APEX

Charlize Theron and Taron Egerton in Apex

In theory, Apex, the latest film from director Baltasar Kormákur (whose CV includes the enjoyably silly 2022 Idris Elba vs CGI lions thriller Beast) doesn’t seem to have a lot going for it. Its survivalist tale of a plucky vacationer being stalked and hunted down through dangerous, unfamiliar territory by a baying psychopath is the stuff of countless straight-to-streaming low-budget features.

However, the presence of A-listers Charlize Theron and Taron Egerton immediately elevates Apex into a different league, and indeed the film has a few more tricks up its sleeve and a deeper story to tell than most in a sub-genre that stretches back decades.

Adrenaline junkie Sasha (Theron) and her husband Tommy (Eric Bana) are scaling Norway’s fearsome storm-lashed Troll Wall. Tragedy strikes, and a few months later, we find Sasha driving to Australia’s formidable Wanderra Park, where a local ranger tells her that there have been numerous unexplained disappearances recently. Sasha clashes with some local hunters, but Ben (Egerton) befriends her and gives her directions to Blackwater Bay so she can indulge in some whitewater kayaking.

When her bag disappears from her camp overnight, she finds Ben camped nearby, and she soon discovers that he isn’t as benevolent as he’d previously appeared. A tense, taut cat-and-mouse game of survival ensues, with the raging Ben chasing Sasha through the wilderness. While it’s clear he’s utterly insane (and responsible for the recent disappearances), Sasha is strong, determined, resourceful, and cut from a different cloth than the terrified, clueless victims usually portrayed in similar life-or-death adventures.

Apex is essentially a two-hander, but superb and often vertiginous cinematography, a handful of nail-biting set pieces, and terrific performances from Egerton and Theron combine to deliver an exciting, hugely enjoyable cut-above “Netflix Original Movie.” Put Apex at the top of your ‘must watch’ list.

APEX is streaming now on Netflix.

STREET TRASH (1987)

Street Trash

The ‘melt movie’ that became a cult favourite in the VHS era is back in a fantastic 4K restoration.

Expanding on his 1984 short (also included here), Jim Muro’s film is set in the ultimate scuzzy ’80s environment. A group of homeless people in the slum areas of lower Manhattan drink Tenafly Viper, a 40-year-old wine from the local liquor store, which causes them to melt in horrifically graphic ways.

Forget the recent remake, Muro’s Street Trash is the real, gloopy deal. It’s more than just an excuse for some (actually impressive) gore effects, set in the pre-gentrification of areas of New York. There’s also a rather amusing ‘keep away’ game involving one unfortunate’s penis, which is something you don’t see every day. Not that you’d want to!

Street Trash is the most Troma-esque non-Troma film you’re likely to find. It’s in gloriously bad taste but a lot of fun, with funny dialogue and remarkably cinematic (Muro is an accomplished Steadicam operator, as seen here).

The 4K release from Lightbulb makes the movie look as good as you’d expect, given the low-budget source. It’s packed with informative extras, including a pair of feature-length documentaries that essentially give you the final word on the film, but don’t let that stop you from enjoying the commentaries! And if you have an appetite for more ‘melt movies’, there’s a video essay from genre historian Darrell Buxton that will point you in the direction of more. Ephemera fans will be happy with the art cards, poster, and nifty laminated beer mat, not to mention the retro-style VHS-sized case it comes in.

STREET TRASH is available to buy on 4K UHD Blu-ray now. 

