Monday, 1 September 2025

Weapons (2025) - A Guest Review by Chad Dixon

Trailed since early Spring this year and much anticipated from the same director and writer of the highly plaudited horror film Barbarian (2022), which I haven't seen yet, Zach Cregger now brings to the cinema another Horror/Thriller. Penning the story as well, he freely admits it was written in the aftermath of the sudden death of a very close friend as a way to process his grief and emotions.

Set in the fictional small town of Maybrook, Pennsylvania, we join the story a couple of months after the mysterious disappearance of an entire class of Elementary School children. At 2:17am, they all just got out of bed and ran out of their houses into the night. In many cases, their exit captured on doorbell cams. Just one student arrived at teacher, Justine Gandy (Julia Garner)'s class the following morning and up to this point, the local police are still completely stumped!

The first chapter is titled 'Julia' and begins a couple of months later when she reluctantly takes the podium at a consolation meeting for the faculty and parents in the school hall, hosted by Principal Marcus Miller (Benedict Wong). Halfway through her unconvincing, empathetic speech, a man in the audience pipes up "Why isn't she being questioned?" He stands up. "She must know something about our kids?" The frustrated man is Father, Archer Graff (Josh Brolin), and his outburst begins a cacophony of further accusations from those gathered. Miller swiftly intervenes and the meeting ends abruptly with Gandy being ushered outside by security to her car between a handful of clamouring parents.

A troubled individual, Gandy heads directly to the local liquor store to get a couple of bottles of vodka to drown her sorrows at home. Later that night, while deep into her umpteenth glass, the doorbell rings. She looks between the blinds and sees no-one. Returning to her solace, then someone hammers on the front door. "Who is it?" She cries. "What do you want? She goes outside. Still nobody but then she sees the word "WITCH" scrawled in thick red paint on the side of her coupe.

We are then shown the same few days after that school meeting from a number of distinct chapters - seen from the points of view of some of the major players. 'Archer', 'Miller' and a few others - including moustached local cop, Paul Morgan (Alden Ehrenreich), who seems to be an old flame of Justine's and now seems to be her only confidant. As these chapters unfold, the tension in the town ramps up until we finally see Alex's story. The only child not to have gone missing from Gandy's class that day.

There's lots to keep one's attention here. From the curious premise, the spooky town that seems virtually empty most of the time, the atmospheric camera work - and the intense performances showing every character to be flawed in one way or another. A good choice of cast, especially a totally unrecognisable Amy Madigan as Gladys Lilly, Alex's quirky Aunt, who dramatically arrives in the second half of the 2 hour 8 minute runtime. Without giving away any kind of spoilers, I must reiterate that this film definitely deserves its given 18 certificate as when the truth is revealed as to where the children have gone, it kicks the visuals and intensity into overdrive!

I do think this is a well crafted thriller and no doubt many studios will be knocking on the door of Mr Cregger to deliver further content of this genre to the big screen. Horror is normally not my sort of cinema-going fare, however I did find this quirky story engaging and quite watchable. Even if it was from behind my fingers at times!

PodHubUK Podcasts for the Month of August 2025

...a roundup of our month of podcasting. Links to the team, communities and podcast homes on the net at the foot, so scroll down!

Tech Addicts 2025
Season 4, Episode 1 - Think of the Children!
Sunday 3rd August
We're back! Hope you missed us and enjoy this opener in which Gareth flies off big-time about that unscientific, untechy Peter Kyle and his bombastic attempts at gathering our data! Plenty of time left for more from us though, including Linux stuff, Bazzite, Lutris, Ulefone, slim phones, C64 Mini and Voyager 1 - as we prepare for the year 71,500!

The Phones Show Chat Podcast
Sunday 3rd August
Steve and I are looking back at our PSC shows and experiences (with anecdotes tossed in) since the beginning in 2009. We natter lots about that as Steve steps down for a well-earned rest in (semi, kind of) retirement! He'll still be around for sure doing other bits - and you can see what the plans for PSC are in my other post which has been lurking here now for a few days. Anyway, do tune in and by listening, feel a part of thanking Steve for his huge contribution to all of our tech lives and wishing him (and the new-look PSC) well.

