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[Review] ‘Companion’ Droid Rage Is Serious Business 

Companion is a fun take on a subgenre that is starting to feel a bit stale. There are thrills, lovable but morally grey characters, and a kill that is guaranteed to make social media very happy. If you enjoyed Lars and the Real Girl but felt it was too pure and sincere, this deadly thriller might have the droids you’re looking for.

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Sci-fi has been exploring technology and how men use and abuse each new advancement forever. This makes sense, seeing as AI is practically shoved at us whenever we open a smart device. Its usage was also one of the sticking points in the 2023 Writers Guild Of America and SAG-AFTRA labor disputes. However, androids, specifically, are having a renaissance with films like M3GAN, T.I.M., and The Creator. So, it makes sense that Drew Hancock’s Companion would be a timely watch for a few reasons this Valentine’s season. While the movie seems like another standard sci-fi thriller about a killer robot on the surface, it actually raises some interesting points and has a bit of chaotic fun while doing it. 

Iris (Sophie Thatcher) and her boyfriend Josh (Jack Quaid)  join his friends for a weekend getaway at a remote cabin. The couple seems happy, but something is clearly amiss. We soon discover Josh’s friend Kat (Megan Suri) does not like Iris, and Kat’s boyfriend Sergey (Rupert Friend) gives her unwanted attention. We watch Iris as she goes out of her way to be the perfect girlfriend to Josh, despite all the weird vibes. However, when Sergey tries to sexually assault Iris, she fights back in self-defense and kills him. When she returns to the cabin to explain, Josh puts her to sleep, and she awakens to learn that she is an Android. 

This is when Companion starts to dig into the questions it is posing. The group of friends discuss the safeguards that should prevent her from killing humans instead of how Sergey was a rapist. Much like Andy (David Jonsson) in Alien: Romulus, the people surrounding empathetic Android deny their humanity and treat them as property. Allowing them to not care about what happens to the robot or any trauma they inflict on them. This is where Companion forces the audience to side with the AI even before we get to the second reveal. 

After tying Iris to a chair, Josh wakes her up, and she discovers her memories of their relationship are part of her programming. Her boyfriend ordered a sex robot and customized her to be his ideal woman. As Iris reels from this information, the audience discovers that Josh is the standard issue “nice guy.” He has decided that he is done with Iris, so he jailbroke her system to help him and Kat kill Sergey and get away with the murder. Obviously, Iris escapes and steals Josh’s phone, allowing her to give herself a higher IQ and change some other settings. This is when Companion really begins putting the pedal to the metal. 

Hancock’s script gives Thatcher a pretty awesome playground to remind people why we love to see her in the genre. As Iris quickly learns to be independent and realizes that anger is a powerful motivator, this game of cat and mouse ramps up. We go from pitying this naive robot to watching her become a woman on a mission. Thatcher never misses a beat and makes the most of each comedic and violent turn. This makes it difficult to remember when machines have autonomy, it usually ends badly. However, it is impossible to not root for her in her newfound independence as she fights for survival. We have a bold entry in the feminine rage category this year while still in this neverending January. 

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Outside of Thatcher, the small ensemble has fun with this dark comedic thriller. Harvey Guillén as Eli and Lukas Gage as Patrick are a couple of scene thieves who also play a couple whose weekend has been turned upside down due to this plot. Suri kills in the role of Kat, a character we love to hate, who is also one of the funniest people in most of her scenes. Quaid adds Josh as another character on his resume, who we all want to fight. Unlike his previous iterations of the supposedly perfect boyfriend who spends too much time on 4chan to not be a problem, he gets a bit more time to live in Josh. We watch this character escalate things further every chance he gets, and we watch him decide to completely lean into his villain era. I sincerely believe Quaid has finally peaked in the arena of bad boyfriends and may never be able to top this one. 

Companion is a fun take on a subgenre that is starting to feel a bit stale. There are thrills, lovable but morally grey characters, and a kill that is guaranteed to make social media very happy. If you enjoyed Lars and the Real Girl but felt it was too pure and sincere, this deadly thriller might have the droids you’re looking for.

Sharai is a writer, horror podcaster, freelancer, and recovering theatre kid. She is one-half of the podcast of Nightmare On Fierce Street, one-third of Blerdy Massacre, and co-hosts various other horror podcasts. She has bylines at Dread Central, Fangoria, and Horror Movie Blog. She spends way too much time with her TV while failing to escape the Midwest. You can find her most days on Instagram and Twitter. However, if you do find her, she will try to make you watch some scary stuff.

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TIFF 2025: ‘Fuck My Son!’ Review

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A couple of assumptions can be made when a movie has a title like Fuck My Son! The most obvious one is that the title also serves as the film’s entire premise. The second is that it’s probably going to be a raunchy, tasteless, and chaotic affair. Writer-director Todd Rohal’s (The Catechism Cataclysm, Uncle Kent 2) adaptation of Johnny Ryan’s comic of the same name meets both of those expectations. However, it starts out with an unexpected amount of promise before hitting the slippery slope that leads to an unforgettable but underwhelming experience for the audience. 

WTF?!

Fuck My Son! starts off with a scuzzy charm that makes you think it might just surprise you. It gives the audience a cute intro (although it looks like AI was heavily utilized) and explains how to use the Perv-O-Vision and Nude Blok glasses that the audience was given on the way in. This is obviously a ploy to throw some naked people on screen and rip the X-rated band-aid off early. While this bit lasted too long, I appreciated having peen on a big screen. As someone who yells into a podcast microphone a few times a year,I want to see a pair of testies for every pair of breasties,I appreciated a filmmaker having the balls to have balls on screen. 

