What's Coming Out This Week (September 8 - September 14, 2025)
Here's your one-stop guide to all the films and shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
If you need a quick update on what’s coming out this week on both the big and small screens, you’ve come to the right place. Scroll down to see what’s heading to theaters or landing on streaming platforms in the next couple of days. And maybe even find the perfect pick to add to your watchlist.
🎥 In Theaters This Week
🎥 The Long Walk
(Fri, Sept. 12th — wide release)
Horror master Stephen King always knew how to make something as simple as walking feel like a death sentence—and now his infamous novel finally hits the big screen. In a grim alternate America, 100 boys are forced to keep walking at three miles per hour or face instant execution. Cooper Hoffman, David Jonsson, and Charlie Plummer endure the ultimate test of survival, while Star Wars legend Mark Hamill looms over them as the ruthless Major. With Francis Lawrence directing and a script by Strange Darling’s JT Mollner, this is part Hunger Games, part Running Man—but all King.
🎥 Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale
(Fri, Sept. 12th — wide release)
After 15 years of tea, titles, and tantalizing scandals, the doors of Downton Abbey are closing for good. The Crawley family enters the 1930s, where Lady Mary’s public disgrace threatens the estate’s future and new blood collides with old money. With Michelle Dockery, Hugh Bonneville, Elizabeth McGovern, Jim Carter, and familiar favorites joined by Alessandro Nivola, Joely Richardson, and Paul Giamatti, this final chapter promises heartbreak, elegance, and one last toast to tradition.
🎥 Spinal Tap 2: The End Continues
(Fri, Sept. 12th — wide release)
After more than 40 years, the world’s loudest (and dumbest) band is back on the road! And yes, they still can’t keep a drummer alive. Rob Reiner once again directs as Marty Di Bergi, following Spinal Tap’s latest meltdown of a tour with Michael McKean, Christopher Guest, and Harry Shearer reprising their hilariously clueless roles. Expect deadpan chaos, improvised lunacy, and cameos from famous fans like Paul McCartney and Elton John. With the amps cranked, the wigs dusted off, and egos barely intact, Spinal Tap is ready to melt faces... or at least pull a hamstring.
🎥 Code 3
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
Rainn Wilson is the burned-out medic counting down to his final clock-out, while Lil Rel Howery is the rookie stuck learning the ropes on the city’s craziest night. With Aimee Carrero, Rob Riggle, and Yvette Nicole Brown along for the ride, this aims to deliver a mix of laughs, heart, and siren-blaring action as every call turns into a test of survival. One night, one crew, zero chance of a quiet shift.
🎥 The History of Sound
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
Paul Mescal and Josh O’Connor star as Lionel and David, whose friendship at the Boston Music Conservatory in 1917 blossoms into something deeper on a journey across rural Maine. Tasked with preserving folk songs from a fading generation, they discover their own secret harmony in Oliver Hermanus’ poignant adaptation of Ben Shattuck’s short story.
🎥 Rabbit Trap
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
When a married duo of musicians retreat to the countryside to revive their careers, they instead capture something they were never meant to hear. Dev Patel and Rosy McEwen star in Bryn Chainey’s eerie debut, where a buried sound awakens woodland forces, unravels a fragile marriage, and invites a stranger with sinister intentions into their home. With paranoia mounting and folklore seeping into reality, this atmospherical thriller plays like a symphony of dread... where the final note may be their last.
🎥 Bang Bang
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
Tim Blake Nelson sheds his familiar frail persona for a bruising turn as Bernard “Bang Bang” Rozyski, a washed-up prizefighter drawn back into the ring through his estranged grandson’s raw talent. But as old rivalries, past loves, and buried anger resurface, Bang Bang must decide if he’s passing on strength or simply repeating his own cycle of violence.
🎥 Tin Soldier
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
Jamie Foxx dons an afro and a god-complex as a charismatic messiah raising an army of mercenaries in Brad Furman’s gonzo action thriller. Scott Eastwood stars as Nash Cavanaugh, the ex–special ops insider turned would-be assassin, sent on a government-sanctioned mission by none other than Robert De Niro’s mysterious handler. With John Leguizamo, Shamier Anderson, Rita Ora, and Saïd Taghmaoui in the mix, this fires off B-movie energy with big-name heat. Expect wild shootouts, larger-than-life characters, and enough explosive bravado to rattle the walls.
🎥 The Man In My Basement
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
Corey Hawkins stars as Charles Blakey, drowning in debt when Willem Dafoe’s unnervingly charming stranger offers him $1,000 a day to rent out his basement, no question asked. But as the arrangement grows darker, Charles realizes he’s sold more than space... he may have sold his soul. Adapted from Walter Mosley’s acclaimed novel, Nadia Latif’s feature debut plays like a Faustian nightmare: when the devil pays rent, eviction isn’t an option.
