
If 2024 felt like a slightly off year for movies, you’re not alone – between the Hollywood strikes impacting release dates, audiences gravitating towards streaming rather than actual movie theaters, and the so-called superhero fatigue that has affected even the MCU, it’s safe to say that movie fans were looking forward to a better 2025.
And that’s where we come in, with this look at the biggest movies still to come this year. There’s the big-screen debut of James Gunn’s new DC Universe in Superman, the return of classic Universal monsters, new works from the likes of Paul Thomas Anderson, and, yes, the arrival of the Fantastic Four in the MCU.
Here are the biggest movies still coming in 2025…
Lilo & Stitch
Date: May 23

Another of Disney's live-action/CGI combo projects that reimagines an old Disney animated hit, this one leads us to note that the original Lilo & Stich doesn’t feel that old, but then again... it came out in 2002, so maybe time is just moving more slowly these days? Because that just doesn’t seem right. Whatever the case, Chris Sanders returns as the voice of Stich, the alien creature who is adopted by Maia Kealoha's Lilo. Auliʻi Cravalho, Judge Reinhold, Zach Galifianakis, Courtney B. Vance, and Hannah Waddingham also star. Read IGN's review of Lilo & Stitch here.
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning
Date: May 23
The eighth film in the long-running Tom Cruise spy/action series, and the follow-up to Dead Reckoning Part One from 2023, Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning sees the world’s most stunt-prone star reunite with the likes of Hayley Atwell, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, and Vanessa Kirby for one more Ethan Hunt adventure. But will it be his last? With Dead Reckoning slumping as one of the lowest-grossing installments of the series, the future of Hunt and the Impossible Missions Force lies largely on this film’s shoulders. Read IGN's review of Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning here.
Karate Kid: Legends
Date: May 30
For this film, Ralph Macchio, the OG KK, is teaming with Jackie Chan, who starred in the 2010 “reimagining” of The Karate Kid – which I guess is now just part of the bigger Karate Kid Cinematic Universe. The pair will play their characters from their respective films, with Ben Wang (American Born Chinese) cast as the new kid who must learn karate to solve all his life’s problems. Even though Macchio is one of the stars of the Cobra Kai TV show, and that apparently exists in the same world as this movie, it seems as though the film won’t have a ton do with the series as the actor has said Legends takes place around three years after the end of the show.
Bring Her Back
Date: May 30
Directors Danny and Michael Philippou, who made a big splash with Talk to Me, are back with another mortifyingly shocking tale of grief and the afterlife, all about two siblings who uncover a terrifying ritual at the secluded home of their new foster mother.
Read IGN's review of Bring Her Back.
The Phoenician Scheme
Date: June 6 (limited release May 30)
Wes Anderson's latest slice of symmetrical whimsey stars Benicio del Toro, Michael Cera, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Jeffrey Wright, Scarlett Johansson, Benedict Cumberbatch, and...look we can't name them all. It's the type of amazing ensemble you'd expect for a movie about a wealthy businessman and his daughter who become the target of scheming tycoons, foreign terrorists and determined assassins.
From the World of John Wick: Ballerina
Date: June 6

In case you weren’t clear on what world this film takes place in… in case Keanu Reeves showing up in the trailer wasn’t enough… Lionsgate’s Ballerina is now called From the World of John Wick: Ballerina. Which OK, fair enough. You can’t blame them, I guess. And while the Baba Yaga’s current status may be, shall we say, unclear, his world of assassins continues with this spin-off/sidequel, which takes place between John Wick: Chapter 3 and Chapter 4. (Ah, that’s why he was able to show up in the trailer!) Ana de Armas stars as Rooney, who’s seeking Wickian-style revenge for the murder of her family, with Underworld and the Total Recall remake's Len Wiseman directing.
Materialists
Date: June 13
A24 ventures into rom-com waters with Materialists, headlined by Dakota Johnson, Chris Evans, and Pedro Pascal. Johnson plays a lucrative NYC business gets complicated as she finds herself torn between the perfect match (Pascal) and her imperfect ex (Evans).
