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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.
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.
New Trailers
Love, ambition, and tradition collide in Netflix’s romantic drama My Oxford Year, where a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity meets a life-changing decision.
Netflix has unveiled the first official trailer for My Oxford Year, the adaptation of Julia Whelan’s bestselling novel, bringing an emotionally rich story of ambition, romance, and self-discovery to the screen. Starring Ella Hunt as Anna Alcott, a rising political star from the U.S. who earns a coveted Rhodes Scholarship, the film follows her journey across the Atlantic to Oxford University—only to find more than she bargained for.
Set against the dreamy backdrop of gothic spires and candlelit libraries, Anna’s carefully mapped-out future is disrupted when she meets Jamie Davenport (played by Leo Woodall), a charming and elusive local with secrets of his own. Their whirlwind romance is laced with wit, emotional candor, and a deeper exploration of what it means to live fully—even if briefly.
Directed by So Yong Kim (Lovesong, Treeless Mountain), My Oxford Year blends heartfelt drama with lush visual storytelling. The trailer teases tearful phone calls, long walks through misty courtyards, and the emotional stakes of balancing ambition with vulnerability. As Anna is forced to choose between a future she’s always dreamed of and a present she never expected, My Oxford Year promises to be a tearjerker in the vein of Me Before You or One Day.
The film premieres globally on Netflix this fall.
Liam Neeson trades gravitas for slapstick in this absurdist reboot of The Naked Gun, promising chaotic gags and deadpan chaos for a new generation.
Paramount Pictures has dropped the first official trailer for The Naked Gun, a reimagining of the beloved Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker comedy series—this time with Liam Neeson stepping into the gumshoes of bumbling detective Frank Drebin. Directed by Akiva Schaffer (Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping), the 2025 update leans hard into the original’s legacy of ridiculous set pieces, deadpan deliveries, and sight gags that fly faster than bullets.
Pamela Anderson co-stars as Vicki, a sultry presence caught in Drebin’s mess of mishaps, while a supporting cast filled with comedy veterans and fresh faces rounds out the ensemble. The trailer opens with a dramatic voiceover and a montage of crime-fighting tropes, only to derail into toilet humor, pratfalls, and Neeson’s hilariously dry take on physical comedy. He may be best known for brooding thrillers, but here, Neeson’s straight-faced commitment to chaos makes him an unexpectedly perfect Drebin.
With slick visuals, high-budget action gags, and an updated tone that nods to everything from Airplane! to Brooklyn Nine-Nine, The Naked Gun reboot aims to revive the spoof genre with sharp production and even sharper silliness. It hits theaters later this year, just in time to remind audiences that comedy can still be loud, dumb, and deliriously fun.
Alex Ross Perry’s VIDEOHEAVEN is a hypnotic essay film tracing the rise and cultural imprint of video rental stores—narrated by Maya Hawke.
Cinema Conservancy has unveiled the first trailer for VIDEOHEAVEN, a new documentary essay directed by indie auteur Alex Ross Perry (Her Smell, Listen Up Philip) and narrated by Maya Hawke. The film is a kaleidoscopic journey through the birth, boom, and psychological hold of the video rental store era—stitched together from hundreds of archival sources, including old TV commercials, VHS covers, in-store footage, and clips from blockbuster films. Edited by Clyde Folley, VIDEOHEAVEN turns nostalgia into narrative, exploring how these once-ubiquitous spaces shaped moviegoing, taste, and the analog ritual of discovery.
More than just a look back, Perry’s film interrogates the emotional and cultural residue of the rental boom—its promise of choice, its capitalist contradictions, and its lingering grip on generations of cinephiles. Hawke’s narration offers a dreamy, philosophical lens on an American phenomenon that now exists mostly in memory. At once melancholic and exuberant, VIDEOHEAVEN isn’t about the death of physical media—it’s about the life it once gave us.
Netflix announces the official title and release window for the third Benoit Blanc mystery, Wake Up Dead Man, teasing the sleuth’s darkest case yet.
In a brief but stylish teaser, Netflix confirms Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery as the official title of Rian Johnson’s third film in the franchise. Daniel Craig returns as Southern detective Benoit Blanc, this time teasing a “most dangerous case yet.” The title is revealed via a sleek monochrome title card, accompanied by haunting music and ominous voiceover from Blanc himself.
While plot details remain tightly under wraps, the teaser’s tonal shift suggests a darker, more suspenseful entry than its predecessors. Wake Up Dead Man follows Knives Out (2019) and Glass Onion (2022), continuing Johnson’s acclaimed whodunit series with a fresh ensemble cast and a new mystery set in an undisclosed location. Filming has already begun with a confirmed cast that includes Josh O’Connor, Cailee Spaeny, Andrew Scott, and Kerry Washington.
