Welcome to The Shortening! For February, we adjust the height on our camera to focus on movies featuring vertically challenged villains. If you have your own blog or podcast and plan to do the same, be sure to leave a note in the comment with your links!
Monday, February 23, 2026
I'll Spin You a Yarn
Monday, February 16, 2026
Don't Judge an Evil Kid Movie By Its Evil Boy Title
Welcome to The Shortening! For February, we adjust the height on our camera to focus on movies featuring vertically challenged villains. If you have your own blog or podcast and plan to do the same, be sure to leave a note in the comment with your links!
Monday, February 9, 2026
Monkey Trouble
Welcome to The Shortening! For February, we adjust the height on our camera to focus on movies featuring vertically challenged villains. If you have your own blog or podcast and plan to do the same, be sure to leave a note in the comment with your links!
Final Destination, but with a monkey-topped organ grinder in the Death role? Sign me up!
Quick Plot: Hal is having a hard time being twelve. His father Petey disappeared long ago, leaving his pessimistic mother Lois alone to raise Hal and his cruel twin brother Bill.
Dad's career as a pilot left the family with a bundle of foreign objects and thingamajigs. While rummaging through his supply, the boys discover an organ grinder featuring a maniacally smiling monkey. They think little of it after turning its key, but later that night, their beloved babysitter dies in a freak accident at a hibachi restaurant.
Hal quickly connects the dots. After one more round of brutal bullying, he snaps and decides to wind up his monkey again in the hopes that it will claim Bill. Unfortunately, he learns too late that the monkey's targets are out of his hands. Instead of his brother, it's his beloved mother who drops dead.
After a few more rounds of odd deaths, Hal and Bill drop the cursed object in a deep well and move on with their rather unhappy lives. 25 years down the road, Hal works a menial job and has a strained relationship with his teen son Petey, so much so that his ex-wife is starting the process of transferring parentage to her new husband (the delightful but underused Elijah Wood).
Their plans change when Hal discovers his aunt has died in a bizarre but somewhat familiar freak accident. Bill is convinced the monkey has returned, so Hal heads back to his small Maine hometown to investigate.
From there, a lot of people die.
In increasingly amusing ways.
I've seen most of Osgood Perkins' filmography (the exception being I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives In the House and the new Keeper) and every time, I've found myself wanting to like them so much more than I could. The Blackcoat's Daughter is beautifully filmed but narratively empty, while Gretal & Hansel never came together for me. I'm in the minority on thinking Longlegs was just dumb, and not in a campy intentional way. My working theory is that Perkins is a much better director than he is writer.
With all that in mind, I went into The Monkey without too much hope.
For the second time in a row, it was a joy to be proven wrong.
The Monkey is FUN. It's mean but not cruel, and tonally so clear on what kind of story it's telling and how it must be told. This is a black comedy that establishes itself from the very opening scene and constantly reminds us by having virtually every character that isn't Hal (and even to an extent, Hal) be such an inappropriate weirdo that you wonder if Nicolas Cage's Longlegs villain didn't come from this same town.
High Points
I really do mean it when I say the tone of The Monkey is consistently bananas in the best way. It starts with a bonkers opening scene with Adam Scott, but really solidifies itself during the most inappropriate eulogy you can imagine at the film's first funeral
Low Points
Playing twins should be an actor's dream, but Theo James never really seems to seize the moment
Lessons Learned
The best way to teach your kids about death is to pair the conversation with ice cream cones
The most surefire way to bond with an adolescent boy is via the art of dance
Nothing cramps your swinger lifestyle faster than guardianship of teen twins
Rent/Bury/Buy
I was genuinely surprised by how much I enjoyed The Monkey. It knows exactly what it wants to be, and achieves it with a wildly high level of camp. Find it on Hulu when you need a nasty laugh.
Monday, February 2, 2026
It's Another Shorten1ng!
Monday, January 26, 2026
Best of the Year: 2025
Here we are!
Or maybe 17. I don’t do math. What I DO do is, every end of January, take a moment to call out my favorite movies reviewed here from the past year. Does this mean they’re good? NOT ALWAYS. Does this mean they’re relevant to a new year? BASED ON THE DATES, PROBABLY NOT THAT EITHER.