How to Train Your Dragon
Date: June 13
Here's another live-action remake of an animated film (it’s just a genre now, isn't it)? This time it's DreamWorks re-doing 2010's lovely How to Train Your Dragon, with The Black Phone’s Mason Thames playing Hiccup and a CGI rendition of Toothless of course playing the dragon he befriends. Gerard Butler co-stars as the live-action version of his animated character, Stoick the Vast (Hiccup's father), while Nico Parker (The Last of Us), Julian Dennison (Deadpool 2), and Nick Frost are also among the cast. Many have noted how closely the first trailer for the film resembles the original animated movie, but is that a good thing? We’ll find out in June.
Elio
Date: June 20
Pixar's next film tells the story of Elio (Yonas Kibreab), a boy who wants to be abducted by aliens. As Elio says in the teaser trailer for the film, he has a mole that’s the same shape as the Orion Nebula after all! And he does get his wish, finding himself in the “Communiverse, an interplanetary organization with representatives from galaxies far and wide.” Among Elio’s new alien friends are Brad Garrett as Lord Grigon and Jameela Jamil as Ambassador Questa, while Zoe Saldaña voices his Aunt Olga.
28 Years Later
Date: June 20
Director Danny Boyle, screenwriter Alex Garland, and star Cillian Murphy return for this sequel to 28 Days Later, and man if this project doesn’t have us as excited as a Rage-Virus-infected whacko. The original post-apocalyptic film set a new standard for zombie action (don’t start arguing with us about what is or isn’t a zombie here), while its first sequel, 28 Weeks Later, was basically a decent thriller made by other people. Ralph Fiennes, who co-stars in the new film, has given us the most info so far regarding the plot, saying that there are "a few pockets of uninfected communities" at this point 28 years after the first film (duh). But wait, there’s more: This is just the first of a new trilogy of films in the series, with The Marvels director Nia DaCosta reportedly helming the second movie.
M3GAN 2.0
Date: June 27
Allison Williams returns to be further harassed by the robot-doll from hell in M3GAN 2.0, or however you pronounce it. After the critical and commercial success of the original, not to mention all the memes, a follow-up from the horror mega-producer team-up of Jason Blum and James Wan was all but assured, delivering unto us a T2-style sequel where the first movie's killer bot must now help destroy an even worse murder doll. Violet McGraw returns as Cady, the niece of Allison Williams’ Gemma.
F1
Date: June 27
Director Joseph Kosinski has more than proved he can do high-speed action thrills with Top Gun: Maverick, so perhaps it was inevitable that he'd tackle the world of Formula One racing with F1. Brad Pitt stars as an ex-driver who had to bow out of the sport after a terrible crash years ago. But you know guys like that – they always have to come out of retirement to train the next generation!
Jurassic World Rebirth
Date: July 2
The Jurassic franchise makes its return to the big screen with a sorta-reboot just three years after Jurassic World Dominion. This trip into the Heart of Dino Darkness in Jurassic World Rebirth finds a “covert operations expert,” played by Scarlett Johansson, venturing into one of the few remaining locations on Earth hospitable to dinosaurs to collect the genetic secret to their survival. Director Gareth Edwards (Rogue One, Godzilla, The Creator) will bring his gift for massive visual scale to the franchise for the first time, while screenwriter David Koepp (the original Jurassic Park, The Lost World: Jurassic Park) may be able to get a Jurassic story back to the roots of what’s kept us loving the original films for the last three decades.
Superman
Date: July 11
James Gunn’s much-anticipated takeover of DC’s cinematic adventures kicks off in earnest with the release of Superman. With leads David Corenswet (The Politician, Pearl) and Rachel Brosnahan (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, House of Cards) joined by a freshly bald Nicholas Hoult (Mad Max: Fury Road, The Menu) as Lex Luthor, we don’t know a ton about this just yet. Aside from Superman’s penchant for very casually putting his boots on and the fact that James Gunn has said all the right things about his “relatively serious” take on the Man of Steel, there’s still plenty to be excited about.
