Followers of the movie release calendar just can’t get a moment’s peace: As shortly as COVID-19-era disruptions were smoothed out and production pipelines mostly restored in 2023, a lengthy two-guild strike threw everything out of whack again. Delays, shifts, and cancellations galore added to the usual mix of theatrical releases and (fewer, but inactive notable) direct-to-streaming productions.
Then again, it wouldn’t be a look at the movie year that lies ahead without a bunch of unpredictable shifts, no substance the cause. Even if the first 4th of 2024 looks more barren than usual and a fewer superheroes may have flown consecutive out of the summertime skies, the year inactive has plenty of titles worth anticipating — as this list of 50 peculiarly exciting-sounding movies proves. This year has ghosts, apes, pandas, sentient emotions, killer ballerinas, gladiators, vampires, sandworms, bioexorcists, and no less than 3 Spider-Man movies that do not feature Spider-Man. As always, these dates are subject to change, but here’s how 2024 is shaping up right now.
The Book of Clarence
Release date: In theaters Jan. 12
Director: Jeymes Samuel
Cast: LaKeith Stanfield, Omar Sy, Teyana Taylor
Jeymes Samuel, who previously directed Netflix’s visually arresting all-star Western The Harder They Fall, turns his sights on a Biblical adventure with a comic twist. There’s definitely something alternatively Life of Brian about the thought of Clarence (LaKeith Stanfield), the duplicate brother of the apostle Thomas, positioning himself as a fresh messiah to better his station in life.
Mean Girls
Release date: In theaters Jan. 12
Directors: Samantha Jayne, Arturo Perez Jr.
Cast: Angourie Rice, Reneé Rapp, Tina Fey
The different movie-to-stage-musical-to-movie-musical pipeline has 1 all-time-great success (Little store of Horrors) and a bunch more failed curiosities, like the 2005 version of The Producers. What Mean Girls has going for it is the constant presence of screenwriter/co-star Tina Fey, who wrote both movies as well as the Broadway musical that bridges them. There’s something appealing about the thought of a comedy author allowed to revise and update specified trendy-yet-timeless material over the course of 20 years.
Role Play
Release date: On Prime Video Jan. 12
Director: Thomas Vincent
Cast: Kaley Cuoco, David Oyelowo, Bill Nighy
Emma (Kaley Cuoco) is simply a average fresh Jersey suburbanite, married to the mild-mannered Dave (David Oyelowo), who has no thought that she’s besides a contract killer. After learning the truth, he winds up on a wild, violent adventure with his ass-kicking spouse. In another words, they’re going to tell each another any True Lies?
Argylle
Release date: In theaters Feb. 2
Director: Matthew Vaughn
Cast: Bryce Dallas Howard, Sam Rockwell, Henry Cavill
Matthew Vaughn has directed movies for 20 years now, and Argylle is actually the first 1 since his debut that doesn’t have any kind of connection to the planet of comics and graphic novels. That said, it certain looks closer to Kingsman than Layer Cake, with a shy author (Bryce Dallas Howard) of outlandish espionage novels teaming up with an actual spy (Sam Rockwell) erstwhile her books start hewing eerily close to reality — or so any shadowy figures claim. The exact game line remains a mystery, but the stacked ensemble is clear as day, conspicuously CG cat and all.
Lisa Frankenstein
Release date: In theaters Feb. 9
Director: Zelda Williams
Cast: Kathryn Newton, Cole Sprouse, Carla Gugino
What a difference 15 years makes; back in 2009, Jennifer’s Body was a notorious flop for screenwriter Diablo Cody, not long after winning an Oscar for Juno. Now, it’s her reclaimed feminist-horror comedy that gets namechecked in the trailer for her latest project, the 1989-set Lisa Frankenstein. Yes, it does affect reanimation: Lisa (Kathryn Newton) brings a handsome Victorian corpse back to life, and murderous gothic romance appears to ensue, under the direction of Zelda Williams (daughter of Robin). If this is Cody’s Frankenstein and Jennifer’s Body is her de facto Dracula, possibly she can work her way through all of the classical Universal Monsters.
