THE FURIOUS
2026 | Dir. Kenji Tanigaki | 113 Minutes
5 out of 5
While the plot swerves into absurd territory, particularly in how it catapults the primary antagonist into action ahead of the final act, this is one of those paradigm-shifting martial arts films that comes along only once in a decade or so. Inventive, brutal, and brilliantly-crafted, the fight scenes are truly some of the most spectacular ever conceived. Xie Miao channels Jet Li both in physical prowess and emotional intensity, Joe Taslim should really be a household name for action movie fans by now, and Brian Le simply steals the show as a hulking unrelenting wild card.
2026 | Dir. Kenji Tanigaki | 113 Minutes
5 out of 5
While the plot swerves into absurd territory, particularly in how it catapults the primary antagonist into action ahead of the final act, this is one of those paradigm-shifting martial arts films that comes along only once in a decade or so. Inventive, brutal, and brilliantly-crafted, the fight scenes are truly some of the most spectacular ever conceived. Xie Miao channels Jet Li both in physical prowess and emotional intensity, Joe Taslim should really be a household name for action movie fans by now, and Brian Le simply steals the show as a hulking unrelenting wild card.
DISCLOSURE DAY
2026 | Dir. Steven Spielberg | 146 Minutes
4 out of 5
Spielberg delivers a taut sci-fi thriller demonstrating he's still one of the very best at what he does: telling heartfelt stories imbued with wonder and mystery and staging action sequences full of tension. David Koepp's script is somewhat middling but serviceable as a binding agent for some great scenes tailored to Spielberg's strengths. Showing off her incredible versatility, Emily Blunt gives arguably the best performance of her career to date.
MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE
2026 | Dir. Travis Knight | 141 Minutes
3 out of 5
As packed with empty calories as a big bowl of sugary 1980s breakfast cereal. This years-in-development live action He-Man movie do-over amounts to vibrant design work and fun action sequences stitched together by a least-effort-necessary screenplay with just a sprinkling of weirdness to keep things interesting. The casting is spot-on, Alison Brie in particular really understood the assignment and I wouldn't be mad if Jared Leto only plays Skeletor from now on.
BACKROOMS
2026 | Dir. Kane Parsons | 110 Minutes
4 out of 5
As atmospheric, fascinating, deeply eerie, and occasionally inscrutable as the web series that spawned it, young Kane Parsons' cinematic expansion of his inspired take on the Backrooms creepypasta is an exceptionally fun and engaging experience. While the picture is not as creatively ambitious as some of the more mind-boggling internet installments of Parsons' narrative, it greatly benefits from Chiwetel Ejiofor and Renate Reinsve going all-in on their performances as a disgruntled furniture salesman and his troubled therapist struggling in liminal spaces of their own making to bring the metaphor full-circle.
2026 | Dir. Kane Parsons | 110 Minutes
4 out of 5
As atmospheric, fascinating, deeply eerie, and occasionally inscrutable as the web series that spawned it, young Kane Parsons' cinematic expansion of his inspired take on the Backrooms creepypasta is an exceptionally fun and engaging experience. While the picture is not as creatively ambitious as some of the more mind-boggling internet installments of Parsons' narrative, it greatly benefits from Chiwetel Ejiofor and Renate Reinsve going all-in on their performances as a disgruntled furniture salesman and his troubled therapist struggling in liminal spaces of their own making to bring the metaphor full-circle.
I LOVE BOOSTERS
2026 | Dir. Boots Riley | 105 Minutes
5 out of 5
A wild blend of fashion, social commentary, and philosophical musings manifest through bonkers sci-fi concepts, Boots Riley's second feature doubles down on genre storytelling hilarity and advocacy for workers' rights. It's an utterly unpredictable ride that's consistently engaging and incredibly funny, its pace kicking into overdrive around the halfway point. Keke Palmer, Naomi Ackie, and Taylour Paige are so much fun as the core trio, while Poppy Liu, Eiza González, LaKeith Stanfield, and Demi Moore also deliver memorable performances.