Projector Room
Episode 191 - Maniac Holocaust
Wednesday 6th August

It's just Gareth and I this time as Allan is no doubt wolfing down ice cream on a beach on some sunny offshore island! With an adjusted content we take our First Steps with the Fantastic Four whilst hounded by a Dogman, we Shoot to Kill a trio of Maniacs on the loose in Hell House, then face Armageddon in the Night of the Creeps and Cannibals! A bumper edition of Coming Soon gems is on offer too, so do join us!

The Phones Show Chat Podcast
Monday 11th August
Joe and I recorded a 'mark in the sand' 10-minute pod so that we could get the rss feed going and registered with the directories ahead of 'launch' during the first week of September. The website is also now live you can always grab links and stuff there.

Tech Addicts 2025
Season 4, Episode 2 - Decant a Rant
Sunday 10th August
Gareth and I reunite for another show. This week, more on the UK Online Safety Act that Gareth lost his shit about last week(!), I look at the Nothing Phone 3 debacle, iKKO's new device, Google finishing fiddling with Steam on Chromebooks, a stolen load of Galaxy Z Fold 7s - and PixelSnap be's a thing! Plus loads more, as always.

Whatever Works
Episode 230 - Over Balmy, Over Barmy!
Monday 11th August

Aidan and I are back again to strain your eardrums as we run through a bunch of twaddle loosely badged 'Whatever Works'! This time it's Soft Sitters, Air Purifiers, Assorted Nails, Bongo Bike Charging and even Water Butts. Which we need in this heat! Ice creams at the ready then - plunge in!

The Camera Creations Podcast (at Whatever Works)
Episode 4 - Bridges
Thursday 14th August
Joe Hickey, Chris Clayton, Ian Bundey and I are back with another fortnightly roundup of all things camera and photography. This time we focus on bridges, dive into some news with heavy, big, fast lenses, look at drones from DJI and there's even time for me to Drone on about my perfect camera wishlist! Available from the Whatever Works website and feed in your podcatchers (as Camera Creations doesn't have a home yet).

Tech Addicts 2025
Season 4, Episode 3 - A Monopolistic Perplexity
Sunday 17th August
Gareth and I swelter as we chat about Perplexity AI eyeing-up Google Chrome, Microsoft court action over Windows 10, a battery issue with the GPD Win 5, the new Insta360 8k drone, Linux Mint Zara beta, FydeOS, VPNs vs Proxies, Honor Magic V Flip 2 and more. How could you miss it!

Projector Room
Episode 192 - Alien Zombie Shrouds
Wednesday 20th August

It's just Gareth and I this time and we present a Flop of the Fortnight Special: The 5 Lowest Rated Movies on IMDb! Just for a change while we await Allan's return for some order (and someone knowledgeable for Gareth to talk to)! Plenty more besides though as we have another bumper-packed Coming Soon and oodles in The Main Feature. It's a dark theme with plenty of Zombies, Shrouds, Oddities and Alien Amateurs! So hold onto your hats.

Tech Addicts 2025
Season 4, Episode 4 - A Plucky Pixel Perspective
Sunday 24th August
Gareth and I unpack the latest tech buzz again. Is Valve's "Fremont" console the future of gaming? The ROG Ally impresses as a solid portable Xbox experience. Plus, Ted showcases an innovative AI-powered tablet with a projector, Made by Google Pixel stuff and the Dex which teaches kids a new language.

The Camera Creations Podcast
Episode 5 - Post Processing
Thursday 27th August
Joe, Chris C, Ian Bundey, Chris K and I are back again with an hour of musings on all things cameras and photography. This time Chris C and Ian lead a deep-dive into using various tools to manipulate images after they've been taken, from a sample shared last week. Lots of news and rumours too - to make us twitch about bank balances!

Tech Addicts 2025
Season 4, Episode 5 - A Galaxy of Honor
Sunday 31st August
Gareth and I look at the Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra specs, a couple of new devices from Honor, Motorola & Lenovo’s Massive IFA Leak, Marshall's jumbo-sized speaker, the soundcore Work portable AI voice recorder and a new Google TV box from… Acer! Gareth also picks up a BOSGAME E2 Mini and loads more as always! Don't forget that this is the last one for Season 4 but we'll be back with Season 5, every Sunday in October.