I Know What You Did Last Summer
Date: July 18
Both Freddie Prinze Jr. and Jennifer Love Hewitt return, in some capacity, for this legacy sequel to the I Know What You Did Last Summer slasher films of the '90s. The premise is still the same, basically, with five friends covering up the inadvertent killing of a pedestrian, only to be stalked by a killer a year later. This time though, they seek help from survivors of the infamous Southport Massacre of 1997.
The Smurfs Movie
Date: July 18
The Smurfs Movie is an animated musical with an absolutely stacked voice cast. Everybody from Rihanna to Kurt Russell, Xolo Maridueña (Cobra Kai, Blue Beetle) to Alex Winter (Bill S. Preston, esquire), and (almost) literally everyone in between gets a chance to be blue on the mic. Chris Miller (not Lord and Miller, but Shrek the Third and Puss in Boots' Chris Miller) is directing, so there’s an excellent chance The Smurfs Movie is “charming AF” at minimum.
The Fantastic Four: First Steps
Date: July 25
Marvel’s first family gets their fourth shot at the silver screen in the ironically titled The Fantastic Four: First Steps. Veteran TV director Matt Shakman (WandaVision, Game of Thrones, It’s Always Sunny…) leads Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Ebon Moss-Bachrach (The Bear, Andor) and Joseph Quinn (Stranger Things) in a mid-century take on the Richards family. With concept art hinting at something from ’60s sci-fi and the shenanigans both on screen and off at Marvel, there’s no small amount of pressure on this film to course-correct the much-maligned “Multiversal Saga” in the MCU, particularly now that Dr. Doom, one of Fantastic Four’s most notorious arch enemies, is on the horizon.
The Bad Guys 2
Date: Aug. 1
With a very cool animation style and some legitimately well-choreographed action, The Bad Guys was a kids graphic novel adaptation done right. Following the attempt of a tight-knit group of criminals to go “good,” The Bad Guys 2 returns with the same director, Pierre Perifel, and most of the cast (Sam Rockwell, Awkwafina and, most importantly, Richard Ayoade as a philanthropist guinea pig named Professor Marmalade), so the chances of another very fun Bad Guys movie are, well, good.
The Naked Gun
Date: Aug. 1
Holy crap, we can NOT wait for this movie. With Lonely Island and SNL alum Akiva Schaffer directing, and Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson in the lead roles, the casting alone points to a creative team that understands why The Naked Gun worked so well. Featuring pro wrestler Cody Rhodes and rapper Busta Rhymes, this film has an incredible chance of being one that runs the “remake a classic” gauntlet unscathed. Don’t expect a straightforward remake or a half-assed spoof. Instead, get ready for the parody genre to start working again.
Freakier Friday
Date: Aug. 8
Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan reunite for this follow-up to the 2003 mind-swap classic, which itself was based on the 1976 mind-swap classic starring Jodie Foster and Barbara Harris. Prior to this sequel, there have actually been like six movies inspired by the original 1972 novel, but Freakier Friday is bound to hit folks of a certain age in that sweet spot of nostalgia and curiosity, which we all know Disney is so good at mining. We’ll see who winds up swapping minds with who this time – imagine if they crossed over with the Halloween franchise and Curtis and Michael Myers took a stab at each other’s lives?
Weapons
Date: Aug. 8
Zach Cregger, writer and director of Barbarian, returns with a new bizarre and terrifying ordeal called Weapons, about a mysterious happening in a small town where all but one child from the same class vanish on the same night at exactly the same time. Julia Garner, Josh Brolin, Alden Ehrenreich, Benedict Wong, and Amy Madigan star.