MOUSE: P.I. FOR HIRE

PLATFORM: PC, PS5, SWITCH 2, XBOX SERIES (REVIEWED) | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

Boomer shooters are ten a penny these days, but there aren’t many like Mouse: P.I. For Hire. Set in Mouseburg, a (very) alternate version of 1930s New York where the inhabitants are all anthropomorphic rodents, players assume the role of Jack Pepper, a private investigator in charge of a missing persons case. Taking cues from classic noir thrillers but adding plenty of subversive and satirical elements, the story unravels across 10-12 hours and takes in corruption, kidnapping, murder, lots and lots of cheese, and even a trip to a supernatural undead underworld…

Getting straight to the point, Mouse P.I. is one of the best games in its genre for quite some time. Each mission sends you to a different area of the city before returning back to your base where Jack puts together any clues that he’s found and figures out where to go next, before visiting a few shops to upgrade his gear and maybe playing a few rounds of a very addictive baseball-themed card game before jumping in his car and heading to the next location. Seemingly heavily inspired by Doom’s 2016 reboot, the focus is very much on fast-paced combat, with some downtime between fights to explore the environment and hunt for power-ups and upgrades. Your arsenal of weaponry feels great to use, and a range of handy tools like a grappling hook and floaty “helicopter hat” come into play during platforming sections that are spread liberally throughout each level.

It’s a fantastic looking game, too, with some phenomenal hand-drawn animations and striking black-and-white visuals giving a unique spin on some nicely varied environments like a steamboat, opera house and film studio. It’s in the latter area that we’re given a brief look at what the game might have looked like in full-colour, a tantalising glimpse at what might lie ahead in the future. The 1930s aesthetic is captured tremendously well, complemented by a superb jazz soundtrack that fits the mood perfectly. In Mouse P.I. For Hire, what might look at first glance like a bit of a gimmicky unassuming shooter quickly proves to be one of the standout entries in the entire genre. One not to be missed!

 

THISTLEMARSH

Thistlemarsh

Mouse Dunne comes back from the First World War after serving as a battlefield nurse, finding she has inherited her uncle’s Thistlemarsh Hall and estate. The place has been neglected and is falling apart; even more depressingly, the will demands that if she doesn’t fix the place up within a month, or if she doesn’t get married in the same period, it will be forfeited to her hated uncle, Anthony Carlyle.

Given this ultimatum, she is forced to seek help from Thornwood, a Faerie she liberates from a statue of Dante in the hall’s grounds. He is happy to use his magical powers to help her restore the hall, but Mouse knows that Faeries have different values from mortals. Faeries cannot always be trusted, and she wonders if she can pay the price of his help.

What transpires is a cagey collaboration with this handsome and cold Faerie who might well have his own secret reasons for aiding Mouse. As Thornwood works his magic on the hall, he finds it’s protected by ancient and powerful forces, which conspire to undo his good works.

Mouse and Thornwood work together to fight the many magical obstacles to beat the deadline. As they do so, they both discover the ghosts of their past, and in the process of battling these forces, they develop an intimate bond.

Corrigan blends Charlotte Brontë-like moody romantic characters with inventive magical systems and worlds to create an enchanting, fast-paced, historical, romantic fantasy.

THISTLEMARSH, published by Del Rey, will be released April 23rd 2026 in all good bookshops.

UNDERTONE

Undertone

Undertone immediately made waves following its premiere at Fantasia International Film Festival in 2025, quickly lauded as one of the scariest films of the fest and a must-see as soon as genre fans could get their eyes – and ears – on it. Ian Tuason’s hotly-tipped feature debut soon made its way to Sundance and was picked up by A24, further adding to its buzz. Now enjoying its theatrical run, Undertone is a nerve-shredding auditory experience that will bore into your brain and haunt you long after the credits roll.

The single-location horror film focuses on Evy (Nina Kiri), a woman who hosts the Undertone podcast with her friend Justin (Adam DiMarco), in which she is the sceptic to his believer. She records the episodes from her childhood home, where she has moved to act as caregiver to her dying mother (Michèle Duquet). The duo is sent recordings of a married couple (Keana Lyn Bastidas and Jeff Yung) experiencing terrifying noises and phenomena in their home, listening and reacting while they record. While reviewing mysterious audio files, Evy begins to notice terrifying parallels within her own life.