The Podcasts (PodHubUK)

Tuesday, 26 August 2025

Honor 400 Pro - a Month or so later: Impressions/Thoughts and Images

  1. There was a Chinese-looking page in amongst setup pages (see image). It's more likely to be a rogue help page slipped through the net when making the software ready for English release is my guess.
  2. Why, oh why, is the Lock Screen Signature left-aligned! (see image)
  3. The Magic Capsule (Dynamic Island) works with multiple Media Players (unlike some that will only do so with Spotify)!
  4. M3E changes are rolling out nicely.
  5. I don't know why they have doubled-up on all the core Google apps. Having said that, their Calendar app, like Sammy’s is very good.
  6. If you change the AoD to Full Screen instead of Partial, then back again, it defaults back to "Tap to show" instead of staying on "All day". So yes, if you have the AoD on "Full screen" in the settings, the AoD doesn't work. You have to have it on "Partial Screen"
  7. All that lock/home/screen/theming/icons/AoD is a mess and confusing, frankly.
  8. The AoD is inflexible for brightness and size of elements. Even when you go to the Theming and install 3rd party ones. Far too small and not bright enough. Still, at least it seems to stay on, unlike BBK Phones which turn off when they fancy even when 'always' is set!
  9. MagicOS has a lot of maturing to do.
  10. The face recognition is good.
  11. FPS good, even though only optical.
  12. The Video from Image is bozo fun! Though really annoying that you have to copy everything you want to manipulate in there from Google Photos to their Gallery. Ditto Outpainting which got real-world use last month (here in the group).
  13. Qi is great and Charging is fast, 5,300mAh battery performance is fab.
  14. The speakers are great.
  15. Settings have options buried under huge levels of layers but the search engine seems ok.
  16. You can't get rid of the 'suggested apps' at the top of the App Drawer. The App Drawer option is not on by default too as it's set the Apple way, so they probably assume most will leave it like that and give the App Drawer no love. Can't get rid of the A-Z down the side either.
  17. Why isn't the Music Player widget (for their own app) one of the 'cards' (part of the Widgets suite) which you could then put into a stacked group of cards?! It doesn't fit!
  18. The control centre of course is pure apple - and unlike others, no option to merge it with notifications. Which is annoying. So Mr Tiny Brain has to remember left/right down-swiping!
  19. Classic Widgets (i.e. not Honor ones) are buried under 4 screen taps/gestures and an area called 'cards' (as above) and you have have to pinch the home screen then start fishing around to find them. And they are in seemingly random non-alphabetical order! Really, really bad design idea Honor.
  20. The icons in the Status bar are too small.
  21. You can't get rid of the battery icon but you can put the % outside (but the icon stays) but then it pops itself back inside the icon if you use Magic Capsule. Mad.
  22. The screen is very sharp, but it's not up to Moto's LG standard for brightness and colour. Apparently it's their own. To include their own Honor PWM Dimming tech. Ultra-high frequencies (3840Hz or higher) to reduce flicker and eye strain.
  23. There’s no HDMI out support.
  24. Phone Link (well, after a 30-minute fight with the phone and Microsoft, uninstalling, re-installing, rebooting, both on PC and phone), I eventually got connected and sure enough it does do the same as Samsung and BBK Group phones - with full suite of App control and pass-through audio etc. It’s just such a fight always which is probably Microsoft’s fault. Also appears on the Windows 11 Start Panel as it should. Not that I shall ever use it of course!
  25. Deeper research (by me) seems to be strongly suggesting that the "6 years of updates" that are being offered here actually means 4 OS Updates (so Android 15-19) and 6 years of Security Updates (so to Spring 2031). The difference here (and confusion) is that it is not 6 Android updates. Further, it seems that this is for devices released in the EU (and also the UK?) as other areas are expecting only 3 OS/4 Security. Apparently.
  26. The phone feels like a bit of a powerhouse frankly, but it’s just ruined by the software layer over the top of Android IMHO. Octopi Launcher helps to some degree, but not for all irritations.
  27. (BTW inside Octopi you can actually throw a switch to turn off the Status Bar altogether then replace it with widgets and screen elements where they are actually useful and not so bleedin’ tiny you can’t see them!)
  28. Image to Video and Google's Veo: I've been doing a bit more digging on this and it seems that the Image to Video function on the Honor 400 Pro is a temporary arrangement between Google and Honor which will expire 2 months after the device has been registered. (It's not clear if that means with Google i.e. one's Google account or signing into an Honor account or if, for example, a second-hand user gets that 2 months starting again.) Anyway, it looks like this version of Veo (without audio - if you want that, you have to cough up more cash to Google) was 'developed' between Honor/Google and this particular handset, a world exclusive. Even Pixel phones don't have this 'animation' function (rather, stuck with just the 3D Cinematic Background function at best). So I guess that it will run out eventually here - and who knows what will happen then? Maybe a software update will remove it from Honor's MagicOS9 Gallery app.
  29. So far, so good though as I'm really enjoying the device (for a far-east phone). Lots to like for the (now) £550 price.

