Entertainment The 33 most exciting new movies of 2026: TechRadar's top picks that are coming to the big screen, Netflix, and more Streaming 26 hottest movies to look out for in 2026 – on Netflix, ...
One of these movies is what you should watch tonight. This weekend's choices include theatrical releases arriving on streaming like "The Running Man" and "Black Phone 2." There are original streaming ...
From new Christopher Nolan and Greta Gerwig films to more "Dune" and "The Social Network," the movies we're most looking forward to in the new year. The year 2025 is hardly in the rearview, as the ...
Margot Robbie in "Wuthering Heights" (Warner Bros.), "The Mandalorian and Grogu" (Disney) and Ryan Gosling in "Project Hail Mary" (Amazon MGM) New year, new movies. 2026 has arrived, and this year ...
2026 is here, so let's look at what Hollywood's got in store for us over the next 12 months, ranging from horror and sci-fi to superheroes and fantasy to whatever Disney and Pixar have planned. The ...
Get ready to spend your holiday with the sponge who lives in a pineapple under the sea, because the new SpongeBob movie, The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants, is opening in movie theaters this ...
148 critics from six different continents voted on the best films of the year. These films were their 50 favorites. As the credits roll on 2025, we’re left with a slate of movies that will almost ...
Anja Djuricic was born in Belgrade, Serbia, in 1992. Her first interest in film started very early, as she learned to speak English by watching Disney animated movies (and many, many reruns). Anja ...
You wouldn’t call 2025 an “off” year for horror — more like an odd one. Both A24 and Neon continued to back several scary-movie auteurs (the prolific Osgood Perkins, the brothers Danny and Michael ...
Gary Dauberman, the scribe behind the 'It' and 'Annabelle' horror movies, wrote the script for the Sony Pictures/PlayStation Productions project. By Borys Kit Senior Film Writer Lin will also produce ...
2025 was a year that posed a lot of questions for movie lovers: Did the success of Sinners prove that there was still a mass audience hungry for original (read: non-IP) stories on a blockbuster level?