Madame Web
Release date: In theaters Feb. 14
Director: S.J. Clarkson
Cast: Dakota Johnson, Sydney Sweeney, Adam Scott
Undeterred by the comparatively unsuccessful Morbius, the hold of Kraven the Hunter to 2024 (more on that soon), and widespread net derision for any of these movies that aren’t a Venom sequel, Sony continues their SSWSFNU (Sony Spider-Man Without Spider-Man For Now Universe) series with Madame Web. The best chance these movies have is to go nuttier than the MCU will allow, and that surely seems to be the case here, as Dakota Johnson gains the short-term prediction superpowers of Nicolas Cage in Next and Sydney Sweeney becomes Spider-Woman at any point.
Drive-Away Dolls
Release date: In theaters Feb. 23
Director: Ethan Coen
Cast: Margaret Qualley, Geraldine Viswanathan, Beanie Feldstein
Left to his own devices apart from his brother, Joel Coen made an expressive black-and-white version of Macbeth. Ethan, meanwhile, opted to squad up with his wife Tricia Cooke for a raucous-looking crime comedy. Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan play a pair of young lesbians whose road journey to Florida is scrambled by a group of criminals.
Dune: Part Two
Release date: In theaters March 1
Director: Denis Villeneuve
Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Florence Pugh
Denis Villeneuve’s sci-fi adaptation looked like an costly hazard back in 2021, erstwhile it premiered simultaneously on theaters and HBO Max — and then it made a bunch of money and garnered a ton of Oscar nominations. Don’t necessarily anticipate awards bait from the second half of the story; per Villeneuve himself, it’s little reflective and more action-packed than its predecessor. Chalamet returns as the exiled Paul Atreides, who teams up with revolutionaries (including Zendaya’s Chani, only glimpsed in the first film) to prevent catastrophe from befalling the spice-rich planet of Arrakis.
Kung Fu Panda 4
Release date: In theaters March 8
Directors: Jonathan Aibel, Glenn Berger
Cast: Jack Black, Awkwafina, Viola Davis
It’s a good thing DreamWorks doesn’t request exclusivity deals from its voiceover talent: Kung Fu Panda 4 teams Jack Black, returning to DreamWorks after jumping over to Illumination to sing “Peaches” as Bowser in The Super Mario Bros. Movie, with Awkwafina, a Bad Guys alum who has besides done voices for Illumination and Disney. Here, Awkwafina voices Zhen, a fox who helps Po (Black) fend off a new, shapeshifting foe called The Chameleon (Viola Davis).
Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire
Release date: In theaters March 29
Director: Gil Kenan
Cast: Mckenna Grace, Finn Wolfhard, Paul Rudd
Sony yet got its Ghostbusters franchise with the slavishly reverent (and not especially funny!) Ghostbusters: Afterlife. This follow-up moves characters from that movie to fresh York City, presumably for opportunities to interact with surviving cast members from the 1984 original; Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, and Ernie Hudson all appear in the trailer, where any kind of fear-based supernatural entity freezes the city in the mediate of summer.
Mickey 17
Release date: In theaters March 29
Director: Bong Joon-ho
Cast: Robert Pattinson, Mark Ruffalo, Toni Collette
Following his multiple Oscar wins for Parasite, filmmaker Bong Joon-ho took 1 of the longest breaks of his career; now he’s back with a primarily English-language sci-fi image (his first since Snowpiercer), another spring release without any footage release so far. It’s about an “expendable,” but not the kind who utilized to star in 1980s action movies; this 1 is simply a lowly worker named Mickey Barnes (Robert Pattinson) who has the ability to regenerate after death.
Godzilla x Kong: The fresh Empire
Release date: In theaters April 12
Director: Adam Wingard
Cast: Dan Stevens, Rebecca Hall, Brian Tyree Henry
Godzilla is so hot right now! He’s been on the large screen in the critically acclaimed hit Godzilla Minus One, made any uncommon tv appearances via Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, and appears to venture into the Hollow Earth for this sequel to 2021’s zestily goofy Godzilla vs. Kong. No longer instinctive enemies but gigantic frenemies, Kong and Godzilla face a fresh foe in the form of a recently discovered Titan — seemingly another immense ape who’s coming for Kong’s crown.