Undertone’s hook lies in its simplicity, with one character in one location listening to recordings and experiencing increasingly eerie phenomena, from bumps in the night to creaking doors. It’s a classic haunted house tale with a thoroughly modern twist, as ghosts in the wires break into the real world and threaten to take the most vulnerable in society. The narrative does become somewhat convoluted in the threads it attempts to juggle, but when it strips everything back and focuses on its blood-chilling scares, Undertone lives up to its marketing promise of being “the scariest film you’ll ever hear”. Tuason expertly builds tension from start to finish, never giving the viewer chance to relax as it hurtles towards its nerve-shredding final act. Every detail littered through the narrative is pulled together in a satisfying conclusion, layering fright upon fright to almost unbearable effect. While Undertone sometimes wanders off beat, it is a testament to the power of storytelling, frightening you long after viewing.

The use of sound fully immerses the viewer into the horror, with Tuason creating an auditory hellscape that puts you right into the shoes of the podcast hosts. Undertone works perfectly both in a state-of-the-art cinema and streamed at home through headphones – in the dark, of course – offering a fresh, yet still terrifying experience each time. Kiri carries much of the chaos of Undertone in her incredible performance, commanding the screen at all times as she grapples with the impending death of her mother, learning she is pregnant, and the supernatural horrors unfolding in front of her. She brings to life the burnt-out podcast host escaping into the world of ghosts and ghouls to shut out the trauma of her own life without relying on familiar tropes horror fans will have seen time and time again, compounding the events she is living out before our eyes.

Undertone is a nightmarish descent into madness and an impressive feat of storytelling. Despite being rough around the edges in parts, Tuason’s feature debut ramps up the terror with the simplest of frights, thanks to his expert grip on the central demon’s lore and the story unravelling in the recordings. Undertone is at its best when it goes back to basics, creating some of 2026’s most terrifying sequences with some of the most simplistic set pieces, noises, and reactions from Evy. It shifts and changes with each disturbing revelation, with varying success, in a unique way that is sure to usher in a slew of imitations.

UNDERTONE is in cinemas now. You can read our interview with Ian Tuason and Nina Kiri here.

MARS ONE

Mars One by Charlotte Robinson book cover

This near-future space thriller by Charlotte Robinson interweaves three primary narratives as humanity attempts its first one-way colonisation mission to Mars.

Firstly, there is ex-NASA astronaut Alyssa Wright, the mission commander. Only days before the launch, she is worried that the main focus is now on turning this into a TV extravaganza. Her concerns about the safety of the mission are ignored because it is being funded by private enterprise and TV advertising rather than by any government agency.

Jia is the sister of a computer coder, who uncharacteristically goes missing. In her search for him, she uncovers his secret life as a coder for the Eco Terrestrial group that believes Earth should be saved before space is colonised. A microchip inside his beloved cat contains clues to his whereabouts, which leads Jia from her home in Hong Kong to the USA and eventually to the Kazakh Steppe. On her journey, she sees for herself the harmful changes we are making to our planet, and discovers her own self-worth.

Thirdly, we get the story of Rubio, an artist and photographer onboard the Argo spacecraft. He is riddled with self-doubt as he is the least scientifically qualified member of the six-person crew. Not only does he have to deal with his own demons, he also uncovers evidence that a crew member is actively sabotaging the mission.

The three narratives inevitably converge and it is a race to save the mission from disaster. Unlike hardcore science fiction that concentrates on describing plausible scientific and technological means of getting to Mars, Charlotte Robinson’s debut novel is an action-packed thriller that puts human interactions, emotions and relationships at its heart.

MARS ONE is released from all good bookshops on April 23rd 2026.

LEE CRONIN’S THE MUMMY

Lee Cronin's The Mummy

Not content with tearing one family apart in Evil Dead Rise, director Lee Cronin returns to torment another with his take on a classic movie monster. Forget Brendan Fraser and Boris Karloff – this ain’t your mother’s Mummy. In its tale of a tight-knit family unit ripped to pieces by the disappearance and sudden return of their beloved daughter, Cronin goes hard. Harder, even, than his previous film. Which is no mean feat – we’re still cringing at the memory of what he put the characters of Evil Dead Rise through.

