Dynamite Comics’ Gargoyles Demona Closing Chapter is Excitingly Near!

Demona’s solo comic series is just beginning! Just whether she’s a survivor or an eye of a tiger, depends on what Greg Weisman and Frank Paur have planned. Will this be it, or will there be more?

Dynamite Comics Disney's Demona #5 CoverDynamite Comics
Read the series on Kindle (Amazon link)

One lone survivor’s journey in her solo comic book outing by Greg Weisman and Frank Paur will soon reach its finale. And what I’ve found in Gargoyles Demona feels very Shakespearean. Her desire for revenge versus being a mother to a youngling plays like a tragedy worthy of a stage, and perhaps like an operetta too! As part of her days are revealed for all to read, she’s losing herself. What we learn about her dealings with humanity during the early to late Middle Ages is a story longtime fans have been waiting for.

Although this creator has barely scratched the surface regarding the Age of Renaissance and later eras, I can’t wait to see what can transpire then! Demona’s survival in the later centuries wasn’t explored in the animated series, and there’s still an enormous gap before the tale picks up again in 1910 when she killed Jackson Canmore, a Hunter whose goal is to continue Gillecomgain’s desire for revenge. It all began because she scratched his face while scavenging for food back in the early Middle Ages.

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Five 2025 Animated Films That North America Is Missing

International animation in 2025 has produced some of the most ambitious and heartfelt films of the year, yet many remain unseen in North America. What these animated films offer in how they they can be different from traditional narratives.

Animated Films Round the WorldThe global animation scene in 2025 has delivered a spectrum of visually striking and narratively bold films, yet many of these treasures remain unseen in North America. Whether sidelined by limited festival runs, language barriers, or distribution hurdles, some of the year’s animated films from afar are not being screened in North America.

From intimate European adventures to imaginative Asian reinterpretations of classic tales, these international works offer worlds that deserve a broader audience. Here are five animated films from 2025 that North America is missing — and why they’re worth seeking out.

Jumbo

Jumbo (France) Movie Poster🇫🇷 France / 🇧🇪 Belgium
🇱🇺 Luxembourg / 🇮🇩 Indonesia

Directed by Ryan Adriandhy, this tender adventure follows Don, a young boy whose size makes him the object of schoolyard teasing. To prove himself, he creates a play filled with fairies and spirits, blending slice-of-life drama with whimsical fantasy.

Although Jumbo has screened in Indonesia and appeared at select European festivals, it still hasn’t reached North America. Its cross-cultural charm, heartfelt characters, and festival pedigree make it a standout example of a smaller international co-production that deserves far more visibility.

A Magnificent Life

A Magnificent Life Movie Poster🇩🇪 Germany / 🇬🇧 United Kingdom

This imaginative biography reflects on the life of playwright and filmmaker Marcel Pagnol. He’s considered to be one of France’s greatest talents whose works are considered a national treasure. At 60, he finds himself confronted by a vision of his younger self, prompting a meditation on memory, destiny, and the wonder threaded through his work.

Premiering at Cannes, the film represents the kind of sophisticated, festival-leaning European storytelling that too often goes undistributed in North America. Its blend of nostalgia, fantasy, and emotional depth makes it a gem that deserves recognition beyond the festival circuit.

A Chinese Ghost Story 2025

🇨🇳 China

This new animated adaptation revisits the iconic series that have seen countless sequel and remakes. From the first film directed by Tsui Hark to a live-action series, just what it offers is romance, horror, and supernatural intrigue. Just who loves whom more is the trope that gets explored in different ways.

With no marketing, inclujding a poster release, and it looking like vapourware, maybe it never saw release at all. The sources consulted for this entry are suspicously minimal, even when checking Chinese reports. Despite maybe being offered at the wrong time due to a competing work, this work did not get the love it deserves, and for long time fans, it still needs to be seen!

Strange Tales: Lan Ruo Temple

Curious Tales of a Temple Official Movie Poster🇨🇳 China

Inspired by Strange Tales of a Chinese Studio, this adaptation may not cover the full breadth of the anthology, but it captures some of its best-known stories. Paired with larger-scale works like A Chinese Ghost Story 2025, it highlights the range and ambition of contemporary Chinese animation.

Its absence from the American and Canadian markets reveals a recurring distribution gap: even studios with proven North American success — such as those behind Chang’an — still struggle to secure releases for follow-up projects.

Balentes

Balentes Movie Poster🇮🇹 Italy / 🇩🇪 Germany

Set in Sardinia in 1940, this painterly, somber film follows Ventura and Michele, two young boys who discover that a herd of local horses is being sold to the army. Driven by idealism and a fierce sense of honour — balentes means “bravery” in Sardinian — they plot to free the horses before they reach the battlefield.

