“Alone Wolf” (*1/2 out of four) was a lackluster melodrama character study about a recluse (Richard de Klerk) who is forced to venture outside of his home and his controlled environment for the first time in two years when he becomes involved with a neighbor (Cara Gee) after witnessing her psychotic boyfriend (James Aaron Oliver) commit murder outside his home. Interesting story of one man’s journey back into the world from his life of security and seclusion is undone by molasses pacing and de Klerk’s aloof character and performance. Story is full of good intentions but writer/director Charles Ehrlinger lacks the grit and grandeur that the material needs. James Griffith’s eloquent score is film’s sole asset.

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“Captured” (*1/2 out of four) was a wretched horror thriller about a rock ‘n’ roll band who travel to the wilderness for a weekend getaway and to shoot a music video when their lead singer (Brittany Curran) becomes targeted by an escaped lunatic who is on the prowl for a slaughter. Relentlessly shaky and dizzying hand-held camerawork may cause to reach for dramamine and vertigo medication but film is so frenetic and unpleasant that it’s hardly worth the bother. Even the music is pretty limp and forgettable

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“Inmate #1: The Rise Of Danny Trejo” (*** out of four) was a moving documentary chronicling the star’s journey from impoverished upbringings in L.A. to a life of drugs and crime to prison to rehabilitation counselor to an extra on movies that led to him becoming a B-movie legend in his own right (“From Dusk Till Dawn”, “Machete”, countless others) who works tirelessly and endlessly to this day. An interesting story of a man who took his hard lessons learned in life and turned his life around to help others and to achieve worldwide fame. Features good interviews with Michelle Rodriguez and Robert Rodriguez but this wouldn’t work as well and be so heartfelt without Trejo himself who is heavily interviewed and comes off as a genuinely nice man who sought to turn his life around and turned his love for the streets into a love of people and a love of movies.

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“Alive” (*1/2 out of four) was an overbearing horror thriller set in an abandoned sanitarium in which a man and a woman (Thomas Cocquerel and Camille Stopps) awake and find that a psychotic doctor (Angus Macfadyen) is holding them hostage and he holds the keys to their true identity and thus their survival. Seedy production design and decrepit cinematography are creepy but you’ll eventually be swallowed up and numbed by all the unpleasantness. This is what audiences get for having made “Saw” such a huge hit.

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“Viena And The Fantomes” (*1/2 out of four) was an incomprehensible slog about a young roadie (Dakota Fanning) who goes on tour with a noxious and hard-living punk bank (Phillip Ettinger, Ryan LeBeouf, and others) in the 1980’s and this leads to an odyssey of discovery and a self-catharsis of revelations for her. Unpleasant, uninvolving, and pretty much unwatchable all the way through; even the usually bright Fanning is a one-note zombie and she starred in a much better rock ‘n’ roll movie “The Runaways” in 2009. This was filmed in 2014 and was re-tooled and re-edited for years to no avail and hasn’t exactly aged like fine wine.

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“Jasper Mall” (** out of four) was a curiously flat and unmoving documentary about a shopping mall in Jasper, Alabama and its declining fortunes in today’s economy. Potentially incendiary look at capitalism, consumerism, and the effects of internet commerce on today’s shopping mall revenue is indifferently handled, as most of the focus is on various shoppers and store workers and their own lives, instead of the mall itself. As a result, film meanders and never comes to life. You can only imagine what the Michael Moore of “Roger And Me” or the Charles Ferguson of “Inside Job” would have done with interesting material like this.

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“Lection” (0 out of four stars) was an absolutely worthless “horror” movie set in a post-apocalyptic world that resembles an ancient society in which many citizens (Mike Amason, Jennifer Hill, Bradley J. Petit, and others) try to come to terms with each other’s differences and survive. Don’t look for more plot that or much else either (much of the film doesn’t even have dialogue). If you’re looking to kill time, this film beats it to death slowly and painfully. This turkey somewhat resembles M. Night Shymalahan’s “The Village” but this makes that look like “The Sixth Sense” by comparison. Please for the love of God- don’t elect to waste your time on this one

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“What Goes Around” (* out of four) was an unbearable horror show about an introverted college student (Catherine Morvell) who discovers that the guy (Jesse Bouma) she has a crush on may be a notorious serial killer and that her life may be in danger if her sanity isn’t overwhelmed first. Passable beginning soon gives way to ugliness and unpleasant characters and violence and soon goes nowhere slowly and cheaply and never gets back on track. Further proof that “what goes around” does not always come back around.

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“Day Of The Stranger” (** out of four) was a logy Western about a bounty hunter (Dale Sheppard) who works for a ruthless crime kingpin (Gary Shail) and is suddenly left for dead after one bounty retrieval goes awry but then subsequently awakens at home and has to piece his memories back together of what happened and what went wrong especially after a mysterious stranger (Gary Baxter) comes to town. Writer/director Thomas Lee Rutter tries to add spice and style to the trite proceedings with whiplash editing and hyperactive camerawork but it’s all for very little since the basic storyline is pretty dull. Based on a short story by Mark Twain which it should have remained.

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“Dwellers: The Curse Of Pastor Stokes” (** out of four) was a tired supernatural horror thriller about the title pastor (Sean Kaufman) who has to contend with a series of exorcised spirits that come back to haunt him and his church and his surrounding community and he has to try everything in his will power to send them back to the bowels of Hell. Umpteenth story of religious symbolism, exorcisms, and demonic possession; well-made and decently acted especially by the standards of this dreck but you’ve seen it all before and much better, going all the way back to “The Exorcist” in 1973. There’s not much left for this genre anymore except to go to Hell itself!

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