We soon meet Sandi (Tipper Newton) and her kid, Bernice (Kynzie Colmery), as they are shopping. They have a run-in with a nameless pervert that feels like Rohal might be going for a John Waters kind of sleaze. While having a heart-to-heart about good people versus bad people, they notice an older woman, Vermina (Robert Longstreet), needing assistance. They do not know that this old lady dressed like Mama from Mama’s Family has set a trap for the woman. This soon leads them to a home where Vermina explains that Sandi will have to fuck her son if she doesn’t want anything bad to happen to her or her daughter. To make this situation more twisted, her son, Fabian (Steve Little), is a mutant with a mutant dick (once it’s finally found).

We Also Feel A Little Trapped

What comes next is a lot of gross-out humor, repetitive jokes, and the fairly predictable escape to only be brought right back to their tormentors. Fuck My Son! loses all of the goodwill (and steam) we had as it stretches this premise well past the breaking point. There are a few more jokes that land as Sandi and Vermina square off, but not enough to stop the movie from overstaying its welcome. That being said, Tipper Newton understood the assignment and had a standout performance worth noting. She is still compelling enough around the forty-minute stretch when it becomes clear this movie didn’t need to be a feature film.

Fuck My Son! Tries to stitch a lot of things together that never really add up. For example, Bernice’s meat friends (the animated meat also gives AI), who visit her in times of distress. The movie also never addresses whether Vermina is being played by a male actor for an actual reason. No one is going to see Fuck My Son! for social commentary, and Longstreet does earn a couple of chuckles. However, it feels like another attempt at what passed for humor decades ago rather than putting drag on the big screen with a purpose. This could also be something that I just overthought once the movie lost its way. Much like I wondered why this old lady would have pads on hand when she is well past the point of having a period.

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We Used to Be A Society

Some of these gripes could be partly explained by Fuck My Son! wanting to stay closer to the source material than it should for modern audiences. However, the issue of running a joke into the ground is pervasive throughout the movie. Even before it starts reaching for anything that could be even slightly offensive and makes its way to rape jokes and multiple endings. It makes for an overall frustrating experience because we want filmmakers to do something unique and take chances. Just not like this.

Many of us also have a soft spot for sleazy movies from the 1970s and 1980s. I was one of the last people to discover the charming chaos of Frank Henenlotter’s Basket Case and Frankenhooker. So, I know scuzzy cinema can work, and it can be fun. However, Fuck My Son! is a one-and-done instead of a title that will stand the test of time. It’s a movie you can toss on to laugh at with friends before it becomes background noise. It’s not one that most of us are going to demand a physical release of. Or want to revisit again. 

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TIFF 2025: ‘Dead Lover’ Review

Dead Lover introduces us to a lonely and smelly gravedigger who dreams of being loved. One night, her wish comes true as she saves a man who seems intoxicated by her pungent scent. However, like all gothic romances, theirs is doomed. Her lover dies at sea, leaving the gravedigger upset and alone again, as all that’s left of the man she loved is his finger. This propels her to turn to science to see if she can bring her lover back from the dead using his sole digit. This obviously causes chaos because, as all horror fans know, sometimes things are better left dead.

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As a recovering theater kid who supports women’s rights and wrongs, I think Dead Lover is an interesting experiment. It feels like a sketch group has taken over a Black Box theater, and during the Q&A at TIFF, it was confirmed that that was the case. This leads to quite a bit of laughter and a few cheers as you invest in the ridiculousness of this world. Which is great for a movie premiering its Stink-O-Vision at a prestigious festival. However, what stands out the most for me are the themes of longing and basic human desire.

A Smell To Remember

Dead Lover introduces us to a lonely and smelly gravedigger who dreams of being loved. One night, her wish comes true as she saves a man who seems intoxicated by her pungent scent. However, like all gothic romances, theirs is doomed. Her lover dies at sea, leaving the gravedigger upset and alone again, as all that’s left of the man she loved is his finger. This propels her to turn to science to see if she can bring her lover back from the dead using his sole digit. This obviously causes chaos because, as all horror fans know, sometimes things are better left dead.

Director, co-writer, and our leading smelly gravedigger lady, Grace Glowicki, puts forth a world that allows women to be gross. However, unlike most cinema, Dead Lover knows the nauseating and uncouth lead still deserves love. There is no She’s All That makeover or a montage of her learning how to be a lady. This movie gets that people are people, women can be many things, and our dreams should not hinge on how society perceives us. Between the jokes, this film touches on yearning for the life you deserve. While Glowicki’s character yearning leads her to love, the sentiment can be applied to anything. She just happens to think her place in the world is beside the dead love of her short life. 

It’s The Ensemble for Me

In addition to Glowicki, Leah Doz, Lowen Morrow, and Ben Petrie (who also co-wrote the script) take turns playing an array of zany characters. This allows the world to feel fuller, even if it’s the same two stages reused with the same four actors. It also guarantees the team a dedicated playground to make an impression. Everyone gets at least one character so bizarre that they feel like the MVP of the film. At least until the next one is introduced.

The small ensemble of four performers tackling all the roles is committed to their bits and having fun. This allows Dead Lover to reach for some silly highs and some ridiculous lows as they move through these characters at a fairly rapid speed. This results in more of a Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder energy (with modern sensibilities). Which isn’t something most of us would expect from a body horror comedy.

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If you are in the mood for a likable sketch troupe exploring gothic expressionism, then this is your movie. You might even find yourself charmed by the style choices and improv vibes if you’re a theater person.

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