Thrown into a fresh cycle of trauma is the Cannon family, led by TV journalist Charlie (Midsommar star Jack Reynor) and pregnant wife Larissa (Laia Costa). They’re living in Cairo when their young daughter Katie (Emily Mitchell) is suddenly kidnapped by a creeper at the bottom of the garden. Eight years later, and now residing in New Mexico, Charlie and Larissa are shocked when Katie is found. With her now catatonic after spending the best part of a decade locked inside a sarcophagus, it quickly becomes clear that this isn’t the same Katie they lost. Quite literally, in fact, as she’s now played by Natalie Grace in a performance that’s part Hereditary, part The Exorcism.

And what happened to Katie? As the family try to reintegrate the teenager into the home, Charlie puts his skills as a journalist to good use in unlocking the mystery of her disappearance. What he soon comes to learn is that… well, maybe Katie should have stayed buried.

Where the efficiently horrible Evil Dead Rise barely pushed ninety minutes, Lee Cronin’s The Mummy takes its time to breathe… a rank, fetid breath that reeks of death and embalming fluid. Written by the director in the wake of real-life tragedy, it holds nothing back in its depiction of grief and its devastating effects on those of us who survive. It’s sphincter-tightening, sick-in-your-mouth stuff, and includes a sequence which does for toenail clippers what Evil Dead Rise did for the cheese grater.  This is made all the more discomforting for its likeable cast (including Billie Roy and Shylo Molina, who play the Cannons’ other children) and the well-written, often heartbreaking family dynamic.

It may come off the rails during the boisterous final act (including an egregiously tacked-on closing scene), but this is the most fun you’ll have with a bad time this year. Provided you don’t go in expecting a traditional Mummy movie from Lee Cronin’s The Mummy, that is. Blending intense body horror with big scares and even bigger laughs, the director more than earns his name being in the title. His bloody fingerprints are all over the thing – a crowd-pleasing, stomach-upsetting work of sustained horror that’s more Evil Dead than his actual Evil Dead film.

LEE CRONIN’S THE MUMMY is out in UK cinemas now.

PROJECT HAIL MARY

ryan gosling in project hail mary trailer

Waking up on a mysterious spaceship, school teacher and passionate biologist Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) has to rely on his fractured memory to piece back together not only how he got there, but why he is there. Directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), and adapted for cinema by Drew Goddard (The Martian) from the Andy Weir novel of the same name, Project Hail Mary instantly pulls the viewer into its intriguing enigma, and what follows is one of the greatest sci-fi movies ever made.

Known for his outstanding earlier novels The Martian and Artemis (also soon to be adapted by Lord and Miller), renowned sci-fi author Andy Weir constructed a stunning sci-fi world with Project Hail Mary, which could have only been a dream to translate to the big screen. Just like with Ridley Scott’s take on The Martian, Weir’s grounded use of science within his storytelling shines through wonderfully. It makes for a compelling watch as you attempt to figure out each urgent situation alongside the protagonist.

During Ryland’s flashbacks, we discover that single-celled spaceborne organisms named Astrophage are draining the energy from the Sun, setting Earth on a course to catastrophe, and doing the same to all nearby stars – except for a distant star called Tau Ceti, which has somehow not been affected. The government-appointed agent Eva Stratt (Sandra Hüller) assembles the finest team of astronauts and scientists the world has to offer, and sends them on a one-way deep space mission to Tau Ceti to find out how they can fix our sun. Due to his history with molecular biology, Eva recruits Ryland to find out a possible way of combatting Astrophage. But Ryland’s no astronaut, so how did he end up on the Hail Mary himself?

Backed by a stunning and commanding soundtrack from Daniel Pemberton (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), alongside beautiful cinematography from Greig Fraser (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Dune, The Batman), the creative energy and passion from everyone involved is on display through every single frame. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller also used no green or blue screens, which not only makes you appreciate the movie even more, grounding the story within a believable setting.

If you’ve seen any trailer for Project Hail Mary, then you’ve probably witnessed an alien character called Rocky. Voiced by puppeteer James Ortiz, the dynamic between Grace and Rocky has already become iconic. The pair share fascinating moments of humour, joy, and complete fear, as they team up to save both their species. It’s quite simply, “Amaze. Amaze. Amaze.”