Rebel Moon – Part Two: The Scargiver
Release date: On Netflix April 19
Director: Zack Snyder
Cast: Sofia Boutella, Charlie Hunnam, Ed Skrein
Zack Snyder’s Rebel Moon may not be the most blatantly split-in-half two-part movie always made, but the first part wasn’t precisely a complete and satisfying story, either. Then again, what’s most fun about the movie is its frequent and weird bursts of visual imagination, which suggests that The Scargiver doesn’t even necessarily request to stick the landing to supply plenty of ridiculous fun in the vein of Jupiter Ascending or The Chronicles of Riddick.
Challengers
Release date: In theaters April 26
Director: Luca Guadagnino
Cast: Zendaya, Mike Faist, Josh O’Connor
The sex-scene discourse will get another workout with Challengers, an athletic spin on the love triangle starring Zendaya, Mike Faist (West Side Story), and Josh O’Connor as tennis pros facing off in the bedroom and on the court. The presence of earthy, sometimes button-pushing manager Luca Guadagnino (Call Me By Your Name) virtually guarantees that this won’t be just a Netflix-ready rom-com.
The Fall Guy
Release date: In theaters May 3
Director: David Leitch
Cast: Ryan Gosling, Emily Blunt, Aaron Taylor-Johnson
For the first time since 2006, the May-through-August summertime movie period kicks off with a non-Marvel character. (The MCU in peculiar has kept a stranglehold on this date since 2015.) What’s more, The Fall Guy isn’t even a superhero communicative — it’s that very ‘90s form of event movie, the big-budget, big-star adaptation of an old tv show. In for Lee Majors is Ryan Gosling, playing a stuntman turned amateur detective trying to find the star of his latest task — which happens to be directed by his ex (Emily Blunt). Gosling looks like he’s back in The good Guys mode, and if the trailer’s quips aren’t all up to Shane Black’s level, it’s awfully good to think of a (relatively) old-fashioned star vehicle at the head of the large summer-kickoff hype train for a change.
If
Release date: In theaters May 17
Director: John Krasinski
Cast: Ryan Reynolds, Cailey Fleming, Steve Carell
John Krasinski’s directorial follow-up to his A Quiet Place movies approaches a kid in a fantastical situation from a somewhat little terrifying angle: In If, a young girl (Cailey Fleming, who played a young Rey in The Force Awakens) discovers she can see the discarded imaginary friends of another children. Ryan Reynolds plays any kind of imaginary-friend emissary — though the film’s Paramount release precludes a Bing Bong cameo.
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga
Release date: In theaters May 24
Director: George Miller
Cast: Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Hemsworth, Nathan Jones
George Miller took 30 years to bring back post-apocalyptic road warrior Mad Max via 2015’s Fury Road. The spinoff Furiosa, by contrast, arrives just 8 years after that Oscar-winning blockbuster, though it takes more than a fewer pages from the Fury Road playbook. Most noticeably, it recasts its central character, with Anya Taylor-Joy playing a younger version of Charlize Theron’s one-armed commander/driver/warrior from the earlier film. It besides revives fearsome creep Immortan Joe and the super-saturated desert landscapes that became so instantly iconic in the earlier film. The approach may spur any unfair comparisons between Furiosa and its predecessor, but given Miller’s age, we should truly just be grateful that he’s started making movies at specified a clip (check out Three 1000 Years of Longing!), and that any of them feature Anya Taylor-Joy kicking ass across the post-apocalyptic desert.
The Garfield Movie
Release date: In theaters May 24
Director: Mark Dindal
Cast: Chris Pratt, Samuel L. Jackson, Nicholas Hoult
While the latest Garfield big-screen adventure isn’t adapting the net phenomenon Garfield Minus Garfield, it steps in its direction by asking the question: What is Garfield without a low, sleepy deadpan delivery? erstwhile Garfield voices Lorenzo Music and Bill Murray have specified a akin transportation that Music played Murray’s part on the Ghostbusters cartoon. Chris Pratt, on the another hand, has a full different vibe — but at least Garfield is back into fully-animated territory after those off-putting hybrid productions from the 2000s. Plus, possibly the film’s obligatory retelling of Garfield’s origin will clarify why an unemployed cat possesses a cubicle drone’s hatred of Mondays.
