What's Coming Out This Week In Theaters and On Streaming, VOD & TV: June 8 thru June 14, 2026
All the 🎥 films and 📺 shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
June is rolling in, and we’re already getting a pretty clear sense of how this summer is shaping up. Horror continues to be one of the most reliable draws on the calendar, while some of the bigger IP-driven titles aren’t hitting quite as hard as they used to. That doesn’t mean the summer movie season is in trouble, but it does suggest audiences may be getting a little pickier about what actually gets them off the couch and into a theater.
This week should be especially interesting, as we’ll see whether a master filmmaker like Steven Spielberg still has real sway at the box office, or if the summer conversation keeps shifting toward younger filmmakers becoming the new box office champions.
As always, we’ve rounded up the new movies and shows arriving this week across theaters, streaming, TV, and VOD. So whether you’re heading to your local movie theater, catching up on a new series, or just looking for something fresh to add to the watchlist, scroll down and see what stands out.
🎥 In Theaters This Week
⇩
🎥 Honeyjoon
(Wed, June 10th — limited release; in NY & LA)
Grief gets awkward fast when a mother and daughter try to mourn in paradise. Ayden Mayeri stars as June, who travels with her Persian-British mother Lela (Amira Casar) to the Azores for an anniversary neither of them knows how to handle. Writer-director Lilian T. Mehrel’s darkly comic family drama turns mourning, flirting, memory, and resentment into one very uncomfortable vacation.
🎥 Disclosure Day
(Fri, June 12th — wide release)
The truth is out there, but deciding what to do with it may be the real problem. Emily Blunt stars as a Kansas City weather broadcaster who, along with a whistleblower played by Josh O’Connor, becomes the reluctant guardian of evidence that non-human intelligence may already exist on Earth. Directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Steven Spielberg, who returns to his UFO roots, this sci-fi mystery co-stars Colin Firth, Colman Domingo, and Eve Hewson, turning first contact into a dangerous question of power, secrecy, and whether the world is ready to know.
🎥 The Furious
(Fri, June 12th — wide release)
After his daughter is kidnapped by a criminal network, a Chinese father finds only corruption and indifference from the police. Martial artist Xie Miao stars as the desperate parent carving his own path toward justice, while The Raid’s Joe Taslim plays a relentless journalist searching for his missing wife. Directed by Kenji Tanigaki, this martial arts revenge thriller throws back to action films where stunt work did the heavy lifting... and also all the damage.
🎥 Stop! That! Train!
(Fri, June 12th — wide release)
Disaster movies finally get dragged onto the rails. Drag queens Ginger Minj and Jujubee star as two coach train stewardesses aboard the Glamazonian Express, where a catastrophic “Stormaganza” threatens to send the ride crashing toward Los Angeles. Directed by Adam Shankman, this campy disaster spoof turns drag performance, disaster parody, and RuPaul as the U.S. President into one runaway spectacle.
🎥 Kraken
(Fri, June 12th — limited release; also on ✅VOD)
A remote Norwegian fish farm becomes the center of something monstrous when strange disturbances, dead teenagers, and old sea legends point toward the dark heart of the bay. Sara Khorami stars in this chilly creature feature where a misguided salmon-treatment program appears to have stirred up more than the local ecosystem.
🎥 O Horizon
(Fri, June 12th — limited release; also on ✅VOD)
Grief gets a software update in this darkly comic sci-fi-tinged drama. Maria Bakalova stars as a young neuroscientist who reconnects with her late father through an AI-generated voice avatar, only to find that one more conversation can quickly become one complication too many. With David Strathairn, Adam Pally, and Maggie Grace co-starring, the indie film turns memory, data, and loss into something tender, funny, and deeply disconcerting.
🎥 This Tempting Madness
(Fri, June 12th — limited release; also on ✅VOD)
Memory becomes a trap in this psychological mystery-thriller. Simone Ashley stars as a battered woman who wakes from a coma with no clear memory of what happened, only to discover that her husband, played by Austin Stowell, has vanished. As each clue pulls her closer to the truth, the line between recovery and danger starts to feel dangerously thin.
🎥 Jinsei
(Fri, June 12th — limited release)
A life can take many forms, and this hand-drawn anime takes that idea across an entire century. Written, directed, edited, and hand-drawn by newcomer Ryuya Suzuki, the film follows a hero voiced by rapper ACE COOL as he shifts through names, identities, and eras, chasing superstardom before becoming an outcast, a leader, and finally a strange oracle of destiny.
🎥 I Shot Andy Warhol: 30th Anniversary
(Fri, June 12th — limited release; re-release)
American Psycho director Mary Harron’s 1996 feature film debut returns to theaters in a restored 4K presentation, with Lili Taylor starring as Valerie Solanas and Jared Harris as Andy Warhol. This indie landmark revisits fame, anger, politics, and notoriety inside New York’s counterculture underground, as Valerie’s troubled life leads to her attempted assassination of the famed pop artist.