Despite a strong presence at European festivals throughout the year, there is no confirmed North American release. It’s a familiar fate for smaller European animated features, particularly those that favour personal themes or painterly experimentation over commercial formulas.

Dick Van Dyke at 100! Celebrate His Spellbinding Legacy Any Which Way You Can

Dick Van Dyke is turning 100, and Fathom is celebrating with a theatrical tribute packed with clips, stories, and co-star memories. I look back on his legacy, that old-school Disney charm, and share my top five favourite Van Dyke works.

Dick Van Dyke at 100 In the United States, Fathom Entertainment is inviting fans of Dick Van Dyke to celebrate his 100th birthday in theatres. Whether other distributors follow suit remains to be seen, but I’ll be lighting a candle on December 13 to honour this extraordinary performer’s legacy and perhaps belt out Chitty Chitty Bang Bang for good measure.

It still amazes me that he has the drive to keep acting. From the agile young man who could take a pratfall with grace, to the dancer, to the unexpected villain in Night at the Museum, he’s played every type of character under the sun. His charm and the way he entertained me during my younger years has never left me. His influences were obvious, especially the silent film legends like Laurel and Hardy along with Buster Keaton, and that timeless physicality shaped so much of what he brought to the screen.

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Thankfully, There’s Just One Dust Bunny Than Two in Bryan Fuller’s Directorial Debut

Bryan Fuller’s feature debut Dust Bunny pairs Mads Mikkelsen with a sharp young heroine and a very picky monster under the bed. It’s a stylised mix of dark fantasy and absurdist humour that doesn’t always land, but its strange, playful energy is hard to shake.

Dust Bunny Movie PosterLionsgate
Coming to theatres Dec 12th

Most fans of Bryan Fuller’s work will name Hannibal or Pushing Daisies as his defining projects, but for me, his voice was forged back when he got full credit for scripts for Star Trek Voyager and Deep Space Nine. In Dust Bunny, his feature debut, he leans into an Art déco sensibility that flirts with Wes Anderson staging while brushing up against Tim Burton’s sense of humour. It’s an odd blend, but I’m enjoying the experiment. That’s because his ideas have always balanced a dark, moral edge with a certain playfulness.

As the title suggests, there’s a monster in the mix. Young Aurora (Sophie Sloan) believes it ate her foster parents. Alone for a few days, she’s not sure what to do. But once she musters the courage to ask for help, the only person she can turn to is Resident 5B (Mads Mikkelsen). He’s the perfect “freaky neighbour,” a type Mikkelsen slides into with alarming ease. Together, this unlikely duo might be the only hope the apartment has for stopping whatever’s lurking under the beds before it decides to snack on more tenants.

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On How The King of Color Transformed How The Industry Saw The Rainbow

When you ask a graphic designer who The King of Color is and if that individual does not say Lawrence Herbert, it’s best to hire someone else to get your visual design made.

The King of Color PosterPicturehouse Movies
Playing at select theatres beginning Dec 12

Lawrence Herbert is a name few will recognize, but for anyone in illustration, graphic design, fashion, or printing, he’s an individual widely respected. He built the system that standardized how color is described, visualized, and mixed. In doing so, he became The King of Color—which is also the title of this biograph. Normally I’d lean on Canadian spelling, but for this story, American convention feels appropriate. After all, this revolution began in the United States.

When a curious child asks a teacher why one drop of black on white differs from three, they’re told it’s a subtle gradient. And this individual was that kind of child. He was wide-eyed, fascinated, and drawn to the magic of the moving picture. His love affair with cinema began when he saw The Charge of the Light Brigade. His father worked various jobs, and when he became a projectionist, young Herbert all but lived in the theater. He wasn’t just there for the pulps; he was there to learn. Some of that spark still glows in him nearly ninety years later.

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The Best of Universal Pictures Home Video Releases (2025 Gift Guide)

Collage of Universal Pictures home video releasesAs the year winds down, Universal Pictures has quietly taken over my home video shelf. They’ve been releasing the titles I’m most eager to revisit, and when that includes their distribution work for DreamWorks, it’s an added bonus. What follows is a look at the releases that earned a place in my collection for one reason or another. I’ll begin with a title that hasn’t hit home media yet, but I’m already excited for it.

Bugonia

Bugonia Blu-ray cover art

This UFO-tinged conspiracy adventure is set to be a treat for anyone who missed its limited theatrical run. The story follows two people who kidnap the CEO of a pharmaceutical company because they believe he’s an alien bent on destroying Earth. The odyssey that follows has the spirit of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, but flipped on its head. Whether the planet survives is part of the fun.

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