This has been a great month – we took a total of 2 weeks off for a family wedding in Türkiye & visiting friends in Sweden straight after it, with a day trip to Helsinki (Finland) in the mix. There’s been such a lot to keep on top of, so I haven’t really watched as much as previous months.
Nevertheless – here’s my media round-up for the lovely month of June! I fell into an SCP Foundation rabbit hole, rewatched some of my favourite films, discovered a new favourite film, and read some real bangers. All washed down with some Regency-flavoured comedy as light relief!
Musical Greetings
If you’ve ever been to a Turkish wedding, you will know the dancing is one of the best parts, and it was a highlight of June for sure. However, I think my favourite moment was at home during one part of the celebration when one cousin said “This is not music!!” and our other cousin immediately turned the volume all the way up. Ahh, family.
Top Wedding Playlist Songs
This absolute banger stuck in my head from the wedding for better or worse… It’s an Egyptian hit in Arabic, but pretty popular in Türkiye. He doesn’t drink, bro.
… And this is the one we listened to about a million times, and I think I will know word for word – “They Can’t Destroy Me” by Tekir (let their fathers come!)
And not forgetting this absolute masterpiece, which is super fun and actually wedding appropriate, “The Boy is Ours, the Girl is Ours” by Aylin Demir:
Album of the Month

As Above, So Below by Sampa the Great.
Our friends have this on vinyl and it’s great! Sampa the Great is a Zambian singer, new to me, who lives in Melbourne, Australia. I just really liked this! I’ll be looking for more of her songs & albums now.
Books
Everything I’ve read in June! I’ve had a really good run so far with so many highlights, this month is no exception. As we were travelling a lot, I read a lot more this month – 3 flights, multiple trains, a very chill catamaran, a packed party ferry that was about 25% swingers, 6 cities and 4 countries… and lots of time to read. As there are a few, I’ll display the covers below in a gallery and then give my thoughts for each one below.







Non-Fiction

Queer Tastes: Unconventional Representation in Horror Films
by Cat Voleur.
I don’t often read non-fiction these days, but I really enjoyed this one. I’m writing a full review for Divination Hollow‘s site, and I received an eARC via DHR as well. This is going to be one of those I come back to a lot, I think. It’s a very personal study of 20 films, and Voleur never presents it as definitive. It’s accessible and easy to dip into, even for those without a grounding in Film or Queer Studies.
Pansexual author Cat Voleur guides readers through twenty film recommendations selected from over eighty years of scary movies. Her personal experiences with the LGBTQIA+ community are intertwined into these essays about the history of the genre and persistence of the counterculture. Get ready to let the messiest and most fabulous skeletons out of the closet. Honor some classics, get out of your comfort zone, and embrace some problematic favorites because no one should have to hide their Queer Tastes.
Cat Voleur is a fulltime horror author with such titles as Revenge Arc, The Lorekeeper, and My Apologies to Tanya Grace. She is a member of the International Association of Media Tie-in Writers and a co-host of The Nic F’n Woo Cage Cast. When she’s not creating or consuming morbid content, you can find her relaxing with her small army of rescued felines.
Release date: June 23, 2026
Fiction

The Library Thief by Kuchenga Shenjé.
I got this one kind of on a whim from Afrori Books, Brighton (they ship!) and I’m really happy I did. I wanted queer Victorian Gothic, and this is that (trans and sapphic identities are included), AND it’s also an exploration of race and how that intersects with class, and the concept of belonging to various communities – rural, urban, white, black/African, rich, poor, middle class. I really liked the prose style and found it a good read overall.
Spoilery Thoughts
I did like this one – there are some anachronisms that stuck out, but I really loved the prose so that didn’t really matter. I was disappointed the sapphic couple were the tragic couple, but glad the trans woman got a HFN. I enjoyed the exploration of race & identity as well, and it felt really hopeful despite the rape and pregnancy.
A strikingly original and absorbing mystery about a white-passing bookbinder in Victorian England and the secrets lurking on the estate where she works, for fans of Fingersmith and The Confessions of Frannie Langton
The library is under lock and key. But its secrets can’t be contained.
1896. After he brought her home from Jamaica as a baby, Florence’s father had her hair hot-combed to make her look like the other girls. But as a young woman, Florence is not so easy to tame—and when she brings scandal to his door, the bookbinder throws her onto the streets of Manchester.
Intercepting her father’s latest commission, Florence talks her way into the remote, forbidding Rose Hall to restore its collection of rare books. Lord Francis Belfield’s library is old and full of secrets—but none so intriguing as the whispers about his late wife.
Then one night, the library is broken into. Strangely, all the priceless tomes remain untouched. Florence is puzzled, until she discovers a half-burned book in the fireplace. She realizes with horror that someone has found and set fire to the secret diary of Lord Belfield’s wife–which may hold the clue to her fate…
Evocative, arresting and tightly plotted, The Library Thief is at once a propulsive Gothic mystery and a striking exploration of race, gender and self-discovery in Victorian England.

