Wednesday, 24 June 2026

REVIEW: The Sheep Detectives (2026 Film) - Starring Hugh Jackman, Nicholas Braun, Nicholas Galitzine, Molly Gordon, Hong Chau, and Emma Thompson



Review by Jon Donnis

Family films often struggle to balance broad comedy, emotional storytelling and a compelling plot, but The Sheep Detectives manages to bring all three together with surprising confidence. Directed by Kyle Balda and based on Leonie Swann's beloved novel Three Bags Full, this mystery comedy takes an undeniably unusual premise and turns it into one of the most entertaining family adventures of the year. What could have been little more than a novelty quickly develops into a genuinely engaging whodunnit, packed with humour, heart and enough twists to keep both children and adults invested from beginning to end.


The story follows a flock of sheep whose lives are thrown into turmoil after the death of their shepherd, George Hardy, played by Hugh Jackman. Having spent years listening to George read detective novels aloud, the sheep have unknowingly absorbed all the lessons needed to become investigators themselves. As the local police struggle to piece together the truth, the flock embarks on its own investigation, uncovering secrets hidden beneath the surface of their quiet English village.

One of the film's greatest strengths is the mystery itself. Family films often simplify their plots for younger audiences, but The Sheep Detectives refuses to take that route. Instead, it presents a genuinely satisfying investigation filled with red herrings, hidden motives and surprising revelations. The screenplay trusts viewers to follow the clues, creating a story that feels rewarding rather than predictable. While adults will appreciate the structure of the mystery, younger viewers are given enough humour and character moments to remain engaged throughout.


The voice cast is exceptional. Julia Louis-Dreyfus brings warmth, intelligence and determination to Lily, the flock's self-appointed detective, while Chris O'Dowd delivers many of the film's funniest moments as the endlessly memorable Mopple. Bryan Cranston gives Sebastian a surprising amount of depth, transforming what could have been a simple supporting role into one of the film's emotional anchors. Across the board, the sheep are far more memorable than many of the human characters, which is ultimately a compliment considering how much personality the filmmakers manage to give each member of the flock.

That success extends to the film's emotional core. Beneath the comedy lies a surprisingly mature exploration of grief, memory and loss. Like Babe and Homeward Bound before it, The Sheep Detectives treats younger viewers with a level of respect that is becoming increasingly rare in family entertainment. Difficult themes are not avoided or softened beyond recognition. Instead, they are presented in a thoughtful and accessible way that allows the story to carry genuine emotional weight. Some of the film's most effective moments arrive when it slows down and allows its characters to process what has happened rather than rushing towards the next joke.


The film also deserves praise for its tone. Family features often feel frightened of sincerity, constantly undercutting emotional scenes with a joke or reference. The Sheep Detectives embraces earnest storytelling without embarrassment. The result is perhaps the most tonally surprising family film of the year so far, a genuinely heartfelt PG-rated adventure that succeeds through strong characters and timeless storytelling rather than relying on irony or cynicism. Its confidence in well-worn storytelling traditions proves remarkably effective.

Visually, the film creates a charming countryside setting that perfectly suits the story. The village, meadows and farms feel inviting while still maintaining enough atmosphere to support the murder mystery elements. The contrast between the picturesque surroundings and the darker investigation creates much of the film's appeal.

If there is a significant weakness, it is the running time. At 1 hour and 49 minutes, The Sheep Detectives occasionally stretches beyond what its youngest audience members may comfortably sit through. While the mystery remains engaging, some sections feel slightly overextended and a tighter edit could have improved the pacing. Children may begin to lose focus during certain middle portions before the film regains momentum heading into its final act.


Even so, the lengthy runtime does little to diminish the overall achievement. This is a truly lovely and consistently funny family film that never forgets the importance of telling a good story. The mystery is clever, the characters are charming and the emotional moments land exactly as intended. Most impressively of all, the sheep completely steal the spotlight, often overshadowing Hugh Jackman despite his strong performance.

The Sheep Detectives may well become one of the year's biggest surprises. It delivers laughs, mystery, emotion and genuine heart in equal measure, creating a family film that appeals across generations. In an era where family entertainment often struggles to connect with audiences of all ages, this one succeeds with remarkable ease.

