PROJECT HAIL MARY
2026 | Dir. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller | 156 Minutes
5 out of 5
This Andy Weir space adventure adaptation from Lord and Miller not only offers a wealth of humor, suspenseful moments, and breathtaking imagery, it's also totally heartwarming through and through. In classic sci-fi tradition, heroic scientists working the problem take the spotlight and the picture does a spectacular job of enabling viewers to vicariously bask in the triumph of its intelligent and resourceful protagonists with each discovery and breakthrough. Ryan Gosling carries the picture virtually alone for long stretches at a time, turning in arguably his best performance yet.
READY OR NOT 2: HERE I COME
2026 | Dir. Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett | 108 Minutes
4 out of 5
Radio Silence delivers another round of wild bloody mayhem that's a bit bigger in scale, with a few more twists, inevitably less fresh than its predecessor, but just as amusing. Through the splatter and brutality, Samara Weaving and Kathryn Newton share pretty good chemistry as estranged sisters, giving the picture a decent amount of heart. This second set of detestably wealthy homicidal Satanists includes a fun mix of familiar faces including Sarah Michelle Gellar, Néstor Carbonell, and Elijah Wood with brief but memorable appearances from Kevin Durand and David Cronenberg.
THE BRIDE!
2026 | Dir. Maggie Gyllenhaal | 126 Minutes
3 out of 5
Bold, disjointed, raucous, and bizarre, Maggie Gyllenhaal's takes the shotgun approach to reassembling Bride of Frankenstein with mixed results. When it hits, it's a rather brilliant primal scream of uninhibited feminist rage. When it doesn't, it's a fascinatingly muddled rant that struggles for coherence. Christian Bale is perfectly cast as the infamous lonely Creature. Unsurprisingly, Jessie Buckley is phenomenal as the titular Bride and the ghost of Mary Shelley(?!).
GOOD LUCK, HAVE FUN, DON'T DIE
2026 | Dir. Gore Verbinski | 134 Minutes
5 out of 5
A bold and wildly entertaining swing-for-the-fences sci-fi satire delivering striking imagery that's as inspired as it is wacky courtesy of Gore Verbinski. It's incredibly broad at points, but in that way it's sadly mostly a spot-on reflection of the collective technological hellscape of contemporary times. Playing a depressed young woman with a peculiar allergy, Haley Lu Richardson stands out among the exceptional ensemble cast led by the reliably funny Sam Rockwell.
SEND HELP
2026 | Dir. Sam Raimi | 113 Minutes
4 out of 5
A hilarious tale of survival in the wilderness as only Sam Raimi could deliver, rife with viscera, wild camerawork, and pitch dark humor. While the narrative's social commentary isn't remarkably deep, the plot isn't afraid to go take a few disturbing and unconventional turns. Dylan O'Brien is simply too convincing as a privileged asshole, while Rachel McAdams absolutely shines as a put-upon woman finding her power and striving to keep it by any means necessary.



