Who’s The Chan in Panda Plan 2, The Magical Tribe?

Panda Plan 2 The Magical Tribe mixes Jackie Chan charm, playful fantasy, and a soft spiritual thread into a family adventure where HuHu the panda easily steals the spotlight.

Panda Plan 2 The Magical TribeWell GO USA
Coming to select theatres April 17, 2026

Although HuHu isn’t quite like the Dragon Warrior Po from a certain DreamWorks franchise, Panda Plan 2 The Magical Tribe leans fully into that style of animated hilarity. In this Jackie Chan led film, figuring out who’s truly in the spotlight depends on who you love more: a computer-animated fuzzy wuzzy or the man himself. For me, the bear steals the show. A lot has been done to improve the mix of practical stand-ins (in the form of inert puppets) and digital work to bring the cuddly creature to life. Whether that’s enough to keep viewers watching depends on expectations.

And when a long-lost Indigenous group is discovered deep in the wilds of China, a team is unaware as they make their way through this realm to a sanctuary for this star of the show to now live in. From there, the film slips into something dreamlike. Like a modern fairy tale, events unfold with a hint of Alice in Wonderland, where reality and imagination blur. As people disappear and logic begins to slip, the viewer is left adrift as though in a midsummer’s night dream.

Continue reading “Who’s The Chan in Panda Plan 2, The Magical Tribe?”

Lost and not Found? Can Hunting Matthew Nichols Be A Hail Mary to the Found Footage Format?

Set on Vancouver Island, Hunting Matthew Nichols blends true crime, found footage, and supernatural dread into a regional horror story with real local flavour. For Island viewers especially, that familiar forested backdrop adds an extra chill.

 Hunting Matthew NicholsFound footage and true crime are two genres that don’t exactly send me scrambling to the theatre. The format has been done to death, and though not necessarily together, some unique idea has to be pitched before I’ll pay attention, be it paranormal or something else. Hunting Matthew Nichols is one of those films, and it deserves a fair look since it may involve something lurking in them thar woods, to pardon the phrase. In this case, it’s about finding the recording itself and examining it, rather than displacing the narrative from who is watching whom.

And if the buzz around this film is any indication, this regionally made independent production getting a ton of Hollywood attention might be the one to make people say, let’s check this out. Now playing at theatres nationwide, this work from director Markian Tarasiuk, who also acts in the film because apparently sleeping is overrated, and screenwriter Sean Harris Oliver blends true crime drama with the supernatural.

Continue reading “Lost and not Found? Can Hunting Matthew Nichols Be A Hail Mary to the Found Footage Format?”

Level Up Your Game: A Nerd’s Guide to Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival 2026

The Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival returns for 2026 with a lineup full of intriguing discoveries. From animated shorts to offbeat late-night programming, here are some standout picks worth seeking out at this year’s event.

Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival 2026The Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival returns for 2026 with a packed slate that rewards a bit of digging. Beyond the headline titles, it’s often the smaller works, especially in animation and side programming, where the real surprises tend to surface.

This year feels particularly strong in that regard. Whether by design or coincidence, animation has a noticeable presence, adding texture to an already diverse lineup. Now in its 43rd year, LAAPFF continues to offer plenty to explore across its five-day run. Here are my picks worth seeking out:

113 Words For You Today

A team of workers is sent to planet Gliese 12b to build a gravitational portal. To survive the cold, each person is limited to 138 words per day. Soo chooses his words carefully. Even a groan from pain feels like a loss. When a blizzard hits, he risks everything to retrieve a vital crystal, too reserved to ask for help. Lost in the storm, he survives the night in a crashed cable car.

Returning at last, exhausted but alive, he picks up the phone, calls Earth, and waits. When the line connects, he smiles and proudly says, “Hi sweetie, I saved 113 words for you today.”

113 Words For You Today

Continue reading “Level Up Your Game: A Nerd’s Guide to Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival 2026”

AiNA THE END Unleashes “Luminous” with Stunning Music Video and 2026 Tour Dates

AiNA THE END’s new song “Luminous” has arrived as the latest opening theme for One Piece, alongside a new music video and fresh Asia tour dates. The release ties into the anime’s Elbaf Arc and adds more momentum to the singer’s growing international reach.

Aina the End Luminous If you haven’t listened to AiNA THE END’s new song “Luminous”, the opening theme for One Piece, it’s now available on streaming platforms and through its music video on YouTube. The track can be heard in the anime’s latest story arc, which debuted on April 5, 2026, on Crunchyroll. This new chapter sends Luffy and the crew into a storyline involving giants.

The music video also reunites AiNA THE END with director G2 YUKI TSUJIMOTO, who previously worked on “革命道中 – On The Way”. That song served as the opening track for DAN DA DAN Season 2 and surpassed 200 million global streams across major platforms. It was also featured on Spotify’s Viral Top 50 Global chart, marking a major breakthrough for the artist both in Japan and abroad.

Continue reading “AiNA THE END Unleashes “Luminous” with Stunning Music Video and 2026 Tour Dates”

Something Wicked This Way Stomps: The Yeti, A Deadly Alaskan Thriller

The Yeti delivers a chilly pulp horror adventure with strong atmosphere, striking locations, and a monster that feels genuinely dangerous. While the story could use a bit more bite, the film’s practical creature work and old-school menace make it a fun throwback.

The Yeti (2026)Well GO USA
Coming to Digital on April 10th.
Home Video Release Date: May 19, 2026 (pre-order on Amazon USA)

It’s rare to find a creature feature that treats its monster as a genuine threat rather than a tourist attraction, but The Yeti earns that by framing things as a pulp adventure set in Alaska, where the creature is very much unknown and deadly. What plays out feels more like Predator than anything else, and that’s exactly the energy these legends deserve. After Merriell Sunday Sr. (Corbin Bernsen) and Hollis Bannister (William Sadler) disappear in the wilderness, it falls to Junior (Eric Nelsen) and Ellie (Brittany Allen) to find them and unravel a conspiracy worthy of a pulp horror novel.

The set design and visual aesthetics feel straight out of Agent Carter, and like that series, our heroine wins the spotlight by simply refusing to be sidelined. Even Evie from The Mummy would recognise the uphill climb of earning respect in that era, and the film explores that thesis without ever overstating it. Rather than constantly needing to prove herself, Ellie just handles whatever comes her way, even in the direst of circumstances.

Continue reading “Something Wicked This Way Stomps: The Yeti, A Deadly Alaskan Thriller”

Can Dagger of Kamui Still Impress in This Blu-ray Release?

A landmark Madhouse production, Dagger of Kamui remains a sweeping ninja epic with striking animation, strong historical scope, and a soundtrack that still hits with force. This Blu-ray edition sharpens the presentation and adds enough new value to make it worth another look.

The Dagger of Kamui Blu-Ray ArtMediaOCD Release
Available to purchase on Amazon USA

Any fan of Madhouse Animation‘s vast catalogue should take another look at Dagger of Kamui. Not only is it a seminal work that shows what this studio loves best, it’s a strong early showcase for their visual style. From Neo Tokyo to Paprika, they covered a lot of ground over the decades, and more recent productions like Goodbye, Don Glees! show they never really stopped pushing.

This 1985 film was an early feature effort for director Rintaro, but what he brought to make this ninja epic a genuine classic is a soundtrack that follows the rhythm of each act. Whether that’s the folk-tinged percussion of a sequence involving people living much like the Ainu of northern Japan, the whistle of the Wild West, or the rock-inflected energy that underscores the Edo-period chaos, the score is a big reason this film still holds up.

Continue reading “Can Dagger of Kamui Still Impress in This Blu-ray Release?”