Nobody 2
Date: Aug. 15
Bob Odenkirk's hard-hitting Hutch is back for a summertime sequel all about a family road trip gone violently awry. Connie Nielsen, RZA, Christopher Lloyd, Colin Salmon, and Michael Ironside all return as Sharon Stone takes over the villain role as a bootlegging crime lord.
The Toxic Avenger
Date: Aug. 29
It only took two years after its 2023 Fantastic Fest screening for the Peter Dinklage Toxic Avenger reboot to officially hit theaters, but here it is in all its goopy glory. Co-starring Jacob Tremblay, Kevin Bacon, Elijah Wood, and Taylour Paige, this Troma cult classic refresh is set in a fantasy world where a janitor named Winston Gooze (Dinklage) transforms into a mutant vigilante known as Toxie.
Caught Stealing
Date: Aug. 29
Darren Aronofsky's latest stars Austin Butler, Regina King, Zoë Kravitz, Matt Smith, Liev Schreiber, Vincent D'Onofrio, and Carol Kane in the story of a former baseball player (Butler) who finds himself caught up in the crime scene of 1990s New York. Based on the 2004 book by Charlie Huston.
The Conjuring: Last Rites
Date: Sept. 5
Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga are back as Ed and Lorraine Warren, those paranormal investigators we all know and love, for the ninth movie in the Conjuring Universe. Director Michael Chaves, who has helmed two previous films in the James Wan-created series, has said this will be a finale for the franchise, but come on. We’ll believe it when we see it.
The Long Walk
Date: Sept. 12
The Hunger Games franchise's Francis Lawrence adapts a 1979 dystopian Stephen King novel about a world where the U.S. is a totalitarian regime and a group of young men enter an annual walking contest where they must walk at three miles per hour non-stop or be executed until only one of them is left alive. Cooper Hoffman, Mark Hamill, David Jonsson, and Judy Greer star.
Him
Date: Sept. 19
Jordan Peele's Monkeypaw Productions brings us a sports-horror film, directed by Justin Tipping, about a promising football player who gets invited to train at the isolated compound of a dynasty team's aging quarterback. This chilling journey into the pursuit of excellence at all costs stars Marlon Wayans, Tyriq Withers, Julia Fox, and Tim Heidecker.
One Battle After Another
Date: Sept. 26
In this house, we hold the belief that any news of a Paul Thomas Anderson movie is good news. Even if the news might just be the most expensive movie the auteur’s ever had the chance to make. The confirmed cast includes Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, and Regina Hall. The film is loosely based on Thomas Pynchon's 1990 novel Vineland.
The Smashing Machine
Date: Oct. 3
Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson will officially enter Awards Season contention with The Smashing Machine, playing former wrestler and MMA fighter Mark Kerr alongside Jungle Cruise co-star Emily Blunt. Written, directed, co-produced, and edited by Benny Safdie, this A24 biopic looks to smash the competition this fall.
TRON: Ares
Date: Oct. 10
The long and arduous quest for a TRON: Legacy sequel seems to be nearing its end with TRON: Ares currently scheduled for a 2025 release. The film follows a program called Ares, played by famous doctor/vampire Morbius (Jared Leto), as it enters the real world, giving mankind its first opportunity to shake hands with AI. Tron as a franchise is a curious one, as the original film is a classic in its own right and the 2010 sequel felt largely unnecessary. The opportunity here, however, is with the look of the film, this time in the hyper-capable hands of DP Jeff Cronenweth (The Social Network, Gone Girl), and the music, with Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross not even bothering to drop the Nine Inch Nails from their credit for the film.
Good Fortune
Date: Oct. 17
Keanu Reeves stars in this comedy from writer-director Aziz Ansari. Good Fortune is about a so-called “budget guardian angel,” played be Reeves, who loses his wings and winds up, after a series of unfortunate events, living with Seth Rogen. Hey, Hollywood still makes comedies it turns out? We’re there.