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes
Release date: In theaters May 24
Director: Wes Ball
Cast: Freya Allen, Owen Teague, Kevin Durand
After an acclaimed trilogy and a six-year break, the apes are back in town with the 4th installment of the rebooted series. Yes, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes appears to be in-continuity with the Rise/Dawn/War trilogy, but set many decades further out. Noa (Owen Teague), a chimp, teams up with Mae (Freya Allen), a feral human, to change the course of history, both ape and human. fresh manager Wes Ball, of Fox’s Maze Runner trilogy and the future Legend of Zelda movie, has experience following young people on a dystopian mission.
Ballerina
Release date: In theaters June 7
Director: Len Wiseman
Cast: Ana de Armas, Keanu Reeves, Lance Reddick
Produced in anticipation of severe Wickdrawal hitting a nation following the peaks of John Wick: Chapter 4, Ballerina is simply a midquel-slash-spinoff set in between the 3rd and 4th films, exploring the deadly ballet school run by Anjelica Huston. Huston appears here, as does Reeves in a supporting role, owing to the movie’s timeline tricks, and the late, large Lance Reddick in his final big-screen appearance! But the main attraction will be Ana de Armas as a vengeful ballerina-assassin, hopefully expanding on the charm and action chops she displayed in the Cuba series of No Time to Die. manager Len Wiseman may not be an action legend, but he has experience with women stylishly shooting up the place, having directed the first 2 Underworld movies.
Inside Out 2
Release date: In theaters June 14
Director: Kelsey Mann
Cast: Amy Poehler, Tony Hale, Maya Hawke
Pixar has weaned itself off the sequel addiction it nursed for much of the 2010s, but no $300 million grosser would be allowed to go unsequelized. So welcome back Riley, the girl from Inside Out, who has moved into full-on adolescence and generated any brand-new emotions, led by Anxiety (Maya Hawke), a teengaer’s constant companion. Pixar and Disney gotta know that revisiting Riley’s brain is simply a reasonably irresistible proposition, given that they already covered this delightfully awkward territory with Turning Red, 1 of their best movies in years.
A Quiet Place: Day One
Release date: In theaters June 28
Director: Michael Sarnoski
Cast: Lupita Nyong’o, Djimon Hounsou, Alex Wolff
Is Lupita Nyong’o our classiest scream queen? She gave an award-worthy dual performance in Jordan Peele’s creepily beguiling Us, and now joins the Quiet Place franchise for another look at the day the super-hearing aliens arrived on Earth – last seen during an extended series in Part 2. Day One besides marks the big-budget debut of Michael Sarnoski, who made Pig, 1 of Nicolas Cage’s best films of the 21st century.
Despicable Me 4
Release date: In theaters July 3
Directors: Chris Renaud, Patrick Delage
Cast: Steve Carell, Kristen Wiig, Miranda Cosgrove
OK, possibly it feels a small silly to wring hands over the appropriateness of Pixar deciding to do Inside Out 2 erstwhile compared to Illumination’s willingness to crank out Despicable Me movies into infinity and beyond. This appropriate 4th movie follows on the heels of a second Minions spinoff (which was besides fundamentally a Despicable Me prequel), and details are scarce. The film’s rumored to affect reformed supervillain Gru (Steve Carell) making gestures toward villainous deeds only to yet wind up on the nebulously defined side of good with his wife Lucy (Kristen Wiig) and his 3 adorable daughters, with occasional interruptions from Minions saying “banana!”
Twisters
Release date: In theaters July 19
Director: Lee Isaac Chung
Cast: Daisy-Edgar Jones, Glen Powell, David Corenswet
In a triumphant return to the Aliens rule of sequel-naming, Twister becomes Twisters for this blockbuster revival — although another titling strategy comes to mind, given that this follow-up is arriving 28 years later. Normal People’s Daisy Edgar-Jones and Top Gun: Maverick’s Glen Powell lead the cast, with an unusually pedigreed manager in the form of Minari’s Lee Isaac Chung. No word on whether Chung wrote a dollar-sign after Twister on the whiteboard.