The Handsome Young Man by Mark N. Drake.
I really love Drake’s Darkisle series with Jack Glennison as the noir detective. This is a short story from Drake’s Ko-Fi, which can be read as a fun standalone in the vein of Lovecraft and firmly in Lovecraft’s mythos, but it’s background to one of the key cults we meet in the main series! Really liked this one.
This 7,000 word original Mark N Drake short story has not been published anywhere and will not be made available for open publication until 2029 at the earliest. The ‘Handsome Young Man’ tells of a key part in the Darkisle story, delving back into the 19th Century and establishing the link between the island and the New England of Lovecraft’s Mythos.
Download this story today to get a glimpse of the deeper lore behind the world of Darkisle!

Slaughterhouse 5 by Kurt Vonnegut.
This is one of Himself’s favourite books, and he persuaded me to read it so we could talk about it. I really enjoyed it – I can see why it’s such a classic. I love the pulp Sci-Fi layered onto the jigsaw of ironies and unflinching cynicism, and it definitely deserves its reputation. It’s actually my first Vonnegut, I am trying to build up to reading Cat’s Cradle.
Slaughterhouse-Five, an American classic, is one of the world’s great antiwar books. Centering on the infamous World War II firebombing of Dresden, the novel is the result of what Kurt Vonnegut described as a twenty-three year struggle to write a book about what he had witnessed as an American prisoner of war. It combines historical fiction, science fiction, autobiography, and satire in an account of the life of Billy Pilgrim, a barber’s son turned draftee turned optometrist turned alien abductee. Just as Vonnegut had, Billy experiences the destruction of Dresden as a POW. Unlike Vonnegut, he experiences time travel, or coming “unstuck in time.”
Slaughterhouse-Five made Kurt Vonnegut a cult hero in American literature, a reputation that only strengthened over time, despite his being banned and censored by some libraries and schools for content and language. But it was precisely those elements of Vonnegut’s writing — the political edginess, the genre-bending inventiveness, the frank violence, the transgressive wit — that have inspired generations of readers not just to look differently at the world around them but to find the confidence to say something about it.
Fifty years after its initial publication at the height of the Vietnam War, Vonnegut’s portrayal of political disillusionment, PTSD, and postwar anxiety feels as relevant, darkly humorous, and profoundly affecting as ever, an enduring beacon through our own era’s uncertainties.

Shadows Over Ravenskirk 2: Civil Blood and Civil Hands, by Vivian M. Valentine
I received an ARC from the author. Really enjoying the unfolding of the Ravenkirk stories in these novella-length instalments, it’s like binging short seasons of a TV Show – think queer Widow’s Bay meets Dark Shadows. This is one to go for if you enjoy complicated tangles of family drama (like the Addams Family but far darker and more twisted, more like the New England version of the be-tentacled British clan in THIRTEENTH – including that one cousin who makes snuff films). You should definitely start with Book 1, and read in sequence, or it’s like starting a show in Season 2. It’s very worth it. Grab Book 1 now, and preorder this one!
No blurb on GoodReads yet – expected publication is September 2026.
Victoria tries to figure out the secret of the key (from Book 1), while Nicodemus Ruthven and his complicated, twisted extended family scheme away at cross-purposes in the old manor for a shot at restoring their power and influence over the town and its founding families.
Vivian M. Valentine has cited Ricky Porter as an influence on the way she wrote Nicodemus, and I can definitely say that if you’re a fan of my books PLEASE DO pick these up as well, they are great.