Black Phone 2
Date: Oct. 17
Perhaps the surest bet in Hollywood is that a horror film that made 10 times its budget at the box office is going to get a sequel. Doctor Strange director Scott Derrickson’s The Black Phone did just that in 2021 and, to nobody’s surprise, in 2025 we’re getting a sequel with Derrickson returning alongside Ethan Hawke and the rest of the first film’s cast. Given all this, along with Blumhouse’s track record with franchising their sneak-up hits, it seems just as unwise to bet against this one too.
Mortal Kombat II
Date: Oct. 24
If we couldn’t get WWE’s The Miz the role of Johnny Cage in the sequel to 2021’s surprisingly awesome Mortal Kombat reboot, Karl Urban is a lovely consolation prize. With director Simon McQuoid and much of the same cast of badasses (especially Hiroyuki Sanada and Joe Taslim as Scorpion and Sub-Zero entrenched in a centuries-old grudge match) back, we’re looking forward to a helluva tournament in Outworld and, if the rumors are true of actors being locked up for as many as four Mortal Kombat movies, a trilogy worth of fatalities before they’re done.
Predator: Badlands
Date: Nov. 7
With Dan Trachtenberg’s Prey marking the first truly great Predator movie since the 1987 original, the floodgates for Predator projects were officially opened. While a direct sequel to the Amber Midthunder-led Prey was long assumed to be in the works, we recently found out that another, secret Predator movie had also already been shot! But all the while, Trachtenberg was also hard at work on Badlands, a standalone Predator story that’s most interesting because of the fact that, for the first time in the franchise’s nearly 40-year history, it’s being told from the perspective of the titular hunter himself. Set on an alien planet and deploying Elle Fanning in multiple roles, Predator: Badlands, like Prey before it, has a chance to be a completely fresh take on one of cinema’s most iconic monsters.
The Running Man
Date: Nov. 7
The Running Man from 1987 came at the height of the muscle-bound heyday of ’80s action cinema, and Edgar Wright taking another stab at it with an equally muscle-bound cast of Glen Powell, Katy O’Brian and Josh Brolin is the best thing that 2025 could offer us. It seems Wright is going back to the source material, a Stephen King book written under his pulpier pseudonym Richard Bachman, to get at the more socially satirical elements the film left out of the first adaptation. Knowing Wright’s unconditional love of cinema, this might be pulling from everything from RoboCop to The Truman Show, all with the choreographed mayhem of Hot Fuzz and Baby Driver. We’re very excited for this one.
Now You See Me: Now You Don't
Date: Nov. 14
Now You See Me players Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco, Isla Fisher, and Morgan Freeman all return for this third installment, joined by new faces Justice Smith, Dominic Sessa, Ariana Greenblatt, and Rosamund Pike. With a fourth movie already in development, Now You See Me: Now You Don't will reunite The Four Horsemen as they recruit three skilled illusionists for a high-stakes heist involving the theft of the world's largest queen diamond.
Wicked: For Good
Date: Nov. 21

With close to three hours worth of Part One, Wicked concludes by taking over its second consecutive Thanksgiving in 2025. With performances from leads Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo that are both great and powerful, the two-part Wicked is a fascinating exercise in adapting from not just one source but two. Folding in elements from the cheery Broadway hit and the decidedly darker novel, the first film was a faithful retelling of them both, and it’ll be more than a little interesting to see how well it concludes with Part Two.
Zootopia 2
Date: Nov. 26
As secretly in development as the obviously-coming follow-up to a smash Disney animation hit could be, Zootopia 2 was in the works as early as 2017. Ginnifer Goodwin’s Officer Judy Hopps and Jason Bateman’s reformed con artist fox, Nick Wilde, must infiltrate another biome in the sequel, but the real question is, can a franchise get by on clever animal puns and positivity alone? The first film had a subversive note to its cute and furry veneer that was something worth talking about, and if they’ve found another conversation to start with Zootopia 2, it could be more than just a no-brainer sequel.