Saturday, 23 August 2025

The Life of Chuck (2025) - A Guest review by Chad Dixon

Based on a short story by prolific author Stephen King, The Life of Chuck (2025) is told in Three Acts but in reverse. Set some time in the near future, Marty Anderson (Chiwetel Ejiofor), is a High School teacher in an unnamed medium-sized American town. Halfway through his English class, everyone's smartphones receive notifications at the same moment that there's another massive earthquake in California - which has already lost a massive chunk of its landmass to the the Pacific Ocean, just months previously.

Basically, the whole planet has recently gone to hell in a handbasket with worldwide floods, droughts, massive forest fires and new volcanoes in unexpected places filling the daily news bulletins. Incredibly, what most people, including the parents of Marty's students seem to be annoyed about the most is the internet slowly going down. "They shut down Porn Hub!" cries one distraught father in a one-to-one meeting with Anderson. He nods politely as he states that there's still a multitude of text and other books freely available in the school library. The useful advice seems to be falling on deaf ears during these tedious meetings with disillusioned parents.

On his way home, in yet another traffic jam, Marty notices a billboard displaying the message, "Charles Krantz: 39 Great Years! Thanks Chuck!" next to a picture of a seated middle-aged white man in a grey suit with glasses and short curly dark hair. In the following days, as worldwide disasters seem to escalate exponentially, this message seems to appear everywhere. Even on TV when no other channels seem to be broadcasting. "What does it all mean?" says Anderson to an older black man (Carl Lumbly), sitting on a bench in a deserted town centre one day, "...and who is Chuck?"

In the second act we meet Charles Krantz himself (Tom Hiddleston), as a disillusioned accountant dressed in the same grey suit 'playing hooky' from an accountants' business conference. We discover that his true love is dancing. As he passes a busking drummer on a street corner, he spontaneously breaks into a routine with moves akin to Christopher Walken's steps in Fat Boy Slim's 'Weapon of Choice' video. He encourages a young woman in the gathering crowd to join him and the performance goes on for a quite a while. This was much better than a stuffy conference!

In the first act (shown last), we meet the pre-highschool-age Charles Krantz (Benjamin Pajak). After the loss of his parents and unborn sibling in a car accident, he is now living with his beloved grandparents, an aged-up Mia Sara and Mark Hamill - the latter looking like a real life Geppetto. He's a thoughtful boy, constantly learning from his surroundings and actually taking advice from teachers, unlike almost all of his peers. One day, after a particularly disruptive class on the last day before the Summer recess, his 'hippy dippy' English teacher reminds him that between his ears is not just his brain but also everyone and everything he will collectively experience in life. "I contain multitudes", she quotes as she holds both his temples. He then discovers that there is an after-school dance group run by the gym teacher and soon he feels that he is fully in his element.

There are definitely some profound ideas being presented here in the guise of a 'Wonder Years' style narrative. Conflicting advice from his straight-talking, maths-promoting grandfather about what he should be concentrating on - compared with the sheer joy he finds from watching 20th Century musicals on Blockbuster video with his grandmother - and from the dance partner he eventually finds in the group. This leads to the way Chuck Krantz admirably tries to navigate from childhood to adulthood but ultimately it flies completely in the face of the very weird ending that comes surprisingly quickly in this 111 minute runtime.

