Sunday, June 21, 2026
IN DEVELOPMENT
Saturday, June 20, 2026
The Roundup with Jeff Stockton (Season 36 Round 4)
Round 4 gave us erotic horror, comic-book insanity, muted prestige drama, and — because this season apparently refuses to stop doing this — more uneven box office math. Here's The Roundup....
Friday, June 19, 2026
BOX OFFICE BREAKDOWN (SEASON 36 ROUND 4)
Action: #111
Erotic: #7
Thursday, June 18, 2026
LRF TRIVIA TIDBITS (SEASON 36 ROUND 4)
Round 4 of Season 36 turned into an unexpectedly historic one for LRF—breaking franchise records, pushing content boundaries, and marking a sudden resurgence for a veteran performer who had previously been almost absent from the studio’s history.
Lobo
Lobo made history within LRF’s DC Comics Universe as just the seventh R-rated entry—and easily the most commercially successful of the bunch. Its breakout performance suggests there may be a stronger appetite than expected for harder-edged, adult-oriented DC storytelling within the studio’s shared universe.
Gray
While Gray ultimately lost money, it still secured a unique place in film history as only the fourth NC-17 release in LRF history - and the first not to be written by Meirad Tako. More impressively, the film became the second highest-grossing NC-17 movie ever released, trailing only the long-standing record held by Lust, Caution—proving controversy can sometimes translate into curiosity at the box office.
The Quiet Between Us
Angela Bassett’s sudden LRF resurgence continued with The Quiet Between Us. Across the studio’s first 35 seasons, Bassett had appeared only twice—Dishonest in Season 1 and The Stand in Season 11—but Season 36 alone has already doubled that total thanks to back-to-back appearances in Stretch Armstrong and now The Quiet Between Us.
RELEASE: THE QUIET BETWEEN US
"While The Quiet Between Us is undeniably well-acted, its deliberate pacing and heavy emphasis on mood can feel repetitive over time. Scenes often linger past their emotional peak, and the film occasionally leans too hard on familiar “end-of-life” beats without adding new perspective. Washington and Bassett elevate the material significantly, but the script sometimes feels stretched thin, relying on silence and atmosphere where deeper narrative development might have helped. It’s moving, but not always as impactful as it aims to be." - Tony Klesko, San Diego Union-Tribune
"The Quiet Between Us is a deeply affecting, intimate portrait of love and loss, anchored by extraordinary performances. Derek Cianfrance directs with patience and restraint, allowing silence and small moments to carry immense emotional weight. Denzel Washington delivers one of his most vulnerable performances in years, while Angela Bassett brings heartbreaking grace to Ruth. Tessa Thompson adds complexity as the daughter caught in the middle. It’s a quiet film, but devastating in all the right ways." - Alton Pierce, American Drama Review
"For all its prestige talent, The Quiet Between Us often feels dramatically inert, mistaking stillness for depth. The film leans heavily on well-worn end-of-life clichΓ©s—lingering silences, symbolic objects, strained family arguments—without offering much new insight into them. Scenes repeat the same emotional beats with minimal progression, creating a sense of stagnation rather than accumulation. While Washington and Bassett bring undeniable gravitas, even their performances can’t fully overcome a script that feels overly familiar and, at times, frustratingly static." - Dave Manning, Ridgefield Press
Rated PG-13 for thematic material and brief strong language.





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