🎦 Streaming This Week
⇩
🎦 Luz
(Tues, June 9th — streaming on Kino Film Collection)
Separate lives flicker between Chongqing, Paris, and a virtual world where escape starts to look like confession. This meditative drama follows an ex-con searching for his estranged daughter and a Hong Kong gallerist caring for her ailing stepmother, played by Isabelle Huppert. As grief pulls them into the same VR space, hidden truths surface and human connection takes on a strange new form.
🎦 The X-Files: I Want to Believe — Director’s Cut
(Thurs, Jun 11th — on Disney+)
Nearly two decades after its release, Chris Carter’s director’s cut restores darker horror elements reportedly toned down for the original PG-13 version. The film moves closer to Carter’s intended vision, following Mulder and Scully through a grim case involving psychic visions, a kidnapped FBI agent, and unsettling supernatural threats. For fans who felt the theatrical cut held back, this version promises a darker, more confident take on the story. It should also not be confused with the previously released “uncut” version, which only reinstated a handful of trimmed scenes. This new cut is being presented as a more substantial restoration of Carter’s original vision, with expanded horror content and material unseen in any prior home release.
🎦 I Am Frankelda
(Fri, June 12th — premiering on Netflix)
Set in 19th-century Mexico, this gothic stop-motion fantasy follows Frankelda, a gifted young writer whose imagination is dismissed by the world around her. But her demons are not just emotional, as the creatures she creates begin to sing, crawl, and lurk inside her subconscious. Written and directed by Mexican animators Arturo and Roy Ambriz, this dark fantasy musical expands the handmade, monster-filled mythology of Frankelda’s Book of Spooks, turning fear, authorship, and artistic identity into an eerie journey of self-discovery.
🎦 Find Your Friends
(Fri, June 12th — premiering on Shudder)
A girls’ weekend in Joshua Tree should mean drinks, bad decisions, and one decent group photo. Written and directed by Izabel Pakzad, this desert-set horror thriller follows Amber and her four best friends as they leave L.A. for a party weekend, only to discover the locals have other plans. Bella Thorne, Chloe Cherry, Helena Howard, Sophia Ali, and Zión Moreno star in this getaway-gone-wrong chiller, where vacation mode turns into survival mode fast.
🎦 Maternal Instinct
(Fri, June 12th — premiering on Netflix)
A perfect online life cracks wide open in this unsettling Netflix true-crime documentary. The story follows a young woman from a wealthy East Texas town whose carefully curated relationship and pregnancy collapse after a routine traffic stop reveals she has just given birth in her car. From there, the image she built online quickly falls apart, exposing an unthinkable crime where social media fantasy crashes hard into real-world horror.
🎦 They Will Kill You
(Fri, June 12th — streaming on HBO MAX)
One bad job. One very bad building. Zazie Beetz stars in this grindhouse horror-action hybrid as a desperate housekeeper who discovers her employers are part of a satanic cult with a monthly sacrifice on the schedule. But when she’s next in line, this would-be victim turns the tables, using her cage-fighting skills to battle through a blood-soaked night of survival.
✅ On VOD This Week
⇩
✅ Michael
(Tues, June 9th — on VOD/Digital)
Michael Jackson’s nephew Jaafar Jackson steps into the role of a young Michael, charting his rise from Motown prodigy to solo superstardom in this Antoine Fuqua-directed jukebox biopic that leans into stage performance and behind-the-scenes craft. As pressure from his domineering father/manager (played by Colman Domingo) mounts and expectations close in, he turns to the music to define himself, carving a path toward global icon status. The focus lands less on controversy and more on how the sound, the moves, and the ambition built a legend.
✅ Mortal Kombat II
(Tues, June 9th — on VOD/Digital)
Karl Urban brings bruised action-star swagger to this bone-crushing sequel as Johnny Cage, a washed-up Hollywood action star whose ego takes a beating when real supernatural warriors start throwing punches. Director Simon McQuoid returns for a bloodier, louder sequel packed with familiar fighters, new challengers, and enough ’90s video-game nostalgia to make that old PS controller twitch.
✅ Mārama
(Tues, June 9th — on VOD/Digital)
A young Māori woman (Ariana Osborne) exiled in Victorian England finds her fragile sense of identity unraveling as secrets about her colonial past begin to surface, pulling her toward a reckoning she can’t outrun. With Toby Stephens costarring as the man directly tied to the damage, justice and vengeance become indistinguishable, threatening to consume her completely in this New Zealand period drama where ancestral wounds refuse to heal, nor be forgotten.
✅ Neglected
(Tues, June 9th — on VOD/Digital)
Retirement is going to have to wait. Josh Duhamel stars in this ticking-clock action thriller as a detective whose final days on the job turn nightmarish when Dylan Sprouse’s cold-blooded stranger delivers a brutal ultimatum: solve a string of gruesome murders, or his kidnapped son runs out of air. Nothing says “one last case” like trying to catch a killer before a loved one pays the ultimate price.
✅ Let’s Love
(Tues, June 9th — on VOD/Digital)
The cast of a beloved romance film gets one more chance to revisit the roles that changed their lives. Martin Freeman, Josh Hutcherson, Malin Åkerman, and Jess Weixler star as former co-stars who reunite a decade later for a fan convention, only for the event to fall apart before it can really begin. When they return to the film’s original locations, talk of a sequel starts stirring up old feelings, buried tension, and the uncomfortable realization that nostalgia has a way of reopening every wound it pretends to heal.