The Sheep Detectives is an excellent family film and earns a strong 9 out of 10.

Out Now on Prime Video https://amzn.to/4f1kODW


Tuesday, 23 June 2026

REVIEW: Citizen Vigilante (2026 Film) - Starring Armie Hammer


Review by Jon Donnis

Uwe Boll's Citizen Vigilante arrives as a hard-hitting vigilante action thriller that is guaranteed to divide audiences, politicians and critics alike. Presented through a nonlinear narrative structure, the film follows Sanders (Armie Hammer), a former U.S. Army officer who has built a new life in Europe while secretly operating as the feared Vigilante Citizen. As crime escalates and public confidence in the authorities declines, Sanders takes matters into his own hands, targeting those he believes have escaped justice. The result is a provocative B movie thriller that places its message front and centre and refuses to soften its stance.


The first thing that stands out is just how timely the film feels. The issues explored throughout the story mirror concerns that many people can see are becoming increasingly relevant in modern society, which gives the narrative an immediacy that is difficult to ignore. While the subject matter is undoubtedly controversial, Citizen Vigilante never attempts to disguise what it wants to say. Instead, it confronts its themes head on, creating a film that feels designed to spark debate as much as entertain.

Armie Hammer delivers a strong performance as Sanders. The character is presented as a man driven by frustration at institutions that he believes have failed ordinary people. Whether confronting criminals directly, visiting victims who feel abandoned by the justice system, or evading law enforcement, Hammer gives Sanders a sense of determination that makes his actions understandable within the context of the story. The film asks viewers to see events through his perspective, and Hammer carries that responsibility effectively throughout.


Costas Mandylor also performs well as Interpol Regional Chief Henry. Rather than being portrayed as a simple antagonist, Henry serves as the representative of law and order, placing him on a collision course with Sanders. Their conflict provides much of the film's tension and gives the story a second perspective, even as the narrative remains firmly focused on the vigilante's mission.

The action scenes are another major strength. Citizen Vigilante embraces its B movie roots while delivering sequences that are both engaging and effective. The confrontations feel direct and grounded, avoiding unnecessary spectacle in favour of a more realistic approach. Whether Sanders is dealing with street criminals, confronting individuals he believes have escaped punishment, or battling armed authorities, the action consistently keeps the story moving forward.

The story itself is also surprisingly effective. Despite its controversial subject matter, the narrative remains easy to follow and maintains momentum throughout. The nonlinear structure adds intrigue, while the underlying plot steadily builds towards its conclusion. The film's willingness to tackle difficult issues without compromise helps it stand apart from many modern thrillers that often feel reluctant to take clear positions.


Perhaps the strongest endorsement the film receives is the fact that it has been banned in Germany. For many viewers, that alone will make it a title worth seeking out. The controversy surrounding the film is likely to attract as much attention as its content, and it is easy to understand why. Citizen Vigilante challenges accepted narratives and presents a perspective that many mainstream critics and politicians are unlikely to welcome.

As for negatives, there is really only one significant criticism. The attempts to ban or restrict the film may prevent some audiences from seeing it. However, there is also the possibility that the controversy will ultimately increase interest in the film and encourage more people to seek it out. Whether that proves true remains to be seen.


Citizen Vigilante succeeds as an entertaining vigilante thriller while also delivering a message that it considers deeply important. At times its realism is so striking that it almost resembles a documentary. Despite its modest budget, the film manages to leave a strong impression, combining solid performances, effective action and a story that feels highly relevant to current events. For viewers willing to engage with its themes, it is one of the most notable and provocative releases of the year.

Citizen Vigilante is an excellent and very timely film. Its message, serves as a warning that governments ignore public concerns at their own peril. Whether audiences agree with that message or not, the film delivers it with conviction and confidence.

Score: 9/10




Monday, 22 June 2026

Why Watching Foreign Films Broadens Your Perspective?


