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		Summer Movie Guide 2025: Here’s what’s coming to theaters and streaming 
		from May to August
		[April 30, 2025] 
		By The Associated Press 
		Ethan Hunt's last mission? A new Superman? Happy Gilmore as a dad? Three 
		genre-spanning Pedro Pascal movies, including a romance, a superhero 
		movie and an A24 Ari Aster thriller? Hollywood is pulling out the stops 
		this summer movie season, which kicks off with the release Marvel's “Thunderbolts(asterisk)” 
		on May 2.
 May also brings big studio releases like a live-action “Lilo & Stitch,” 
		“Mission: Impossible 8" and a new Wes Anderson film. June heats up with 
		race cars in “F1,” adventure in “How to Train Your Dragon,” zombies in 
		“28 Years Later” and a New York love triangle with Dakota Johnson's 
		matchmaker in the middle in “Materialists.”
 
 July is supercharged with “Jurassic World Rebirth,” “Superman” and 
		“Fantastic Four: The First Steps.” And August closes out the season with 
		comedies, big (“The Naked Gun”) and dark (“The Roses”), horror 
		(“Weapons”) and a lighthearted body-swap (“Freakier Friday”).
 
 Here's The Associated Press' guide to help make sense of the many, many 
		options in theaters and at home.
 
 MAY MOVIE RELEASES
 May 1
 “Another Simple Favor” (Prime Video, streaming): Chill those martini 
		glasses, Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick reunite with their “A Simple 
		Favor” director Paul Feig for this Italy-set sequel.
 
 May 2
 “Thunderbolts” (Disney, theaters): Marvel’s antiheroes Yelena Belova 
		(Florence Pugh), Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) and Red Guardian (David 
		Harbour) kick off the summer movie season in superhero style. “It’s a 
		group of misfit toys that have been essentially thrown away at the 
		beginning of the movie and have to figure out if they can work together 
		to get themselves out of that mess,” director Jake Schreier told the AP. 
		(Read AP's review.)
 
		
		 
		“Bonjour Tristesse” (Greenwich Entertainment, theaters): Chloë Sevigny 
		and Claes Bang star in this new adaptation of Françoise Sagan’s lusty, 
		stylish coming of age novel about a playboy father and his teenage 
		daughter (Lily McInerny) on the French Riviera.
 “Pavements” (Utopia, theaters): Alex Ross Perry takes an experimental 
		approach to the traditional music biopic in his portrait of the indie 
		rock group Pavement that’s better experienced than described.
 
 “Rust” (Falling Forward Films, theaters and VOD): The Alec Baldwin 
		Western “Rust” is actually coming out after years in limbo and 
		litigation. Cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was fatally shot on set in 
		October 2021 and director Joel Souza was wounded during a rehearsal. 
		Souza said at the film’s premiere at a festival in Poland in November 
		that it was Hutchins’ husband, Matthew, who wanted the film to be 
		finished.
 
 “The Surfer” (Lionsgate, Roadside Attractions, theaters): Tensions are 
		high on a “locals-only beach” when Nicolas Cage and his son return to 
		try to catch some waves.
 
 “Magic Farm” (MUBI, theaters): Amalia Ulman directs this absurdist 
		comedy about a documentary crew who ends up in the wrong town, starring 
		Chloë Sevigny, Alex Wolff and Simon Rex.
 
 “Words of War” (Decal, theaters): Maxine Peake and Jason Isaacs star in 
		this political thriller about journalist and human rights activist Anna 
		Politkovskaya. Sean Penn produced.
 
 “Vulcanizadora” (Oscilloscope, theaters): A black comedy following 
		friends on a dark mission deep in the woods of Michigan.
 
 May 9
 “Friendship” (A24, theaters): Paul Rudd and “I Think You Should Leave” 
		comedian Tim Robinson star in this absurd, comedic film about male 
		camaraderie.
 
 “Shadow Force” (Lionsgate, theaters): Kerry Washington and Omar Sy star 
		in this Joe Carnahan-directed action thriller about a couple of 
		ex-assassins running from their old boss (and trying to protect their 
		young son).
 