Frankenstein (Netflix)
Date: Nov. 2025

Guillermo del Toro has been talking about making a Frankenstein movie for a very, very long time, and it's finally happening thanks to his deal with Netflix. Oscar Isaac stars as Dr. Victor Frankenstein while Jacob Elordi plays the monster. How handsome will GDT's creature be? That remains to be seen, but you can bet that you’re gonna feel for the monster one way or another. Mia Goth, Felix Kammerer, Lars Mikkelsen and Christoph Waltz also star.
Five Nights at Freddy’s 2
Date: Dec. 5
The depth of lore that’s sprung up around a survival game about haunted animatronic pizza place mascots is astounding. Given the games, books, short stories, comics and more, that the first major film adaptation was a success is no surprise. Thanks to the bottomless pit of horror spawned by Freddy Fazbear and friends, Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 has no shortage of story to pull from. Also, with the director (Emma Tammi) and cast (Josh Hutcherson, Matthew Lillard) all set to return, if you were into the first one, we can’t imagine you’re going to be mad at the second.
Avatar: Fire and Ash
Date: Dec. 19

James Cameron, lover of the ocean and inventor of new ways to make Kate Winslet hold her breath for staggering lengths of time, is giving us another trip to Pandora for Christmas 2025. Avatar: Fire and Ash will be the director’s third installment in what may be the only franchise he works on until he’s dead. Avatar became the highest-grossing movie of all time after its release, while The Way of Water peaked at the third-highest box office number ever. Whether the continuing saga of former human marine Jake Sully and his family being pursued across Pandora can continue that trend is the most open question about Fire and Ash. With James Cameron, however, we know for sure that we’ll get an inventive approach to blockbuster filmmaking that demands to be seen on as big a screen as you can find.
Wolf Man
Date: Jan. 17
Director Leigh Whannell nailed his Universal Monster redo The Invisible Man in 2020, and now he’s got a Wolf Man take coming (with Blumhouse producing). Christopher Abbott (Poor Things) stars as a family man who undergoes some, um, changes while trapped in a cabin in the woods with his wife (Ozark’s Julia Garner) and daughter (Matilda Firth). Based on The Invisible Man and what we’ve seen of Wolf Man so far, Whannell seems to understand that the best monster movies are the ones that are really about, well, the monster that lurks inside us.
Read IGN's review of Wolf Man.
Star Trek: Section 31 (Paramount+)
Date: Jan. 24

Michelle Yeoh’s character from Star Trek: Discovery has long been in the running to get a spin-off, and it’s finally here in the form of the first Star Trek TV movie ever made. Section 31 sees Yeoh’s Philippa Georgiou teaming up with Starfleet’s top-secret division that handles the dirty jobs that those fancy-pants Federation types like to avoid. It would be great if this film works out and leads to a series of Trek movies that go straight to Paramount+, allowing for the exploration of the more obscure corners of Gene Roddenberry’s universe that a feature film wouldn’t typically permit.
Read IGN's review of Star Trek: Section 31.
The Witcher: Sirens of the Deep (Netflix)
Date: Feb. 11
Netflix's Witcher franchise continues with another animated movie, Sirens of the Deep, following 2021's Nightmare of the Wolf, this time featuring the voice of Doug Cockle as Geralt of Rivia. With Henry Cavill no longer playing the character in the live-action series, Cockle returns to the role here, having previously voiced Geralt for the video games. Meanwhile, Joey Batey and Anya Chalotra reprise their roles from the show as Jaskier and Yennefer, respectively. Based on the short story “A Little Sacrifice” from The Witcher author Andrzej Sapkowski’s Sword of Destiny, the film sees Geralt pulled into a struggle between humans and merpeople. Sure hope the water doesn’t mess up his hair.
Read IGN's review of The Witcher: Sirens of the Deep.