There's a moment that happens to almost every film lover. You've watched everything on your usual list, scrolled past the same recommendations a dozen times, and felt that flat, stale sensation of déjà vu. Then, almost by accident, you click on a movie from another country. The subtitles feel strange at first. Ten minutes later, you forget they're even there.

That's the magic of foreign movies. They don't just entertain. They rewire how you see the world.

A Window Into Lives You'll Never Live


Most of us will only ever experience one culture firsthand, maybe two if we're lucky enough to travel or relocate. Foreign films hand you a passport without the airport lines. A Korean drama can show you the quiet tension inside a Seoul apartment. A French film might capture the unspoken rules of a Parisian dinner party.

Suddenly, you understand things textbooks never taught you. Why does this matter? Because empathy isn't built through lectures. It's built through stories that make you feel like you're standing in someone else's shoes, even for two hours.

The Numbers Tell an Interesting Story


Foreign film consumption has exploded in recent years. According to data from the Motion Picture Association, international content now accounts for a significant share of total streaming hours on major platforms worldwide. Netflix alone has reported that non-English titles consistently rank among its most-watched content globally, with shows and films from South Korea, Spain, and India pulling in hundreds of millions of viewing hours.

Why does this surge matter? Because audiences are voting with their remote controls. People are tired of formulaic plots. They want something raw, something different, something that doesn't follow the same three-act structure they've memorized since childhood.

Breaking the Hollywood Formula


American cinema, for all its strengths, often follows predictable rhythms. Setup, conflict, resolution. Foreign films laugh at that structure sometimes. They linger in silence. They let scenes breathe without rushing toward a climax.

Iranian cinema, for instance, frequently uses long takes and minimal dialogue to build emotional weight. Japanese films might spend ten minutes on a single conversation over tea, and somehow it's riveting. This isn't a flaw. It's a different philosophy of storytelling, one that values patience over spectacle.

Language as a Bridge, Not a Barrier


Here's something surprising: watching subtitled films can actually improve cognitive flexibility. Reading text while processing audio and visual cues simultaneously keeps your brain engaged in ways passive English-language viewing doesn't. Some linguists argue this is why frequent subtitle-readers often pick up new vocabulary faster, even in their native tongue.

There's also something humbling about hearing a language you don't understand. It reminds you that billions of people communicate, joke, argue, and fall in love in words completely foreign to you. That's not a small realization. It reshapes how you think about communication itself.

Discovering Stories Hollywood Would Never Greenlight


Big studios chase blockbusters. They want sequels, franchises, safe bets. Foreign film industries, especially smaller or independent ones, often take risks that would terrify a major studio executive. A Romanian film might explore bureaucratic absurdity with dark, biting humor. A Senegalese director might tell a story rooted entirely in oral tradition and folklore.

These aren't niche curiosities. They're entire genres of human experience that mainstream cinema rarely touches. Once you start watching, you realize how much storytelling territory has gone unexplored in the films you grew up with.

The Social Side of Cinema


Watching a film is one thing. Talking about it afterward is where the real magic often happens. A great foreign film tends to spark questions you didn't expect: What did that ending really mean? Why did the director choose silence instead of music in that scene? These conversations don't always need to happen with people you already know.

Many viewers are now turning to platforms built specifically for this type of exchange. It's easy to chat with strangers about anything: a new arthouse film, a famous actor's role, the plot of an action movie, or anything else. Sites like OMG Fun let people connect with strangers and chat about whatever's on their minds. On OMGFun, you can find unexpected dialogues with different people at any time.

Festivals: Where Discovery Begins


Film festivals like Cannes, Berlinale, and Busan exist largely because foreign cinema deserves a stage. These events routinely showcase work that later gets distributed worldwide, sometimes years after its festival debut. Parasite, for example, swept through festival circuits long before it made history at the Oscars.

Streaming has democratized access to festival darlings too. You no longer need to fly to France to see what's winning awards. A few clicks, and that acclaimed Belgian drama everyone's talking about is sitting right there on your screen.

How It Changes the Way You See Your Own Country


Strangely enough, watching foreign films often teaches you more about your own culture than you'd expect. Seeing how other societies handle grief, family conflict, or ambition gives you a mirror. You start noticing patterns in your own upbringing you never questioned before.