🎥 Looking Through Water
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
Michael Stahl-David stars as a fallen executive forced to reconnect with his father (David Morse) during a high-stakes fishing competition in Belize. Along the way, the waters run deep with regret, reconciliation, and rediscovery. Also starring Cameron Douglas, Walker Scobell, and Michael Douglas, this is a heartfelt story of fractured families, second chances, and the ties that bind across generations.
🎥 Traumatika
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
From indie horror filmmaker Pierre Tsigaridis comes a nerve-shredding tale of terror, where a boy’s night terrors awaken something sinister in his own home. As his mother slips into the grip of demonic possession, child abductions, violent visions, and basement-dwelling horrors consume their world.
🎥 Naked Ambition
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
This doc. explores the life and legacy of Bunny Yeager, the “world’s prettiest photographer” whose lens helped define mid-20th-century pop culture. From popularizing the bikini and discovering Bettie Page to shaping Playboy’s image and inventing the selfie, Yeager challenged the norms of conservative 1950s America and helped spark the feminist and sexual revolutions—only to fade into obscurity as the world she helped change moved on.
🎥 Clemente
(Fri, Sept. 12th — limited release)
This doc. dives deep into the story of Roberto Clemente, the MLB legend whose impact went far beyond the ballpark. Chronicling his childhood in Puerto Rico, struggles and triumphs with the Pittsburgh Pirates, and his lasting humanitarian work cut short by tragedy in 1972, the film paints a portrait of a man who defined excellence on and off the field. Executive produced by LeBron James and Richard Linklater, and featuring Michael Keaton, Rita Moreno, Bob Costas and more, this stands as the definitive tribute to one of baseball’s greatest.
🎥 The Sound of Music: 60th Anniversary
(Fri, Sept. 12th thru Sept. 17th — re-release, via Fathom)
Meticulously restored for its 60th anniversary, this classic musical returns to the big screen with breathtaking picture and sound. Julie Andrews lights up the screen as Maria, the spirited governess whose songs and spirit win the hearts of the von Trapp children—and their father—before leading them on a daring escape as war looms. Featuring timeless favorites like “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” and “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” the beloved musical once again proves why it remains one of cinema’s greatest treasures.
🎦 Streaming This Week
🎦 Sister Midnight
(Tues, Sept. 9th — streaming on Hulu)
Indian cinema is no stranger to quirky, dark humor, and Sister Midnight is here to prove it. Directed by London-based filmmaker Karan Kandhari, this subversive comedy follows a rebellious small-town woman (Radhika Apte) who leaves her stifling housewife life behind to search for happiness in Mumbai, only to find the exact opposite. With Apte’s breakthrough performance and an original score by Interpol’s Paul Banks, this stylish, offbeat romp has already made waves on the festival circuit. Now, it’s time to give Indian comedy the credit it deserves.
🎦 When Fall is Coming
(Wed, Sept. 10th — streaming on Prime Video)
In writer-director François Ozon’s (Swimming Pool) latest twisty French thriller, family bonds are put to the ultimate test when a quiet visit to the countryside turns into a recipe for disaster. After a cooking mishap involving poisonous mushrooms, Michelle (played by Hélène Vincent) finds herself in a fight to hold onto her fractured family, using methods that are anything but sweet. Was it a simple accident, or is grandma willing to go a few steps too far to keep her loved ones close?
🎦 Warfare
(Fri, Sept. 12th — streaming on HBO MAX)
Filmmaker Alex Garland (Civil War) teams up with Iraq War vet Ray Mendoza for a gritty, real-time thriller that plunges a platoon of Navy SEALs into the heart of chaos during an ambush in an Iraqi village. With a star-studded cast of young actors (D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Will Poulter, Cosmo Jarvis, Joseph Quinn, Charles Melton and more) and intense, close-quarters combat, the film delivers a no-holds-barred look at modern warfare. Prepare for chaos, courage, and a whole lot of close calls.
🎦 I Don’t Understand You
(Fri, Sept. 12th — streaming on Netflix)
Nick Kroll and Andrew Rannells are in way over their heads in this dark comedy of errors. They play Dom and Cole, a gay couple whose dream vacation in Italy turns into an outrageous nightmare when they find themselves surrounded by dead bodies. Expecting their first child via adoption (thanks to Amanda Seyfried’s mother-to-be), they scramble to cover up each accidental death, only to have one mistake lead to another, and another, until there's no turning back. Directed and written by David Joseph Craig and Brian Crano, and co-starring Morgan Spector and Eleonora Romandini, the film asks: is it just bad luck, or are Dom and Cole just that clueless?