Untitled Deadpool Movie
Release date: In theaters July 26
Director: Shawn Levy
Cast: Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman, Jennifer Garner
Thanks mostly to strike delays but most likely besides to the shakiness of their 2023, the Marvel Cinematic Universe presently has just 1 theatrical release on the calendar for 2024: a 3rd movie in the Deadpool series that originated within Fox’s old X-Men movies before the studio was bought by Disney. You know who might point out the unexpected incongruity of this event? Why, Deadpool himself! Provided he can teardrop himself distant from making jokes at the expense of another Ryan Reynolds movies. Rumor has it that the long-delayed 3rd installment will fold its Fox X-Men roots into the MCU’s multiverse; at the very least, Hugh Jackman is back in action as Wolverine, presumably for a bit of dessert after the more dramatic farewell of Logan.
Trap
Release date: In theaters Aug. 2
Director: M. Night Shyamalan
Cast: Josh Hartnett, Hayley Mills, Saleka Shyamalan
M. Night Shyamalan has been working non-stop for the past quarter-century, but there’s something especially succinct and expedient about his run of modestly budgeted one-word titles: Split, Glass, Old, and now Trap (righting the ship after the more complicated, if conceptually streamlined, Knock at the Cabin). small is known about Shyamalan’s latest, beyond that it may be set at a concert.
Borderlands
Release date: In theaters Aug. 9
Director: Eli Roth
Cast: Jack Black, Cate Blanchett, Kevin Hart
Eli Roth had a bit of a comeback late with the success of his long-promised Thanksgiving, and it turns out that the movie he was coming back from hadn’t even been released yet, due to the fact that Roth shot this adaptation of the sci-fi video game back in 2021. Since then the task has undergone reshoots (from Deadpool’s Tim Miller alternatively than Roth) and shuffling credits (with a screenwriter and composer both swapped out). Whatever’s going on with this one, it should be something worth watching, given the eclecticism of a cast that includes Cate Blanchett, Jack Black, Kevin Hart, Jamie Lee Curtis, Haley Bennett, Édgar Ramírez, and Gina Gershon, and Roth’s continued enthusiasm for the project.
Untitled Alien Movie
Release date: In theaters Aug. 16
Director: Fede Álvarez
Cast: Cailee Spaeny, Isabela Merced, David Jonsson
To be honest, Fede Álvarez (Evil Dead, Don’t Breathe) feels like more of a Predator director than an Alien director. (This is not an insult, due to the fact that all Predator movies are good.) It’s exciting, though, that Álvarez has been selected to follow in the footsteps of Ridley Scott, James Cameron, David Fincher, and Jean-Pierre Jeunet to become the first fresh manager to take on a appropriate solo-Alien movie in almost 30 years. He’s supposedly making a stand-alone feature, alternatively than a prospective trilogy or franchise-starter, set sometime between Alien and Aliens. Priscilla’s Cailee Spaeny stars, and the release date is hilariously close to the 20th anniversary of Alien vs. Predator.
Kraven the Hunter
Release date: In theaters Aug. 30
Director: J.C. Chandor
Cast: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Russell Crowe, Ariana DeBose
The second SSWSFNU movie of 2024 has Aaron Taylor-Johnson as a presumably more sympathetic version of the Spider-Man nemesis Kraven and Ariana DeBose as his love interest, Calypso (another Spider-Man villain). Will manager J.C. Chandor bring any of his Most Violent Year and Triple Frontier grit to this shambolic universe, or will he be forced to focus his energy on engineering incoherent mid-credits teasers?
Beetlejuice 2
Release date: In theaters Sept. 7
Director: Tim Burton
Cast: Jenna Ortega, Catherine O’Hara, Michael Keaton
On 1 hand, it’s a small disheartening to see Tim Burton turning his eye for adaptation onto 1 of the fewer full first screenplays he’s always directed by making a legacy sequel to the horror comedy Beetlejuice. On the another hand, the 1 another sequel Burton has always directed is Batman Returns — one of the best follow-ups of all time — and his expected emphasis on a back-to-basics approach rife with puppetry and in-camera effects does sound promising. The presence of scream queen Jenna Ortega, playing the daughter of Winona Ryder’s Lydia Deetz, is almost as reassuring as the participation of Michael Keaton, reviving his vulgar bio-exorcist.
