” team’s emotional dynamics (Milo vs. Scathal, Tyrin’s seduction, Orion’s rage) repeatedly get explained or announced rather than built through behavior and choices. The casting is the real anchor, though: it’s hard to buy this particular ensemble as a cohesive rebel unit, and the stunt casting is especially disruptive—Gronkowski and Kate Upton don’t just feel “miscast,” they feel like they’re from a different movie, which keeps puncturing whatever gravity the story is trying to conjure. Even the pieces that should be slam-dunks - Irons as a tyrant, del Toro’s supposed creature-meets-tech imagination, the promise of a propulsive trek across distinct landscapes - get swallowed by franchise-minded sprawl. The film keeps widening its scope (drones, royalty, multiple realms, “weakness transcripts,” sequel propulsion) instead of tightening into one great central narrative with a clear emotional engine. In hindsight, Nexus plays less like the first chapter of an epic and more like a pitch deck that accidentally got filmed.

Original Grade: C

New Grade: D+