Badlands by Gary Kruse.
This is a decent indie debut thriller, it’s competently written and one I picked up after seeing the author advertising later books in this series on Bluesky. I think that these can be read in any order, but I wanted to see where the Dark England series all started. This one is Cornish Noir, while others are set in the Norfolk Broads (Bleak Waters and Ruins). I mostly enjoyed this. It’s not 100% for me – I found some parts a bit tame, or not quite fleshed out/structured the way I was hoping for, but I think it might be of interest to some of you! I will be picking up his other books to see how they progress.
Surf. Sand. Smugglers. Murder. Willow has run as far as she can.
From her home.
From the friends she betrayed.
From the family who betrayed her.
From her own name.
But a cry for help will bring her back.
Back to face her family.
Back to face the sins of her past.
Back to face the darkness at the heart of Cornwall.
In the search for her sister, Willow will face deception and betrayal, before she’ll find love – and herself. But will she uncover how close the enemy is, or will she become another victim of the Badlands?

Raise the Blood by Nenia Campbell.
I appreciate a heroine with anxiety, and this is a modern Gothic romance (dark) which has a companion book out, My Blood Is Risen, from the villain/love interest’s perspective. I like modern Gothic, and this was a fun little romp for the plane. It also gave me a new story idea focused on the mother-in-law of the fragile Gothic bride, as that’s a perspective we rarely get.
FIND THE GREEN BOOK
COUNT THE SPARROWS
Shy and anxious Nadine Harnois has spent her whole life living in the shadow of her older, prettier sister, Noelle. But when Noelle mysteriously vanishes just months after her fairytale wedding, Nadine gathers her courage to go to her brother-in-law’s home in Argentum to seek answers.
Caledon Cullraven, the family’s youngest son, takes an immediate interest in her, becoming both her tormentor and her ally. But beneath his playful demeanor lurks something twisted and depraved, and as her reluctant attraction to him grows, so, too, does the potential for real danger.
The Cullraven family legacy goes back for generations, with secrets that run as deep and as dark as the town’s abandoned silver mines. The people of Argentum are suspicious and fearful of their town’s reclusive benefactors, and possibly with good reason: because the more time Nadine spends with this family, the more she suspects that they’re hiding something truly terrible.
“You want to run, Nadine? Run to me.”
Podcasts & Audio Dramas
Everything I’ve listened to this month! While I have one re-listen to cheer me up, Folk’n’Hell got me revisiting a lot of films I’ve seen before (most of which I enjoyed). Plus, the SCP Archives podcast was a great companion to the SCP short films which I’ve placed in the “Mini Series” category.

Folk’n’Hell Podcast, hosted by Andrew Davidson, Dave Houghton, and David Hall.
As I’ve seen almost all of the films discussed so far (bar 2-3 I think), I dived in. The hosts are good company, and while I may not 100% agree with their scores, it’s a really good podcast and I’m getting a lot out of their discussions of films I’ve enjoyed/watched before.
FolknHell is the camp-fire you shouldn’t have wandered up to: a loud, spoiler-packed podcast where three unapologetic cine-goblins – host Andy Davidson and his horror-hungry pals David Hall & Dave Houghton, decide two things about every movie they watch: 1, is it folk-horror, and 2, is it worth your precious, blood-pumping time.
Armed with nothing but “three mates, a microphone, and an unholy amount of spoilers” Intro-transcript the trio torch-walk through obscure European oddities, cult favourites and fresh nightmares you’ve never heard of, unpacking the myths, the monsters and the madness along the way.
Their rule-of-three definition keeps every discussion razor-sharp: the threat must menace an isolated community, sprout from the land itself, and echo older, folkloric times.
Each episode opens with a brisk plot rundown and spoiler warning, then erupts into forensic myth-picking, sound-design geekery and good-natured bickering before the lads slap down a score out of 30 (“the adding up is the hard part!”)
FolknHell is equal parts academic curiosity and pub-table cackling; you’ll learn about pan-European harvest demons and still snort ale through your nose. Dodging the obvious, and spotlighting films that beg for cult-classic status. Each conversation is an easy listen where no hot-take is safe from ridicule, and folklore jargon translated into plain English; no gate-keeping, just lots of laughs!
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episodes Listened To
- Kill List (2011) dir. Ben Wheatley. This one wasn’t a highlight for me when I watched it for the first time. It was fine, but it didn’t work quite as well for me in terms of the naturalistic lighting and dinner party scenes at the start. This was an interesting one to listen to, and it did make me want to rewatch it, but I think our scores will always differ as they rated this one really highly, and I definitely wouldn’t rate it like that.
- Sennentuntschi (2010) dir. Michael Steiner. I also didn’t think this film was top notch when I watched it and I agree the timeline is too confusing for this to be really clear. I think I understood it better on my first watch than they may have done, but I’d need to watch it again to straighten out the timelines and the inconsistencies in my head. CW for rape, which is discussed during the episode and happens on screen in the film.
- I listened to the first part of Night of the Demon (1957) in which there is an interview with my favourite Weird fiction author, Ramsey Campbell. This is one film I haven’t seen so I’ll give that a go first before listening to the rest of this episode. I think I actually want to save this for the 100 Horror Movies In 92 Days Challenge, so I might keep it on my watchlist for August-Oct.
- Moloch (2022) dir. Nico van den Brink. I really enjoyed this one when I watched it a long time back, and I think this is one I definitely agree with the ratings. This one is a great horror film with some really tense and creepy moments, and the bog is a great setting. I think after watching Witte Wieven/Heresy this year, I would like to get into some more Dutch horror and see what else is on offer from the Netherlands… I’ve also enjoyed Bumperkleef/Tailgate (2019), and (I guess) Sint/Saint (2010), so curious to see what else is out there!
- तुम्बाड/Tumbbad (2018) dir. Rahi Anil Barve. I really enjoyed this film – it’s so good. This has so many Gothic trappings, but also does a lot with Indian Independence and corrupted/cursed bloodlines, and the struggle of moving from a dark past into the throes of an uncertain modernity. I love the generational trauma merged with the story of the country as a backdrop, and I think there are parallels with the family story and the mythology of the story. It’s just really interesting. (I disagree that it’s Lovecraftian – it’s Hindu fantasy, and I don’t think that should be lumped in with Lovecraftian mythos.)