🎦 The Wrong Paris
(Fri, Sept. 12th — premiering on Netflix)
Miranda Cosgrove plays Dawn, a wannabe artist whose plan to scam her way into Paris, France, backfires when the reality dating show she joins drops her in Paris, Texas instead. Stuck with a cowboy bachelor (Pierson Fodé) and a camera crew capturing her every move, Dawn tries to outwit the show for prize money... until real romance sneaks up on her. What begins as a desperate ploy to win tuition money for her French art school turns into an unexpected love story with the last person she ever imagined.
🎦 Lost in the Jungle
(Fri, Sept. 12th — premiering on Disney+)
From Oscar-winning directors Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin (Free Solo) and Emmy-winner Juan Camilo Cruz comes the extraordinary true story of four siblings who survived a plane crash in the Colombian rainforest and endured 40 days alone before being rescued. Blending intimate testimony with sweeping cinematography, this chronicles a 40-day battle against hunger, fear, and the elements.
✅ On VOD This Week
✅ Weapons
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on VOD/Digital)
Seventeen children. One classroom. No answers. When a group of kids vanishes overnight, panic grips a suburban town—and all eyes turn to their bewildered teacher, played by Julia Garner. As suspicion spreads and fear turns to fury, a grieving father (Josh Brolin) demands the truth, no matter how dark it gets. From Barbarian director Zach Cregger, this new horror thriller is a chilling tale of blame, hysteria, and the monsters that inexplicably emerge when a community begins to unravel.
✅ Honey Don't!
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on VOD/Digital)
Ethan Coen tackles B-movie pulp in his latest offbeat caper, the second entry in his so-called “lesbian B-movie trilogy.” Margaret Qualley struts in as Honey O’Donahue, a small-town PI with a taste for trouble, whose latest case—a corpse in a crashed car—spirals into a scandal involving a corrupt preacher, secrets best left buried, and a whole lot of click-clacking heels. With Chris Evans as a reverend who’d rather sin than sermonize, Aubrey Plaza as a plucky cop, and Charlie Day as a baffled detective, this wild, campy romp spins into a playful whirl of sex, scandal, and small-town sleaze.
✅ Strange Harvest
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on VOD/Digital)
When a string of brutal killings leads detectives to a trail of grotesque and otherworldly horrors, they uncover a terrifying truth: this is no ordinary serial killer... it’s something far more sinister. Told through eerie found footage and laced with cosmic dread, this indie horror thriller marks the return of writer-director Stuart Ortiz (one half of The Vicious Brothers, the filmmakers behind the cult Grave Encounters found footage franchise), delivering a nightmarish descent into malevolent forces beyond comprehension. Starring Dawsyn Eubanks, this is one harvest you won’t survive.
✅ Tatami
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on VOD/Digital)
When Iran’s star female judoka (Arienne Mandi) is ordered to throw the match—faking an injury rather than face her Israeli rival in the Olympic finals—she must grapple with a government that values politics over podiums. Shot in stark black-and-white and co-directed by Israeli-born American filmmaker Guy Nattiv (Skin) and Iranian-French actress Zar Amir Ebrahimi who also stars as the coach, this real-life inspired drama throws personal ambition head-first into the ring against authoritarian control, and proves the heaviest weight isn’t on the mat, but on your conscience.
✅ We Strangers
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on VOD/Digital)
Kirby Howell-Baptiste stars in this sharp-tongued dark comedy as Rayelle, a house cleaner whose casual fib about talking to the dead suddenly makes her the most in-demand medium in suburban Indiana. What begins as a harmless hustle soon warps into something eerily real, as Rayelle’s fake séances start hitting closer to the truth than she ever bargained for. Written and directed by TV helmer Anu Valia (Never Have I Ever, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law), this comedy turns one little lie into a supernatural snowball of wit, danger, and ghostly surprises.
✅ The Fetus
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on VOD/Digital)
After cementing her scream-queen status in the Terrifier films, Lauren LaVera stars as a young woman who discovers her unborn child may be linked to something far darker than she imagined. Returning home with her fiancé (Julian Curtis) to face her gruff father (Bill Moseley), she finds herself battling stringy tentacles, demonic hunger, and a family secret soaked in blood.