Transformers One
Release date: In theaters Sept. 13
Director: Josh Cooley
Cast: Scarlett Johansson, Chris Hemsworth, Jon Hamm
In the wake of beloved Spider-Man and Ninja Turtles movies that cost a comparative pittance compared to their live-action counterparts, the hottest fresh franchise accessory is an animated spinoff that experiments stylistically while winking at Saturday morning cartoon nostalgia. What better candidate than the Transformers franchise? The maker calls the communicative “biblical.”
Saw XI
Release date: In theaters Sept. 27
Director: TBD
Cast: TBD
In 2023, Jigsaw returned, and horror fans responded by making 2023’s Saw X the highest-grossing installment since Saw V; it helped that it was the flat-out best 1 since at least Saw VI (you know, if you keep track of that kind of thing), notching a series-high score on Jigsaw’s old nemesis, the Tomatometer. No filmmakers or cast for part eleven have been announced, but they’re gonna gotta find any more area in the timeline, given how much Tobin Bell’s John Kramer (technically dead since Saw III) brings to the series.
Joker: Folie à Deux
Release date: In theaters Oct. 4
Director: Todd Phillips
Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, woman Gaga, Zazie Beetz
Finally, sex parity in rehashing superhero characters! Harley Quinn joins the Joker and the Batman in the annals of “wait, they’re giving this to yet another actor?!” as woman Gaga reinterprets the beloved character just a fewer years after Margot Robbie brought her to life in a series of live-action movies. Of course, Joker: Folie à Deux takes place in a different universe from Birds of Prey, and if the first Elseworlds-style Joker snagged an Oscar by blatantly knocking off King of Comedy and Taxi Driver, we can only hope that manager Todd Phillips and returning Mistah J actor Joaquin Phoenix have their sights set on New York, fresh York for this allegedly musical follow-up.
Smile 2
Release date: In theaters Oct. 18
Director: Parker Finn
Cast: Naomi Scott
Smile came from seemingly nowhere in 2022 to parlay some killer imagery and suddenly-ubiquitous trailers into 1 of the year’s most profitable box office runs, all from a movie erstwhile earmarked for streaming. manager Parker Finn returns for the obligatory fast-turnaround follow-up, and Naomi Scott (Jasmine in the Aladdin remake) takes over the leading role, presumably playing a character hoping to halt the demon causing a chain of suicides that can only be broken through murder. Cheerful stuff!
Untitled Venom Sequel
Release date: In theaters Nov. 8
Director: Kelly Marcel
Cast: Tom Hardy, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Juno Temple
The final installment of 2024’s SSWSFNU trilogy brings back the reason it all exists in the first place: Venom, that giant-tongued ’90s throwback played with raffish charm and an unplaceable accent by the large Tom Hardy. small is known about the latest Eddie Brock/Venom buddy picture, beyond that Juno Temple and Chiwetel Ejiofor will both appear, and that Kelly Marcel, who worked on the scripts for the first 2 movies, is making her directorial debut. Could Venom find himself on a wacky date with Madame Web, perhaps?!
Gladiator 2
Release date: In theaters Nov. 22
Director: Ridley Scott
Cast: Paul Mescal, Denzel Washington, Pedro Pascal
No, this isn’t a direct-to-DVD obscurity from 2003 someway uncovering its way to movie screens; Ridley Scott actually went and made a sequel to his Oscar-winning 2000 period action picture, not paying much head to the on-screen death of Russell Crowe’s Maximus. It follows a now-grown Lucius (Paul Mescal), the nephew of Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix) who Maximus saved in the first film, and an even heavier hittier steps into Crowe’s movie-star sandals: no another than Denzel Washington will play a slave-turned arms-dealer. It should be fascinating to see how Scott revisits this planet following the little conventional historical dramas of The Last Duel and Napoleon.
Wicked
Release date: In theaters Nov. 27
Director: Jon M. Chu
Cast: Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande, Michelle Yeoh
Have you always seen a phase musical where the home lights went up for intermission and you thought, “I want I could wait a year before watching the rest”? If so, Universal Pictures has the movie for you: the long-gestating movie version of Wicked has been divided into 2 movies. It’s only natural; after all, the Broadway version runs a full 150 minutes, which, as we all know, is an unheard-of runtime for a feature film. Anyway, Jon M. Chu has been making musicals for years, whether officially (In the Heights), dance-centrically (Step Up 2 the Streets), or in the mediate of an action movie (that part on the cliffs in G.I. Joe: Retaliation), so he seems like a good choice to bring this Maleficent-style POV-shifted Wizard of Oz riff to movies. Cynthia Erivo is set to bring the home down as the future Wicked Witch of the West, while Ariana Grande will play a young Glinda.