In its later act, we see huge, beautiful, sweeping sci-fi sequences that have you mesmerised, which eventually leads to – just like the book – a satisfying ending. With what comes across as three huge narrative sections that differ rewardingly from each other, and an ending that ties everything neatly together, the storytelling pace of Project Hail Mary is flawless. It’s a perfect balance.

Thanks to movies like Interstellar, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, and Dune, sci-fi has found success with a more serious tone in recent years, but Project Hail Mary is something for everyone. It’s almost Spielberg-esque in its approach. Capturing the monumental tone of the book in a grand scale that you could not be prepared for, it is sci-fi at its absolute best.

NIGHT BABIES

Night Babies

Lucie McKnight Hardy returns to the world of ‘weird girl’ fiction with her latest novel Night Babies, releasing late April 2026 with John Murray Press. McKnight Hardy, known for her earlier atmospheric horror novels such as 2019’s well-received Water Shall Refuse Them, weaves a new landscape in Night Babies as struggling painter Astrid and her long-suffering boyfriend Kit take refuge from a home emergency in the chapel on her friends’ land.

Fighting against deadlines, relationship tension, the creeping consequences of a long-ago trip to Florence, and a deteriorating mental state, Astrid becomes increasingly obsessed with the reservoir the chapel overlooks, as well as the secrets that may be hiding in its depths. Strange visitors, violent dreams, old guilt; a tight and claustrophobic storm begins to swirl in the rugged landscape of the Brecon Beacons, demanding a closer look at the nature of what is truly wild, and that which imprisons us.

McKnight Hardy’s new novel is steeped in quintessentially Welsh horrors. The reservoir looming blackly beyond the chapel windows with secrets buried at its bottom is reminiscent of the intentional flooding of Capel Celyn in the 1960s which left the entire village underwater, while the remote farmhouses, crumbling psychological states, and strange horrors mounting in the hallways brings to mind the infamous haunting of Heol Fanog – one of Wales’ best-known paranormal cases. Without specifically naming these things, McKnight Hardy draws quietly on a swell of national eeriness, an inherent uncanniness in the untamed landscapes of Wales, and those fears that run forever through a national psyche. It is a natural kind of horror, a swirling and untouchable one – wet and dark and full of blood – and one that it is gripping to watch McKnight Hardy’s characters grapple with. Straight away we are confronted with the inherent human weakness – we cannot fight the natural world, and we cannot fight that which we don’t understand.

A richly described, artistic view of the landscapes and settings of the novel means that the narrative passes in the same oil-paint compositions that Astrid is feverishly trying to complete for her first gallery exhibition in her young career. The bones of the novel colour the way McKnight Hardy creates not only her setting but her characters – Astrid, deliciously three-dimensional, always just slightly beyond our forgiveness, always just a little too close to hate. Astrid paints and so does McKnight Hardy – the water up against its banks in the night, the tension between her friend Flora’s husband and the secret from years ago, the strange wounds her boyfriend Kit keeps waking up with in the morning.

The novel is brooding and photographic, the mounting wrongness gathering like a fog. The characters are strikingly real, flawed, and relatable in a darkly guarded kind of way, splaying out qualities that we may be trying not to acknowledge in ourselves. Astrid is haunted by her past – specifically a college trip to Florence with her handsome art teacher – and as the white and gold of Italy, the marble cherubs and modelled sensuality begin to blur with the brambly darkness of the Welsh winter, the voodoo dolls under the bed, the strange handprints on the windows, we see the way a personal history will colour everything we do; the way the past is not a forgotten thing, but something always just in reach. Astrid’s inability (or unwillingness) to see herself for what she really is, what she’s really done, is a tantalising slow-burn down into the core of what makes someone truly bad, or truly forgiven.

