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: Jun. 12, 2026
Wide (United States)
Disclosure Day
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
The Furious
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Stop! That! Train!
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Limited (United States)
The Devil Queen
- Excerpt: Loosely inspired by the life of João Francisco dos Santos, a 1930s gangster who was also a drag performer under the name Madame Satã (Madam Satan), The Devil Queen moves the action to the 1970s and paints a vivid, pulpy portrait of people fighting for power on the margins of Brazilian society.
2026 Films in Theaters Now in Select Areas
Backrooms
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
The Bride!
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Is God Is
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
Masters of the Universe
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Power Ballad
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Tuner
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Ask E. Jean
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: Ivy Meeropol may begin with how most know Carroll from today…but there is a whole lot more to E. Jean Carroll, who would still be an intriguing documentary subject even if she’d never met the man.
Blue Film
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: This isn’t what anyone would call a pleasant watch, but it is a brutally honest look at what fuels perversions and how people rationalize them driven by two performers unafraid to go there.
Bob and David Climb Machu Picchu
Sebastian Zavala @ Cinencuentro.com [Spanish]
- Excerpt: It’s not the most profound documentary you’ll ever see. When it ended, I had the feeling I’d watched something very light, often funny, and (very occasionally) reflective, but nothing more.
Chum
Sebastian Zavala @ MeGustaElCine.com [Spanish]
- Excerpt: It doesn’t work as either a B-movie or a gory thriller. There are tons of shark movies out there, so there’s no point in wasting your time watching “Chum.”
The Currents
- Excerpt: An eerie psychological drama focused on the unraveling of a woman at what should be the prime of her life, The Currents dwells on the lasting legacy of generational trauma and the fear of repeating others’ mistakes, as though fated by blood.
- Excerpt: The Swiss-Argentine drama dives into a mental health crisis, expressed with engrossing attention to detail.
The Death of Robin Hood
- Excerpt: It’s a slow drip towards the end, reality running out like blood from a vein, leaving only a body of stories behind. But without a compelling narrative or affecting emotions at its core, the subversion is often as shallow as the legend.
Deepfake
Matt Oakes @ Silver Screen Riot
- Excerpt: Matt Eames’ Deepfake tackles timely ideas about influencer culture, app-mediated relationships, and manufactured identity, but never discovers enough reason to make this feel clickable. More cringeworthy than funny and more observant than insightful, this social media satire struggles to find an authentic voice of its own.
Forastera
Sebastian Zavala @ Cinencuentro.com [Spanish]
- Excerpt: It works as a drama of subtle characterisations, fascinating questions, and an excellent central performance, which also makes the most of its prime location.
Iron Lung
Gregory J. Smalley @ 366 Weird Movies
- Excerpt: The lack of explanations would not be a problem if we cared about the protagonist in more than a theoretical sense, but it’s hard to become engaged with the convict’s plight. We root for humanity to survive more out of a sense of general obligation to the species than because the movie has caused us to care about this particular band of plucky survivors.
Office Romance
- Excerpt: Office Romance has the requisite pretty people, pretty settings, pretty needle-drops, and low-key mix-ups and misunderstandings, and I like the actors. But, boy, this movie fought me every step of the way, and I finally gave up and acknowledged that it is not just disappointing but unmistakably awful. It will be on my worst-of-the-year list for sure.
Sebastian Zavala @ Loud and Clear Reviews [Spanish]
- Excerpt: A surprisingly fun romantic comedy that takes good advantage of its relevant premise and manages to be a bit raunchier than expected.
Recluse
Sebastian Zavala @ Cinencuentro.com [Spanish]
- Excerpt: Bryce Holden’s cinematography plays with the contrasts between light and shadow; some flashbacks are shot as if filmed on 16mm, which contributes to the atmosphere of dread, and there are a couple of genuine scares.
Scary Movie
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: ou’d think that after fourteen years, the Wayans brothers reclaiming their series from Harvey Weinstein and the rise of a vibrant horror landscape…this self-proclaimed rebootiquel would have tons of material to mine from
Seven Snipers
Allen Almachar @ The MacGuffin
- Excerpt: This is nothing more than a mild curiosity – a forgettable action thriller with a cast trying their best to keep things interesting.
Sebastian Zavala @ Loud and Clear Reviews [Spanish]
- Excerpt: What should have been a tense experience, then, turns into yet another case of wasted potential.
Summer War
Matt Oakes @ Silver Screen Riot
- Excerpt: Alicia Scherson’s Summer War is an uneven but mostly interesting descent into obsession, paranoia, and abstraction. Bolstered by a uniquely disorienting atmosphere and a refusal to follow predictable narrative paths, this Bolaño adaptation rarely comes together cleanly but remains consistently intriguing nonetheless.
2025 Films
Sentimental Value
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The Unbreakable Boy
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2024 Films
Mistura
Sebastian Zavala @ Ventana Indiscreta [Spanish]
- Excerpt: It tells a story of cultural and gastronomic diversity, which ends up feeling more like a naive fairy tale than a true representation of Lima society.