Rian Johnson once again writes and directs, reuniting with his longtime producing partner Ram Bergman. With a 2025 release window officially on the calendar, Netflix is building anticipation for what could be the most unpredictable Knives Out installment yet.
A24 unveils the first official trailer for Architecton, a hypnotic documentary that meditates on architecture, time, and the ruins we leave behind.
Architecton, directed by acclaimed Russian filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky (Gunda), is not your typical documentary. Through mesmerizing imagery and a minimal, almost sacred soundscape, the trailer introduces a film that functions less like a traditional narrative and more like a cinematic prayer—one that reflects on the ephemerality of civilizations through the lens of stone, steel, and silence.
Shot across historic and decaying architectural landmarks from Syria to Russia to Italy, Architecton seeks to answer a deceptively simple question: what remains when we are gone? With no voiceover and minimal dialogue, the film is instead driven by its striking visuals and elemental score—glimpses of bombed-out buildings, monumental ruins, and haunting manmade structures framed with surgical precision.
The trailer emphasizes the grandeur and fragility of human ambition, where architectural marvels become archaeological ghosts. Kossakovsky’s camera treats buildings as living organisms—breathing, aging, and dying. As with his previous work, the film is composed with reverence for image and rhythm, and appears designed to provoke not explanation, but reflection.
Premiering at the 2024 Venice Film Festival to critical acclaim, Architecton is now set for limited U.S. theatrical release via A24 later this summer. It promises to be a cinematic experience as much about philosophy and perception as it is about design.
Aliens land—and humans get weird—in the first teaser for Bugonia, a bizarre, brainy sci-fi satire from Yorgos Lanthimos, in theaters this October.
Focus Features has dropped the first official teaser for Bugonia, the latest genre experiment from director Yorgos Lanthimos, following his Oscar-winning Poor Things. This time, the acclaimed auteur adapts the cult 2003 South Korean film Save the Green Planet!, reimagining it through his surreal, deadpan lens.
Bugonia stars Jesse Plemons and Emma Stone as two conspiracy theorists who kidnap a corporate CEO (Willem Dafoe), convinced he’s an alien planning to conquer Earth. What follows is a darkly comic descent into delusion, paranoia, and the absurd theater of human behavior.
The teaser is both eerie and eccentric—sterile laboratories, insectoid visuals, interrogation set-pieces, and pitch-black humor abound. Lanthimos leans into his trademark tonal tightrope: somewhere between unsettling sci-fi and existential satire. Stone, continuing her striking run of collaborations with the director, plays it coolly detached, while Plemons spirals through wild-eyed obsession.
Visually meticulous and thematically loaded, the film seems poised to dissect late capitalism, human fear, and the dangers of unchecked belief systems. Featuring a supporting cast that includes Margaret Qualley, Hong Chau, and Mamoudou Athie, Bugonia promises to be both profoundly weird and piercingly relevant.
The film opens in theaters this October, distributed by Focus Features.
Angel Studios’ latest film Green and Gold explores the redemptive power of faith, football, and family in a moving new trailer.
Angel Studios has released the official trailer for Green and Gold, a stirring sports drama that blends small-town football with themes of personal redemption and spiritual awakening. The film follows a young quarterback on the cusp of stardom, grappling with the weight of expectations, fractured relationships, and the search for identity beyond the field.
As the trailer opens, we’re introduced to the high-stakes world of Texas football—a crucible of talent, pressure, and community pride. But beneath the bright lights and roaring crowds, Green and Gold is a story about the challenges of growing up and growing inward. When tragedy strikes, the protagonist must reevaluate what truly defines him: fame, victory, or faith.
Directed with an intimate lens and underscored by a soaring score, the trailer teases a visually rich film filled with emotionally charged moments and grounded performances. From locker room pep talks to quiet scenes of reflection, the story promises both athletic drama and spiritual transformation.
Angel Studios continues its mission to deliver uplifting, values-driven entertainment. Green and Gold looks poised to follow in the footsteps of recent faith-forward successes, speaking to audiences looking for meaning amid adversity.
The film is set for release later this year in select theaters.
Bleecker Street unveils the taut first trailer for Relay, a sleek international thriller starring Riz Ahmed and Lily James in a game of psychological espionage and emotional duplicity.