 “Nonnas” (Netflix, streaming): Vince Vaughn stars in this Stephen 
		Chbosky-movie based on a true story of a Brooklyn guy who hires Italian 
		grandmothers to be the chefs at a restaurant after the loss of his own 
		mother. Susan Sarandon, Lorraine Bracco, Talia Shire and Linda 
		Cardellini also star.
 
 “Fight or Flight” (Vertical, theaters): Josh Hartnett, sporting bleached 
		blonde hair, is a mercenary on a flight full of assassins in this bloody 
		action-comedy at 30,000 feet.
 
		
		 
		“Caught by the Tides” (Janus Films): Chinese filmmaker Jia Zhangke takes 
		footage spanning 22 years to tell a story of love and longing that had 
		Cannes critics raving last year. Zhao Tao stars.
 “Juliet & Romeo” (Briarcliff Entertainment, theaters): Shakespeare’s 
		star-crossed lovers get the (pop) music treatment in this colorful take 
		starring Clara Rugaard and Jamie Ward.
 
 “Clown in a Cornfield” (RLJ Entertainment): This slasher from director 
		Eli Craig (“Tucker & Dale vs. Evil”) features a killer named Frendo.
 
 “Lilly” (Blue Harbor Entertainment, theaters): Patricia Clarkson plays 
		equal pay activist Lilly Ledbetter in this biographical drama.
 
 May 16
 “Final Destination: Bloodlines” (Warner Bros., theaters): It’s been 25 
		years since the “Final Destination” franchise kicked off and they’re 
		still finding new horrifying ways to kill off their characters.
 
 “Hurry Up Tomorrow” (Lionsgate, theaters): The Weeknd (Abel Tesfaye) 
		plays a fictionalized version of himself in this psychological thriller 
		about an insomniac musician from Trey Edward Shults, co-starring Jenna 
		Ortega and Barry Keoghan.
 
 “Love” (Strand Releasing): This Norwegian film about two health care 
		workers discussing relationship philosophies closes out Dag Johan 
		Haugerud’s “Sex, Dreams, Love” trilogy.
 
 “Sister Midnight” (Magnet Releasing, theaters): This black comedy about 
		an unhappy arranged marriage and a series of chaotic events was a Cannes 
		selection in 2024.
 
 “The Ruse” (Seismic Releasing, theaters): This thriller centers on a 
		caregiver and the mysterious patient she’s caring for in a remote home 
		on the sea.
 
 May 23
 “Lilo & Stitch” (Disney, theaters): This live-action reimagining of the 
		2002 classic about orphaned Hawaiian sisters who unknowingly adopt an 
		alien was directed by “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On” filmmaker Dean 
		Fleischer Camp. Sydney Agudong, who plays older sister Nani, said, “The 
		beauty of this movie is that it highlights the idea of Aloha and Ohana 
		and the family dynamics that happen here along with the aliens and the 
		Hawaiian roller coaster ride.”
 
		
		 
		“Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning” (Paramount, theaters): 
		Nothing ever really ends in the land of franchise filmmaking, but the 
		“final” in the title suggests this could actually be Tom Cruise’s last 
		ride as Ethan Hunt. Even if it isn’t, audiences can trust it’ll be full 
		of death-defying spectacles worthy of the big screen.
 “Fountain of Youth” (Apple TV+, streaming): Natalie Portman and John 
		Krasinski play siblings on a dangerous quest for the fountain of youth 
		in this globe-trotting adventure from Guy Ritchie.
 
 “Pee-Wee As Himself” (Max, streaming): This riveting two-part 
		documentary about the life of Paul Reubens was crafted from some 40 
		hours of interviews and thousands of hours of archival footage.
 
 “Jane Austen Wrecked My Life” (Sony Pictures Classics, theaters): A 
		Parisian bookseller gets invited to the Jane Austen writers’ residency 
		in this contemporary Austen-inspired romantic comedy written and 
		directed by Laura Piani.
 
