What's Coming Out This Week In Theaters and On Streaming, VOD & TV: June 22 thru June 28, 2026
All the 🎥 films and 📺 shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
June has one more week to show us what it’s got before the calendar flips. So expect a big rollout this week from DC Studios to see if its new superhero era can carry some real summer heat into July. Additionally, there will be plenty of counterprogramming for those looking for something a little different in theaters this week, while on the TV front, a couple of exciting titles are trying to make their own noise before the month wraps up.
As always, we’ve rounded up the new movies and shows arriving this week across theaters, streaming, VOD and TV. So whether you’re heading out to the movies, catching up on a new series, preparing to binge a show’s finale, or just looking for something fresh to add to the watchlist, scroll down and see what stands out.
🎥 In Theaters This Week
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🎥 Chapter 51
(Tues, June 23rd — limited release; also on ✅VOD/Digital)
A $500 million movie shoot turns into a Hollywood horror story. Photographer-turned-director Tyler Shields steps behind the camera for this neo-noir mystery thriller about a cursed film production, the deaths of three actresses, and an FBI case that refuses to stay closed. Abigail Breslin, Colman Domingo, Emily Alyn Lind, Charlotte Lawrence, and Connor Paolo star as old secrets resurface, exposing how ambition, obsession, and movie-industry mythology can become just as dangerous as any curse.
🎥 BLEACH: Thousand-Year Blood War – The Calamity
(Thurs, June 25th thru Mon, June 29th — limited theatrical engagement)
This limited theatrical event brings the final chapter of the anime adaptation to the big screen, as Ichigo Kurosaki and his allies face Yhwach’s catastrophic march toward the Royal Palace. Directed by Tomohisa Taguchi and Hikaru Murata, The Calamity finds Soul Society running out of second chances as sacrifice, destiny, and the fate of the Three Worlds fuel one last blade-swinging battle.
🎥 Supergirl
(Fri, June 26th — wide release)
Mess with Krypto, and Supergirl takes it personally. Milly Alcock stars as Kara Zor-El in this DC superhero adventure from director Craig Gillespie and screenwriter Ana Nogueira. Still carrying the emotional wreckage of Krypton’s destruction, Kara launches a galaxy-spanning revenge mission after space pirate Krem of the Yellow Hills (Matthias Schoenaerts) poisons her loyal pup and leaves him for dead. Joined by Eve Ridley’s Ruthye Marye Knoll and crossing paths with Jason Momoa’s Lobo, this Woman of Steel runs on grief, rage, revenge… and maybe a little booze.
🎥 Jackass: Best and Last
(Fri, June 26th — wide release)
Johnny Knoxville and the gang are back for one last big-screen wipeout. Directed by longtime franchise filmmaker Jeff Tremaine, this farewell comedy mixes new stunts with greatest-hits moments from the past, turning 25 years of bruises, bad decisions, battered dignity, and reckless nostalgia into one final sendoff. It’s a raucous goodbye to a crew still willing to risk safety, pride, and dental work for the laugh.
🎥 The Invite
(Fri, June 26th — limited release)
Olivia Wilde and Seth Rogen play a long-married San Francisco couple whose dinner with their upstairs neighbors, Edward Norton and Penélope Cruz, turns into a painfully awkward night of blurred boundaries and long-buried frustrations. Directed by Wilde and written by Rashida Jones and Will McCormack, this eyebrow-raising dramedy adapts Cesc Gay’s Spanish swinger comedy Sentimental into a pressure-cooker relationship tale where one unexpected invitation threatens to expose years of tension, desire, and sexual insecurity.
🎥 The Get Out
(Fri, June 26th — limited release)
Russell Crowe stars as a nightclub owner hoping to put his criminal past in the rearview, but that fresh start goes sideways when masked gunmen storm his club. With cartel pressure tightening and a mysterious buyer circling the business, his escape plan becomes a violent fight to stay alive. Co-starring Luke Evans, Teresa Palmer, Nina Dobrev, and Aaron Paul, this is a crime thriller where leaving the life may be more dangerous than staying in it.