In the official trailer for Relay, Bleecker Street teases a high-stakes psychological thriller led by Oscar-nominee Riz Ahmed as Tom, a professional negotiator known as a “relay.” His job: neutralize hostile ransom deals with poise, precision, and zero emotional involvement. But when his next job pairs him with a mysterious client played by Lily James, the mission becomes far more personal—and far more dangerous—than he anticipated.
Directed by David Mackenzie (Hell or High Water), the trailer positions Relay as an elegant fusion of slow-burn suspense and international intrigue. We watch as Tom maneuvers between luxury hotels, surveillance rooms, and darkened corridors, his calm unraveling with each cryptic twist. As James’ character enters the frame, layers of misdirection and double-blind allegiances begin to surface. Her performance walks a fine line between victim and accomplice, while Ahmed channels quiet intensity into a man trained to suppress every instinct—except survival.
Visually, Relay feels composed and quietly paranoid. The cinematography echoes the cool tension of Michael Clayton or Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, favoring greyscale interiors and cold cityscapes. The orchestral score pulses beneath the surface, building dread without spectacle. The trailer suggests a film more interested in dialogue and mind games than explosions—a cat-and-mouse story told through whispers, glances, and withheld truths.
Bleecker Street will release Relay in select theaters starting September 6, 2025.
Universal releases the emotional new trailer for Wicked: Part Two – For Good, teasing heartbreak, rebellion, and the spellbinding conclusion to Oz’s most iconic untold story.
The yellow brick road leads to a reckoning in the newly released trailer for Wicked: Part Two – For Good, the climactic second chapter of Jon M. Chu’s adaptation of the Broadway phenomenon. Picking up where Part One left off, this installment promises soaring stakes and deeper emotional currents as Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) embraces her destiny, Glinda (Ariana Grande) grapples with legacy, and the land of Oz teeters on the edge of revolution.
Set to the haunting reprise of “For Good,” the trailer delivers both visual spectacle and a more solemn emotional weight. We see Elphaba’s transformation into the so-called Wicked Witch of the West become complete—black hat, broomstick, and all—as she flies into legend. Grande’s Glinda, meanwhile, steps fully into her public persona, tasked with shaping the narrative that history will remember. Sweeping shots of the Emerald City, an uprising of Ozians, and chilling glimpses of Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh) and The Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) point to a final showdown drenched in political manipulation, personal sacrifice, and magical fallout.
Jon M. Chu’s direction brings more gravitas this time around, matching the intimacy of the musical’s final act with the grandeur of a Hollywood fantasy epic. Newcomers like Jonathan Bailey as Fiyero and Marissa Bode as Nessarose return to complete their arcs, while lush costume design and thunderous orchestration hint at a finale filled with both heartbreak and catharsis.
Wicked: Part Two – For Good hits theaters November 26, 2025, closing out the saga that redefined Oz for a generation.
Prime Video teases a brutal return to the shadows in The Terminal List: Dark Wolf, starring Taylor Kitsch in a deadly new chapter of the conspiracy-fueled action saga.
Prime Video has unveiled the first official teaser for The Terminal List: Dark Wolf, a gritty and brutal expansion of its hit military-conspiracy series. Spun off from the original Terminal List starring Chris Pratt, this new installment follows fan-favorite character Ben Edwards—played by Taylor Kitsch—in a standalone origin story filled with betrayal, bloodshed, and black ops reckoning.
Clocking in at just over a minute, the teaser is terse, muscular, and drenched in tension. With a brooding voiceover and flashes of kinetic violence, it sets the stage for a darker, more psychological chapter. Kitsch, stripped of Navy SEAL idealism and grappling with internal war wounds, is shown navigating shadowy corridors, desert landscapes, and clandestine kill missions. We glimpse glimpses of CIA operatives, shattered alliances, and covert operations with unclear allegiances—all backed by a growling synth score and low-lit cinematography that mirrors his descent into moral gray zones.
Notably, Dark Wolf appears more intimate and internal than its predecessor, trading large-scale gunfights for something moodier and more cerebral. There’s a heavy emphasis on psychological warfare, loyalty, and trauma, positioning Ben Edwards not as a sidekick but as a haunted protagonist whose choices ripple into the broader universe of The Terminal List.
Created by Jack Carr and executive produced by Chris Pratt and Antoine Fuqua, The Terminal List: Dark Wolf premieres exclusively on Prime Video September 5.
Get Out meets Magnolia in Weapons, a chilling, multistrand horror film from Zach Cregger that intertwines trauma, time, and terror.
New Line Cinema has released the second official trailer for Weapons, the highly anticipated follow-up from Barbariandirector Zach Cregger. Leaning even deeper into psychological horror and narrative experimentation, Weapons assembles an ensemble cast led by Pedro Pascal, Renate Reinsve, and Charles Melton in what appears to be an ambitious, time-bending exploration of dread, grief, and violence across generations.