Untitled Karate kid Movie
Release date: In theaters Dec. 13
Director: Jonathan Entwistle
Cast: Jackie Chan, Ralph Macchio
With all of the hoopla over the Karate kid sequel series Cobra Kai, it felt a small unusual that barely anyone seemed to mention how a 2010 Karate kid remake starring Jaden Smith and Jackie Chan was a immense hit. individual at Sony must have remembered, and possibly it was the Spider-Man: No Way Home multi-iteration all-stars that jogged their memories, due to the fact that the next Karate kid movie unites Ralph Macchio, star of the originals, with Jackie Chan, the Mr. Miyagi figure from the remake. Now do the right thing, Sony, and call The Next Karate Kid’s Hilary Swank!
The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
Release date: In theaters Dec. 13
Director: Kenji Kamiyama
Cast: Miranda Otto, Brian Cox, Shaun Dooley
Given the resurgence of Lord of the Rings as a mega-budgeted Amazon tv series, it might be expected that the franchise’s first animated movie since its Ralph Bakshi days would be someway related to that show, or be set in its own continuity, Spider-Verse style. But The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim actually ties into the Peter Jackson movies from the early 2000s, with Miranda Otto’s Éowyn serving as narrator (though Jackson himself is not involved). Set hundreds of years earlier, the movie offers an origin of sorts for the conflict of Helm’s Deep — or its name, anyway, with king Helm Hammerhand (Brian Cox) proving his mettle against invading forces.
Sonic the Hedgehog 3
Release date: In theaters Dec. 20
Director: Jeff Fowler
Cast: Ben Schwartz, James Marsden, Idris Elba
When the first 2 Sonic movies came out to the delight of under-12s everywhere (and, somewhat stranger, plenty of under-40s, too), they were the only game in town, so to talk – at least in terms of kid-friendly video game characters with a quarter-century’s worth of nostalgia behind them. Now Sonic 3 must contend with a post-Super Mario world, possibly without marquee human star Jim Carrey. Still, the Sonic brand carries quite a few weight with those kids-slash-adults, more than willing to cut a cute movie any slack for not being outright horrible. And the more Sonic characters the movies add, the closer they get to an all-out cartoon velocity worthy of the character’s abilities.
Mufasa: The Lion King
Release date: In theaters Dec. 20
Director: Barry Jenkins
Cast: Aaron Pierre, Seth Rogen, John Kani
A prequel to a quasi-live-action-but-actually-animated remake of The Lion King may seem like a creative dead end to a filmmaker as talented as Barry Jenkins, but at least this task has no origin material to quote word-for-word or shot-for-shot erstwhile expanding upon the backstory of young Mufasa and his scheming brother Scar. As much as any Jenkins fans may be filled with dread, it will be undoubtedly interesting to see how (which is to say, if) the sensibility that produced the aching sensitivity and vivid lighting of Moonlight and If Beale Street Could Talk can shine through the Disney Remake machine.
Nosferatu
Release date: In theaters Dec. 25
Director: Robert Eggers
Cast: Bill Skarsgård, Nicholas Hoult, Lily-Rose Depp
The first Nosferatu was truly an unauthorized Dracula adaptation, so it’s intriguing to consider what made Robert Eggers (The Witch; The Lighthouse; The Northman) want to re-adapt this circumstantial take on the vampire, last taken on by Werner Herzog in 1979. possibly the rarified company of Herzog and F.W. Murnau was motivation enough, or possibly he’s found a point of intersection between his own rigorous aesthetics and the German Expressionism of the original. Bill Skarsgård stars as the ghoulish number Orlok, joined by The Idol’s Lily-Rose Depp and a couple of the vampire’s erstwhile familiars: Nicholas Hoult (who just played a zany version of Renfield) and Willem Dafoe (who played Max Schreck, star of Nosferatu, in Shadow of the Vampire).