Night Babies is delightfully tense on every conceivable level – something is constantly lurking just out of sight. Astrid dreams of demonic cherubs and undead children, fighting against gallery deadlines as her paintings grow ever stranger, while her host Flora is heavily pregnant and enjoying the slower lifestyle of a homemaker. She is forced into close proximity to Flora’s snooty husband Simeon, who Astrid reviles for the upper-class snobbery he represents, and yet is strangely captivated by. The contrasts between the sweeping location and the tightening claustrophobia of people thrown together and cracks beginning to show is a masterful balance by McKnight Hardy, leaving a reader wondering which danger is going to swoop first – the social, psychological, or environmental?

Richly layered and cleverly plotted, Night Babies feels like a race to a nugget of truth that will make sense of everything. The parallels between the beautiful and the grotesque (a word attached to Astrid throughout as she becomes more unmoored from herself) give a refreshing evocation of femininity, a woman unafraid to be disgusting, frightening, preoccupied with the body and the things we leave behind. (Night Babies is sure to be popular on ‘weird girl’ BookTok, a space which celebrates female protagonists connecting to their base selves.) Potentially a comment on the demands made of women – bearing children, motherhood, the balance of everything together and getting on with it – Night Babies is not afraid to take its characters to the dark animal depths of the nature from which we all originally came. The novel becomes subtly witchy, and yet relatably domestic – Astrid as a figure of what we should be, and simultaneously who we actually are.

McKnight Hardy’s constant balancing of the supernatural and the psychological leaves a delicious ambiguity to Night Babies. There is a constant question of what is truly real- what power the supernatural has, or how fractious Astrid’s narration can become. It is never made clear what the true driving force actually is – haunting, tension, mental illness, guilt, ghosts – and the novel is all the richer as a result, weaving a complex tapestry from which there are endless threads to unpick and examine. Night Babies is simultaneously a tight, terse retelling of a struggling friendship and forced proximity, and a sweeping, panoptic look at what might lurk just outside the bounds of our accepted reality. It is a slow descent, a sinking, a cold creep as we watch something being pulled slowly beneath the water.

NIGHT BABIES will be released in book shops from April 23rd 2026.

CTHULHU: THE COSMIC ABYSS

PLATFORM: PC, PS5, XBOX SERIES (REVIEWED) | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW


In this narrative-driven investigate-em-up, players take the role of Noah, an employee of the Ancile, a company that specialises in “occult affairs”. Sent to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean to track down some missing miners, Noah finds something highly unusual – the entrance to R’lyeh, the sunken city long thought to be the lair of Cthulhu…

Like many other Lovecraft-related games, The Cosmic Abyss focuses on exploration and investigation rather than combat – you won’t be fighting anything other than Noah’s grip on his own sanity. Instead, you’re given an upgradeable AI companion that will assist you in your quest to uncover the many secrets that lie ahead. Each of the game’s chapters features a series of puzzles that need to be completed by thoroughly investigating your surroundings and piecing together the clues that you find. By analysing anything that might be useful, you’re able to add materials to a sonar that will help you to find additional information or routes through the level. All of the major clues that you find are stored in the Vault, where you’ll use your own detective abilities to figure out how and why the various bits of information link together, leading to a deduction that will hopefully show you what steps to take next.

In each chapter, the main Investigation always has two outcomes – one that strengthens Cthulhu’s influence, and one that reduces it. Your task is to not only find the puzzle’s solution, but to also choose the correct one that will keep Noah’s Corruption meter stable and stop him from going insane. In the standard “Investigation mode”, there’s very little hand-holding and you’re rarely explicitly told what to do, so you’ll need an inquisitive mind and a keen eye to progress safely. Those who prefer an easier ride can opt to play in “Exploration mode” which enables hints that range from nudging you in the right direction to just giving you the answer to your current puzzle, depending on how much help you feel you might need.

With its cerebral puzzle-solving, beautiful scenery and unsettling atmosphere, The Cosmic Abyss has plenty to offer for discerning puzzle fans. Its investigation mechanics can be a bit fiddly though, mid-game checkpoints are infrequent, and some of the clues and solutions can at times be almost prohibitively tricky to figure out, even when using the built-in hint system. If mind-bending puzzles of a Lovecraftian nature are your thing, Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss should scratch a very specific itch.

 

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