The trailer begins with disjointed snapshots: a body discovered on a rural highway, an anxious teen in a suburban home, and a fragmented monologue about “echoes that don’t fade.” As with Barbarian, Cregger plays with chronology and shifting perspectives. Pedro Pascal appears as a grieving father trapped in a Kafkaesque loop of paranoia. Renate Reinsve (The Worst Person in the World) seems to anchor another thread, possibly linked to a suburban conspiracy. Meanwhile, Charles Melton’s character—bloodied and shaking—repeats the line, “They’re still watching,” as static overtakes the screen.
Visually, the trailer blends shadowy interiors with stark outdoor dread—small-town Americana rendered uncanny. There are flashes of surveillance, cult iconography, and what seems to be a supernatural presence haunting the timelines. The tone echoes films like It Follows and Donnie Darko, but filtered through Cregger’s distinct blend of social unease and genre deconstruction.
The final moments of the trailer deliver a chilling crescendo: a child whispering into a walkie-talkie, a man vanishing mid-frame, and a series of home videos that suggest whatever Weapons is, it’s also deeply personal. With a screenplay shrouded in secrecy, early buzz indicates that this could be Cregger’s breakout as a singular voice in horror—an ambitious swing that may redefine what mainstream genre films can accomplish.
Weapons premieres in theaters September 27, distributed by New Line and Warner Bros.
Channing Tatum stars as America’s most bizarre fast-food bandit in Roofman, a stranger-than-fiction crime tale of love, desperation, and a Toys “R” Us hideout.
Paramount has released the official trailer for Roofman, a darkly comedic and suspense-laced true crime drama directed by Derek Cianfrance (Blue Valentine, The Place Beyond the Pines). Based on the unbelievable real-life exploits of Jeffrey Manchester, the film stars Channing Tatum as the charming yet troubled ex-Army Ranger who made headlines by robbing McDonald’s restaurants via their rooftops and hiding out for months in a Toys “R” Us undetected.
The trailer opens with an aerial shot of suburban Americana, underscored by a sly voiceover that hints at Jeffrey’s double life. After a string of inventive robberies, he lands behind bars—only to escape and take up residence inside a toy store, navigating its air ducts and surveillance systems like a suburban phantom. But his criminal ingenuity takes an emotional turn when he meets Leigh (Kirsten Dunst), a single mother whose warmth draws him toward a second chance at life—one complicated by the lies he must keep buried.
As Jeffrey’s world begins to unravel, Roofman plays with tonal shifts: part cat-and-mouse thriller, part offbeat romance, and part character study of a man trapped between reinvention and recapture. The film’s visual style blends 2000s mall culture and late-capitalist malaise with Derek Cianfrance’s signature intimacy—lingering close-ups, handheld tension, and a melancholy hue that sharpens the surrealism of it all.
Rounding out the cast are Shea Whigham as the obsessive detective on Manchester’s trail, and young newcomer Will Riggins as Leigh’s son, who slowly uncovers the truth about his mother’s new boyfriend. With a screenplay that layers suspense with emotional resonance, Roofman offers a haunting look at loneliness, reinvention, and the absurdities of the American Dream.
Premiering August 29 in select theaters before expanding nationwide through Paramount Pictures.
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Entertainment News
Entertainment News

‘The Surfer’ Trailer: Nicolas Cage Rages Through an Aussie Beachfront Turf War
Nicolas Cage stars in The Surfer, a psychological thriller about a man fighting for his place in an unforgiving coastal town. Watch the new trailer.

‘You’ Season 5: Everything We Know About the Final Chapter of the Hit Netflix Show
You Season 5, the final chapter of Netflix’s hit psychological thriller, premieres April 24, 2025. Explore the release date, cast, plot details, and trailers as Joe Goldberg’s journey comes to a haunting conclusion in New York City.

‘Lurker’ Review: Théodore Pellerin and Archie Madekwe Pop the Fame Bubble in Alex Russell’s Scintillating Power Play
Théodore Pellerin and Archie Madekwe star in Lurker, a sharp psychological thriller about the seductive power of proximity to fame. Read our full review.

‘Together’ Review: Dave Franco and Alison Brie Embrace Love, Gore, and Codependency in Michael Shanks’ Absurdly Inventive Horror-Comedy
Michael Shanks’ Together is a brilliantly grotesque mix of horror and dark comedy, starring Dave Franco and Alison Brie as a couple whose toxic relationship manifests in terrifying body mutations. A must-see at Sundance 2025!

