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Joseph Kosinski’s F1: The Movie blends kinetic spectacle with thematic depth. Featuring Brad Pitt and Damson Idris, it’s a visually stunning, narratively complex Formula 1 saga powered by real races and raw emotion.
Scarlett Johansson and Mahershala Ali lead a forgettable expedition in Gareth Edwards’ Jurassic World: Rebirth, a visually competent but emotionally extinct return to the dinosaur franchise.
Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci return in The Devil Wears Prada 2, with Kenneth Branagh joining the cast. Here’s everything we know about the anticipated sequel, hitting theaters May 1, 2026.
Michael Madsen, the gravel-voiced star of Reservoir Dogs, Kill Bill, and The Hateful Eight, has died at 67. Known for his iconic Tarantino roles and poetic spirit, he leaves behind a towering legacy in Hollywood and beyond.
NEON releases the first trailer for Sentimental Value, Joachim Trier’s Cannes Grand Prix-winning drama starring Renate Reinsve, Stellan Skarsgård, and Elle Fanning. The family story opens in theaters November 7.
A leaked teaser for Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey has surfaced online ahead of its official theatrical debut. The 70-second footage reveals Matt Damon, Tom Holland, and Jon Bernthal in a sweeping adaptation of Homer’s myth. Set to release July 17, 2026.
Trending, New Releases, Action, Adventure, Drama, Fantasy
FX’s The Bear returns with a muted but still compelling fourth season. Jeremy Allen White leads a strong cast through a story grappling with creative burnout and emotional stagnation.
Glen Powell stars in The Running Man, Edgar Wright’s high-stakes adaptation of Stephen King’s dystopian novel. The film follows a father competing in a deadly televised survival game to save his daughter, hitting theaters November 7.
FX has officially renewed The Bear for Season 5 following the success of Season 4. Jeremy Allen White and Ayo Edebiri will return in 2026 as the acclaimed restaurant drama continues.
Jennifer Aniston will portray Jennette McCurdy’s manipulative mother in the Apple TV+ series adaptation of I’m Glad My Mom Died. Based on the bestselling memoir, the 10-episode dramedy explores the dark side of child stardom and toxic family ties.
Dwayne Johnson, Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, and George Clooney are among the stars expected to headline Venice 2025 premieres, with major new films by Luca Guadagnino, Yorgos Lanthimos, and Kathryn Bigelow vying for competition slots.
Venice Film Festival 2025 is expected to feature major premieres from Dwayne Johnson, Julia Roberts, and Emma Stone, with new films by Luca Guadagnino, Yorgos Lanthimos, Guillermo del Toro, and Kathryn Bigelow likely to debut. Official lineup to be announced July 22.
Tribeca Studios and OpenAI have launched a new AI-integrated short film program that gives filmmakers tools, mentorship, and funding to create live-action projects for the 2026 Tribeca Festival. The initiative continues Tribeca’s leadership in tech-forward storytelling.
Bruce Springsteen, Jeremy Allen White, Deliver Me From Nowhere, Nebraska album, Scott Cooper, music biopics, 20th Century Studios, Jeremy Strong, The Bear, Oscar contenders 2025
Prime Video’s We Were Liars adapts the bestselling YA novel into a coastal thriller of family secrets, romantic tension, and generational trauma. With standout performances from Emily Alyn Lind and Shubham Maheshwari, the show walks a fine line between haunting and heightened.
Sennheiser will spotlight its new Profile Wireless and EW-DP systems alongside the MKH series at Bild Expo in New York, giving creators hands-on access to pro-grade audio gear during the two-day event. Booth 1160, June 17–18.
In a Hot Ones interview, Dakota Johnson called out Hollywood’s reliance on remakes and risk-averse decision-making. Her honest comments reflect growing industry concerns about originality and creative stagnation.
Celine Song’s Materialists is a profound exploration of modern love, blending rom-com structure with sharp social commentary. Starring Dakota Johnson, Chris Evans, and Pedro Pascal, the film redefines romance for a generation shaped by wealth and emotional risk.
Julianne Moore and Sydney Sweeney shine in 'Echo Valley,' a suspenseful domestic thriller from director Michael Pearce. With grief, family trauma, and a gripping plot, the Apple TV+ drama makes for a haunting watch.
Tribeca Festival 2025 announced its major award winners: Charliebird, Happy Birthday, and Natchez take top prizes in U.S. Narrative, International, and Documentary categories, spotlighting new talent and global storytelling.
Josh Gad, Alexandra Daddario, Ashley Park, and Daveed Diggs star in Nora Kirkpatrick’s debut, A Tree Fell in the Woods—a Tribeca-set relationship dramedy about infidelity, identity, and self-reflection in a snowed-in cabin.
Jim Sheridan returns with Re-Creation, a bold blend of fact and fiction inspired by the Sophie Toscan du Plantier case. A gripping, 12 Angry Men-style drama questioning justice, guilt, and truth. Premiered at Tribeca 2025.
Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick star in The Best You Can, a Tribeca 2025 Spotlight Narrative standout about aging, connection, and unexpected second chances. A heartwarming dramedy that proves it's never too late to start over.
Deep Cover is a whip-smart Tribeca 2025 standout, where three misfit actors accidentally infiltrate London’s criminal underground in a hilarious, high-energy improv crime caper led by Bryce Dallas Howard, Orlando Bloom, and Nick Mohammed.
Tim Heidecker stars in Fior di Latte, a surreal and bittersweet Tribeca 2025 standout that blends comedy and pathos in one man’s scent-fueled spiral through memory, madness, and emotional stasis.
June 8 at the 2025 Tribeca Festival featured red carpet premieres for Call Her Alex, Hal & Harper, and One Spoon of Chocolate, with appearances by Mark Ruffalo, Lili Reinhart, Alex Cooper, Paris Jackson, RZA, Josh Gad, and more. Full recap and event photos.
Paris Hilton’s new music documentary Infinite Icon will hit global theaters in 2026, co-produced with CJ 4DPLEX and promising an immersive, multi-sensory concert experience. The film blends live performances, home footage, and memoir into a bold new cinematic chapter for Hilton.
New Trailers
Ari Aster’s Eddington reimagines the Western as a feverish COVID-19-era standoff in New Mexico, starring Joaquin Phoenix and Pedro Pascal amid rising tension and conspiracy.
A24 has unveiled the first trailer for Eddington, Ari Aster’s latest and most grounded work to date. Known for Hereditary, Midsommar, and Beau Is Afraid, Aster trades existential horror for real-world unease in this politically charged Western set during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. Set in the remote town of Eddington, New Mexico, the film follows Sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix) and Mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal) as their opposing worldviews push the community to its breaking point.
From its opening moments, the trailer leans into tension and visual symbolism. A red-lit stare-down between Phoenix and Pascal through a rain-streaked window sets the tone—one of suspicion, division, and moral paralysis. Darius Khondji’s cinematography captures the stillness of lockdown life with arid palettes and hauntingly empty public spaces, while Bobby Krlic and Daniel Pemberton’s score adds a layer of ambient dread.