✅ Saccharine
(Fri, June 12th — on VOD/Digital)
A killer diet trend takes a ghostly turn in this Australian supernatural horror film from Relic filmmaker Natalie Erika James. Grey’s Anatomy’s Midori Francis stars as a lovelorn medical student who falls into a bizarre weight-loss craze built around eating human ashes, only to find herself haunted by the person she’s consuming.
✅ Badland Rising
(Fri, June 12th — on VOD/Digital)
A long drive home turns into a brutal fight to stay alive. This Australian action thriller stars Jake Ryan as an ordinary man whose 19-hour road trip takes a violent detour when two unhinged criminals begin hunting him across the open road. With Nathan Phillips, Steve Mouzakis, and Hannah Levien also starring, the film turns the highway into a battleground where every mile brings him closer to either home or a dead end.
✅ Broken Land
(Fri, June 12th — on VOD/Digital)
A quiet Texas ranch becomes the site of a crisis no one can outrun. David Morse stars as Carson Tidwell, a reclusive rancher who accidentally shoots a pregnant migrant worker crossing his land and then tries to protect her from the consequences of his own mistake. But with his estranged son (Bill Heck) working as a Border Patrol agent, Carson’s desperate act of mercy soon pulls father, son, and wounded stranger into a tense moral standoff. Directed by J.T. Walker, this rural thriller turns guilt and survival into a hard road toward redemption.
⇯ See Above: ✅Kraken (Fri, Jun 12; VOD/Digital)
⇯ See Above: ✅O Horizon (Fri, Jun 12; VOD/Digital)
⇯ See Above: ✅This Tempting Madness (Fri, Jun 12; VOD/Digital)
📺 On TV This Week
⇩
📺 Alice and Steve
(Mon, June 8th — on Hulu/Disney+)
Some friendships survive anything, but dating your best friend’s daughter is pushing it. Nicola Walker and Jemaine Clement star as Alice and Steve, longtime friends whose 25-year bond is thrown into crisis when Steve starts seeing Alice’s daughter (Yali Topol Margalith). Written and created by Sophie Goodhart, this British comedy turns loyalty, boundaries, and family complications into one painfully funny personal mess.
📺 Tony Hinchcliffe: Man of the People
(Tues, June 9th — on Netflix)
Stand-up comic Tony Hinchcliffe returns with his signature brand of sharp insults, confrontational crowd work, and equal-opportunity provocation, aiming at the audience, the culture, and just about every group imaginable.
📺 All the Queen’s Men: Season 5
(Wed, June 10th — on Paramount+)
Madam’s empire is taking its final bow, but not quietly. Eva Marcille returns for the final season as Madam’s life hangs in the balance, her shooter remains at large, and the dancers of Eden are left facing fear, betrayal, and enemies ready to move in. This last chapter brings the power plays, revenge, and survival games to a dangerous breaking point.
📺 Every Year After
(Wed, June 10th — on Prime Video)
Some summer loves never really stay in the past. Sadie Soverall and Matt Cornett star as Percy and Sam, whose romance unfolds across six years and one unforgettable week in Barry’s Bay. Based on Carley Fortune’s bestselling novel, this eight-episode Prime Video series turns first love, bad timing, and old heartbreak into a question of whether some wounds heal or simply wait to reopen.
📺 Sweet Magnolias: Season 5
(Thurs, June 11th — on Netflix)
Serenity is changing, but the Magnolias are still leaning on each other. JoAnna Garcia Swisher, Brooke Elliott, and Heather Headley return as lifelong friends facing romance, family drama, wedding bells, new ambitions, and a summer that may push them beyond the comfort of home. This new season keeps friendship at the center, even when life refuses to stay sweet.
📺 Surviving Earth
(Thurs, June 11th — on NBC; next day on Peacock)
The planet has survived catastrophe before, and this docuseries digs into just how brutal that survival has been. From the producers of Walking with Dinosaurs, this eight-part prehistoric nature series journeys across 450 million years of extinction, evolution, and adaptation. Dinosaurs play a major role, but the bigger story belongs to Earth itself, a world repeatedly broken apart and rebuilt by disaster.
📺 Power Book III: Raising Kanan: Season 5
(Fri, June 12th — on STARZ)
Kanan Stark’s origin story reaches its final chapter, and every family secret is coming due. Mekai Curtis returns as Kanan Stark, caught in the fallout of betrayal, hard truths, and an all-out street war threatening the Thomas crime family. As Kanan moves closer to the man he is destined to become, family business just may be the most dangerous business of all, especially when it involves the drug game.
📺 The Listeners
(Fri, June 12th — on STARZ)
Rebecca Hall stars as Claire, a woman whose life unravels after a mysterious hum brings migraines, insomnia, isolation, and fractured relationships. Based on Jordan Tannahill’s novel and directed by Janicza Bravo, this British miniseries follows Claire into a support group where shared torment begins to blur the line between connection, obsession, and reality. It seems one strange sound is enough to break a life wide open.