Even though I watched this story intently, I left the cinema wondering if I may have missed the key message. But I suppose like the many other Science Fiction and/or Supernatural stories penned by Mr King, it's meant to be unconventional and slightly unsettling. Maybe another viewing might help? What I am clear about is that it's beautifully filmed with some great 90s needle-drops. All the acting is spot-on with some heavyweight names cast here. Hiddleston is all over the promotional materials and is quite engaging but I really have to champion Pajak for a beautifully heartwarming performance! Surprisingly rated as a (15), I think it's easily more like a (12A).

Monday, 18 August 2025

Motorola Moto G86

The G86 is, surprise, surprise, Motorola's update to the G85! My interest was piqued because on the spec-sheet at least, the updates do seem to be significant enough to give this squarely mid-range handset knocking on the door of, well, at least upper mid-range territory. It's quite an impressive-looking value prospect too, for those looking to not pay flagship money out, but getting a high percentage of features and performance. So we'll see.

I reviewed the Motorola G85 in November 2024 which, in turn, I compared with the G84 from the year before that. My conclusion back then was that very capable as the G85 was, for those willing to pay an extra £70, the Motorola Edge 50 Neo offered significantly more. So will I conclude the same here, I wonder - or have Moto updated the G-line here so as to not need that bump. The G86 at time of writing is available mainstream in the UK for £279 and the Edge 50 Neo, now time has passed, £269 down from the RRP of £399 - so £10 less and as such, maybe an even bigger ask of the G86.

The UK retail box is a simple affair. White, small enough to not have a charger in, big enough to have some papers, a pokey-SIM tool, USB-C to USB-A cable and a colour-matched hard plastic cover with cut-outsat the side and bottom for essential buttons and ports. It's very slippery. First thing I did was to buy a simple, clear, soft TPU for a fiver from Amazon! The deal with Pantone seems to have gone (at least with anything like this, mid-range) as there's no pungent perfume smell wafting out from the carton.

The material on the back, which I assume must be silicone polymer (eco-leather) is actually very nice - and very nearly grippy enough to not need the above-mentioned case. But not quite. It is nice to the touch, though and almost feels padded. Spongy. I have the Spellbound finish here as supplied by Moto PR for review, which is a kind of dark blue. There's also Golden Cypress (a golden yellow/green), Cosmic Sky (purple/blue) and Chrysanthemum (red/pink). The do seem to be Pantone shades, so it's just the perfume in the box that has been skimped on!

There's a big 'M' of course in the middle of the back and up-top and left (in portrait) the by-now iconic sloping camera island. It sloped subtly up on the two sides facing the back then again on the others, facing the frame. There are four circles on the island, which I'll come to later, though one of them is clearly an LED flash. The four edges join the plastic, flat edging (iPhone style) abruptly. So much so that the edge can be felt when the finger runs over it.

The flat plastic frame runs around the perimeter of the phone and up the top, there's a Dolby Atmos logo next to a microphone. On the right side there's another microphone, a volume rocker and power button - all of which feel sturdy enough with no 'play' and on the bottom, another microphone, one of the stereo speaker pair (so bottom-firing) and a USB-C port. On the left side we have the long-reaching SIM Card Tray which takes a single nanoSIM and microSD Card. No choice for a second physical SIM Card but the phone does support eSIM in the mix.

The front of the phone is flat glass with a Selfie camera up front and centre (cut-out circle), under the second of the stereo speakers, doubling-up as the phone app's earpiece, and not quite so abruptly meeting the edges as the back. Gorilla Glass 7i is employed here which according to the blurb make it significantly less likely to get scratched than last year's Gorilla Glass 5 and has greater drop-resistance for shattering. With certification for IP6/8, IP6/9 and MIL-STD-810H you'd like to think that the phone should survive various accidents and environmental ingress.

It's a big phone at 161.2 x 74.7 x 7.8mm, very slightly less tall than last year's G85 but also slightly wider and fatter. It's 185g which again, is heavier than either of the finishes available (acrylic or vegan leather) on last year's model. And it feels it, too. Last year's G85 seems more stealthy mainly because of the slightly curved screen and slim edging around the perimeter.

