Sunday, 19 April 2026

REVIEW: Lee Cronin's The Mummy (2026 Film) Starring Jack Reynor, Laia Costa, May Calamawy, Natalie Grace, and Verónica Falcón



Review by Jon Donnis

Lee Cronin's The Mummy arrives carrying the weight of a famous name, but it quickly becomes clear that Lee Cronin is far more interested in pushing his own brand of feral, body horror than honouring the legacy of the franchise. That choice will split audiences. Some will feel misled. Others will quietly admire the nerve.

"The young daughter of a journalist disappears into the desert without a trace. Eight years later, the broken family is shocked when she's returned to them. However, what should be a joyful reunion soon turns into a living nightmare as she starts to transform into something truly horrifying."


The opening stretch is easily the film at its strongest. Set against the oppressive heat of Aswan, the early descent into the buried pyramid lands with real menace. Cronin builds dread patiently, letting unease seep in before unleashing something far uglier. It feels controlled, deliberate, and genuinely eerie. Once the story shifts to the Cannon family, the emotional angle also lands well. Jack Reynor plays Charlie with a convincing sense of exhaustion, while Laia Costa gives Larissa a quiet fragility that grounds the chaos.

When the horror escalates, it does so without restraint. This is not a subtle film. It is grotesque, often shockingly so, and at times borders on the deranged. Cronin clearly leans into practical effects and visceral imagery, and the result is a series of moments that are hard to shake. The infamous toenail scene alone will test even seasoned horror fans, and the film keeps finding new ways to unsettle. It has that grim, sticky texture that lingers long after the credits roll.


There is also something undeniably creative in how the possession is handled. The use of ancient scripture embedded in living skin is a strong concept, (Sound familiar Evil Dead fans?) and the gradual peeling away of those bindings gives the film a ticking clock. The Morse code communication adds a strange, almost tragic layer beneath the violence, hinting at the trapped child still fighting inside.

Yet for all its strengths, the film struggles to hold itself together over its full runtime. At over two hours, it begins to sag. The pacing becomes uneven, with stretches that feel padded rather than purposeful. Tension builds, then dissipates, then has to be rebuilt again. That stop start rhythm weakens the overall impact, especially in the second half.


There is also the unavoidable issue of identity. Despite the title, this rarely feels like a reimagining of The Mummy in any traditional sense. Instead, it plays more like a demonic possession story that happens to involve ancient Egyptian elements. At times it even drifts into territory that feels closer to Cronin’s previous work than anything associated with the franchise. For viewers expecting sweeping adventure or gothic mythology, this will likely come as a disappointment.

Even so, the film rarely becomes dull. Its commitment to excess keeps it watchable, even when it loses focus. The kills are inventive, the imagery is bold, and there is a certain reckless energy that carries it through its weaker stretches.


In the end, this is a film that works best when taken on its own terms. Forget the title for a moment and it becomes a brutal, often effective horror piece with flashes of real originality. Hold it up against expectations of what The Mummy should be, and it starts to falter.

It is messy, too long, and occasionally unfocused. But it is also memorable, unsettling, and unafraid to go places most mainstream horror avoids. For that alone, it earns a degree of respect.

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy settles as a flawed but striking entry, one that will divide opinion but rarely be forgotten. A fair 7 out of 10.

In Cinemas now
And coming soon to digital

Friday, 17 April 2026

PREVIEW: Forever Home (2026 Film) - Starring Sammie Lideen and Drew Leatham


Preview by Jon Donnis

A new haunted house tale with a mischievous streak is on the way, as Forever Home prepares to land on UK digital platforms on 20 April. Marking the feature debut of director Sean Oliver, this award winning paranormal chiller leans just as heavily into comedy as it does into creeping dread, setting the tone for a lively and unpredictable ride.

At the centre of the chaos are Jules and Ryan, a young couple eager to start fresh in a place they can finally call their own. That optimism does not last long. Their dream home comes with a problem that no survey could have picked up. It is already occupied, and the previous tenants have no intention of leaving.

What begins as a nuisance soon turns into something far more unsettling. Strange disturbances build from irritating to outright disturbing, with sleepless nights, eerie sounds and unsettling sights becoming part of daily life. A phantom violinist makes sure peace is never an option, while more violent supernatural intrusions push the couple to their limit.

Desperate for a solution, Jules and Ryan turn to psychic medium Meg, hoping she can restore some sense of normality. Instead, her intervention opens the door to something far worse. A séance spirals out of control, trapping them inside the house and unleashing a far more dangerous presence, one that threatens not just their lives, but whatever might come after.

Forever Home plays with the familiar haunted house setup but refuses to stay in one lane. It balances absurd humour with genuine menace, shifting from playful to sinister without warning. The result feels knowingly chaotic, as if the film itself is enjoying the mayhem as much as its characters are trying to survive it.

With its mix of eccentric ghosts, escalating horror and sharp comic timing, this is a film that aims to entertain on multiple levels. Whether it is the creeping sense of danger or the sheer ridiculousness of the situation, there is always something happening.

Forever Home arrives on digital platforms in the UK from Miracle Media on 20 April, promising an evening of laughter, shocks and supernatural disorder that refuses to settle down.


