Table of Contents
More than twenty years after Danny Boyle and Alex Garland’s beloved post-apocalyptic horror 28 days later Appearing on screens for the first time, the pair are back, with newly minted Oscar winner Cillian Murphy in tow, for this reboot and follows even more survivors (Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ralph Fiennes, Jack O’Connell) who are fleeing from infected hordes. More good news? A sequel directed by Nia DaCosta, 28 Years Later, Part II: The Bone Templewill follow soon.
M3GAN 2.0 (June 27, 2025)
It’s time to rev up Sia’s “Titanium” once again and fine-tune those creepy dance moves – Gerard Johnstone and Akela Cooper’s preppy killer pop is out for more blood, presumably after (shock, horror!) not dying at the end of the wonderfully campy word of mouth that was the first film. Showcases more unlikely shenanigans from Allison Williams’ roboticist and Violet McGraw as her grieving niece, as well as more wild fight scenes, gruesome deaths and bizarre twists.
Even crazier Friday (August 8, 2025)
Lindsay Lohan is taking a (hopefully short) break from Netflix rom-coms to reprise the role of the now-grown teenage punk rocker turned stiff, middle-aged Anna Coleman, who inexplicably switched bodies with her tense body. mother (Jamie Lee Curtis) in the 2003 Disney classic. Directed by Late evening‘s Nisha Ganatra and co-starring returning favorites Mark Harmon, Chad Michael Murray, Christina Vidal, Stephen Tobolowsky, Haley Hudson, Lucille Soong and Rosalind Chao alongside Once upon a time in Hollywood‘s Julia Butters and Never have I ever‘s Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, this highly anticipated sequel is sure to have you headbanging to Pink Slip like no time has passed.
The Battle of the Baktan Cross (August 8, 2025)
Paul Thomas Anderson rarely misses – and he’s unlikely to do so with his next star-studded project: a crime saga starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Regina Hall, Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, One thousand and one‘s Teyana Taylor, and Licorice pizza‘s Alana Haim. Mark your calendars.
Downton Abbey 3 (September 12, 2025)
Of course it won’t be the same without the late Maggie Smith’s funny Dowager Countess, but at least Paul Giamatti, Dominic West, Elizabeth McGovern, Hugh Bonneville, Michelle Dockery, Laura Carmichael, Jim Carter, Phyllis Logan, Joanne Froggatt, Penelope Wilton, et al return for our third big screen visit to the big pile in Yorkshire, courtesy of Julian Fellowes and Simon Curtis. The enchanting score alone will give me goosebumps.
The bride! (September 26, 2025)
In general, I’m skeptical of movie titles that end in exclamation points (see: Mama Mia!, Mother!, I could go on…), but I’ll make an exception for Maggie Gyllenhaal’s sci-fi musical reinterpretation of Bride of Frankensteinstarring Jessie Buckley as the wife-to-be, Christian Bale as the monster, and a supporting cast that includes Penélope Cruz, Annette Bening, the director’s husband Peter Sarsgaard, and her brother Jake. Get ready for chills, thrills and big dance numbers.
Bugonia (November 7, 2025)
Another year, another wonderfully wacky collaboration between Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone: this time a sci-fi comedy remake of the 2003 South Korean farce Save the green planet! of No idea‘s Alicia Silverstone and Types of kindness‘s Jesse Plemons as a conspiracy theorist who kidnaps a powerful CEO who he believes is actually an alien sent to destroy Earth. What else did you expect?
Bad: Part Two (November 21, 2025)
As we continue to hold space and find strength in the first half of Jon M. Chu’s two-part pink-green blockbuster, we also look breathlessly ahead to the second, destined to fly onto screens next fall, bringing with it even more stunning duets from Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, more antics from Jonathan Bailey, more plots from Michelle Yeoh and Jeff Goldblum, and hopefully many, many more memes.