🎥 Couture
(Fri, June 26th — limited release)
Angelina Jolie stars as an American filmmaker in Paris for Fashion Week, where runway glamour gives way to a quieter personal crisis. As she crosses paths with a rising model, a makeup artist, and a trusted creative collaborator, she confronts difficult choices, emotional baggage, and a life-changing breast cancer diagnosis. Written and directed by Alice Winocour, this French drama turns a world built on beauty and fashion into a story about vulnerability and mortality.
🎥 Lucky Strike
(Fri, June 26th — limited release)
Scott Eastwood stars as a soldier trapped behind enemy lines during the Battle of the Bulge, with nothing but his instincts and a Motorola SCR-300 radio to keep him alive. Directed by Rod Lurie, this WWII survival thriller turns a single soldier’s desperate call for help into a tense battlefield fight where backup is uncertain and every transmission could be his last.
🎥 Camp
(Fri, June 26th — limited release)
Zola Grimmer stars as Emily, a young woman hoping to outrun a traumatic past by taking a summer job as a camp counselor. But whatever peace she expects to find in the woods quickly gives way to modern witchcraft, cursed cycles, and the brutal question of whether redemption is even possible in this supernatural chiller from writer-director Avalon Fast.
🎥 The Room Returns
(Fri, June 26th — special screening at LA’s Hollywood Forever)
Some cult films refuse to stay buried, and The Room may be the most stubborn of them all. Bob Odenkirk stars as Johnny in this charity remake of Tommy Wiseau’s infamous disaster-piece, recreating its baffling mythology with green screens, teleprompters, no rehearsal, and an all-volunteer crew after a shoot that lasted under 12 hours. Bella Heathcote, Kate Siegel, Arturo Castro, Mike Flanagan, Greg Sestero, and director Brando Crawford co-star in a project that doesn’t try to fix the original so much as summon its strange, accidental magic all over again.
🎥 The Wave / La ola
(Fri, June 26th — limited release; in LA theaters)
A quiet music student is swept into a feminist uprising in Sebastián Lelio’s Chilean musical drama. Daniela López stars as Julia, whose decision to speak out turns private pain into public resistance on her university campus. As the movement confronts harassment, abuse, and institutional silence, she discovers that finding her voice doesn’t mean using it alone.
🎥 Situations
(Fri, June 26th — limited release; LA screenings)
Post-breakup limbo gets the Silver Lake indie treatment in this messy LA dramedy. Greg Vrotsos makes his feature directorial debut and stars as a photographer still trying to steady himself three months after a painful split, only to be pulled between friends, flings, career pressure, and bad decisions. With P.J. Byrne, Fiona Dourif, Melora Walters, George Basil, and No Doubt’s Tony Kanal co-starring, heartbreak becomes its own awkward reset button.
🎥 Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby: 20th Anniversary
(Sun, June 28th; Tues, June 30th & Wed, July 1st — theatrical re-release)
Ricky Bobby is taking one more victory lap on the big screen. Will Ferrell stars as the NASCAR superstar whose life is built around winning, until Sacha Baron Cohen’s flamboyant Formula One rival Jean Girard threatens his racing throne. Directed by Adam McKay and co-starring John C. Reilly, Gary Cole, and Michael Clarke Duncan, this absurd racing comedy brings the ego, speed, and “shake and bake” energy back to theaters for its 20th anniversary.
🎦 Streaming This Week
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🎦 In the Hand of Dante
(Wed, June 24th — premiering on Netflix)
Oscar Isaac plays both Nick Tosches and Dante Alighieri in Julian Schnabel’s literary-crime fever dream. When a handwritten Divine Comedy manuscript supposedly surfaces from the Vatican Library, Nick is pulled into a mob-backed theft scheme. Across centuries, Dante’s search for inspiration echoes Nick’s descent into obsession, violence, love, and the dangerous pursuit of the divine.