This isn't about comparison for the sake of judgment. It's about perspective. When you see five different cultural approaches to the same universal theme, like loss or love, you begin to understand that your way isn't the only way. It's just one version among many.

Practical Tips for Getting Started


Diving into foreign cinema can feel overwhelming at first. Where do you even begin? Start with award-winning titles from countries known for strong film industries: South Korea, France, Japan, Iran, and Spain are solid entry points. Mix genres too. Don't just watch dramas; try a foreign comedy or thriller to see how tone shifts across cultures.

Keep a running list of films you finish, along with one sentence about how they made you feel. Over time, that list becomes a map of how your taste, and maybe even your worldview, has shifted.

Final Thoughts


Foreign movies aren't just entertainment from somewhere else. They're invitations into entirely different ways of thinking, feeling, and storytelling. Every subtitle you read, every unfamiliar setting you absorb, chips away at the assumption that your perspective is the default one.

So next time you're scrolling through a streaming app, skip the algorithm's top picks for a moment. Search for something foreign instead. You might walk away with more than just a good story. You might walk away seeing the world just a little differently than before.




Friday, 19 June 2026

REVIEW: Toy Story 5 (2026 Film) - Starring Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, and Joan Cusack


Review by Jon Donnis

Toy Story 5 brings Pixar’s long running world of talking toys back into play with a story that leans heavily into the collision between childhood imagination and modern technology. The film follows Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Jessie and the rest of Bonnie’s toys as their place in her life is disrupted by Lilypad, a frog themed tablet designed to help Bonnie socialise. What follows is a split narrative that pulls the toys into different directions, from Jessie’s journey back towards Emily’s old farmhouse to Buzz and Woody dealing with malfunctioning high tech Buzz units and the growing influence of Lilypad over Bonnie’s attention.


There is a lot here that works well. The core characters remain strong and familiar, and the story is clearly built with both children and adults in mind without losing sight of either audience. Jessie takes on a central role and the emotional weight of her storyline, particularly around identity and belonging, gives the film some of its most grounded moments. Buzz Lightyear, especially in Tim Allen’s performance, continues to stand out whenever he is on screen, bringing a steady comic energy that keeps the film moving. The animation is also of a very high standard, with Pixar once again delivering a polished and detailed visual world that feels alive in every frame. There is a sense that these characters still have something to say, and the film does at least attempt to explore that idea of purpose, imagination and change in a modern setting.


At the same time, the film is not without its problems. At points it feels weighed down by its own nostalgia, as if it is trying to revisit familiar emotional territory rather than fully evolve it. The central idea of toys competing with a tablet device is interesting on paper, but the execution sometimes feels a little awkward, especially when it leans too heavily into the contrast between old fashioned play and modern technology. There is also a sense that the film overstays its welcome. At 100 minutes it feels slightly stretched, when a sharper and more focused runtime would likely have suited the material better. For a story built around imagination and creativity, there are moments where it ironically feels a little constrained and predictable in its own structure.


Overall, Toy Story 5 is a solid but slightly tired continuation of the franchise. It delivers strong animation, dependable character work and a clear message about imagination holding its place in a digital world, even if that message does not always land with fresh energy. There is enough heart here to carry it through, and enough familiarity to make it feel safe, but it rarely surprises in the way earlier entries once did. It is an enjoyable return, just not a necessary one, and it ultimately feels more like a careful extension of something well loved rather than a bold new chapter.

I score Toy Story 5 a generous 7.5 out of 10.

Out Now in Cinemas


Wednesday, 17 June 2026

REVIEW: Propeller One-Way Night Coach (2026 Film) - Directed by John Travolta


Images courtesy of APPLE TV 

Review by Jon Donnis

John Travolta's directorial debut arrives in an unusual package. Running for just 61 minutes, Propeller One-Way Night Coach could easily have felt slight or underdeveloped. Instead, it proves that a modest story, told with care and attention to detail, can leave a surprisingly lasting impression.