The ensemble includes Emma Stone as Louise Cross, the sheriff’s disillusioned wife, and Austin Butler as Vernon Jefferson Peak, a charismatic cult leader who fuels the town’s spiritual confusion. As misinformation and mistrust take root, Eddington becomes a chilling microcosm of America in crisis.
Glimpses of news clips, protests, and political speeches ground the drama in historical reality—from lockdown measures to election anxiety. Aster’s filmmaking resists spectacle, opting instead for quiet dread and internal collapse. With muted dialogue, long silences, and mounting psychological pressure, Eddington trades shootouts for standoffs and delivers a uniquely claustrophobic portrait of a country at war with itself.
The film opens in theaters July 18 ahead of a wider A24 rollout.
Ryan Gosling embarks on an interstellar mission to save humanity in Project Hail Mary, a high-concept sci-fi thriller based on the acclaimed Andy Weir novel
The official trailer for Project Hail Mary, directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, offers a gripping glimpse into humanity’s last hope. Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace, a scientist who wakes alone on a spacecraft with no memory of the mission—and the fate of Earth hanging in the balance.
Built from Andy Weir’s bestseller (The Martian), the film follows Grace as he pieces together his purpose among the stars. Brief flashes reveal a looming cosmic catastrophe and a looming alien ally that could be key to saving Earth. Scenes aboard the vessel highlight intense, claustrophobic atmosphere—rusted metal corridors, soft lighting, Gosling’s weary determination.
The trailer cleverly balances epic ambition with intimate stakes: Gosling drifting in zero gravity, executing precision experiments under pressure, and confronting the unknown. With Hans Zimmer’s score swelling in the background, the director duo blend scientific rigor and emotional resonance. Hinting at humor, sacrifice, and wonder, the footage promises a thrilling ride that’s both cerebral and cinematic.
Project Hail Mary lands in theaters on March 15, 2026—just in time to launch a year of sci-fi blockbusters.
Channing Tatum stars as Jeffrey Manchester, a charming ex-Army Ranger turned McDonald’s-robbing fugitive in Roofman, a stranger-than-fiction true crime dramedy directed by Derek Cianfrance and produced by Paramount Pictures.
Based on an unbelievable true story, Roofman follows Jeffrey Manchester (Channing Tatum), a former Army Ranger and struggling father who becomes a folk legend by robbing McDonald’s restaurants—through their rooftops. His unconventional methods and obsessive neatness earn him the media moniker “Roofman,” and the film leans into his bizarre duality: a meticulous thief with manners and a moral code.
Directed by Derek Cianfrance and produced by Paramount Pictures, the trailer sets the tone with muted Americana visuals, ironic needle drops, and a surreal blend of suspense and dark humor. After escaping prison, Manchester secretly lives inside a North Carolina Toys “R” Us for six months, surviving undetected as he plans his next move. But when he falls for Leigh (Kirsten Dunst), a divorced mother drawn to his quiet charm, his carefully constructed double life starts to crack.
Tatum leads with subdued magnetism, crafting a performance that’s more melancholic than manic. Dunst brings nuance to Leigh, a woman caught between trust and instinct. Pedro Pascal, John C. Reilly, and Michael Cera round out a supporting cast that adds off-kilter dimension to an already surreal true crime tale.
As the FBI closes in, the film turns into a tense, character-driven cat-and-mouse story—with flashes of Coen Brothers-style absurdity. Roofman isn’t just a heist film. It’s a meditation on loneliness, reinvention, and the ways myth can mask desperation.
Set to premiere in select theaters September 20, Roofman might just be fall’s most unlikely crowd-pleaser.
Marvel’s first family is reborn. The Fantastic Four: First Steps introduces a bold new era for Reed Richards and company—complete with interdimensional stakes, family dynamics, and a long-awaited theatrical return.
Marvel Studios has released the final trailer for The Fantastic Four: First Steps, the highly anticipated relaunch of one of its most iconic superhero teams. Arriving in theaters July 25, the film marks a cosmic reset for the franchise and introduces audiences to a younger, sharper, and more emotionally complex version of the quartet.
Directed by Matt Shakman (WandaVision), the trailer highlights a stylish origin story packed with visual flair and narrative ambition. Reed Richards (Joseph Quinn), Sue Storm (Vanessa Kirby), Johnny Storm (Rudy Pankow), and Ben Grimm (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) gain their powers not through space travel, but via an experimental gateway to another dimension—teasing multiversal connections that could tie directly into Avengers: Secret Wars.
The footage leans into character-driven storytelling: Reed’s brilliance is burdened by guilt, Sue seeks control over her identity, Johnny’s impulsive heroism masks insecurity, and Ben—“The Thing”—grapples with physical transformation and emotional isolation. All of it is set against the rising threat of Annihilus, a fan-favorite villain from the Negative Zone, brought to life with a menacing flourish.
From period-inspired production design to the synth-heavy score nodding to 1980s sci-fi, First Steps looks poised to reinvigorate the franchise by embracing both intimacy and spectacle. This isn’t just about saving the world—it’s about redefining family in a world on the edge of collapse.
The Crawleys return for one last bow in Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale, a lush, emotionally resonant farewell that promises closure, scandal, and elegance on the grandest scale.
The legacy of Downton Abbey reaches its final chapter as Focus Features debuts the official trailer for Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale, the concluding installment of the beloved British period drama. Returning to the grandeur of Highclere Castle, the trailer sets the stage for a sweeping conclusion filled with romance, revelations, and the enduring complexities of class and family.
Set in the early 1950s, the film finds the Crawley family grappling with a rapidly changing world while preparing for one final grand occasion—an event that will bring old secrets to light and push the family to confront what the future holds for the estate and their legacy. Michelle Dockery, Hugh Bonneville, Elizabeth McGovern, Maggie Smith (in archival form), and more reprise their roles, bringing heart and gravitas to a series that has defined a generation of period storytelling.
Director Simon Curtis (Downton Abbey: A New Era) returns behind the camera, with creator Julian Fellowes penning what appears to be a lovingly crafted farewell. From candlelit dinners to whispered confessions in marble halls, The Grand Finale trailer teases a return to form—familiar, yes, but brimming with nostalgia, elegance, and the emotional weight of saying goodbye.
Marriage gets messy in Splitsville, a raunchy, razor-sharp breakup comedy starring Samara Weaving and Glen Powell as bitter exes forced into a high-stakes couples therapy retreat—with everything on the line.