What it DOES mean is that I really, really really, mostly really liked these movies. Links to the full reviews in each number. This year, we had a nice and round 10.
Let’s go.
10. Blades
The influence of Jaws can probably never be understated. Iconic lines, cinematic tricks, musical style…there are a LOT of ways Steven Spielberg’s first blockbuster changed the world, but it’s ripoffs that I found most exciting on this 50th anniversary. Blades, a 1988 horror comedy, puts the soul of Bruce the shark into a sentient lawnmower hellbent on destroying a golf club’s big summer tournament. The results are very dumb, and very, very fun.
If you ever need to be reminded what it means to be a movie star, consider queuing up Brian G. Hutton’s Night Watch, where a supposedly past her prime Elizabeth Taylor tries to hold onto her sanity while wandering a creaky British estate. It’s the stately kind of stage adaptation filled with crystal decanters and shifty gardeners, with secrets lurking around every fully furnished corner. The ending is a banger in more ways than one.
The second Jaws-inspired genre comedy on this year’s list, Alligator is the kind of stupid film that only very smart people can make. Written by John Sayles, directed by Lewis Teague, and starring an often shirtless Robert Forster, this is a film that has a few deeply political opinions to ponder by way of very silly, often barely working alligator rigs. It’s an excessively good time.
Not surprisingly, I love good food horror. In fact, my affection for it runs equally deep to that of folk horror, making Lee Haven Jones’s The Feast a pretty satisfying 90 minutes. The last ten years have given us plenty of ‘eat the rich’ takes, and while The Feast doesn’t necessarily reinvent the subgenre, it does bring its own serene style.
I’ve always been a fan of Anna Kendrick as a performer, so it was quite nice to discover she’s equally talented behind the camera. In her directorial debut, Kendrick explores the women whose lives were taken or fundamentally changed by real-life serial killer Rodney Alcala. While true crime generally turns my otherwise iron stomach, the version here (slightly fictionalized in details, though generally accurate in spirit) never feels exploitive. Instead, Kendrick and writer Ian McDonald use the backdrop of an incredibly unusual event (Alcala’s real-life appearance on The Dating Game) to tell a story not about a dangerous man, but one about how the women on the other side of male violence have to navigate the world.
More black comedy than horror, Caye Casas’s The Coffee Table still managed to be one of my favorite, most inappropriate watches of the year. This is, to be clear, A VERY DARK RIDE. And it’s hilarious.
Could I tell you what David Hebrero’s movie was actually about? No. Could I spend the next three hours showcasing my own performance art based on the way star Macarena Gómez wears oversized hats? You know it! Everyone Will Burn is a strange, stylish bite of magical realism that feels like the most delicious meal you can eat knowing you’ll suffer food poisoning after. Head on in expecting a beautifully strange ride.
3. The Lamp
One of the most exciting things about scouring every streaming site on the internet is that you get to discover actual treasures from eras you thought you had already picked dry. A slasher by way of evil djinn made in 1987 and set overnight in a history museum? What ELSE has this world been hiding from me all these years? Tom Daley’s The Lamp (aka The Outing) isn’t necessarily a life-changing watch, but it’s a big hunk of good fun. While there are certainly nostalgic signs of its ‘80s peers, the movie also manages to offer real surprises and stand on its own, something that wasn’t too common for even the best output of the golden age of slashers.
A film that has been haunting me for the better of 10 months, The Hole In the Fence follows a class of privileged Mexican adolescents as they follow a long-established tradition of camping just outside a poor village supposedly riddled with crime. The boys are safe under the care of their wealthy guardians (all of whom long ago conquered the same right of passage) but the titular structural weakness suggests something very, very dangerous has already breached the barrier. Director Joaquin del Paso is a master at building mood, curating incredibly real performances from his young, mostly untrained cast. The story calls to mind Bacurau, a similarly haunting and violent film about how the haves use the have nots as a playground for their basest urges. But The Hole In the Fence has an even more disturbing undercurrent in focusing on how the young generation is so easy to mold into something so, so awful. This isn’t a movie that will have you cheering, but if you’re looking for true horror, it’s hard to beat.


















