The Many Wrongs of Lord Christian Brighty, written by Amy Greaves & Christian Brighty. (Listen on Fourble).
A Regency sitcom I discovered last month (May 2026). It’s a lot of fun, with Bleak Expectations vibes, but Regency. Re-listen.
Lord Christian Brighty is the talk of the Regency ‘Ton’ – a celebrated libertine, a heartthrob and a hero to many. But close-up, he is a spoilt, impetuous, life-ruining bastard… Or at least he was. Because his carefree life of infinite privilege has been upended by an encounter with his new chambermaid – the uneducated but forthright Babigail – who became the first person to tell him the unvarnished truth about his selfish behaviour. Overnight, his lifelong trust that everyone loved him had been replaced with a gnawing fear that Babs was right.
So now, with his narcissism collapsing and a need to prove to Babs he is actually a good person, Lord Brighty is determined to fix all his past wrongs. And by extension all the ills of Regency society. Accompanying him in his quest are Babs (elevated beyond her station to a chambermaid-cum-adviser role), and his butler, Mr Churlington. Although Churley would prefer everything to stay exactly as it used to be (as would all Brighty’s friends, family and the entirety of high society).

SCP Archives (2019-2024).
As I’m watching the SCP short films this month, I thought I’d also give this podcast a go. I’m enjoying the format and the episodes so far – starting with Ep 01, SCP-087: “The Stairwell”.
The SCP Foundation was built to keep humanity safe from a world of beings it doesn’t want to know exists. Things of destruction. And these things have files. A lot of files.
Episodes I’ve Listened To (I can’t pick my favourites)
- SCP-087 – “The Stairwell” (27:46)
- SCP-055 – “Anti-Meme” (10:53)
- April 1 (07:28)
- SCP-049 – “The Plague Doctor” (24:21)
- SCP-682 – “Hard-to-Destroy Reptile” (16:30)
- SCP-106 – “The Old Man” (43:29)
- SCP-096 – “The Shy Guy” (26:40)
- SCP-1981 – “Reagan Cut Up” (28:08)
- SCP-231 – “Special Personnel Requirements” (33:57)
- SCP-2317 – “A Door To Another World” (28:55)
Mini Series
I haven’t actually watched much in the way of series this month. I did discover a series of short films, though, and I’ve mostly been watching these. I would normally count short films in the “Films” section (duh) but as these shorts are all related to the SCP Foundation, I thought I would include them in here.