✅ Men of War
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on VOD/Digital)
In May 2020, former Green Beret Jordan Goudreau and a band of Venezuelan dissidents attempted to topple Maduro’s regime in a reckless coup at sea—only to trigger a global firestorm. Executive produced by Adam McKay and directed by Jen Gatien and Billy Corben, this doc. unfolds like an espionage nail-biter, using archival footage, candid interviews, and exclusive prison recordings to uncover the tangled web of covert deals, betrayals, and political theater behind the mission.
📺 On TV This Week
📺 Only Murders in the Building: Season 5
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on Hulu)
Charles, Oliver, and Mabel (Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez) just can’t catch a break... or avoid a corpse. When Lester, the Arconia’s longtime doorman, is found dead under bizarre circumstances, the trio dives headfirst into their wildest case yet. Between mobsters, billionaires, and a trail of absurdly suspicious clues, Season 5 raises the stakes with an outrageous mystery and a glittering lineup of new faces including Renée Zellweger, Christoph Waltz, Logan Lerman, Bobby Cannavale, Keegan-Michael Key, and Dianne Wiest, alongside returning favorites Meryl Streep, Nathan Lane, and Da’Vine Joy Randolph.
📺 Seen & Heard: The History of Black Television
(Tues, Sept. 9th — on HBO MAX)
From groundbreaking pioneers to cultural game-changers, the docuseries explores how Black creators and performers reshaped television and influenced generations.
📺 The Girlfriend
(Wed, Sept. 10th — on Prime Video)
Robin Wright stars as Laura, a career powerhouse who has always put her son Daniel (Laurie Davidson) at the center of her world—until he brings home Cherry (Olivia Cooke), a girlfriend who’s as ambitious as she is alluring. What begins as polite suspicion escalates into a ruthless psychological duel, with Wright and Cooke matching move for manipulative move.
📺 aka Charlie Sheen
(Wed, Sept. 10th — on Netflix)
With seven years of sobriety under his belt, infamous Hollywood actor Charlie Sheen is finally ready to set the record straight. Directed by Andrew Renzi (Pepsi, Where’s My Jet?), this revealing two-episode Netflix documentary traces Sheen’s Malibu upbringing, meteoric rise to stardom, and infamous fall from grace. Through unflinching interviews with Sheen, his family, and friends—including Denise Richards, Jon Cryer, Sean Penn, and even Heidi Fleiss—this revisits the chaos, the comedy, and the cost of living in the spotlight.
📺 Tempest
(Wed, Sept. 10th — on Hulu)
Gianna Jun stars as Seo Munju, whose world shatters when her presidential-candidate husband is murdered before her eyes. Determined to uncover the conspiracy behind the killing, she’s thrust into a dangerous web of power, betrayal, and violence. Gang Dongwon plays Sanho, the enigmatic mercenary sworn to protect her, while John Cho joins the intrigue as the lines between ally and enemy blur.
📺 Mussolini: Son of the Century
(Wed, Sept. 10th — on MUBI)
From BAFTA-winning director Joe Wright (Atonement, Darkest Hour) comes an audacious eight-part saga tracing Benito Mussolini’s ruthless ascent—from firebrand socialist journalist to Italy’s fascist dictator. Starring Luca Marinelli (The Eight Mountains), this small-screen adaptation of Antonio Scurati’s award-winning novel fuses bold visuals, a hypermodern style, and a pulse-pounding score by Tom Rowlands, of The Chemical Brothers.
📺 Wolf King: Season 2
(Thurs, Sept. 11th — on Netflix)
The fight for power grows fiercer as Drew must defend his crown against rival forces while learning what it truly means to lead. But ruling a kingdom isn’t just about war... it’s about love, loyalty, and legacy. With danger on the battlefield and tension in the heart, Drew’s journey continues in Netflix’s epic animated saga.
📺 Tyler Perry’s Beauty in Black: Season 2
(Thurs, Sept. 11th — on Netflix)
Season 2 finds Kimmie stepping into power, only to discover that in this family, loyalty is fleeting and ambition cuts deep. As greed, danger, and double-crosses threaten to unravel everything, the Bellarie empire becomes a battlefield where only the ruthless survive.
📺 Reunion
(Fri, Sept. 12th — on Paramount+ and Showtime)
Daniel Brennan (Matthew Gurney), a deaf man and convicted murderer, walks free after ten years behind bars with one mission: revenge. But when his estranged daughter Carly (Lara Peake) is pulled into the crossfire, Brennan must choose between vengeance and redemption. Will he cling to the past... or fight for a future with his daughter?
📺 Ride with Norman Reedus: Season 7
(Sun, Sept. 14th — on AMC/AMC+)
Walking Dead star Norman Reedus returns for another season of motorcycles, pit stops, and unexpected friendships on his cross-country journeys.