Captain America: Brave New World
Date: Feb. 14
Captain America: Brave New World, the 35th film in the MCU, finally puts the new Captain America, Anthony Mackie’s Sam Wilson, front and center on the big screen, but he’s not alone. Joining him are Danny Ramirez, back from his small role in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier as Joaquin Torres, a.k.a. the new Falcon, Shira Haas as former Black Widow Ruth Bat-Seraph, Carl Lumbly as Isaiah Bradley, also returning from TFATWS, and Giancarlo Esposito as Marvel villain Sidewinder. And then there’s Harrison Ford, making his Marvel debut as “Thunderbolt” Ross (replacing the late William Hurt in the role). Ross, according to the trailers, is also now president of the United States and the Red Hulk as well, because yeah, this is also kind of a Hulk sequel it seems, with Liv Tyler and Tim Blake Nelson back as Betty Ross and the Leader, respectively (both last seen in 2008’s The Incredible Hulk).
Read IGN's review of Captain America: Brave New World.
Paddington in Peru
Date: Feb. 14 (US)

This third Paddington movie was released in the UK in November of 2024, but it’s coming to the US and other territories in January of 2025. It's been seven years since Paddington 2, and the previous film's director, Paul King, was busy making Wonka with Timothée Chalamet, so new helmer Dougal Wilson stepped in for his feature debut. In this installment, Paddington and the Brown family do indeed visit Peru, though Emily Mortimer takes over as Mrs. Brown, replacing Sally Hawkins. Ben Whishaw is back as the voice of Paddington, as is Hugh Bonneville as Henry Brown. Upon its UK release, IGN’s Matt Purslow gave the film a 7 out of 10, saying “It’s not as delicious as its practically perfect predecessors, but Paddington in Peru preserves the series’ sweet-natured fun.”
Read IGN's review of Paddington in Peru.
The Monkey
Date: Feb. 21
Based on the 1980 Stephen King short story of the same name, The Monkey is the next film from Longlegs writer-director Osgood Perkins. The orginal story deals with a cursed toy monkey that causes various deaths, and it looks like the movie is sticking to that broad outline. The trailer’s VO tells us of “a beast not from this Earth” which smites “the ones who deserved it, the ones who didn’t, and everyone in between” while scenes of gruesome/hilarious (?) horror are teased onscreen. Theo James stars along with Tatiana Maslany and Elijah Wood, while James Wan is one of the film’s producers.
Read IGN's review of The Monkey.
The Legend of Ochi
Date: Feb. 28
This fantasy from powerhouse arthouse (is that an oxymoron?) A24 stars Helena Zengel as the teenage Yuri, a girl who lives on a “small island in the Black Sea.” She and other children, including Stranger Things' Finn Wolfhard (who’s actually old enough to drink IRL now), find themselves on a journey in search of the fearsome creatures of the title – the Ochi. Except when Yuri finds one, it's the cutest ol' thing you ever did see. And so her mission of rebellion, and protection, begins in what looks to be a visually fantastic film.
Read IGN's review of The Legend of Ochi.
Sinners
Date: March 7
Frequent creative partners Ryan Coogler and Michael B. Jordan are back at it with the horror film Sinners, starring Jordan as twin brothers who return to their hometown, according to studio Warner Bros., “only to discover that an even greater evil is waiting to welcome them back.” Hailee Steinfeld and Jack O’Connell (Ferrari) also star, with Coogler and Jordan reuniting with various Black Panther teammates once again including director of photography Autumn Durald Arkapaw, production designer Hannah Beachler, editor Michael P. Shawver, composer Ludwig Göransson, and costume designer Ruth E. Carter.
Read IGN's review of Sinners.
Black Bag
Date: March 14
Steven Soderbergh is very busy for a guy who retired once, having made 10 movies in the past nine years, but hey, who’s complaining? He’s actually got two films out in 2025, the horror-thriller Presence in January, and Black Bag in March, a “high-stakes mystery,” according to distributor Focus Features, which stars Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender. The director reteams with prolific screenwriter David Koepp for both films, after working together on 2022’s Kimi. Not much else is known about Black Bag at this point aside from the fact that it’s got a roster of talent who are almost always worth checking out.