First up: There Is No Antimimetics Division, a 4-part mini series of microbudget short films written and directed by Andrea Joshua Asnicar, based on the Qntm’s SCP concept/entry. This is a fun 4-parter, competently acted and fun. It’s a great take on SCP-3125 and the Antimimetics Division, and I really enjoyed it.
Watch the series on YouTube: [Part 1], [Part 2], [Part 3], [Part 4].
All the SCP short films I’ve watched by Andrea Joshua Asnicar
- 10,000 Years – SCP-2951. Commander Terrence is the only one in his team to make it out alive from an abandoned mine that the SCP Foundation classifies now as SCP-2951. What happened? “SCP-2951” by djkaktus, from the SCP Wiki. Source: scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-2951. Made by @andrea.joshua.asnicar.
- The Switch (Horror Comedy short). Working at a secret SCP Foundation site is stressful enough… Now imagine the one switch that powers the whole place won’t turn on. Meet your average, slightly burned-out SCP technician. His job? Keep the lights on and the containment protocols running. But when The Switch fails, the countdown to disaster begins—and so does the awkward panic. What follows is a tension-filled (and slightly ridiculous) race against time to stop… well, probably the end of the world. “The Switch” is a horror-comedy short film set in the eerie and unpredictable world of the SCP Foundation, where malfunctioning tech, existential dread, and absurd protocol collide. Made by @andrea.joshua.asnicar.
- SCP-2812 Echoes Of Yesterday – a horror short film based on SCP-2812 entry on the SCP Foundation wiki, written by djkaktus. Agent Watson from the SCP Foundation is sent to track down a missing MTF. But she wants to get away. Read the original entry: scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-2812, licensed under CC-BY-SA. Made by @andrea.joshua.asnicar.
- I Do Not Recognise The Bodies In The Water – SCP-2316. When a couple of SCP Foundation investigators stumble on a long-buried tragedy, they uncover more than just secrets beneath the lake’s waterline. The past begins to bleed into the present — with SCP-1423, SCP-332, SCP-4833 and SCP-1833 lurking in the shadows. What starts as a mystery soon becomes a fight against memory itself. Based on “SCP-2316” by djkaktus, from the SCP Wiki. Source: scpwiki.com/scp-2316. Made by @andrea.joshua.asnicar.
Other SCP short films I’ve watched by a variety of filmmakers
- SCP: The Doctor – Crawford Films, written, directed, and edited by Noah Crawford. “SCP-049” was created by Gabriel Jade. The story was rewritten by djkaktus and Gabriel Jade. Original story: https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-049 “SCP-7122” was created by Dr Emil J Svensson. Original story: https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-7122. I liked this one!
- SCP: The Corpse – Crawford Films, written, directed, and edited by Noah Crawford. “SCP-035” was created by Kain Pathos Crow. Original story: https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-035 “SCP-106” was created by Dr Gears. Original story: https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-106 “SCP-1507” Original story: https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-1507 “SCP-3348” was created by DatCactus. Original story: https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-3348. This was a good one as well.
- SCP: Black Meridian – created by Altavision. A man aims to avenge his brother by eliminating the drug den in his small town, but things aren’t what they seem. I really liked this one too. I love the SCP concepts.
- SCP: Dollhouse – created by Evan Royalty. A group of Foundation MTF operators investigate a suburban home after reports of anomalous activity inside. I’m loving the quality of all these shorts! I think it really helps that the SCPs are doing so much of the heavy lifting in the plot, really enjoying the way the scripts bring them to life.
- SCP 1471 – created by REVOLVER PICTURES. Written and directed by Kyle Spencer. “1471” is an original short film in the SCP universe. “1471” is based on “SCP-1471” by “LurkD”. Source: http://www.scpwiki.com/scp-1471.
- SCP 096 – created by Klay Abele, @MrKlay. After a terrifying and deadly monster escapes from the SCP Foundation, Inspector Arlia interviews Doctor Daniels, the man responsible for containing the creature. At first Daniels uses the interview to critique and insult the powerful and mysterious 0-5 Council. However, as Arlia shares the horrifying details of the breach, Daniels becomes more and more fearful of the question everyone wants answered: how, exactly, did this happen? This short film is based on the SCP Foundation Entry 096-1-A by Dr. Dan.
Films (Features & Shorts)
A round-up of all the films I watched in June! I’m getting in a lot of comfort rewatches and fun ones before the 100 Horror Movies Challenge starts in August, as I’ll be watching new-to-me Horror for 92 days. Brace yourselves, it’s coming. In the meantime, here are my highlights, and the full list is, as ever, below!

Portrait of God (2022) dir. Dylan Clark runtime 7mins.
This is a great short film. I think it’s the perfect length, and it’s so genuinely creepy. I loved the effects, and it gave me some very strong SCP Foundation meets Francisco Goya vibes. I watched this because there’s a feature length version coming – but now I’m worried the feature won’t be as good… The beauty of this one is that it leaves so much to the imagination, but a feature length script often says too much to fill the time. We’ll see.
A religious girl must come to terms with her faith when she analyzes a provocative painting of God.