 “Fear Street: Prom Queen” (Netflix, streaming): Prom queen candidates 
		begin to vanish in this latest “Fear Street” installment, set in 1988.
 
 “The Last Rodeo” (Angel Studios, theaters): Neal McDonough plays a 
		retired cowboy who decides to return to the ring in a bid to pay his 
		son’s medical bills.
 
 May 30
 “Karate Kid: Legends” (Sony Pictures, theaters): Jackie Chan and Ralph 
		Macchio unite for the newest “Karate Kid” film, set three years after 
		“Cobra Kai” and focusing on a new kid, Li, played by Ben Wang. “It kind 
		of harkens back to the previous entries in the franchise,” Wang said. 
		“It’s a kid who is a fish out of water who comes to a new city and has 
		to face down bullies.”
 
 “Bring Her Back” (A24, theaters): “Talk to Me” filmmakers Danny and 
		Michael Philippou return with this creepy new movie about death, 
		resurrection and the arrival of an adopted kid who is not quite right. 
		Sally Hawkins plays the mother.
 
 “The Phoenician Scheme” (Focus Features, theaters): Benicio del Toro 
		stars as one of the richest men in Europe, and father to nine sons and 
		one daughter (Mia Threapleton), in Wes Anderson’s newest film, featuring 
		a typically starry ensemble including Tom Hanks, Michael Cera, Scarlett 
		Johansson, Riz Ahmed and Benedict Cumberbatch.
 
 “The Kingdom” (Metrograph, theaters): This Cannes breakout is about a 
		teenage girl who goes on the run with her estranged mob boss father one 
		summer in Corsica.
 
		
		 
		“Ghost Trail” (Music Box Films, theaters): Jonathan Millet directed this 
		revenge thriller about a Syrian man in France who is in pursuit of the 
		man who tortured him at an infamous military prison.
 “Tornado” (IFC Films, theaters): Kōki, Jack Lowden, Takehiro Hira and 
		Tim Roth star in this revenge thriller set in 1790s Britain.
 
 JUNE MOVIE RELEASES
 June 6
 “Ballerina,” (Lionsgate, theaters): Ana de Armas leads this “John Wick” 
		spinoff about a deadly (and classically trained) assassin.
 
 “The Life of Chuck” (Neon, theaters): This is not your typical Stephen 
		King adaptation. Mike Flanagan directs the sentimental and supernatural 
		story about the life of an ordinary man named Charles Krantz, told in 
		three chapters. Tom Hiddleston, Mark Hamill, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Mia Sara, 
		Benjamin Pajak and Karen Gillan are among the large ensemble cast.
 
 “The Ritual” (XYZ Films, theaters): Al Pacino and Dan Stevens as men of 
		the church performing exorcisms? Sure, why not.
 
 “Dangerous Animals” (IFC Films, theaters): Jai Courtney plays a serial 
		killer who feeds his victims to sharks in this bonkers-sounding movie.
 
 “I Don’t Understand You” (Vertical, theaters): Nick Kroll and Andrew 
		Rannells are a couple vacationing in Italy in this dark comedy with an 
		escalating body count.
 
 “Straw” (Netflix, streaming): Taraji P. Henson leads this Tyler Perry 
		drama about a single mother.
 
 “Dan Da Dan: Evil Eye” (GKIDS, theaters): More adventures of Momo and 
		Okarun in this series based on the popular manga by Yukinobu Tatsu.
 
 June 12
 “Deep Cover” (Prime Video, streaming): Bryce Dallas Howard plays an 
		improv comedy teacher recruited by an undercover cop (Sean Bean) for a 
		mission for which she enlists two of her students (Orlando Bloom and 
		Nick Mohammed).
 
		
		 
		June 13“How to Train Your Dragon” (Universal, theaters): Unlike most live 
		adaptations of animated movies, filmmaker Dean DeBlois is behind both. 
		DeBlois said their goal was to make the film “really immersive,” to dial 
		up the sense of urgency and peril and “to just pull the audience in and 
		make them feel like these dragons are real, that you could own one, you 
		could fly on the back of one.” Mason Thames plays Hiccup and Nico Parker 
		takes on the role of Astrid in this epic fantasy sure to enchant a new 
		generation (and the one who grew up on the original).
 
