Tag: New Movie Releases 2026
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Omaha Review: John Magaro Delivers a Career-Best Performance in Cole Webley’s Quietly Devastating Feature Debut

Director Cole Webley’s feature debut, Omaha, follows a widowed father (John Magaro) and his two young children on a cross-country road trip set against the backdrop of the 2008 financial crisis and housing collapse — a premise as quietly devastating as it is urgently relevant. Anchored by career-best work from Magaro and a revelation of…
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Blue Heron (2026) Review: Sophy Romvari’s Debut Is a Quietly Devastating Portrait of Family and Memory

In her feature debut, Blue Heron, director Sophy Romvari draws from her own childhood to craft an intimate, semi-autobiographical portrait of family, memory, and the quiet devastation of losing someone who was never fully yours to keep. Through a lived-in visual language, restrained performances, and a narrative that blurs the line between memory and reality,…
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Hokum Review: Adam Scott Anchors a Haunting Study of Guilt and Reality

Hokum blends Irish folklore with psychological horror, using guilt and grief to blur the line between reality and the supernatural. Led by Adam Scott, Damian McCarthy delivers a haunting and emotionally grounded genre piece.
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Parallel Tales: How “The Drama” and “Our Hero, Balthazar” Use Dark Comedy to Confront America’s Gun Violence Crisis

In the same season, two films independently chose America’s gun violence epidemic as their narrative catalyst — one a dark romantic comedy starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, the other a debut feature about performative activism and male loneliness. “The Drama” and “Our Hero, Balthazar” couldn’t be more different in tone and approach, yet together they…
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5 Film Reviews: From Indie Drama to Horror Chaos and Blockbuster Spectacle

A quick catch-up on five recent films spanning indie drama, documentary storytelling, horror spectacle, and blockbuster franchise filmmaking. From intimate character studies to chaotic genre thrills and nostalgic IP-driven entertainment, this roundup explores the range of tones and styles shaping today’s cinematic landscape.
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Ready or Not 2: Here I Come Review — Radio Silence Expands Its Blood-Soaked Satire with Bigger Stakes and Sharper Family Chaos

Radio Silence returns with Ready or Not 2: Here I Come, expanding its blood-soaked horror satire with new families, bigger stakes, and a deeper focus on power and legacy. While the sequel mirrors much of the original’s structure, it finds new life through chaotic set pieces, sharp humor, and an emotional core centered on Grace’s…
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undertone Review: A24’s Debut Horror Is a Masterclass in Sound, Dread, and Guilt

Podcasts, paranoia, and a demon drawn from ancient folklore — Ian Tuason’s undertone is a masterfully controlled debut that uses sound, silence, and negative space to excavate grief, guilt, and the fear of becoming your mother. A24 knew exactly what they were acquiring. Here’s the full review.
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Same America, Different Wounds: A Review of Slanted and The Gates

All film is political — but some films arrive at exactly the right moment, carrying exactly the right wounds. Slanted and The Gates, both released March 13th, tell the stories of people of color navigating a country that claims them and rejects them in the same breath. One transforms the body. The other traps it.…
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Heel Review: Jan Komasa’s Twisted Psychological Thriller Explores Control, Generational Chaos, and the Cost of Forced Rehabilitation

Formerly titled Good Boy, Heel sees director Jan Komasa crafting a psychologically unsettling examination of control, morality, and generational conflict. When a reckless 19-year-old influencer obsessed with online “clout” wakes up chained in the basement of a seemingly respectable family, what begins as a disturbing kidnapping evolves into something far more complex: a warped attempt…
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The Bride! Review: Maggie Gyllenhaal’s Radical Frankenstein Reimagining Turns Female Rage Into Gothic Spectacle

Maggie Gyllenhaal’s The Bride! is one of the most divisive genre films of the year. Led by a fearless performance from Jessie Buckley and an unexpectedly tender turn from Christian Bale, the film reimagines the Frankenstein myth through feminist rebellion, surreal spectacle, and gothic visual poetry.