Howl (2015) dir. Paul Hyett.
This is a banger. One of my favourites. If you spend most of your life commuting on 150s and 158s that chug through forested areas and break down at annoying times of night, this hits different, let me tell you that. Although “AlphaTrack” seems to use repurposed tube carriages… I also hated the character of Adrian (Elliot Cowan) so much that he influenced Phil’s characterisation in The Crows and Phil’s equivalent in the AU, Birds of a Feather. Oh, and I enjoy the werewolves!
Last Train. Full Moon. All Change.
When passengers on a train are attacked by a creature, they must band together in order to survive until morning.

Jennifer’s Body (2009) dir. Karyn Kusama.
This is one I haven’t seen in a long time, but I fancied another go and it didn’t disappoint. The most bisexual film ever made since The Mummy. What a classic. I don’t think we need a sequel, or a reboot. Very happy with this one as it is. It’s a great script from Diablo Cody – I also liked her script for Lisa Frankenstein, which I rated 5 stars but haven’t rewatched yet.
She’s evil… and not just high school evil.
Jennifer, a gorgeous, seductive cheerleader takes evil to a whole new level after she’s possessed by a sinister demon. Now it’s up to her best friend to stop Jennifer’s reign of terror before it’s too late.

The Midnight Meat Train: Extreme Edition (2008) dir. Ryûhei Kitamura.
Based on one of my favourite Clive Barker short stories, this is a moody little Urban Gothic gore-fest from the director of No One Lives. I love the concept. I really enjoy Vinnie Jones in everything I’ve seen him in, including the criminally short-lived TV series The Cape, where he was a mobster with alligator skin. For this film, I definitely prefer the Extreme Edition for the ridiculous CGI effects.
The most terrifying ride you’ll ever take
A photographer’s obsessive pursuit of dark subject matter leads him into the path of a serial killer who stalks late night commuters, ultimately butchering them in the most gruesome ways.

Las brujas de Zugarramurdi/Witching & Bitching (2013) dir. Álex de la Iglesia.
I vibe a lot with Spanish horror and humour, and this cracked me up in places. The heist at the start was absolute gold (pun intended). I really enjoyed it. I watched it on YouTube (MeduFiles Channel). I love the witches in this, and the way they casually walk on the ceiling to take phone calls, and the inclusive coven, and we get a gay ship that sails too. All very fun, definitely a new favourite.
A gang of gold thieves land in a coven of witches who are preparing for an ancient ritual… and in need of a sacrifice.
- Les Aventures extraordinaires d’Adèle Blanc-Sec/The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec (2010) dir. Luc Besson. I didn’t realise this was a Besson film until I was halfway through it, but having seen Fifth Element and Dracula, it makes sense. I don’t know what it is about the fantasy style here, but it doesn’t quite do it for me. It’s camp French fun, but not quite a highlight.
- 河兽/The Beast in the River (2023) dir. Wei Zhang. Chinese action film/creature feature. While both Letterboxd and IMDb solely classify it as Action, this is definitely Horror as well. It’s not a highlight, but it is pretty fun. It’s got some comic moments and a lot of monster drama. I found it on YouTube via the Movie House channel.
Previous Media Round-Ups
May 2026 Media Round-Up
My media round-up for May! Everything I watched, listened to, and read over the previous month, with highlights and recommendations.
Media Highlights: The Best of the Best
I began my media round-ups in Nov 2025, so I thought I’d do a media highlight post of my Top 5 books, short stories/collections, TV shows, and films from Nov-Apr. Find out what made the ultimate cut!
April 2026 Media Round-Up
Everything I’ve watched, read, and listened to in April! Skim the highlights, or expand the details to see the full lists.
March 2026 Media Round-Up
Everything I’ve read/watched/listened to in the month of March!
February 2026 Media Round-Up
What I read, listened to, and watched in the month of February! Skim the highlights, or expand the details to see the full lists and my thoughts.
January 2026 Media Round-Up
My monthly media round-up for January 2026 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I’ve been enjoying this month!
December 2025 Media Round-Up
My monthly media round-up for December 2025 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I read/listened to/watched this month.
November 2025 Media Round-Up
I’m starting a new monthly series where I post a round-up of all the media I’ve watched/read/listened to for the previous month. Here is November’s media round-up!



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