Splitsville has officially entered the chat—and it’s bringing scorched-earth comedy with it. Directed by Zoe Lister-Jones, this Redband trailer unleashes a hilariously unfiltered look at love, loss, and the all-out warfare of modern relationships. Glen Powell and Samara Weaving star as a couple in the middle of a contentious split who are unexpectedly invited to an experimental reconciliation retreat. The catch? They have to survive a week of forced intimacy, intrusive group therapy, and a house full of equally dysfunctional couples… or forfeit everything in the divorce.
From tequila-fueled confrontations to therapy sessions that spiral into chaos, the trailer teases a film that blends high-concept comedy with emotional stakes. Lister-Jones—who also co-wrote—channels the spirit of Forgetting Sarah Marshall and Couples Retreat but gives it a 2025 twist: dirtier, darker, and defiantly funnier. It’s not about getting back together—it’s about figuring out how to burn it all down with style.
With an ensemble cast that includes D’Arcy Carden, Manny Jacinto, and Michaela Watkins, Splitsville looks like the breakup comedy we didn’t know we needed—one that goes for the jugular, then offers a hug.
A gritty fugitive thriller with a beating heart, She Rides Shotgun pairs Taron Egerton and Ana Sophia Heger in a tense, tender father-daughter survival story on the run.
Based on the novel by Jordan Harper, She Rides Shotgun is a brooding, emotionally-charged action thriller that follows Nate (Taron Egerton), a newly released convict forced to protect the daughter he barely knows from the gang he betrayed. When 11-year-old Polly (Ana Sophia Heger) becomes the target of a violent vendetta, Nate has no choice but to flee across the American Southwest with her riding shotgun.
Directed by Smriti Mundhra, the trailer paints a raw, dusty portrait of survival, vengeance, and reluctant redemption. Egerton’s portrayal of Nate is intense and layered, while Heger holds her own as Polly—smart, wary, and slowly discovering the truth about her father. With a pulsing score, desperate shootouts, and stolen moments of tenderness, the film promises a grounded, emotionally rich ride.
From battered motel rooms to sun-scorched highways, She Rides Shotgun delivers an intimate twist on the classic crime road movie, balancing grit with gravitas. It’s part Logan, part Midnight Special, with the kind of emotional payoff genre fans crave.
Eddie Murphy returns in The Pickup, a slick, high-stakes action comedy from Prime Video that pairs romance, heists, and explosive star power.
Prime Video has dropped the official trailer for The Pickup, an adrenaline-charged action comedy starring Eddie Murphy, Keke Palmer, and Pete Davidson. Directed by Tim Story, the film follows a group of charming criminals who get more than they bargained for when their latest job spirals into chaos.
Murphy plays a seasoned con man who’s seen it all—until he meets Palmer’s enigmatic femme fatale. As sparks fly and betrayals stack up, the trailer teases a fast-paced blend of romance, bullets, and double-crosses, set against glossy backdrops and peppered with sharp one-liners. Pete Davidson brings his signature deadpan energy to the mix, adding a layer of absurdity to an otherwise slick thriller.
With its glossy cinematography, punchy dialogue, and a classic setup—one last job gone awry—The Pickup looks like a crowd-pleasing return to form for Murphy and a stylish summer hit for Prime Video. It’s part Out of Sight, part Ocean’s Eleven, and all swagger.
Guillermo del Toro breathes new life into Mary Shelley’s classic with a haunting first look at Frankenstein, starring Jacob Elordi, Oscar Isaac, and Mia Goth.
Netflix has unveiled the official teaser for Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, a long-gestating passion project that fuses gothic horror with lush visual storytelling. The teaser offers only a fleeting glimpse—but its moody atmosphere and striking tableaus speak volumes. Jacob Elordi, in pale makeup and stitched scars, appears almost angelic and monstrous all at once, while Oscar Isaac’s tortured gaze hints at the story’s psychological weight.
Set against snow-drenched backdrops and flickering candlelight, the teaser leans heavily into Del Toro’s signature world-building—equal parts fairy tale and fever dream. With Mia Goth appearing briefly in period costume, and haunting narration teasing man’s ambition to “play God,” this adaptation appears primed to delve into the tragedy and tenderness that so often go missing in other versions.
Though it’s only a minute long, the teaser sets a tone that’s operatic and eerie. If the visuals are any indication, Frankenstein could be the prestige horror epic Netflix has been searching for, following in the footsteps of Del Toro’s Crimson Peak and The Shape of Water, but with even grander literary ambition.
Edgar Wright reboots a cult classic with kinetic flair in The Running Man, starring Glen Powell as a fugitive forced into a deadly televised game of survival.
Edgar Wright’s highly anticipated reimagining of The Running Man is here—and it’s every bit as explosive, stylish, and pulse-pounding as fans could hope for. Glen Powell leads the cast as Ben Richards, a falsely accused man turned unwilling contestant in a government-run deathmatch broadcast for national entertainment.
Based loosely on Stephen King’s 1982 novel (originally published under his pseudonym Richard Bachman) and the 1987 film starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, this modern take is infused with Wright’s signature kinetic visuals, whip-smart pacing, and retro-futuristic worldbuilding. The trailer teases an adrenaline-fueled dystopia where media manipulation, totalitarian control, and spectacle collide. Powell, fresh off Anyone But You and Hit Man, leans fully into action-star territory with charisma and grit.
Flashes of neon-soaked arenas, crowd hysteria, and stylized combat hint that Wright hasn’t lost his pop-culture bite. With supporting turns from Joe Keery, Ella Balinska, and Giancarlo Esposito, The Running Man is shaping up to be more than a remake—it’s a total reboot of reality TV horror with something to say.
Jeremy Allen White trades chef’s knives for six-strings in Deliver Me From Nowhere, portraying Bruce Springsteen in the emotional making of Nebraska.
Jeremy Allen White transforms into Bruce Springsteen in the first trailer for Deliver Me From Nowhere, Scott Cooper’s intimate portrait of the making of Nebraska. With support from Jeremy Strong, Stephen Graham, and Odessa Young, this awards contender explores the darkness and genius behind Springsteen’s most haunting record.
The official trailer for Lurker has dropped—and it’s pure nightmare fuel. With flickering lights, claustrophobic visuals, and creeping paranoia, this August horror release promises to be one of the summer’s most chilling cinematic experiences.
Opening with grainy VHS footage and ambient static, Lurker sets a disorienting tone from its very first frame. The story follows a young woman who begins to suspect she’s being watched—or followed—after moving into a new apartment complex. As security cameras glitch and shadowy figures appear just outside her door, the line between paranoia and reality begins to blur. The trailer flashes unsettling imagery: a hand reaching from beneath the bed, a neighbor who’s always awake, and a journal filled with drawings of a faceless figure. The pacing is slow and deliberate—until it’s not. Jump cuts, heavy breathing, and distorted sound design heighten the tension, with a final sequence suggesting the “lurker” may not just be human. Think It Follows meets The Babadook, delivered through a tech-noir lens.
The Cinema group
Entertainment News
Entertainment News

