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.
STAR WARS: THE MANDALORIAN AND GROGU
2026 | Dir. Jon Favreau | 132 Minutes
3 out of 5
The galaxy's shiniest bounty hunter and his unbearably adorable son arrive at the cinema in this one-off space adventure flick that's dramaticaly inconsequential and thematically threadbare. It's loud, it's explosive, it's occasionally fun, but there's markedly far less plot development in this feature than on a single episode of the streaming show of which it spun off. Good for one ride, but it's difficult to imagine repeat viewings would hold any value. Hearing Ludwig Göransson's theme music in a movie theater sure is sweet though.
MORTAL KOMBAT II
2026 | Dir. Simon McQuoid | 116 Minutes
4 out of 5
A bit heavy on lore but it more than delivers on the promise of what a new Mortal Kombat movie should be, offering up impressive fight after impressive fight, clever nods to the game series, and tons of (often janky CGI) gore. It's thankfully a vast improvement over its direct predecessor, quickly discarding what didn't work in the 2021 picture and smartly capitalizing on what did. Once again, Josh Lawson's Kano steals every single one of his scenes.
MICHAEL
2026 | Dir. Antoine Fuqua | 127 Mintues
3 out of 5
A standard issue biopic greatly elevated by superb performances and Michael Jackson's music. The narrative is not particularly groundbreaking or insightful, following the standard story beats of the genre while sidestepping nearly every controversial aspect of its subject, but it's a crowdpleasing experience from start to end for those willing to buy into the well-crafted fantasy. Colman Domingo is impressively detestable as the domineering Jackson family patriarch, while Jaafar Jackson is an instant star delivering an uncanny performance as his uncle.
LEE CRONIN'S THE MUMMY
2026 | Dir. Lee Cronin | 134 Minutes
3 out of 5
Gnarly, disgusting, and extraordinarily mean-spirited, Lee Cronin's take on The Mummy evokes Raimi-esque setups and creature work though it's generally more miserable than fun as an overall experience. It offers more than its fair share of gross-out bits and supernatural terror, but it's overall unsatisfying on a narrative level. Empty calories for gorehounds.