🎦 Avatar: Fire and Ash
(Wed, June 24th — streaming on Disney+)
Pandora’s cold war is on the verge of eruption as Jake Sully (Sam Worthington), Neytiri (Zoe Saldaña), and their children are forced to choose between protecting their family and defending their world. With Varang (Oona Chaplin), a hardened leader of the volcanic Ash People, potentially aligning with Colonel Quaritch (Stephen Lang), survival may ignite a devastating Na’vi civil war that threatens to tear the planet apart in this third explosive installment of James Cameron’s sci-fi fantasy saga.
🎦 The Sheep Detectives
(Wed, June 24th — streaming on Prime Video)
A dead shepherd, a $30 million will, and a flock of sheep that knows a suspicious accident when they see one. Hugh Jackman stars in this woolly whodunit, where his detective-novel-loving flock turns amateur sleuth after his mysterious death, with Molly Gordon, Emma Thompson, Nicholas Braun, Hong Chau, and Nicholas Galitzine among the suspects. Case closed? Not until these sheep get to the baaaa-ttom of it.
🎦 A Great Awakening
(Thurs, June 25th — streaming on Prime Video with Wonder Project)
Before it was written into law, liberty had to be felt. Jonathan Blair and John Paul Sneed star in this sweeping historical drama as Rev. George Whitefield and Benjamin Franklin, whose unlikely friendship helps spark a movement fueled by belief, influence, and the emotional force of a nation coming to life.
🎦 Little Brother
(Fri, June 26th — premiering on Netflix)
John Cena stars as Rudd, a successful real estate agent and TV personality whose carefully managed life is built on order, routine, and keeping nonsense at a safe distance. But that control vanishes when he mistakes Eric Andre’s Marcus, a forgotten honorary “little brother” from an old charity school program, for his actual brother after an accident. With Michelle Monaghan as his more compassionate wife and Christopher Meloni as the brother he expected, this comedy turns one reluctant act of kindness into a full-blown domestic meltdown.
🎦 Chris & Martina: The Final Set
(Fri, June 26th — premiering on Netflix)
This intimate sports documentary revisits Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova, two tennis icons whose fierce rivalry helped define women’s tennis before becoming one of the sport’s most enduring friendships. Moving beyond championship pressure, the film explores their battles with cancer and the resilience that carried them through, turning a story of greatness into one of loyalty and lasting support.
🎦 Strung
(Fri, June 26th — premiering on Peacock)
A dream gig starts playing the wrong tune. Chloe Bailey stars as a gifted violinist who accepts a prestigious tutoring job with an influential family, only to find herself drawn into a world where wealth hides something sinister. Directed by Malcolm D. Lee and produced by Blumhouse, this psychological horror thriller turns high-society privilege into a trap with no easy exit.
🎦 undertone
(Fri, June 26th — streaming on HBO Max)
Some haunting stories don’t need ghosts... just the right sound. Nina Kiri stars as a skeptical paranormal podcast host whose investigation into eerie audio recordings begins to bleed into her own reality, turning a simple case into a deeply unsettling descent where what you hear becomes far more terrifying than what you see.
🎦 Forbidden Fruits
(Fri, June 26th — streaming on Shudder)
In this Diablo Cody-produced darkly comic horror satire, Lili Reinhart stars as a boutique-working mall employee who secretly leads a coven of fashionable witches (Victoria Pedretti and Alexandra Shipp), where after-hours rituals blend sisterhood with a taste for revenge. But when a rebellious new hire (Lola Tung) throws their perfectly curated dynamic off balance, everything begins to unravel in ways that threaten not just their bond, but the very power holding them together.
✅ On VOD This Week
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✅ Power Ballad
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
Sing Street and Once filmmaker John Carney returns to the messy business of making music with this song-driven dramedy about creativity, credit, and one hit single with two possible fathers. Paul Rudd stars as a washed-up songwriter-turned-wedding singer whose late-night jam with Nick Jonas’s fading pop star turns into a comeback smash, a stolen-song feud, and one very tuneful fight over who gets to claim the glory.
✅ Tuner
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
Leo Woodall stars as a gifted piano tuner whose extraordinary hearing turns into a very dangerous side hustle. While apprenticing under a veteran tuner played by Dustin Hoffman, he discovers he can crack safes by sound alone, pulling him into New York’s criminal underworld. What starts as a rare talent quickly becomes a costly temptation.