‘Plainclothes’ Review: A Complex, Visually Striking Exploration of Queer Desire, Shame, and Surveillance
Plainclothes, Carmen Emmi’s gripping Sundance debut, follows a closeted cop who falls for a man he’s meant to arrest. A psychological thriller exploring identity, surveillance, and the criminalization of queerness.

‘Inheritance’: A Twisty Thriller Undermined by Its Own Inconsistencies
Inheritance, starring Lily Collins and Simon Pegg, finally hits theaters five years after premiering at the 2020 Tribeca Film Festival. Does it live up to its intriguing premise?
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
Brad Pitt hits the track in the making of F1: The Movie, a pulse-pounding look inside the speed, precision, and pressure of Formula 1 racing.
Apple TV+ has released a new behind-the-scenes video for F1: The Movie, spotlighting the extraordinary effort behind this year’s most ambitious racing drama. Titled “75 Live,” the featurette gives fans an inside look at how director Joseph Kosinski (Top Gun: Maverick) and producer Jerry Bruckheimer brought real Formula 1 action to life—starring Brad Pitt and Damson Idris.
Filmed during actual Grand Prix weekends and in collaboration with F1 teams, the project is a landmark fusion of live racing and scripted drama. The crew built a fictional team—APXGP—that competes alongside real racers, with Pitt playing a retired driver returning for one last shot at the grid. Idris plays his young teammate, with Lewis Hamilton onboard as a producer to ensure authenticity.
The “75 Live” footage reveals never-before-seen shots of Pitt in full racing gear, high-speed track sequences, and pit lane logistics—all designed to make audiences feel like they’re in the cockpit. With IMAX cameras capturing the velocity and scale, this film promises an immersive look at one of the world’s most elite sports.
F1: The Movie is set to debut in theaters first before streaming on Apple TV+.
NEON’s Together reimagines memory through still frames, weaving a photo album into a moving portrait of love and loss.
NEON has released the official photo album trailer for TOGETHER, a quietly powerful drama from director Andrew Haigh. Presented as a visual scrapbook, the trailer unfolds through carefully curated still photographs that chronicle a relationship’s most intimate and transformative moments. Rather than traditional narration, it relies on the power of imagery to tell the story.
Starring Dave Franco and Alison Brie, TOGETHER follows a couple as they reflect on the evolution of their love—through joy, heartbreak, and everything in between. The trailer’s restrained, emotive tone suggests a film rooted in the complexities of human connection and the impermanence of time. With a haunting score and tactile visual language, TOGETHER is poised to be one of NEON’s most emotionally resonant releases.
Opening in theaters July 30, the film joins NEON’s growing slate of bold, character-driven storytelling.
Discover unexpected films at Tribeca 2025, including Just Sing and Paradise Records—plus one title that took everyone by surprise.
Join us as we explore the hidden gems of Tribeca 2025 in this exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the festival’s most compelling films. From the genre-defying musical Just Sing to the emotionally charged Paradise Records, we examine what makes these titles stand out in a crowded lineup. But there’s one more film—a surprise discovery—that completely flew under our radar until now.
We also dive into the cultural heartbeat of New York City and how its energy continues to inspire new voices in storytelling. With nods to artists like Logic and the cinematic legacy of the city itself, the video celebrates Tribeca’s role as a nexus of film, music, and creative fusion. Founded by Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, and Craig Hatkoff, the festival remains a champion of diverse, independent voices—offering not just premieres, but new perspectives.
The opening minutes of Superman (2025) reveal a grounded, emotionally resonant Clark Kent—establishing the film’s heart before it takes flight.
The first official clip from Superman (2025) has arrived, offering fans their initial full-scene glimpse into James Gunn’s highly anticipated DC Universe reboot. The clip, which features David Corenswet as Clark Kent, is a quiet, contemplative moment—marking a tonal shift from previous Superman films. Set in Smallville, the scene opens with Clark walking alone through the golden Kansas fields before heading into Metropolis, newspaper in hand.
Rather than starting with a superpowered spectacle, Gunn chooses restraint, leaning into warmth, nostalgia, and Americana. With gentle lens flares, slow dolly shots, and natural light, the cinematography underscores the story’s emotional weight. Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan) is teased through a voiceover at the Daily Planet, while John Murphy’s subtle score gives the moment a mythic resonance without overwhelming the human element.
This is Superman as Gunn promised—noble, introspective, and rooted in identity rather than invincibility. If the opening scene is any indication, Superman (2025) may succeed in marrying the emotional clarity of Man of Steel with the sincerity and optimism fans have long hoped to see restored.