Thursday, 16 April 2026

PREVIEW: Jack Ryan Ghost War (2026 Film) - Starring John Krasinski, Wendell Pierce and Sienna Miller



Images: Amazon MGM Studios

By Jon Donnis

Jack Ryan: Ghost War brings Jack Ryan back into the field when a routine international covert operation collapses into something far more dangerous. What begins as a controlled mission quickly unravels into a widening conspiracy, pushing Ryan into direct confrontation with a rogue black-ops unit that always seems one step ahead. With the situation escalating in real time and lives hanging in the balance, the pressure builds fast, leaving no room for hesitation.


Forced back into the world he tried to step away from, Jack reunites with familiar allies including CIA veteran Mike November and former CIA head James Greer. Their experience becomes essential as they try to contain an enemy that appears to anticipate their every move. The mission takes on a deeper edge when MI6 officer Emma Marlowe enters the picture, bringing a sharp new dynamic to the team as trust is tested and alliances shift under pressure.


Set across a global stage, the film continues the tone of the series while pushing into more immediate, high-stakes territory. It leans into tense, intelligent storytelling where every decision carries weight and every mistake has consequences. The returning ensemble, led by John Krasinski alongside Wendell Pierce and Michael Kelly, builds on the relationships that defined the series, now stretched under extreme conditions.


Sienna Miller joins the cast as Emma Marlowe, an MI6 officer whose precision and instinct match Ryan’s own, creating an unlikely but effective partnership as the threat tightens around them. As the past begins to resurface, the mission becomes deeply personal, forcing each character to confront what they thought was already behind them.

Premiering globally on Prime Video on 20 May 2026.

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

PREVIEW: The Session Man: Nicky Hopkins


Preview by Jon Donnis

The Session Man: Nicky Hopkins is one of the greatest session musicians you’ve probably never heard of now a new feature documentary celebrates the unsung rock and roll hero whose contributions helped create some of the most iconic music of all time

There is a certain irony in how some of the most recognisable music ever recorded can be traced back to a man whose name rarely made the sleeve. That quiet absence is exactly what makes the arrival of The Session Man feel so overdue. Landing digitally in the UK on 4 May 2026 through Reel2Reel Films, the documentary turns its full attention to Nicky Hopkins, a musician whose influence has long echoed louder than his public profile.

Directed by Mike Treen and produced by John Wood alongside Mike Sherman, the film sets out to correct that imbalance. It traces the life of a pianist who helped define the sound of an era while deliberately staying out of its spotlight. Hopkins built a career across more than three decades, navigating personal setbacks while quietly shaping the recordings of some of the biggest names in popular music.

His list of collaborators reads like a map of rock history. He worked extensively with The Beatles, even contributing to solo work from all four members, including John Lennon’s Imagine. His relationship with The Rolling Stones was equally significant, appearing across fourteen of their albums. From The Kinks and The Who to Rod Stewart, Dusty Springfield and Jeff Beck, his fingerprints are everywhere. The reach extends even further, touching the work of Cat Stevens, Peter Frampton, Joe Cocker, Art Garfunkel, Ella Fitzgerald and Carly Simon, among many others.

Across more than 250 albums and countless singles, Hopkins developed a style that felt instantly recognisable yet never intrusive. His piano lines carried songs without overwhelming them. You hear it in Revolution, in Sympathy for the Devil, in Angie, in Jealous Guy, in You Are So Beautiful. Each track carries a trace of his touch, a subtle lift that turns a good recording into something lasting.

Recognition, when it finally came, arrived long after his passing. Over thirty years on, Hopkins was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in November 2025, with another honour set to follow at the Musicians Hall of Fame on 28 April 2026. The timing gives this documentary a certain weight. It feels less like a rediscovery and more like a correction.

Narrated by Bob Harris, the film gathers voices from across that golden era, including Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, Pete Townshend, Peter Frampton and Bill Wyman. There is also a more personal perspective through his widow, Moira Hopkins, who helps bring the man behind the music into clearer focus.

The Session Man does not try to rewrite history. It simply fills in the space that was always there, the space behind the piano, where one of rock’s most important musicians quietly shaped the sound of a generation.

On digital 4 May from Reel2Reel Films



Monday, 13 April 2026

PREVIEW: Content (2026 Film) - Stars Adam Meilech


Preview by Jon Donnis

Content arrives as a sharp, uneasy blend of satire and psychological horror, with Adam Meilech, known for The Leak and Junk Male, pushing found footage into the era of constant scrolling and online performance. It takes the DNA of Creep meets Unfriended and reshapes it into something built for the modern attention economy.

Following a strong festival run, including Grimmfest 2025, the film is now set for its digital debut on 27 April through GrimmVision, bringing its unsettling vision to home screens.

At the centre is AJ, played by Meilech himself, a modern-day renaissance figure in the influencer world who presents as an actor, writer and director. Beneath that curated identity sits something far darker, a stalker, kidnapper and outright psychopath who treats real lives as raw material.

Using hacked phones and laptops, AJ surveils his targets as though they are characters in a private production, erasing the boundary between reality and fiction in pursuit of what he believes is his cinematic masterpiece. The result is a world where every screen becomes both stage and trap.

Already described as “unpredictable, unhinged and batshit crazy” by Slasher Reviews, Content positions itself as a scarily charged piece of digital horror, landing on 27 April for its online release.