Here are some reviews of films coming out at the theater this week as well as others that may be in theaters or newly on home video.
Opening: Mar. 6, 2026
Wide (United States)
The Bride!
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
Hoppers
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
Limited (United States)
Heel
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: achieves squirmy black humor with a film that appears to condone the unthinkable even as it condemns it, a modern take on “A Clockwork Orange.”
2026 Films in Theaters Now in Select Areas
Dreams
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
Accused
Kathy Gibson @ Access Bollywood
Blades of the Guardians
Sebastian Zavala @ Loud and Clear Reviews [Spanish]
- Excerpt: A fierce, violent and entertaining wuxia epic, full of impressive fight choreography, some solid character work and efficient drama.
The Bluff
Allen Almachar @ The MacGuffin
- Excerpt: This is one of those “Turn Your Brain Off For Two Hours” movies and shouldn’t be seen as anything more than that.
Dolly
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: Cinematographer Justin Derry achieves a 70’s look shooting on 16mm and the film’s trailer goes heavy on the “Texas Chainsaw” influence, but Blackhurst offers gore instead of scares in a film that is merely unpleasant. Even the dolls aren’t creepy.
Ghost in the Cell
- Excerpt: Set in a high-security prison haunted by a mysterious entity, the film blends gore, political commentary, action and dark humor in a bold genre spectacle.
Josephine
Dennis Schwartz @ dennisschwartzreviews
- Excerpt: A remarkable family drama.
Night King
- Excerpt: A glossy and energetic Lunar New Year hit, “Night King” blends neon-soaked nostalgia, sharp comedy, and emotional rivalry into a glamorous tale of survival in Hong Kong’s fading nightclub scene.
Scream 7
Allen Almachar @ The MacGuffin
- Excerpt: A low point for the franchise. Despite the efforts of Williamson and a committed performance from Neve Campbell, there just isn’t enough here to make this a worthy installment.
The Spin
A Useful Ghost
Gregory J. Smalley @ 366 Weird Movies
- Excerpt: … the dynamic shifts from romantic comedy to political screed, and the film raises an unusual question: is it possible for a ghost to be a quisling?
2025 Films
Arco
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
Cover-Up
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Hamnet
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Little Amélie or the Character of Rain
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
One Battle After Another
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Train Dreams
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The Bruce LaBruce’s The Visitor
- Excerpt: At the centre of it all is Bishop Black in the title role, symbolically washing up on the shore of the Thames in a suitcase (nothing says refugee better), naked as the day he was born, which becomes his “costume” of choice for most of the production.
Come See Me in the Good Light
Jared Mobarak @ Hey, have you seen …?
- Excerpt: Megan and the others are crucial as mirrors and support, but Andrea is at the center dictating pace and tone. Their emotions are the focal point and they hit much harder as a result.
Dhurandhar
Kathy Gibson @ Access Bollywood
Late Shift
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: Using long takes, Volpe paces her film like a tense thriller, the extraordinary Leonie Benesch never stops multi-tasking at breakneck speed yet always has time for a kind word, gentle touch or sympathetic smile.
Officer on Duty
- Excerpt: “Officer on Duty” can be difficult to digest at times, particularly in the current climate, yet as a spectacle it thrives, delivering relentless intensity from beginning to end, especially for viewers drawn to uncompromising violence.