 “Materialists” (A24, theaters): Dakota Johnson plays a matchmaker torn 
		between two prospects (played by Chris Evans and Pedro Pascal) in love 
		story from “Past Lives” filmmaker Celine Song. “It's a modern love story 
		that’s set in New York City and it’s inspired by the brief time that I 
		worked as a professional matchmaker,” Song said. “I really tried in this 
		film to be really honest about the marketplace of dating, as the people 
		actually experience it and live it today.”
 
 “Echo Valley” (AppleTV+, streaming): Claire (Sydney Sweeney) shows up on 
		her mother’s (Julianne Moore) doorstep covered in someone else’s blood 
		in this thriller from Brad Ingelsby.
 
 “The Unholy Trinity” (Roadside Attractions, theaters): Pierce Brosnan 
		and Samuel L. Jackson lead this Western, set in 1870s Montana.
 
 “Prime Minister” (Magnolia, theaters): This documentary follows Jacinda 
		Ardern through her tenure as prime minister of New Zealand.
 
 June 17
 “Sally” (NatGeo/Disney+, streaming): Blue Origin who? Sally Ride, the 
		first American woman to go to space, is the focus of this new 
		documentary that chronicles her professional accomplishments and her 
		lesser-known personal life.
 
 June 20
 “28 Years Later” (Sony Pictures, theaters): The original team behind “28 
		Days Later,” including director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland, 
		return with a new entry featuring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jodie Comer and 
		Ralph Fiennes.
 
		“Elio” (Disney/Pixar, theaters): This intergalactic adventure centers on 
		an 11-year-old earthling (Yonas Kibreab) who is abducted by aliens and 
		assumed to be a world leader. Oscar-winner Zoe Saldaña is part of the 
		voice cast.
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            This image released by Netflix shows Adam Sandler in a scene from 
			"Happy Gilmore 2." (Scott Yamano/Netflix via AP) 
            
			
			
			 
		“Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore” (Kino Lorber, theaters): Marlee 
		Matlin gives an unflinchingly honest account of her experiences as a 
		deaf actor in this funny and revelatory documentary, directed by 
		Shoshannah Stern, who also is deaf. The film is closed captioned and 
		includes verbal translations for hearing audiences.
 “Sovereign” (Briarcliff, theaters): Dennis Quaid, Nick Offerman and 
		Jacob Tremblay lead this crime thriller about anti-government extremists 
		and a police standoff.
 
 “ Bride Hard” (Magenta Light Studios, theaters): Rebel Wilson is a 
		secret agent whose skills come in handy at her friend’s wedding when a 
		hostage situation emerges in this Simon West-directed comedy.
 
 “Everything’s Going to Be Great” (Lionsgate, theaters): Bryan Cranston 
		and Allison Janney are lifelong actors in regional theater trying to 
		raise their very different sons.
 
 “Alma and the Wolf” (Republic Pictures, theaters): Ethan Embry and 
		“Sinners” breakout Li Jun Li star in this psychological horror about a 
		mysterious wolf attack and a police officer’s missing son.
 
 “KPop Demon Hunters” (Netflix, streaming): An animated action comedy 
		about K-pop superstars who also hunt demons on the side.
 
 June 27
 “F1” (Warner Bros./Apple, theaters): Brad Pitt plays “the best that 
		never was,” F1 driver Sonny Hayes, who's recruited to mentor a young 
		up-and-comer (Damson Idris) in this high-octane film from “Top Gun: 
		Maverick” filmmaker Joseph Kosinski. Real racing cars were used, driver 
		Lewis Hamilton consulted and a new camera system was developed to give 
		audiences an immersive experience. “It’s a story about a last-place 
		team, a group of underdogs, and Sonny Hayes in his later years having 
		one more chance to try to do something he was never able to do, which is 
		win a race in F1,” Kosinski said.
 