Golden Globes Producers Praise Nikki Glaser and Reveal Behind-the-Scenes Details of the 82nd Ceremony
The 82nd Golden Globes featured Nikki Glaser’s dynamic hosting debut at the 82nd Golden Globes earned praise from producers, who are eager to bring her back for 2026. check out the standout moments and behind-the-scenes innovations. bold production innovations; both good and bad as well as all the memorable unscripted moments. Get the inside scoop on what made this year’s show unique.

SUNDANCE 2025: A DREAM COME TRUE FOR A FIRST-TIME FESTIVAL-GOER
Discover the magic of Sundance 2025 through the eyes of a first-time attendee. From must-see films to unforgettable moments, experience the power of storytelling in Park City.

Timothée Chalamet to Make History as Both Host and Musical Guest on ‘SNL’
Timothée Chalamet will make history on January 25 as the first non-professional singer in 30 years to serve as both host and musical guest on Saturday Night Live.

Bong Joon Ho’s ‘Mickey 17,’ Starring Robert Pattinson, to Premiere at Berlin Film Festival (EXCLUSIVE)
Bong Joon Ho’s Mickey 17 will premiere at the 75th Berlin Film Festival. Starring Robert Pattinson, the $118 million sci-fi thriller debuts internationally ahead of its global release.

Barry Keoghan and Christopher Abbott Face Off in a Rural Irish Feud in ‘Bring Them Down’
Barry Keoghan and Christopher Abbott star in Bring Them Down, a tense Irish thriller about feuding families and devastating revenge. Now in theaters.

Oscars Predictions: BAFTA Longlist Shakes Up Awards Race Amid SAG and Critics Choice Buzz
The 2025 Oscars race heats up as the BAFTA longlist shakes up the competition. Discover predictions for Best Picture, Acting, and more.

Hollywood in Crisis: Southern California Fires Reshape Awards Season and Call for Solidarity
The Southern California fires have disrupted Hollywood’s awards season, leading to event cancellations and calls for solidarity. Learn about the industry’s response and how you can support relief efforts.

Zendaya’s Massive Ring Sparks Engagement Speculation at the 2025 Golden Globes: See the Photos!
Zendaya turned heads at the 2025 Golden Globes with a dazzling diamond ring on her left hand, fueling engagement rumors with Tom Holland. Read more here.

Tom Holland Won’t Walk the Red Carpet at Zendaya’s Premieres: ‘It’s Her Moment,’ Says He’ll Quit Acting When He Has Kids
Tom Holland reveals why he skips Zendaya’s red carpet premieres, discusses their on-set chemistry, and shares plans to step away from acting when he becomes a dad.

Film Independent Announces Emerging Filmmaker Award Honorees
At its Spirit Awards Nominee Brunch, Film Independent celebrated Sarah Friedland, Rachel Elizabeth Seed, and Sarah Winshall, while honoring the legacy of Josh Welsh.

Golden Globes 2025: Full Winners List and Highlights
Discover the winners of the 2025 Golden Globes, from Emilia Pérez breaking records to Wicked earning cinematic recognition. See the full list and ceremony highlights.

National Society of Film Critics Award Winners: ‘Nickel Boys’ and ‘A Real Pain’ Dominate the Night
The National Society of Film Critics crowns Nickel Boys as Best Picture, with A Real Pain and Sing Sing among top honorees. See the full list of winners.

Jason Momoa to Play Lobo in ‘Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow’
Jason Momoa takes on the role of Lobo in James Gunn’s Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow. Learn more about this bold casting decision and the new DC Universe.

36th Palm Springs International Film Awards Red Carpet Photos: Ariana Grande, Mikey Madison & More
Discover the highlights of the 36th Palm Springs International Film Awards, including red carpet photos and award winners like Nicole Kidman, Colman Domingo, and Ariana Grande.

‘Saturday Night’ Director Jason Reitman Says Chevy Chase Told Him He “Should Be Embarrassed” About Film
Jason Reitman recounts Chevy Chase’s cutting reaction to his SNL origins film, Saturday Night. Discover how the comedy legend critiqued the ambitious portrayal of the 1975 broadcast chaos.

The Most Overlooked Movies of 2024
Discover the most overlooked movies of 2024, from The Outrun starring Saoirse Ronan to My Old Ass by Megan Park. Celebrate these hidden cinematic gems that deserve more attention.

