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. 20, 2026
Wide (United States)
Dhurandhar: The Revenge
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
The Pout-Pout Fish
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Project Hail Mary
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Limited (United States)
Tow
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: …appears to be a labor of love, but Jonathan Keasey & Brant Boivin’s ripped-from-the-headlines screenplay bogs down its pacing with too many details which don’t matter much in the overall scheme of things.
Mike McGranaghan @ The Aisle Seat
- Excerpt: Rose Byrne is fabulous.
2026 Films in Theaters Now in Select Areas
The Bride!
For member reviews of this film, follow this link
Crime 101
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GOAT
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Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die
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Hoppers
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Shelter
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Undertone
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All That’s Left of You
Bev Questad @ itsjustmovies.com
- Excerpt: Apparently too honest and too courageous a film for final Oscar consideration, distribution is also challenging. Still, Dabis’s film, along with “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” ranks among the best of the decade if not the best ever made.
André Is an Idiot
Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: Benna’s documentary begins with zaniness, incorporating everything from game shows to toilet POV shots, gradually leaning into harsh reality…André lived life well, serving up his death as a helpful and humorous warning to the rest of the human race.
Collapse
Panagiotis Kotzathanasis @ Asian Movie Pulse
- Excerpt: Although “Collapse” offers little in the way of resolution, it succeeds as a chronicle of both current and past devastation and the consequences of war across all levels of society. In that regard, Anat Even’s work ultimately stands as a vital contribution to the cinematic documentation of an ongoing conflict.
The Gallerist
Dennis Schwartz @ dennisschwartzreviews
- Excerpt: A misfire indie arthouse comedy.
Hellfire
Dennis Schwartz @ dennisschwartzreviews
- Excerpt: Whose story is over drugs and not cattle like it was back in its pioneering days.
The Incomer
Dennis Schwartz @ dennisschwartzreviews
- Excerpt: An off-beat character study which at times is cringe-worthy.
Made in Korea
Kathy Gibson @ Access Bollywood
No Other Choice
Bev Questad @ itsjustmovies.com
- Excerpt: It hits close to home, as Americans worry about inflation, job security, and the oncoming effect of Artificial Intelligence on job growth.
Numakage Swimming Pool
Panagiotis Kotzathanasis @ Asian Movie Pulse
- Excerpt: “Numakage Swimming Pool” is an excellent documentary, one that highlights a specific phenomenon while putting it into a wider context, while also focusing on individuals, whose stories, though, echo far beyond the neighborhood the doc takes place in.
The Optimist
Jared Mobarak @ Hey, have you seen …?
- Excerpt: Taylor’s script succeeds in bridging the gap by stripping his present-day leads of age and impact to simply exist as victims with the capacity to see their pain in the other’s face and recognize they aren’t alone.
O’Romeo
Preschool
Jared Mobarak @ Hey, have you seen …?
- Excerpt: Preschool truly lives and dies by how you embrace Duhamel and Socha in these very flawed yet relatable roles. This is the sort of comedy that demands its performances elevate the plot’s rote machinations and I believe they do exactly that.
Reminders of Him
- Excerpt: It may sound like damning with faint praise, but Reminders of Him is a competently made film that knows how to serve its core audience without insulting anyone who may not automatically be all-in for such a story. The filmmakers don’t try to force any of the key moments down the audience’s throat, and that stands out in a genre that’s not always known for its subtlety.
Mark Hobin @ Fast Film Reviews
- Excerpt: It stretches a simple story into a drawn-out test of patience. Lots of glossy emotion, but no spark.
Mike McGranaghan @ The Aisle Seat
- Excerpt: This one certainly gives off “glorified soap opera” vibes from the trailer, but it’s actually an affecting romantic drama that I admit got me a little choked up at the end.
Replica
Panagiotis Kotzathanasis @ Asian Movie Pulse
- Excerpt: At the same time, a rather timely question emerges. Having an AI boyfriend is sad when compared to having a happy, actual relationship, but is it actually worse than being in a toxic relationship, or being miserable and alone, constantly longing for a relationship but never managing to achieve it? The question and the thinking about it actually emerges as one of the biggest traits of the documentary.
Seeds
Bev Questad @ itsjustmovies.com
- Excerpt: On the top 15 Oscar nomination list for Best Documentary, the answer, and the now obvious double entendre of the title, prove good enough for the price of the ticket to this subtle but informative work of art.
Slanted
Jared Mobarak @ Hey, have you seen …?
- Excerpt: Think of Slanted as the reverse Get Out. It also very effectively points to the shame inherent to being a non-white citizen of a country hellbent on infantilizing, exploiting, destroying, and/or becoming you.
2025 Films
Bugonia
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It Was Just an Accident
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Jurassic World Rebirth
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Cutting Through Rocks
Bev Questad @ itsjustmovies.com
- Excerpt: Just what kind of patience, strength, supportive gear, and skill would it take to cut through rocks? That’s the metaphor Mohammadreza Eyni and Sara Khaki (directors, producers, and editors) use to explain how difficult it is to change what the West calls misogyny in a country where women may be ostensibly revered but most severely restricted.
Unidentified
Panagiotis Kotzathanasis @ Asian Movie Pulse
- Excerpt: As such, “Unidentified” emerges as a work with a number of appealing qualities, particularly regarding its protagonist and overall production values, which is nevertheless hampered by a series of narrative issues.