 “M3GAN 2.0” (Universal, theaters): The creepy, dancing doll is back — as 
		is an even more dangerous version on a killing spree whom she has to 
		stop. Any questions?
 
 “Sorry, Baby” (A24, theaters): One of the big breakouts from this year’s 
		Sundance Film Festival, the debut feature of writer-director-star Eva 
		Victor follows Agnes, a grad student, in the aftermath of a sexual 
		assault. “I wanted to make a film that was about feeling stuck when 
		everyone around you keeps moving,” Victor said. “I really think the 
		thing it’s about is trying to heal and the slow pace at which healing 
		comes and how it’s really not linear and how there are joys to be found 
		in the everyday and especially in very affirming friendships and 
		sometimes, like, a sandwich depending on the day.”
 
		
		 
		JULY MOVIE RELEASESJuly 2
 “Jurassic World Rebirth” (Universal, theaters): Filmmaker Gareth Edwards 
		(a “Jurassic Park” superfan and the director of “The Creator”) is 
		ushering in a new era of “Jurassic” movies and harkening back to the 
		Steven Spielberg originals in this film with Scarlett Johansson, 
		Mahershala Ali and Jonathan Bailey. Much about the film is being kept 
		top secret, but Edwards said David Koepp's script read like a love 
		letter to Spielberg's early work. “It's basically a mission story where 
		these military types go to this island to get this DNA, then there’s a 
		twist,” Edwards said. “This family ends up involved and it becomes a 
		story of survival. It's like one giant roller coaster ride and once it 
		gets going, it sort of doesn’t stop.”
 
 “The Old Guard 2” (Netflix, streaming): Charlize Theron is back with her 
		immortal team for a new mission. KiKi Layne, Matthias Schoenaerts, 
		Marwan Kenzari and Luca Marinelli also reprise their roles.
 
 “40 Acres” (Magnolia, theaters): Danielle Deadwyler and Michael Greyeyes 
		lead this post-apocalyptic thriller about a plague that has caused 
		worldwide famine.
 
 July 10
 “Brick” (Netflix, streaming): In this German horror, a couple wakes up 
		to find they're trapped in their apartment.
 
 July 11
 “Superman” (Warner Bros., theaters): James Gunn is ushering in a new era 
		of Superman, with a fresh face in David Corenswet and the promise that 
		he's a different Superman than what audiences have seen before. Gunn 
		told the AP that this is “a Superman that’s both more grounded in his 
		own personality and his relationship, which is much more complex than 
		has been in the past. And then also the big magic world of Superman 
		being in the world of the DCU with flying dogs and robots and giant 
		monsters.” There's romance with Rachel Brosnahan's Lois Lane, and a 
		“pretty scary” Lex Luthor in Nicholas Hoult. “He's actually going to 
		kill (Superman),” Gunn said. “And that's cool to see.”
 
 “Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight ” (Sony Pictures Classics, 
		theaters): Actor Embeth Davidtz directs and stars in this critically 
		acclaimed adaptation of Alexandra Fuller’s bestselling memoir of growing 
		up on a farm in the former Rhodesia before and after the 1980 election, 
		as the colonial system crumbles. The story is told through the eyes of 
		8-year-old Bobo (Lexi Venter).
 
		 
		“Tyler Perry's Destination Wedding” (Netflix, streaming): Madea goes to 
		the Bahamas.
 “Skillhouse” (Fathom, theaters): 50 Cent stars in this horror about 
		influencers who are lured into a “content house” and forced to compete 
		in deadly challenges.
 
 July 18
 “I Know What You Did Last Summer” (Sony Pictures, theaters): Jennifer 
		Love Hewitt and Freddie Prinze Jr. reprise their roles from the 1997 
		slasher in this new installment featuring an eerily similar situation 
		and a cast of pretty young up-and-comers including Madelyn Cline, Chase 
		Sui Wonders, Jonah Hauer-King and Tyriq Withers.
 