The new featurette for Superman (2025) showcases how James Gunn’s reboot was crafted with IMAX in mind—promising a superhero epic shot for the biggest screen possible.
Warner Bros. has released a behind-the-scenes look at Superman (2025) titled “Filmed for IMAX®,” giving fans their most immersive peek yet at the scale and ambition behind James Gunn’s DC Universe relaunch. Designed to be experienced in full IMAX 1.90:1 aspect ratio, the footage features sweeping set pieces, towering practical builds, and first glimpses of Superman in flight across expansive American landscapes.
Director James Gunn narrates portions of the video, underscoring his commitment to grounding the film’s spectacle in emotion and character. “We didn’t just want the action to be big,” Gunn says, “we wanted it to feel big—to mean something.” The featurette includes production shots of David Corenswet suited up as Superman, Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane, and Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor, hinting at the dynamic interplay between hero, journalist, and villain that defines the heart of the film.
The IMAX footage emphasizes natural lighting, large-scale sets, and vivid contrast between Clark Kent’s Kansas roots and the grandeur of his Kryptonian heritage. From cornfields to craters, and newsroom interiors to planetary transmissions, every detail feels constructed to immerse audiences in both myth and intimacy.
The clip ends with Gunn and the crew watching playback on towering IMAX monitors, visibly proud of the visual depth they’re delivering. It’s clear Superman is not just a film—it’s an event calibrated for maximum theatrical impact.
A haunting new clip from Superman (2025) delves into the mythic scale of Kal-El’s origin, teasing the emotional weight of his destiny.
In the latest official clip from James Gunn’s Superman, titled “Knowledge Is Worth Many Sacrifices,” the film pivots away from the grounded realism of its previous teasers to explore Krypton’s haunting legacy. Through a holographic message or recovered memory, Kal-El (David Corenswet) receives a solemn transmission from a Kryptonian elder—likely Jor-El—delivering a poetic warning about sacrifice, heritage, and the cost of wisdom.
Visually drenched in solemn light and alien iconography, the clip leans into the grandeur of Superman’s origins, contrasting the emotional intimacy of Clark Kent’s Earth-bound life with the epic magnitude of his galactic lineage. Corenswet’s silent performance—anchored in awe and grief—emphasizes the film’s dual emotional register: intimate character drama and mythological sci-fi.
As composer John Murphy’s score swells beneath the narration, the scene echoes the classic tones of Man of Steel and Superman: The Movie, while signaling a more philosophical and emotionally complex approach to the Superman mythos. It’s a stirring look at what’s shaping up to be a deeply personal yet universally resonant superhero epic.
James Gunn’s Superman continues to tease its character-driven core with a tense, grounded exchange from the latest official clip.
A new clip from Superman (2025), titled “Keep An Eye On Him,” has been released, offering a sharp, dialogue-heavy moment that underscores the film’s tonal balance between human stakes and heroic mythology. The scene centers on Clark Kent (David Corenswet) navigating his dual identity while under the wary gaze of law enforcement and federal authorities—hinting at larger tensions between Superman and the institutions meant to protect the world.
Set in a drab government corridor, the clip favors subtle tension over spectacle. Characters exchange loaded glances and clipped dialogue, suggesting that Superman’s arrival hasn’t unified the world—it’s split it. Corenswet’s performance exudes quiet intensity, reinforcing James Gunn’s commitment to portraying Kal-El as both alien and painfully human.
This brief but effective scene continues to support what early looks have promised: a Superman story that blends idealism with realism, and action with internal conflict. With its July 2025 release date drawing closer, anticipation is soaring for the first chapter in DC Studios’ new cinematic universe.
Marvel Studios offers a grounded and intimate preview of its highly anticipated reboot with a quiet family moment around the dinner table.
Marvel Studios has released the first official clip from The Fantastic Four: First Steps, offering fans an unexpected look into the emotional core of the upcoming reboot. Titled “Sunday Dinner,” the scene finds the newly formed team—Reed Richards (Pedro Pascal), Sue Storm (Vanessa Kirby), Johnny Storm (Joseph Quinn), and Ben Grimm (Ebon Moss-Bachrach)—sharing a rare moment of calm amid the chaos of their evolving powers and responsibilities.
Set against the backdrop of a quiet evening in the Baxter Building, the clip is more intimate than action-packed, centering on familial chemistry and subtle character beats. Pascal’s Reed anchors the scene with contemplative authority, while Kirby’s Sue provides warmth and resolve. Johnny’s irreverence and Ben’s dry wit round out the dynamic, reminding viewers that this isn’t just a superhero squad—it’s a makeshift family learning to navigate their new reality.