Based on Travolta's own 1997 children's novel, the film follows young aviation enthusiast Jeff as he and his mother Helen travel from New York to Los Angeles during the closing days of 1962. What begins as a simple cross-country flight gradually becomes a defining moment in both of their lives. Along the way they encounter memorable passengers, kind-hearted flight attendants and a series of unexpected experiences that shape Jeff's future.

One of the film's greatest strengths is its remarkable sense of authenticity. From the aircraft interiors to the uniforms, airport terminals and social attitudes of the era, everything feels lovingly recreated. The production never draws attention to its period detail for the sake of nostalgia alone. Instead, it uses the setting to immerse viewers in a vanished age of air travel, when flying still carried a sense of wonder and glamour.


The film also succeeds because of how carefully it observes its characters. Jeff's fascination with aviation could easily have become repetitive, but Clark Shotwell gives the role an earnest charm that makes his enthusiasm infectious. Through his eyes, every aircraft, every stopover and every interaction becomes an adventure. The script understands that childhood memories often attach themselves to seemingly small moments, and it builds much of its emotional power from that idea.

Kelly Eviston-Quinnett delivers a warm and understated performance as Helen. Her relationship with Jeff provides the emotional anchor throughout the journey. While she dreams of pursuing an acting career in Hollywood, the film never turns her ambitions into melodrama. Instead, it quietly explores a mother balancing her own hopes with the responsibility of raising a child.


Ella Bleu Travolta and Olga Hoffmann both leave strong impressions despite relatively limited screen time. Hoffmann's Liz brings unexpected emotional depth to the story, particularly through conversations that reveal her difficult past. Meanwhile, Ella Bleu Travolta's Doris embodies much of the film's gentle optimism. Her interactions with Jeff are sweet without becoming overly sentimental, and she becomes a key figure in shaping the boy's future.

What makes Propeller One-Way Night Coach particularly effective is its willingness to focus on ordinary moments. There are no villains, no major crises and very little conventional conflict. Instead, the film finds drama in human connection. A conversation during a flight. A broken toy aeroplane. A chance meeting between strangers. These moments accumulate naturally, creating a surprisingly rich portrait of lives crossing paths.


The humour is equally understated. Small observations, awkward encounters and Jeff's endless curiosity generate a steady stream of gentle laughs. The film never chases easy jokes, allowing its warmth and wit to emerge organically from the characters.

Perhaps most impressively, the story manages to cover an enormous emotional landscape within its brief running time. Themes of childhood wonder, ageing, ambition, loss, friendship, romance and legacy all find a place here. Yet the film never feels rushed. Travolta demonstrates a confident understanding of pacing, knowing exactly which moments deserve attention and which can be left implied.


That said, the film is not without shortcomings. Some viewers may find the narrative almost too gentle. The lack of significant conflict means that certain sections risk feeling episodic, drifting from one encounter to the next without a strong sense of momentum. While this approach suits the nostalgic tone, audiences looking for a more traditional adventure may find themselves wanting greater dramatic stakes.

The supporting cast is also so appealing that several characters feel underserved. Liz, in particular, could easily have supported a larger storyline, while some of the relationships introduced during the journey are resolved rather quickly. The film's short running time is admirable in an era of bloated family entertainment, but there are occasions when a little extra breathing room would have been welcome.


Even so, these criticisms do little to diminish the overall experience. Propeller One-Way Night Coach understands exactly what it wants to be. It tells a simple story with confidence, filling it with enough detail and emotional honesty that the characters linger in the mind long after the credits roll.

This is an easy film to enjoy. Its nostalgic atmosphere is deeply appealing, its performances are sincere and its recreation of a bygone era is consistently convincing. Most importantly, it proves that family films do not need excessive spectacle or unnecessary filler to leave an impact.


Propeller One-Way Night Coach is a charming, thoughtful and genuinely entertaining family adventure that captures the magic of aviation and the importance of seemingly ordinary moments. At just over an hour, it remains engaging throughout and should hold the attention of younger viewers while offering plenty for adults to appreciate.

Score: 8 out of 10

Out Now on Apple TV - https://apple.co/4x52DV3