The 15 Best Breakout Film Performances of 2024
From Maisy Stella in My Old Ass to Aaron Pierre in Delta Force, explore the 15 breakout performances that defined 2024’s cinematic landscape.
Reviews
Idris Elba and John Cena shine as unlikely allies in Heads of State, Amazon's new action-comedy that struggles to match their charisma with a compelling script. Directed by Ilya Naishuller, the film mixes political satire with globe-trotting chaos but never fully sticks the landing.
Joseph Kosinski’s F1: The Movie blends kinetic spectacle with thematic depth. Featuring Brad Pitt and Damson Idris, it’s a visually stunning, narratively complex Formula 1 saga powered by real races and raw emotion.
Scarlett Johansson and Mahershala Ali lead a forgettable expedition in Gareth Edwards’ Jurassic World: Rebirth, a visually competent but emotionally extinct return to the dinosaur franchise.
FX’s The Bear returns with a muted but still compelling fourth season. Jeremy Allen White leads a strong cast through a story grappling with creative burnout and emotional stagnation.
Prime Video’s We Were Liars adapts the bestselling YA novel into a coastal thriller of family secrets, romantic tension, and generational trauma. With standout performances from Emily Alyn Lind and Shubham Maheshwari, the show walks a fine line between haunting and heightened.
Celine Song’s Materialists is a profound exploration of modern love, blending rom-com structure with sharp social commentary. Starring Dakota Johnson, Chris Evans, and Pedro Pascal, the film redefines romance for a generation shaped by wealth and emotional risk.
Julianne Moore and Sydney Sweeney shine in 'Echo Valley,' a suspenseful domestic thriller from director Michael Pearce. With grief, family trauma, and a gripping plot, the Apple TV+ drama makes for a haunting watch.
Josh Gad, Alexandra Daddario, Ashley Park, and Daveed Diggs star in Nora Kirkpatrick’s debut, A Tree Fell in the Woods—a Tribeca-set relationship dramedy about infidelity, identity, and self-reflection in a snowed-in cabin.
Jim Sheridan returns with Re-Creation, a bold blend of fact and fiction inspired by the Sophie Toscan du Plantier case. A gripping, 12 Angry Men-style drama questioning justice, guilt, and truth. Premiered at Tribeca 2025.
Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick star in The Best You Can, a Tribeca 2025 Spotlight Narrative standout about aging, connection, and unexpected second chances. A heartwarming dramedy that proves it's never too late to start over.
Deep Cover is a whip-smart Tribeca 2025 standout, where three misfit actors accidentally infiltrate London’s criminal underground in a hilarious, high-energy improv crime caper led by Bryce Dallas Howard, Orlando Bloom, and Nick Mohammed.
Tim Heidecker stars in Fior di Latte, a surreal and bittersweet Tribeca 2025 standout that blends comedy and pathos in one man’s scent-fueled spiral through memory, madness, and emotional stasis.
Riz Ahmed delivers a gripping, near-silent performance in David Mackenzie’s Relay, a taut surveillance thriller about whistleblowers, privacy, and modern paranoia. Premiered at Tribeca 2025.
Hulu's Call Her Alex gives a surface-level look at podcasting giant Alex Cooper. While the two-part docuseries is rich in nostalgia and growth, it misses deeper revelations behind her media empire. Premiered at Tribeca 2025.
Rapper Logic makes a stunning leap to filmmaking with Paradise Records, his Tribeca-premiering debut. It’s immersive, honest, and emotionally resonant—proving he’s here to stay behind the camera.
From the creator of 'Succession' comes 'Mountainhead,' a sharp satire where four tech billionaires debate humanity’s fate amid global chaos. Review inside.
New Videos
Genius or madman? In this tense new clip from The Mastermind, the lines between control, chaos, and consequence begin to blur.
The official clip from The Mastermind offers a taut, slow-burn moment that introduces us to the film’s enigmatic central figure. Played with unnerving calm, the titular mastermind reveals just enough of his plan to keep the audience—and his adversaries—on edge. The setting is minimal, the dialogue razor-sharp, and the tension thick enough to cut with a glance.
Directed with precision and dark flair, the clip teases the cerebral tone of the full feature. Whether it’s a criminal operation or a psychological chess match, The Mastermind promises a story rooted in control, manipulation, and a deep dive into the mind of a character who always seems one step ahead.
In My Father’s Shadow, memories linger like ghosts—and sometimes, they speak. This gripping new clip teases the emotional reckoning at the heart of the film.
The official clip from My Father’s Shadow offers a haunting glimpse into a fractured legacy. Set in a quiet, dimly lit interior, the moment captures a charged exchange between a young woman and the fading echoes of her late father’s influence. Grief, anger, and unfinished business hang in the air like static.
Visually restrained but emotionally volatile, the scene is a masterclass in subtle storytelling. There are no raised voices—just glances, withheld truths, and the quiet ache of things left unsaid. The father’s presence, whether real or imagined, casts a long psychological shadow over the daughter’s every move.
With intimate cinematography and powerful performances, this clip signals a drama built on emotional excavation. My Father’s Shadow is less about ghosts and more about inheritance—the wounds passed down, and the courage it takes to finally confront them.
Ana de Armas stares down destiny in Ballerina’s chilling new clip—because in this world, even the mention of “Baba Yaga” carries blood-soaked consequences.
In the official clip titled “Baba Yaga”, Ballerina unveils a moment of high-stakes reckoning. Ana de Armas’s character, Rooney, comes face to face with the dark legend of the John Wick underworld: the Baba Yaga. The name alone evokes fear, respect, and a whole lot of violence—and now, it’s her turn to live up to the myth.
Set in the neon-soaked, gunmetal world of Wick’s Continental-connected universe, the scene is quiet but deadly. Rooney is poised, precise, and entirely aware of the legacy she’s inherited. The clip pulses with tension, hinting at a story rooted in vengeance, ritual, and an unspoken code of survival.
With de Armas exuding controlled fury and grace, this preview teases the spiritual and stylistic inheritance of Wick’s bloodline—proof that Ballerina won’t just dance around its action pedigree. It’s ready to own it.
Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie sit down for a rare, in-depth look at their most explosive collaborations—from death-defying stunts to redefining genre filmmaking.
In this official behind-the-scenes breakdown, Tom Cruise and director Christopher McQuarrie revisit some of their most iconic collaborations, including Mission: Impossible, Jack Reacher, and Edge of Tomorrow. The video offers a candid and technical look into the creative process behind some of the most influential action films of the last two decades.