The subdued tone suggests director Matt Shakman (WandaVision) is leaning into emotional storytelling and character development, promising a version of the Fantastic Four that prioritizes interpersonal stakes alongside cosmic spectacle. The film hits theaters July 25, with expectations sky-high for this long-awaited MCU entry.
Mike Flanagan adapts Stephen King’s experimental novella with surprising warmth in this first official scene.
From acclaimed horror filmmaker Mike Flanagan (The Haunting of Hill House, Doctor Sleep) comes an emotional new adaptation of Stephen King’s The Life of Chuck, starring Tom Hiddleston and Mark Hamill. This official clip offers a first look at the film’s unconventional tone—far from typical King terror, the story unfolds in reverse chronology, beginning with Chuck’s death and tracing his life back through moments of joy, mystery, and loss. The scene, set in an eerie yet oddly tender world, showcases Flanagan’s ability to infuse metaphysical themes with human intimacy.
The adaptation stitches together three seemingly disparate vignettes that eventually coalesce into a portrait of life, death, and cosmic significance. With evocative cinematography, melancholic undertones, and performances that straddle surrealism and sincerity, this clip gives audiences an early taste of a film that promises to be one of the most ambitious King adaptations to date.
Danny Boyle trades traditional gear for Apple tech in 28 Years Later, shot entirely on iPhone 15 Pro Max.
In this behind-the-scenes featurette, 28 Years Later director Danny Boyle breaks down the bold visual decision to shoot much of the film on the iPhone 15 Pro Max. Blending real-world chaos with cinematic finesse, the choice created a sense of immediacy, intimacy, and unpredictability—echoing the energy of 28 Days Later while modernizing the aesthetic for a new generation. Through handheld realism, low-light experimentation, and subtle post-production refinement, How It Hitsdives into how mobile filmmaking shaped the sequel’s visceral tone and redefined what’s possible for major motion pictures.
Prime Video unveils its stacked July 2025 slate, packed with premieres, cult hits, and award contenders.
From explosive action to prestige dramas, Prime Video’s July 2025 lineup is a curated blend of crowd-pleasers and hidden gems. Highlights include the long-awaited streaming debut of Saltburn, the psychological crime series Dark Wolf: Terminal List, and Ari Aster’s political slow-burn Eddington. New Amazon Originals, returning fan-favorites, and a spotlight on global cinema round out the platform’s diverse offering. Whether you’re in the mood for romance, thrills, or thoughtful indie fare, there’s something new every week to stream this July on Prime Video.
Joaquin Phoenix and Pedro Pascal lead Ari Aster’s politically charged pandemic Western in this haunting first look.
A24 unveils the first official footage from Eddington, Ari Aster’s genre-defying new film set at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Set in the arid isolation of New Mexico, the story centers on Sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix), a measured enforcer of public health mandates, and Mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal), a defiant populist whose rhetoric fractures the already tense town. Emma Stone plays Louise Cross, Joe’s conflicted wife, while Austin Butler delivers a chilling performance as cult leader Vernon Jefferson Peak, injecting spiritual extremism into an already divided community. With cinematography by Darius Khondji and a score by Bobby Krlic and Daniel Pemberton, Eddingtoncaptures the paranoia, power plays, and moral erosion of a nation in crisis.
Iconic Movie Trailers, Explained by a Trailer Editor
From Jaws to Inception, trailer editor Bill Neil reveals how the best movie previews manipulate sound, suspense, and structure.
In this fascinating behind-the-scenes feature, acclaimed trailer editor Bill Neil unpacks what makes a trailer unforgettable. Drawing on decades of experience crafting previews for some of Hollywood’s biggest films, Neil walks us through the anatomy of a great trailer—how a single sound cue can change the emotional trajectory, why silence can be more powerful than dialogue, and how the best cuts are built on rhythm, not just story.
Featuring iconic examples from Mad Max: Fury Road, The Social Network, Jaws, The Shining, and Inception, this video essay offers an insider’s look at the precision and psychology behind the trailers that shaped modern cinema. Equal parts film school and love letter to the art of editing, it’s a must-watch for anyone who cares about how movies first hook us.
An early look at One Battle After Another teases Paul Thomas Anderson’s return to character-driven drama, with Leonardo DiCaprio anchoring a tense and intimate scene titled “Baby.”
The first official clip from Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another has arrived. Titled “Baby,” the scene offers a restrained but emotionally loaded moment featuring Leonardo DiCaprio in what may be one of his most vulnerable performances to date.