Read IGN's review of Black Bag.
Snow White
Date: March 21
Disney’s live-action (ish?) remakes of their animated classics trend continues with Snow White, which has had its fair share of behind-the-scenes controversies. Directed by Marc Webb (The Amazing Spider-Man movies) and written by Greta Gerwig (Barbie) and Erin Cressida Wilson (Secretary), the film was delayed a year to 2025 because of the SAG-AFTRA strike, according to Disney. That said, it seems likely that criticism of its use of dwarf characters led to a rethinking of their approach, and hence at least part of the delay. As it stands now, the movie will feature seven distinctly cartoonish CGI characters accompanying Rachel Zegler’s Snow White. We’ll see how this one pans out, as while cultural critics may pick away at these live-action remakes, the general public tends to show up in droves for them.
Read IGN's review of Snow White.
Alto Nights
Date: March 21
Director Barry Levinson (Rain Man, Good Morning, Vietnam) teams with screenwriter Nicholas Pileggi (Goodfellas) and star Robert De Niro for Alto Nights, the story of real-life competing mob bosses Vito Genovese and Frank Costello. De Niro plays both roles, somehow. Debra Messing, Kathrine Narducci (The Sopranos), and Cosmo Jarvis (Shogun) also star.
Read IGN's review of Alto Nights.
A Minecraft Movie
Date: April 4
Minecraft Steve is coming, and it turns out he’s Jack Black! And no, Black isn’t in every new video game movie these days – it just seem that way. This is another title that hit some controversy, as is too often the case lately, this time when the first trailer was released and some fans complained about the look of the film. So much so that Warner Bros. trotted out director Jared Hess and producer Torfi Frans Olafsson when the second trailer was released in order to do some damage control. Jason Momoa, Emma Myers (Wednesday) and Danielle Brooks (Orange Is the New Black, Peacemaker) also feature in the film, and from where we’re sitting, A Minecraft Movie looks like it could be a fun ode to the highly addictive game. But then again, we at IGN like to craft and build things… not knock them down.
Read IGN's review of A Minecraft Movie.
Mickey 17
Date: April 18
Oscar-winning South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho (Parasite) goes sci-fi on April 18 with Mickey 17, and he’s taking Robert Pattinson with him. Steven Yeun, Naomi Ackie, Toni Collette and Mark Ruffalo also star in the tale of an "Expendable," a.k.a. a space traveler sent on hazardous space missions. If the Expendable dies on such a mission, a new version of their body is “printed”... and that’s how you end up with Mickey 17. But what happens when Mickey 18 shows up while Mickey 17 is still alive? That’s the question the film asks, as does the trailer in a pretty lively and comedic manner.
Read IGN's review of Mickey 17.
Thunderbolts*
Date: May 2
The final film of Marvel Studios’ Phase 5, and the second MCU movie of the year after a pretty light 2024 (which only gave us Deadpool & Wolverine on the big screen), Thunderbolts brings together a long-running plot thread in the bigger universe that saw Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ Valentina Allegra de Fontaine assembling (ahem) a team of super-powered individuals, albeit figures who haven’t always been on the side of good. The group consists of Florence Pugh’s Yelena Belova, Sebastian Stan’s Bucky Barnes, David Harbour’s Red Guardian, Wyatt Russell’s U.S. Agent, Hannah John-Kamen’s Ghost, Olga Kurylenko’s Taskmaster, and newcomer Lewis Pullman’s Bob, a.k.a. The Sentry. The specifics of their mission remain a little unclear right now, though perhaps the bigger question is whether or not Thunderbolts can stick the landing for Marvel’s Phase 5.
Read IGN's review of Thunderbolts*.
So there you have it: The biggest movies still to come in 2025. Did we miss anything? What can you not wait to see? Let’s discuss in the comments!
Update: This preview has been updated prior to the Memorial Day weekend, with all the movies previously released shuffled down to the bottom of the page. New films have been added, some have been axed based on news, and some have switched release dates.