The conversation spans Cruise’s obsession with practical effects, the evolution of Ethan Hunt, the underrated grit of Jack Reacher, and the genre-bending brilliance of Edge of Tomorrow. McQuarrie dissects the challenges of staging complex sequences while preserving emotional stakes, while Cruise emphasizes rhythm, trust, and the pursuit of on-screen authenticity.
More than a promo, this is a masterclass. Whether you’re a filmmaker, a franchise fan, or just curious about what makes Tom Cruise run—this video is essential viewing.
Ana de Armas goes full Wick in Ballerina. In this pulse-pounding clip, elegance meets execution as she runs out of bullets—but not options.
In the official clip titled “Out Of Bullets”, Ballerina star Ana de Armas proves she’s more than ready to inherit the John Wick legacy. Set in the neon-lit, blood-soaked underworld fans know well, the scene finds her character cornered, disarmed, and outgunned—until she turns the room itself into a weapon.
Graceful but lethal, the choreography delivers a fresh spin on the franchise’s signature gun-fu style. De Armas moves with balletic precision and cold determination, elevating every move into a spectacle of survival. The clip teases the film’s blend of stylized violence and emotional grit, with a character driven not by revenge—but necessity.
Directed by Len Wiseman and set between the events of John Wick: Chapter 3 and Chapter 4, Ballerina expands the Wick universe with a female lead who moves like a dancer but strikes like an assassin. This is just a taste of the carnage to come.
A24’s latest promo for Friendship captures the complicated beauty of connection—through glances, silence, and stolen moments. It’s a meditation on intimacy and impermanence, wrapped in under ten minutes.
In the official promo for Friendship, A24 presents a soft-glow montage of the film’s emotional core—highlighting fleeting connections and deep undercurrents that define its quiet power. The clip doesn’t give away plot points. Instead, it leans into atmosphere: long-held stares, subtle smiles, the tension of words unsaid.
Told through fragments and feelings, the promo sets a tone of aching nostalgia and understated vulnerability. Set to a haunting instrumental track, it evokes the work of Sofia Coppola and Andrew Haigh—evocative, elliptical, emotionally resonant.
The characters may barely speak, but the message is clear: Friendship is about everything in between. The clip lingers where most trailers cut—on stillness, on breath, on the moment just before someone leaves. It’s art-house marketing at its finest.
The cast of Materialists puts their rom-com knowledge to the test in this charming promo where Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal, and Chris Evans take turns guessing iconic love lines. It’s nostalgia, laughter, and flirtation—all wrapped up in one playful clip.
In this lighthearted official promo for Materialists, stars Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal, and Chris Evans challenge each other to a rapid-fire game of “Guess the Romance Movie Line.” From Notting Hill to The Notebook, the trio relives some of cinema’s most swoon-worthy quotes while revealing their own rom-com instincts—and occasional blanks.
Set against a candy-colored backdrop that mirrors the film’s luxe-meets-love aesthetic, the clip teases not just chemistry between the actors but the tongue-in-cheek tone of the film itself. Johnson and Pascal are effortlessly funny, Evans plays it cool, and the entire interaction radiates star power and playful intimacy.
Part press junket, part viral-ready content, this promo doesn’t just sell the movie—it sells the vibe. If Materialists is about the high-gloss messiness of modern romance, this is the perfect sneak peek into its heart.
In this tender and charged new clip, Sentimental Value previews the raw emotional terrain of grief, family, and unspoken tension. A single conversation cracks open a history, and the silences speak louder than the words.
The official clip from Sentimental Value offers an early look at what promises to be one of the year’s most intimate and affecting dramas. The film centers on a fractured family reunited by loss—and forced to navigate the terrain of memory, resentment, and reconciliation.
In this moment, a quiet kitchen exchange between two siblings swells with unresolved history. The performances are taut, the dialogue restrained, and the camera lingers just long enough to let discomfort rise. There’s a tension in what’s said—and what isn’t—that evokes the emotional intensity of films like Manchester by the Sea and The Savages.
Directed with a soft, observational lens, Sentimental Value appears to be less about plot than presence. A film that asks its characters—and audience—not to move on, but to move through.
Natasha Lyonne brings her singular, off-kilter charisma to the closet in this playful fashion short that fuses vintage glamour, deadpan wit, and New York edge. It’s not just a styling video—it’s a vibe check.
In this latest installment of Closet Picks, Natasha Lyonne opens up her wardrobe and her worldview in equal measure. Part fashion haul, part existential monologue, the Poker Face and Russian Doll star curates a lineup of personal pieces that are equal parts “studio lot grandma” and “downtown art dealer who may or may not time travel.”
Lyonne, known for her gravel-voiced delivery and unmatched taste in oddball cool, brings out statement coats, archival eyewear, and a truly chaotic array of footwear, narrating each selection with that signature mix of sarcasm and sincerity. Between references to Patti Smith, vintage Issey Miyake, and “weird aunt in a Bergman film,” the video is as much about attitude as it is about aesthetics.
This isn’t just celebrity styling—it’s character study through clothing. And in a sea of trend-chasing fashion content, Lyonne reminds us that true style is the one thing you can’t fake.
Marvel peels back the curtain on its grittiest ensemble yet with Thunderbolts—or rather, T̶h̶u̶n̶d̶e̶r̶b̶o̶l̶t̶s̶ —a film already subverting expectations before it even hits theaters. In this high-tension clip, the new squad faces its first catastrophic test.
In the latest official clip titled “It’s Coming Right At Us”, Marvel Studios offers a high-stakes peek at Thunderbolts—or, as stylized, T̶h̶u̶n̶d̶e̶r̶b̶o̶l̶t̶s̶—the film being rebranded by fans and insiders alike as The New Avengers. The footage drops us straight into the chaos: a helicopter spiraling, an impossible enemy closing in, and a team of deeply flawed antiheroes realizing just how over their heads they really are.
Sebastian Stan’s Bucky Barnes leads the charge alongside Florence Pugh’s Yelena Belova, David Harbour’s Red Guardian, and Wyatt Russell’s U.S. Agent. As the team argues over tactics while under fire, the clip teases not only Marvel’s signature humor but a darker, more grounded tone reminiscent of The Winter Soldier and Rogue One.