In usual Moto style, the screen is a 1220 x 27126.67" P-OLED (no doubt made by LG again) and as such, bright (4,500 nits - up from 1,600 last year), colourful and beautiful to look at. It has a refresh rate of 120Hz but is not LTPO which means that in auto modes it will only go down to 60Hz, not 1Hz (as I understand it). You can force it onto 120Hz all the time if you like (Hyper smooth) but there's also Smart and Balanced (auto) or Efficiency first (which presumably means 60Hz always). I think these terms are new as I don't recall having seen them on a Moto phone up to now. It has a ratio of 20:9 and returns 446ppi (up from 395 last year).

The Moto G86 arrived on Android 15 and will get 2 OS updates (same as the G85), so to Android 17, and similarly to last year's model) they are promising 4 years of security updates, so to June 2029. I guess that at this price it's approaching reasonable, though Moto are no doubt aware that Samsung, particularly, even down in this segment are offering significantly more to customers. As usual, Moto go their own way on updates.

The G86 has a 
Mediatek Dimensity 7300 chipset, which is the same found in the Edge 50 Neo and proves to be a great performer for all-round use for most of the people out there doing most of the things that most people do with phones - particularly at this price-point. Last year's G85's SnapDragon 6s Gen 3 was also squarely in the same ballpark, as I reported in my review and performed perfectly well. Let's face it, if people are expecting to play demanding games or process high-end video, they're going to using specialist tools. This is a phone for the people - not extremes - and is nicely priced as such. I have no complaints here about the speed around the UI or tasks executed in general use.

Talking of which, there are a range of options for storage and RAM available depending on market/region. I have the 256GB/8GB version here. It looks like 256GB is the baseline now, which is great, though those hoping to shave more off the cost will look back at last year's 128GB version with envy. I applaud the hike in storage and Moto are tackling this one, often making 512GB the baseline in some lines. So yes, you can also get 256GB/12GB or 512GB/12GB RAM versions. Of course you can 'boost' the RAM (up to 24GB in fact) by utilising some of the storage for swapping working data around but trendy as this is to include, it's clear that this function is mostly smoke'n'mirrors.

What will make an impact for many is the inclusion of a microSD Card slot in the SIM Tray, just like last year's model. I do think people still value this so as to move data around readily, even if only once during setup. Well done Moto, I say! They say that up to 1TB is supported in the slot and I happen to have a 1TB card to test - and sure enough, works like a charm.

The G86 has got the pair of stereo speakers to which I referred earlier and they sound very similar - maybe a touch louder - than last Year's G85. A
t full volume they can get a little tinny, but playing with the Dolby Atmos equaliser settings and installing Wavelet sorts that out nicely. What you lose in a little volume you can make up for in quality. No, it's no Sony Xperia, but the stereo effect is good and soundstage wide and impactful 18" from the face. The vast majority of users will have no complains about the sound from the speakers and, yes, as I say, maybe a slight improvement. Much better to use the Bluetooth of course, if you can, with a decent pair of ear/headphones or hook it up to an external speaker, which all then sounds as good as what the supporting equipment provides.

Connectivity in my tests here is good. All boxes ticked and appear to be working well, for 5G, Wi-Fi 6 (over last year's 5), tested on 3 networks, Bluetooth 5.4, with good range and holding on well - again depending on attached gear, GPS for mapping applications - locking on quickly and staying so - and also NFC talking to other gear and payment terminals in shops. Again, check your region for what's included/supplied/working with all this stuff. Security seems good too with an under-glass optical fingerprint scanner and face unlock working together well, or indeed in isolation, in all-but the darkest conditions for face. Fingerprint scanning software, though never going to be as good as ultrasonic in my experience, makes registering easy/quick and in use, reliable.

The 5,200mAh battery will charge at up to 30W with an appropriately-powered adapter. No chance of the 125W charging of the high-end units or even the 68W of the upper-mid-range. No, here, we have 30W wired and no wireless charging either. I guess something has to give and personally, I'm OK with the 30W wired charging but have really come to rely on wireless (overnight) charging, inefficient and bad for the planet as I'm told it is. 30W wired is no slouch however and certainly better than it used to be with these lower-mid-range phones - and this one can be charged up in around an hour and a half, much like the G85. But the 5,200mAh battery is really well-performing, getting through 2 days of moderate/light use. The 10% Reading Test I do returned excellent result at well over 2 hours. You can always add a 3rd party Qi coil for a fiver from Amazon as long as you're OK wielding a case.