 “Smurfs” (Paramount, theaters): Rihanna produced and stars as Smurfette 
		in this new musical adventure. “There’s a purity to the Smurfs mythos,” 
		said Nick Offerman, who voices Papa Smurf's brother Ken. “That, I think, 
		is what makes their appeal so timeless. They’re a benevolent group of 
		wee blue villagers who, you know, want to love one another and lead 
		productive lives while fending off the world’s forces of evil, usually 
		represented by the machinations of some wizards out for ill gotten 
		gains.”
 
 “Eddington” (A24, theaters): Ari Aster re-teams with Joaquin Phoenix for 
		this film about a standoff between a small-town sheriff and a mayor in 
		the early months of the COVID-19 lockdowns. Pedro Pascal, Emma Stone and 
		Austin Butler also star.
 
 “Unicorns” (Cohen Media Group, theaters): A young, single father from 
		Essex (Ben Hardy) is disarmed when he falls for a drag queen.
 
 July 25
 “The Fantastic Four: First Steps” (Disney, theaters): Pedro Pascal, 
		Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach unite to play 
		“Marvel's first family” in this retro-futuristic world set in 1960s New 
		York. Director Matt Shakman (“WandaVision,” “It's Always Sunny in 
		Philadelphia”) said they are the only superheroes in their world and are 
		the leading lights of their age. While the scale and world building were 
		on another level, Shakman said, “it’s also no different from all of the 
		great comedies and dramas that I’ve done — in the end, it comes down to 
		character, to relationships and to heart and humor.”
 
 “Happy Gilmore 2” (Netflix, streaming): Adam Sandler returns to the 
		green (and one of his most beloved roles) after almost 30 years, along 
		with Shooter McGavin (Christopher McDonald), Hal (Ben Stiller), Virginia 
		(Julie Bowen) and Doug (Dennis Dugan) and an army of newcomers, 
		including some Gilmore offspring. “The first one is so iconic, we all 
		kind of knew the world that we were stepping into,” said Conor Sherry, 
		who plays one of his sons. “We were like the newest additions to a long, 
		long, long family.”
 
		
		 
		“Oh, Hi!” (Sony Pictures Classics, theaters): Molly Gordon and Logan 
		Lerman lead this dark romantic comedy about a married couple's first 
		romantic weekend getaway.
 “Diciannove” (Oscilloscope, theaters): Luca Guadagnino produced this 
		coming-of-age film about a 19-year-old’s journey of self-discovery.
 
 July 30
 “Together” (Neon, theaters): Real life couple Dave Franco and Alison 
		Brie play a frighteningly codependent couple in this inventive body 
		horror that had Sundance crowds raving.
 
 AUGUST MOVIE RELEASES
 Aug. 1
 “The Bad Guys 2” (Universal, theaters): Sam Rockwell, Marc Maron, Craig 
		Robinson, Awkwafina and Anthony Ramos return for another animated heist, 
		but this time they’re teaming up with a new squad called the Bad Girls 
		(voiced by Danielle Brooks, Maria Bakalova and Natasha Lyonne).
 
 “The Naked Gun” (Paramount, theaters): Liam Neeson flexes his particular 
		set of comedy skills as Frank Drebin Jr. in this irreverent new entry 
		from Lonely Island veteran Akiva Schaffer, featuring Paul Walter Hauser 
		and Pamela Anderson.
 
 Aug. 6
 “Sketch” (Angel Studios, theaters): This horror comedy about a girl’s 
		drawings that come to life stars Tony Hale and D’Arcy Carden.
 
 Aug. 8
 “Weapons” (Warner Bros., theaters): Children are disappearing in 
		filmmaker Zach Cregger’s eerie follow-up to “Barbarian,” starring Josh 
		Brolin, Julia Garner and Alden Ehrenreich.
 
 “Freakier Friday” (Disney, theaters): Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan 
		are back as the body-swapping mother and daughter duo.
 
 “My Mother's Wedding” (Vertical, theaters): Kristin Scott Thomas directs 
		and stars in this drama about a woman getting married for the third 
		time, which is an occasion for her three daughters (Scarlett Johansson, 
		Sienna Miller, Emily Beecham) to come home.
 