✅ Billie Eilish – Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
Lights up... and glasses on. This electrifying concert film drops us into Billie Eilish’s sold-out global tour, where arena spectacle gets the full cinematic 3D treatment. Co-directed by Eilish and James Cameron, the experience pulls audiences onto the stage and behind the scenes, turning the show into something less watched than fully swallowed.
✅ I Love Boosters
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
High fashion gets a five-finger discount in this darkly satirical caper from Sorry to Bother You filmmaker Boots Riley. Keke Palmer stars as the leader of the Velvet Gang, a stylish crew of Oakland boosters lifting designer goods from luxury boutiques and flipping them for people priced out of the fantasy. But when Demi Moore’s fashion mogul becomes their biggest target, this Robin Hood hustle turns into a sharp, absurdist takedown of capitalism in couture.
✅ Carolina Caroline
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
Samara Weaving and Kyle Gallner play two lovers with nowhere to go but deeper into trouble in this southern-fried crime thriller from Dinner in America filmmaker Adam Carter Rehmeier. What starts as small-town escape quickly turns into a dangerous road trip of scams, bad choices, and toxic chemistry. Love may be the getaway plan, but self-destruction is riding shotgun.
✅ Two Prosecutors
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
Ukrainian filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa turns Stalin’s Great Terror into a suffocating historical thriller about one man searching for truth inside a machine built to bury it. Aleksandr Kuznetsov stars as prosecutor Alexander Kornyev, whose secret letter from a prisoner sends him to Moscow and straight into a system where fear speaks louder than justice.
✅ Blue Heron
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
In her feature debut, filmmaker Sophy Romvari draws from her own childhood to craft this quiet, memory-soaked coming-of-age drama set on late-’90s Vancouver Island, where a young girl (Eylul Guven) navigates her Hungarian immigrant family’s fresh start as her older brother’s volatile behavior (Edik Beddoes) begins to fracture their home. What begins with promise slowly drifts into unease, capturing the fragile moment when childhood innocence gives way to a deeper understanding of what’s really happening.
✅ We Are Pat
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
Some punchlines don’t age well, but sometimes the joke changes with the times. Director Rowan Haber revisits Saturday Night Live’s “It’s Pat” through today’s conversations around gender, comedy, queer identity, and representation. Featuring Julia Sweeney, the SNL comedian behind the iconic character, alongside a lineup of comics and cultural voices, this Tribeca Films documentary turns a familiar pop-culture oddity into a sharper look at how comedy evolves.
✅ Hungry
(Tues, June 23rd — on VOD/Digital)
A sightseeing trip turns into a survival run after a group of tourists crosses paths with a massive, highly aggressive hippopotamus. Yes, hungry and angry hippos are very much the problem here. With Madison Davenport, Tracey Bonner, Joaquim de Almeida, and Michel Curiel in the ensemble, this natural-horror outing turns vacation curiosity into a frantic race through hostile terrain, mounting panic, and one very bad animal encounter.
✅ Savage House
(Fri, June 26th — on VOD/Digital)
Privilege gets delightfully poisonous in this 18th-century satire starring Claire Foy and Richard E. Grant. As disease spreads and political unrest rises outside their estate, one status-hungry aristocratic couple schemes, manipulates, and spirals toward disaster in Peter Glanz’s dark comedy of manners gone mad.
✅ Above the Line
(Fri, June 26th — on VOD/Digital)
Hollywood is already full of thieves, so why not steal from the biggest night in town? Reno Wilson, Gregg Henry, Cedric the Entertainer, Sophia Ali, Suzy Nakamura, Jamie Lee, and Jackson Pace star in this showbiz heist comedy about six beaten-down Hollywood hopefuls who decide to rob the Oscars and target the crooked producer they blame for wrecking their careers. What starts as awards-season frustration turns into an outrageous comeback plan where desperation, revenge, and very poor judgment all get their moment in the spotlight.