Moto's HelloUI
is present and every phone released by them now comes with it. Even, yes, down here at this price-point. And it's very pretty, been redesigned in terms of front-end, colours, display options, all those great Moto Gestures which I have written about so much - all present and correct. The UI is very Vanilla - like a Pixel in many ways sticking to the tried and tested, but with Moto's sprinkling of genuinely useful additions, including some AI sneaking into some settings like CrystalTalk for reducing background noise on VOIP calls and whatever Google make available, like Gemini Live! It goes deeper than ever now as Moto prioritises security in keeping with what Google are doing as they evolve Android. As I say, I have written loads about HelloUI now, so check out my linked-to reviews above, especially the recent ones where I dig into the nitty-gritty of it all.

Moto's Smart Connect
works brilliantly with the G86, wirelessly of course - only the very top phones get wired support, but actually, wireless is so good, I really don't think, armed with a reliable network connection in your space, wired is becoming unnecessary. Never thought I'd hear myself say that, being a big HDMI-Out fan for so long! Now of course sometimes a situation may arise where a network can't be relied on, then a cable becomes like gold dust. But networks are generally getting very good these days and the hospitality sector gearing themselves up generally for customer's needs. Anyway, it works perfectly here. I shall point you to my Smart Connect Review and Features piece on my Blog as all the details are there, so click on through and see what's so great about it! And it's amazing that Moto are including all the hooks to make it work in even their lower-end phones now. Kudos.

The main camera is a 50MP one with OIS, a supporting 8MP wide-angle with autofocus, up to 4K video at 30fps. There's a 32MP Selfie too. The test shots that I have taken here all seem perfectly good enough for the 98% of users who are going to post photos to social media and share with friends, leaving the 2% pixel-peepers no doubt to zoom in and tut-tut! That autofocus in the wide-angle camera allows for nice and close so-called Macro shots and shooting in Night Vision seems to pull out shareable photos even when the human eye sees pitch blackness! The camera software looks exactly the same to me as it is in various recent Motorola phones, so perhaps I'll point you now to my coverage in those. ThinkPhone, Edge 50 Pro, Edge 50 Neo, Edge 40 and so on! There's oodles of Moto stuff on my blog here. You'll have gathered that I'm a fan!

So there's a fair bit here that has been added and made better since last year's G85, the Gorilla Glass and IP-rating/Military certification for protection, the brightness of an already great P-OLED panel, a slightly improved chipset with storage and RAM options and a bigger battery that performs every bit as well as last year's model - if not better. Physically, the design seems to have gone down the road of many others these days, copying iPhone's squared-off edges. Personally, I prefer the G85's design, but each to their own. To be fair, the G86 fits just as snuggly in the hand, particularly without a case on, and I'm sure I'm outnumbered in preferring the non-Apple leanings!

There's stiff competition in this mid-range as I'm sure you know. Lots of choice and ranges of features - but I think this is where Moto gets it right. With a great camera performance all-round the feature for me that tops all that is Smart Connect. This makes a huge difference for desktop options and I strongly recommend that you follow my links, above, to read up about it and see how Moto have swiped the crown away from Samsung and their DeX option. Moto's Smart Connect is really impressive. And it's fully available right down the range to even these sub-£300 units for all to enjoy - families keeping in touch, business users hot-desking, gamers or simply people wanting to get content out of their phones to a TV or monitor. It's the jewel in Moto's crown as far as I'm concerned and makes this handset worth every penny.

Sunday, 17 August 2025

Cold Fish (2010)

Today's treat was a film I've been meaning to watch for ages and not got round to it. It's a Japanese gruesome, grizzly and dark body horror which you can currently catch on Shudder (or Shudder via Amazon Prime Video) in the UK. Not for the faint-hearted or queasy!

We follow the antics of a mild-mannered chap minding his own business running his small tropical fish shop when one day he gets a call from a local store to tell him to come down and fetch his wayward teenage daughter who's been shoplifting. He races down with his wife (and the girl's stepmother) to find the security guard laying into his daughter verbally, all guns blazing.

