“The Vanished” (**1/2 out of four) was a moody but meandering story about a husband and wife (Thomas Jane and Anne Heche) whose daughter mysteriously disappears; when the local police (Jason Patric and Peter Facinelli) are stumped on leads, they then take the law into their own hands to find their daughter and enact justice at any cost. Intriguing at first but story wanders after a while and never gets fully back on track until its finale. Fun fact: both Heche and Jane played husband-and-wife previously in the HBO series “Hung.” Similar story was covered with more power and raw emotional ferocity in 2013’s “Prisoners.”

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“Unhinged” (** out of four) was an unwieldy action thriller about a woman (Caren Pistorius) who induces the road rage of a psycho (Russell Crowe) who she honks her horn at and he will stop at absolutely nothing to enact revenge and turn her life upside down. Alternately tense, harrowing, unpleasant, and routine as film derives elements from “Duel” and also “The Call” among many others; not bad but film is overall too slight and too derivative to make much of an impact. Pistorius is solid in the lead but Crowe surprisingly isn’t and is atypically awkward and unconvincing.

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“The Unfamiliar” (*1/2 out of four) was a dreary horror thriller about a British army doctor (Jemima West) who returns home from a war and thinks she has PTSD but soon finds that there is a mysterious malevolence in her life that has overtaken her and is threatening her and her family. Ironically titled time-waster is actually very familiar and is simply an amalgam of ideas borrowed from “The Exorcist” and “Paranormal Activity.” West’s sincere performance fails to enliven or enrich the proceedings.

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“Rogue” (** out of four) was a highly uneven war melodrama about a soldier mercenary (Megan Fox) who leads her squadron on a rescue mission in Africa to free hostages from their captors but the mission goes awry as they find themselves stranded in the African desert against a brutal gang of rebels and a group of ravenous lions. Starts off engrossing and intriguing but then goes flat; remains watchable through-out and jump-starts now and then but not often enough to make it stand out. Fox is unusually forceful in a change-of-pace role for her.

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“You’re Not Alone” (** out of four) was a middling horror suspense thriller about a mother and daughter (Alexis Alton and Whitney Andrews) who are forced to acknowledge and analyze the presence of an evil spirit that exists in the walls of their home and they have to decipher how to get it out. By the standards of these “Exorcist”/”Amityville Horror”/”Paranormal Activity”/”House” rip-offs, this is by no means bad and is well-made and does have some watchable content and style, but you have seen this before and better many times and likely will again. Watchable but overall eclipsed by the memories of many other (and better) movies.

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“One Night In Bangkok” (*1/2 out of four) was a flashy but empty action thriller about a grimly determined hitman (Mark Dacascos) who flies into Bangkok seeking vengeance for the death of his wife and child and hires an all-night cab driver (Vanida Golten) to drive him around until she discovers what he’s really up to. Result is such a brazen and ridiculous rip-off “Collateral” but let’s just be kind and say that Dacascos isn’t at the masterly level of Tom Cruise and writer/director Wych Kaosayananda is no Michael Mann. Golten’s strong performance and glossy cinematography by Kaosayananda are plusses but otherwise this is one mighty long night.

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“Star Light” (** out of four) was a hokey horror thriller about a rebellious teenager (Cameron Johnson) who finds a pop star (Scout Taylor-Compton) who is beaten and left for dead and he has to help her to escape her violent pursuers but finds that they may be more than meets the eye. Ungainly pastiche of sci/fi and horror and teen melodrama elements doesn’t gell but is well-made enough to be watchable. From the executive producer of “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” but this lacks that movie’s gory vitality and buzz.

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“The Goocher” (* out of four) was a hideous horror thriller about six strangers (Tyler W. Abron, Reese Acuff, Louis Banks, and others) who find themselves stranded in the woods and are stalked and slaughtered by the title creature who may have watched “Ten Little Indians” ten too many times. Strictly amateur night in terms of acting and filmmaking which turns this into a real horror show. Even at less than an hour-and-a-half, this still feels padded and prolonged (and painful).

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“Spree” (* out of four) was an irritatingly stupid and disjointed “comedy” done in the vein of a docudrama about a rideshare driver (Joe Keery) who tries and fails to build up a following on social media but then hatches a deadly scheme to go viral one night even if it kills him and others in the process. Amateurish and inept literally from the beginning; Keery’s obnoxious and in-your-face character (and performance) is of no help. David Arquette shows up in a meaningless cameo and “Scream 5” must be looking awfully good to him right about now.

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“Poor Greg Drowning” (*1/2 out of four) was styrofoam Woody Allen about a young guy (Graham Sibley) whose girlfriend leaves him for their therapist and he soon becomes depressed and heartbroken but a new girl (Marguerite Gioia Insolia) moves in with him and they subsequently fall in love which helps him discover the true meaning of life and companionship. Some nice moments in the film’s final third are drowned out by Sibley’s unlikeable character and a screenplay that’s often crude and contrived and not especially funny. Cedric The Entertainer provides film’s narration but is unable to add much entertainment value here.

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