Set in the American heartland during an unspecified postwar period, One Battle After Another appears to be a meditation on generational trauma, masculinity, and the silent wars waged within domestic spaces. The clip showcases Anderson’s signature stillness and emotional geometry—long takes, lingering silences, and dialogue that hints at a deeper rupture beneath the surface. DiCaprio’s character remains unreadable yet exposed, as Anderson captures a man circling a confrontation he’s not ready to have.
Shot on 35mm with the director’s frequent collaborators behind the camera, “Baby” suggests the film’s power lies not in spectacle but in emotional precision. With Anderson returning to stripped-down storytelling, One Battle After Another is shaping up to be one of the year’s most anticipated auteur-driven dramas.
Go inside the sonic world of Materialists as Michelle Zauner (Japanese Breakfast) unpacks her original track for Celine Song’s romantic thriller.
In this behind-the-scenes featurette from A24, musician and composer Michelle Zauner—better known as Japanese Breakfast—breaks down the creative process behind her original song for Materialists, the highly anticipated film from Past Lives director Celine Song. Zauner discusses how the film’s themes of longing, illusion, and modern love informed her lyrical choices and sound palette, crafting a track that acts as an emotional echo to the film’s stylish and seductive tone. Combining candid studio footage, scoring sessions, and director insight, this video is an intimate glimpse into how music and image intertwine in one of the summer’s most artful releases.
Step behind the lens of Jurassic World Rebirth to discover how shooting on 35mm film reshapes the scale, texture, and cinematic awe of the franchise’s latest chapter.
In an era dominated by digital filmmaking, Jurassic World Rebirth takes a bold creative turn—embracing 35mm film to capture its prehistoric thrills with new depth and timeless grain. This behind-the-scenes featurette showcases the visual transformation brought by director Gareth Edwards and DP Greig Fraser, who sought to ground the blockbuster spectacle in a more tactile, cinematic tradition. With interviews, onset footage, and side-by-side comparisons, this video offers a rare look at how format choices shape narrative tone, image quality, and nostalgia. For fans of Jurassic Park and modern cinephiles alike, this is a glimpse at the craftsmanship behind the rebirth of a legacy.
An epic visual timeline of every film ever formatted for IMAX 1.43:1—the rarest and most immersive aspect ratio in cinema history, reserved for only the boldest big-screen storytelling.
This curated video dives deep into the select list of films released in IMAX 1.43:1, the towering format synonymous with technical precision and cinematic ambition. From The Dark Knight and Interstellar to Oppenheimer and Dune: Part Two, this rare vertical aspect ratio has redefined how we experience spectacle. With full-frame clips, historical context, and fascinating trivia, the video serves both as a celebration and a catalog of directors who pushed visual storytelling to its limits. A must-watch for cinephiles, format purists, and fans of the large-format experience.
Molly Gordon and Logan Lerman sit down for a candid conversation about their new film Oh, Hi!, exploring their shared history, Jewish coming-of-age humor, and the intimacy of playing former best friends reuniting at a wedding weekend gone sideways.
In this Tribeca-exclusive “Inside Look,” Molly Gordon and Logan Lerman open up about their chemistry in Oh, Hi!, a tender, sharply funny dramedy from director Rachel Wolff. Reuniting in their first major collaboration since childhood acting classes, the pair discuss the film’s emotional undertones—Jewish tradition, romantic regret, and the specific discomfort of seeing someone you once loved again. From shooting improvised dialogue to shaping their characters through personal anecdotes, this interview blends warmth, wit, and a behind-the-scenes peek at one of the festival’s most talked-about films. Candid, hilarious, and quietly moving, it’s a conversation worth watching in full.
In a new behind-the-scenes featurette, David Corenswet reveals the intense regimen that helped him embody the next generation of Superman—complete with grueling workouts, high-calorie meals, and wire training.
David Corenswet takes fans inside his full-body transformation for James Gunn’s Superman, unveiling the physical and emotional toll behind the cape. The video documents his months-long journey with celebrity trainer Paolo Mascitti, where he followed a strict 4,500-calorie diet, performed high-volume gym sessions, and underwent flight training with the stunt team. Between wire rig rehearsals and costume fittings, Corenswet brings humanity to the superhero prep process, making the myth feel real. Paired with insight from Gunn’s production team, this featurette is more than just a fitness reel—it’s a testament to the making of a modern icon.
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.
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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Bleecker Street’s Relay pairs Riz Ahmed and Lily James in a taut psychological thriller from Hell or High Water director David Mackenzie. The trailer teases a sleek, dialogue-driven story about trust, identity, and power. In theaters September 6.