During the process, another man turns up who appears to be a local businessman (who also runs a bigger, more successful tropical fish shop in the town). He obviously has some influence because he talks flatteringly to the security guard who lets the girl go. When they all leave the store, he insists that the group go and look at his fish shop, which they do. It seems that he and his wife make a habit of employing wayward young girls to work in the shop, even giving them accommodation. So he offers the family the same for this shoplifter daughter.

Turns out that this businessman is much more than he seems on the face of it and frankly is a bit of a fruit-loop, more of a Dexter-a-like (but with no Dark Passenger to tame him or give him any rules)! He ensnares our mild-mannered chap into a staged business meeting where he's ripping people off for money, then finding the more radical and permanent ways of making sure they don't care or tell the tale to the police or anyone else!

I guess that you're getting the idea by now and yes, the film turns into something of a series of bloodbath (literally) scenes, one after the other as our businessman hides his tracks. In the meantime he's threatened our man that if he tells anyone what's going on, he will be after his family. So our man just gets further and further sucked in and down the road, way over his head before he realises or could hope for a way out. Trapped - and the only way out might be a radical one!

Apparently the director is quite well known in certain circles, Sion Sono - but I don't think I've heard of him. I had a scour through IMDb at the actors in it and I similarly drew a blank, so I clearly don't move in the right circles! The cast does well with the material on offer though - suitably loopy when needed and grizzly in their antics on cue. It's quite shocking in places with scenes or rape, murder and abuse but also, dare I say in the same sentence, decent entertainment and dark fun. Yes, an extreme, uncontrolled likening to Dexter.

It's quite a long film at two and a half hours. Which version of it you'll get to see will probably depend on censorship for different platforms, but the one I saw on an old DVD looked like it was pretty much uncut! Hold onto your hats for the thrill ride and grab a sponge!

Saturday, 16 August 2025

Zombie Tidal Wave (2019)

What a scream this was. I'm sure it must have been made as a scream. Surely! I guess it's a kind of spoof thriller/horror where most of the budget has been spent on makeup and probably one known actor. Oh, you know - that one from Beverly Hills 90210. For anyone who watched such stuff in the 90's. Ian Ziering. That's his name. He was in all 292 episodes of that show!

Anyway, this bonkers film is about a bunch of Zombies with blue blood who start appearing from the sea in some American coastal town and chomping the locals. Some of whom get together in order to work out how to combat them (often in choreographed fight/dance scenes) and save the day. The acting is pretty awful throughout by everyone, including (and maybe especially) him!

After these Zombies start popping up, there's some sort of tidal wave (hence the title) which scoops up many hordes of them and washes them all ashore. Our hero is on his boat at this time and somehow manages to get it to surf the wave and get him and his mate safely ashore!

The water from the wave is gone in an instant on the land and the Zombies start walking the Zombie-walk amongst the living. Bite the living in the head and it explodes a gush of blood - and they are then a Zombie too. Bite them anywhere else and it takes time to get ahold. The Zombies can't seem to be stopped/killed in any way except for the one which they discover - using electricity. So our crack team start to work out ways to trap them all and zap them all! Yeah, OK, it's a spoiler. But you're not going to watch this! And if you do, you won't care!

It's all so ludicrously tongue-in-cheek and clear that director Anthony C Ferrante and Ian Ziering have cooked this yarn up for their amusement and sport. The CGI is dreadful throughout, but some of the gore-based scenes have worked well-enough with makeup aplenty. There's some kind of explainer thrown in towards the end involving a pharmaceutical firm from 30 years back who were testing something-or-other which wasn't allowed - and went wrong - so it had to be done on the quiet - they, lining the local authorities' pockets with silver in the process!

This is utter tripe of course, but it's also great fun to watch - beers, mates, Friday night after the pub. Not to be taken in any way seriously - just to be silly-entertained! It's also quite good fun looking out for continuity errors if the effect of the beer wears off! So don't rush out and pay extra to see it - wait until it's included with one of your streaming services. But if you must, you can. Cough the price of a large coffee and see it now on various of them!

Weapons (2025) - A Guest Review by Chad Dixon

Trailed since early Spring this year and much anticipated from the same director and writer of the highly plaudited horror film Barbarian (2...