Pitched as Marvel’s messiest team-up yet, Thunderbolts looks to challenge the MCU formula—less shiny suits, more moral gray. And if this clip is any indication, the stakes are going to be real, brutal, and personal.
Wes Anderson expands his pastel-drenched universe with The Phoenician Scheme, a film that merges precision, paranoia, and politics. In this new featurette, the filmmaker invites us inside his meticulously controlled world, where order and absurdity live side by side.
In The World – the official featurette for The Phoenician Scheme – director Wes Anderson, along with stars Saoirse Ronan, Willem Dafoe, and Edward Norton, offer a rare glimpse into the film’s layered production design and surreal geopolitical satire.
Set within an imagined Mediterranean nation teetering between bureaucracy and breakdown, Anderson crafts a story that feels simultaneously antique and terrifyingly current. The featurette walks viewers through the film’s miniature dioramas, intricate sets, and period-costume politics, all rendered in Anderson’s signature visual grammar: symmetrical framing, retro typography, and understated hysteria.
From the Ministry of Calculation to the rooftop gardens of The Grand Archive, every environment is imbued with allegory. As Ronan describes, “It’s not just a place. It’s a system.” Meanwhile, Dafoe and Norton discuss the tension beneath the whimsy—how comedy and control clash in a world ruled by logic and legacy.
At just over two minutes, the video offers a window into the thematic architecture behind the film—a narrative maze where algorithms, nationalism, and identity converge.
Sex Education & White Lotus star Aimee Lou Wood steps into the Criterion Collection closet and reveals the films that shaped her worldview, sense of humor, and love of performance.
In this edition of Criterion’s beloved Closet Picks series, BAFTA-winning actor Aimee Lou Wood curates a personal lineup from the shelves of the Criterion Collection. With infectious warmth and wry insight, Wood walks us through titles that have inspired her—from slapstick comedies and auteur deep cuts to stories that challenged her perspective as both viewer and performer.
As she shares anecdotes about watching films like The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and Grey Gardens, Wood speaks with the reverence of a cinephile and the charm of a natural-born storyteller. The selections offer a revealing glimpse into the inner world of one of Britain’s most exciting young actors.
Whether she’s fangirling over classic screwball heroines or analyzing the emotional architecture of European dramas, this first-look featurette proves that Wood isn’t just a great performer—she’s a thoughtful curator of cinema itself.
Tom Cruise and director Christopher McQuarrie push action filmmaking to new extremes in this behind-the-scenes look at the SnorriCam rig—one of The Final Reckoning’s boldest visual tools.
In this immersive behind-the-scenes featurette, Paramount Pictures highlights one of the wildest visual techniques in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning: the Snorri rig. Attached directly to Tom Cruise’s body during high-intensity action scenes, this custom camera setup captures the world from Ethan Hunt’s exact point of view—tilting, spinning, and jolting with every movement.
Director Christopher McQuarrie and DP Fraser Taggart discuss the rig’s origins, its creative intent, and the technical challenges of filming while Cruise dangles off cliffs, dodges explosions, and fights mid-sprint. Cruise, ever the adrenaline-fueled auteur, embraces the rig’s disorienting realism as a way to bring audiences deeper into the film’s most nerve-shredding moments.
It’s an approach that doesn’t just document stunts—it transforms them into subjective, surreal experiences. With The Final Reckoning, Mission: Impossible continues to evolve the language of blockbuster cinema, one daring shot at a time.
Marvel peels back the curtain on Thunderbolts with a behind-the-scenes look at the film’s “Void Space” sequence—an eerie, high-concept set piece that merges cutting-edge VFX with psychological tension.
In this exclusive featurette, Marvel Studios takes fans inside one of Thunderbolts’ most mysterious and talked-about set pieces: the Void Space. Designed to test the limits of the film’s anti-heroes, the Void Space is more than just a location—it’s a surreal psychological gauntlet that fractures identity, memory, and trust.
Director Jake Schreier and production designer Ethan Tobman break down the origins of the Void, while cast members Florence Pugh, Wyatt Russell, and Sebastian Stan share what it was like to act in such a disorienting and emotionally charged space. The BTS footage showcases immersive LED volumes, minimalistic set builds, and haunting in-camera effects that helped create one of the MCU’s boldest visual experiments to date.
As Marvel moves into darker narrative territory, this look behind the Void offers a glimpse into a creative evolution—and a reminder that even in a superhero movie, space itself can be the enemy.
Celine Song returns with her follow-up to Past Lives, shifting from quiet romance to biting satire with Materialists—a sharp, stylish New York tale of love, money, and emotional negotiation. This First Look teases a film that’s both intimate and fashion-forward, a high-gloss portrait of contemporary longing.
In Materialists, writer-director Celine Song (Past Lives) delves into the transactional nature of modern relationships, setting her new film amidst the elite of Manhattan’s dating and wealth scenes. The story follows a matchmaker—played by Dakota Johnson—whose personal and professional lives blur as she finds herself caught between passion, ambition, and the emotional cost of connection.
Co-starring Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans, the film unfolds in luxury townhomes, downtown art galleries, and discreet restaurants where romance is as curated as a portfolio. Song’s touch remains deeply human, but here it’s delivered with a sharper wit and a playful commentary on status and seduction.
This first look promises a film as emotionally intelligent as it is visually striking, where intimacy is currency and no connection is without its cost.
Catch up on Ethan Hunt’s most death-defying missions, betrayals, and explosive reveals in one concise and stylish recap, just in time for the final chapter.
Before you witness the conclusion of cinema’s most consistently jaw-dropping action franchise, get caught up with The Only Recap You Need Before Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning. This fast-paced video breakdown walks you through the franchise’s most pivotal moments—from Mission: Impossible (1996) to Dead Reckoning Part One—with an emphasis on Ethan Hunt’s evolving moral compass, his enduring loyalty to the IMF, and the increasingly global stakes that have shaped each mission.
Whether you’re a longtime fan or a newcomer looking for a crash course, this recap connects the dots across decades of espionage and jaw-clenching stunts. Learn how recurring figures like Ilsa Faust, Benji, Luther, and Kittridge have shaped the story so far—and why the final reckoning might be Ethan Hunt’s most personal mission yet.