Untitled Jordan Peele Movie
Release date: In theaters Dec. 25
Director: Jordan Peele
Cast: TBD
What about 2024 made Universal decide that Christmas would be an extension of spooky season? The studio’s smaller-scale arm Focus is putting out Nosferatu on Christmas Day, while the big-studio description has an appropriately bigger movie in store: Jordan Peele’s latest. It doesn’t have a title, a premise, any stars, or even, really, a designated genre, so possibly Christmas won’t be Halloween Plus after all. But it’s hard to imagine Peele abandoning his genre trappings after the stunning triple play of Get Out, Us, and Nope.
Havoc
Release date: TBD, on Netflix
Director: Gareth Evans
Cast: Tom Hardy, Timothy Olyphant, Forest Whitaker
Isn’t it about time that we got to see Tom Hardy wreak Havoc? This action movie from manager Gareth Evans (of the Raid movies) has been kicking around the Netflix slate for what seems like years. Filming finished up over 2 years ago, and while the long hold may spell trouble, it’s hard to imagine that Evans/Hardy combo not yielding something entertaining.
Hit Man
Release date: TBD, on Netflix
Director: Richard Linklater
Cast: Glen Powell, Adria Arjona, Retta
Glen Powell supposedly delivered star-making turns in Set It Up and Top Gun: Maverick, but there are times in those movies where he feels a little, well, blandly buttoned up — neither innately sweet adequate to play the steadfast hero nor rather electrical adequate to play the alluring cad. Richard Linklater’s comic thriller rom-com Hit Man weaponizes that blandness in more ways than one, with Powell playing a somewhat dorky, buttoned-up college prof. whose moonlighting gig with local law enforcement has him impersonate a hit man on the fly. He proves unexpectedly good at it, which is how he meets Maddy (Adria Arjona) and becomes entangled in a chaotic double life, fueling 1 of Linklater’s most purely entertaining movies in years.
Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F
Release date: Summer 2024, on Netflix
Director: Mark Molloy
Cast: Eddie Murphy, justice Reinhold, Kevin Bacon
Axel Foley gets the Maverick treatment in this legacy sequel, with Eddie Murphy assuming his signature function after more than 3 decades distant (although Maverick was gone for longer, without a pair of sub-par sequels dragging him down). anticipate plenty of cameos and callbacks in a movie we can only hope is simply a funnier revival than the wan Coming 2 America. (One wonders if The Nutty Professor: Sherman Klump will be hitting Paramount Plus in 2025…)
The Old defender 2
Release date: TBD, on Netflix
Director: Victoria Mahoney
Cast: Charlize Theron, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Uma Thurman
The Old Guard was something of a pandemic-era Netflix phenomenon, a superhero-like action movie about a squad of immortal do-gooders made available at home erstwhile multiplexes were closed. 4 years later, the sequel will test whether the audience has stuck around now that big-screen experiences are more available (and superhero stories may be on the wane). The movie won’t deficiency for star power: Charlize Theron and Chiwetel Ejiofor are joined by Uma Thurman and Henry Golding. Victoria Mahoney, who has directed episodes of Lovecraft Country and The Morning Show, among many others, takes over from Gina Prince-Bythewood.
Ultraman: Rising
Release date: TBD, on Netflix
Directors: Shannon Tindle, John Aoshima
Cast: Tamlyn Tomita, Gedde Watanabe, Keone Young
Like many another franchises on the calendar for 2024, the latest installment of the long-running Ultraman series pivots to animation. In the latest iteration of the nipponese superhero, Ken Sato (Christopher Sean in the American dub; Yuki Yamada on the nipponese track), alter ego of Ultraman, winds up caring for a baby kaiju after defeating its parent in battle.
MaXXXine
Release date: TBD
Director: Ti West
Cast: Mia Goth, Michelle Monaghan, Elizabeth Debicki
In 1 of the swiftest and most abruptly anticipated trilogy-cappers in fresh memory, writer-director Ti West finishes out the makeshift saga that began with his terrific 2022 retro-slasher X and continued with the surprise prequel Pearl, shot concurrently with its immediate predecessor. MaXXXine jumps forward from 1979 Texas to 1980s Los Angeles, as Maxine (Mia Goth), the final girl from X, pursues her dream of stardom. Something tells us bodies may proceed to pile up long after her escape from the aged couple who slaughtered her filmmaking buddies.