 Aug. 13
 “Fixed” (Netflix, streaming): An adult animated comedy from Genndy 
		Tartakovsky about a dog's quest for one last adventure before being 
		neutered.
 
		
		 
		Aug. 15“Nobody 2” (Universal Pictures, theaters): Bob Odenkirk’s former 
		assassin Hutch Mansell can’t catch a break. This time, Keanu Reeves 
		joins the bloody fun.
 
 “Clika” (Sony Pictures, theaters): A small-town musician (Jay Dee) goes 
		viral in this drama set in the world of Mexican American music. It’s the 
		debut feature of Rancho Humilde CEO Jimmy Humilde’s production company.
 
 “East of Wall” (Sony Pictures Classics, theaters): Kate Beecroft’s debut 
		film about a young horse trainer grappling with financial insecurity and 
		grief in the South Dakota Badlands won the audience award in the NEXT 
		section at the Sundance Film Festival.
 
 “Eli Roth Presents: Jimmy and Stiggs” (Iconic Events, theaters): A low 
		budget “splatter fest” for horror devotees, Joe Begos wrote, directed 
		and stars.
 
 “Witchboard” (Atlas, theaters): “Stranger Things’” Jamie Campbell Bower 
		stars in this supernatural horror set in New Orleans (a remake of a 1986 
		cult classic).
 
 Aug. 22
 “Lurker” (MUBI, theaters): Another Sundance gem, this paranoid thriller 
		is the feature debut of “The Bear” and “Beef” writer Alex Russell, about 
		celebrity, fandom and being very online, featuring a buzzy young cast 
		led by Théodore Pellerin and Archie Madekwe.
 
 “HONEY DON'T!” (Focus Features, theaters): Margaret Qualley, Aubrey 
		Plaza, Charlie Day, Billy Eichner and Chris Evans star in this dark 
		comedy from Ethan Coen about a small-town private investigator and a 
		string of mysterious deaths.
 
 “Americana” (Lionsgate, theaters): This Sydney Sweeney-led crime 
		thriller, a revisionist Western set in South Dakota, debuted at South by 
		Southwest in 2023 and concerns the theft of a valuable artifact.
 
 “Eden” (Vertical, theaters): Ron Howard directs Jude Law, Ana de Armas, 
		Vanessa Kirby and Sydney Sweeney in this survival thriller set in the 
		Galapagos after the first World War.
 
 “Relay” (Bleecker Street, theaters): Riz Ahmed plays a corporate fixer 
		in this contemporary riff on the paranoid thriller from “Hell or High 
		Water” filmmaker David Mackenzie.
 
 “Grand Prix of Europe” (Viva Pictures, theaters): “F1” for the preschool 
		set? This animated film is also set in the world of car racing.
 
 Aug. 28
 “The Thursday Murder Club” (Netflix, streaming): Helen Mirren, Pierce 
		Brosnan, Ben Kingsley and Celia Imrie play retirees who spend their time 
		solving cold cases in this adaptation of Richard Osman’s bestseller, 
		directed by Chris Columbus.
 
		
		 
		Aug. 29“Caught Stealing” (Sony Pictures, theaters): Filmmaker Darren 
		Aronofsky’s film is written by and based on the Charlie Huston books 
		about an ex-baseball player (Austin Butler) who gets tangled up in New 
		York’s criminal underworld in the 1990s. Zoë Kravitz, Regina King, Liev 
		Schreiber, Matt Smith and Bad Bunny also star.
 
 “The Roses” (Searchlight Pictures, theaters): The modern reimagining of 
		“The War of the Roses” stars Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch as 
		the feuding couple. It was written by Tony McNamara, the Oscar-nominated 
		screenwriter of “Poor Things” and creator of “The Great,” and directed 
		by Jay Roach.
 
 “The Toxic Avenger” (Cineverse and Iconic Events Releasing, theaters): 
		Peter Dinklage stars as the titular superhero in this supremely gory and 
		graphic film, which sat on the shelf for a few years in search of a 
		distributor. Elijah Wood, Jacob Tremblay, Kevin Bacon and Taylour Paige 
		also star.
 
			
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