From rogue nations to AI threats, this is the essential briefing before Ethan takes on his final mission.
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning hits theaters May 23.
A meta-exploration of craft and chaos, The Studio — The Oner captures the tension, creativity, and sheer risk of attempting cinema’s most daunting visual challenge—all in real time.
In The Studio — The Oner, Apple TV+ delivers a hybrid narrative experience that fuses behind-the-scenes realism with dramatic storytelling. The limited series follows a fictional film crew as they attempt to execute a perfect one-shot take—the infamous “oner”—on a live soundstage. Part homage, part satire, and entirely immersive, the project deconstructs not just the technical mastery required for such a feat, but the fragile egos, exhausted talent, and relentless ambition fueling it.
From dynamic camera choreography to emotional on-set meltdowns, The Oner explores how far artists will go in pursuit of cinematic purity. With vérité-style filmmaking and contributions from real directors and technicians, the series examines the unfiltered psychology of those who work behind the lens, and the myth-making that elevates a single shot into legend.
Anna Kendrick’s Stephanie gets an unexpected dose of drama when a mysterious figure from the past interrupts her big moment in Another Simple Favor.
Prime Video drops a juicy new clip from Another Simple Favor, the upcoming sequel to the 2018 thriller-comedy. In this scene, Stephanie (Anna Kendrick) is on the road promoting her new book when a surprise guest—connected to secrets long buried—shows up to shake things up. The sequel reunites Kendrick with Blake Lively and director Paul Feig, promising another round of campy intrigue, twisted glamour, and deadly secrets. This clip teases the film’s mix of dark comedy and suspense as it ramps up to its full release.
Survival cuts deeper than scars. The Last of Us peels back the layers of Episode 3, revealing the emotional and moral fractures that drive Joel and Ellie forward.
Max releases an official behind-the-scenes look at The Last of Us Season 2, Episode 3, exploring the pivotal choices, character arcs, and evolving emotional landscape that shape Joel and Ellie’s journey. In this inside featurette, the cast and creators discuss the toll of survival, the shifting balance of power between characters, and the quiet moments of vulnerability that haunt even the most hardened survivors. Featuring insights from Pedro Pascal, Bella Ramsey, and the creative team, the video offers a deeper understanding of how personal loss and fear continue to fuel the series’ harrowing realism. It’s an intimate, layered reflection on humanity at the end of the world.
Dive into the meteoric rise of A24, the indie studio reshaping modern cinema. From Oscar-winning hits to cult classics, this feature explores how A24’s distinct voice, daring storytelling, and savvy marketing have turned it into Hollywood’s most influential powerhouse.
A24 has redefined what it means to be a modern film studio. By championing visionary filmmakers, embracing bold storytelling, and cultivating a brand that feels personal to cinephiles, A24 has disrupted the Hollywood system in a major way. This video breaks down the studio’s history, biggest successes, and how its strategic risks — from Moonlight and Everything Everywhere All At Once to Hereditary and Uncut Gems — have paid off, earning A24 a reputation as the ultimate tastemaker for a new generation of audiences and filmmakers.
Interviews
In a Hot Ones interview, Dakota Johnson called out Hollywood’s reliance on remakes and risk-averse decision-making. Her honest comments reflect growing industry concerns about originality and creative stagnation.
Colin Farrell, Dave Chappelle, Arnold & Patrick Schwarzenegger, and Parker Posey headline Season 22 of Actors on Actors. The Emmy-season interview series returns with bold, raw conversations between the year’s most buzzed-about talent. Here’s what to expect from this season’s powerhouse lineup.
Ahead of her Tribeca premiere, Miley Cyrus explains why Something Beautiful is coming to theaters instead of a stage—and how Harrison Ford helped her rethink her entire tour plan.
Robert De Niro used his Cannes honorary Palme d’Or speech to denounce Trump, defend democracy, and call on artists to fight back against cultural authoritarianism.
Lana Love, a real singer who auditioned for a fake HBO show created by Nathan Fielder, says she feels betrayed after learning it was all for The Rehearsal. Read her full story.
Liev Schreiber opens up for the first time about his trans daughter Kai, their journey as a family, and why visibility and advocacy matter more than ever.
Tom Cruise isn’t here for political distractions. At a press stop for Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning, the star swiftly shut down tariff talk to keep the focus where it belongs: on the action-packed final chapter of one of Hollywood’s biggest franchises.
Neptune redefines social media with a customizable algorithm, ghost metrics, and creator-first monetization tools. Launching April 30, the app is built to empower independent artists.
Pedro Almodóvar delivers a fiery political statement against Donald Trump while accepting the 50th Chaplin Award at Film at Lincoln Center, reflecting on activism, cinema, and freedom.
From Oscar winners to cult classics, these Criterion Collection 4K Blu-rays are must-haves for every cinephile. Discover the best films to buy and why physical media still matters.
After decades of lobbying, the Oscars will recognize stunt design in 2028. Industry leaders believe the new category will reshape how Hollywood approaches action and narrative.
At C2E2, Molly Ringwald, Emilio Estevez, and the original cast of The Breakfast Club reunite to reflect on the iconic teen film’s enduring impact—and its cultural blind spots.
Executive producers and star Noah Wyle break down The Pitt's Season 1 finale, tease what's ahead for Robby, and reflect on how the Trump administration could reshape the show's medical storylines.
Werner Herzog, director of Aguirre and Grizzly Man, will be honored with Venice’s Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement. At 82, he’s still making films—and isn’t slowing down.
Netflix’s Everybody’s in Live reimagines the sketch-variety format with John Mulaney at the helm. It’s chaotic, clever—and a work in progress. Here’s our breakdown.
Netflix’s Adolescence Episode 3 features Erin Doherty and Owen Cooper in a harrowing one-take interrogation scene. Here’s how it was made—and why it’s one of the year’s most powerful hours of TV.
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Idris Elba and John Cena shine as unlikely allies in Heads of State, Amazon's new action-comedy that struggles to match their charisma with a compelling script. Directed by Ilya Naishuller, the film mixes political satire with globe-trotting chaos but never fully sticks the landing.