⇯ See Above: ✅Chapter 51 (Tues, Jun 23; VOD/Digital)
📺 On TV This Week
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📺 Harry Wild: Season 5
(Mon, June 22nd — on Acorn TV)
Retirement keeps looking a lot like detective work. Jane Seymour returns as Harry Wild, the sharp-witted former literature professor whose literary instincts and quick mind keep pulling her into murder cases, undercover operations, and chilling investigations. With a new pathologist joining the team, this Irish mystery series keeps its cozy-ish charm while giving Harry’s latest cases a few sharper edges.
📺 The American Experiment
(Wed, June 24th — on Netflix)
Arriving as the U.S. approaches its 250th anniversary, this five-part Netflix documentary series revisits the country’s founding through historians, political figures, legal voices, tribal chiefs, military experts, and thinkers across the political spectrum. With Tom Hanks among the executive producers, the series connects America’s founding ideals to ongoing questions about democracy and self-government.
📺 A Woman of Substance
(Wed, June 24th — on BritBox)
A penniless Yorkshire maid becomes one of the wealthiest women in the world. Jessica Reynolds and Brenda Blethyn star as Emma Harte at different stages of her life in this sweeping British period drama based on Barbara Taylor Bradford’s bestselling novel. Spanning six decades, the series follows Emma’s climb through hardship, family power struggles, ambition, resilience, and glass-ceiling-smashing determination.
📺 The Bear: Season 5 (Final Season)
(Thurs, June 25th — on FX on Hulu / Hulu on Disney+)
The kitchen is still standing... just barely. The fifth and final season picks up after Jeremy Allen White’s Carmy walks away from being head chef, leaving The Bear in the hands of Syd (Ayo Edebiri), Cousin Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), Sugar (Abby Elliott), and the rest. Facing mounting financial trouble, a possible sale, a delivery cutoff, and a flood threatening what little stability remains, the crew has to decide whether this kitchen can survive the heat long enough to become what they’ve always needed: a family.
📺 Avatar: The Last Airbender: Season 2
(Thurs, June 25th — on Netflix)
The Earth Kingdom arc begins. After their hard-won victory at the Northern Water Tribe, Gordon Cormier’s Aang, Kiawentiio’s Katara, and Ian Ousley’s Sokka head deeper into dangerous territory. Their mission is to find the elusive Earth King and rally support against Fire Lord Ozai, once again played by Daniel Dae Kim. The season also introduces Miya Cech as fan-favorite earthbender Toph Beifong.
📺 Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness
(Fri, June 26th — on HBO Max)
American history gets dragged into a Larry David argument. Created for America’s 250th anniversary, this seven-episode HBO limited sketch series reunites David with longtime Curb Your Enthusiasm collaborator Jeff Schaffer, who also directs. Produced by former President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama’s Higher Ground, the series looks back at the nation’s past through awkward misunderstandings, petty grievances, misread social cues, and familiar Curb cameos. It’s history told through Larry David’s favorite language: irritation.
📺 Paul Simon: The Quiet Celebration Concert
(Fri, June 26th — on Hulu / Disney+)
Paul Simon returns to the stage in this intimate two-hour concert special recorded live at Seattle’s McCaw Hall. The special captures Simon during his recent acoustic tour as he performs his Grammy-nominated work Seven Psalms live for the first time, revisits reimagined classics, and reflects on the hearing loss that made performing uncertain.
📺 Esports World Cup: Level Up: Season 2
(Fri, June 26th — on Prime Video)
The world’s largest esports competition gets another close-up. Directed by Emmy-winning filmmaker R.J. Cutler, Season 2 follows players, clubs, and families through a seven-week event in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where competitors chase a $70 million prize pool and the EWC Club Championship. With appearances from Post Malone, Cristiano Ronaldo, Lando Norris, Tony Hawk, and more, the series tracks esports culture pushing further into the mainstream.
📺 Notes from the Last Row
(Fri, June 26th — on Netflix)
A student’s writing becomes a dangerous obsession. Old Boy’s Choi Min-sik stars in this Korean psychological drama as a failed novelist turned literature professor who becomes fascinated by a quiet student’s unsettling talent. Adapted from Juan Mayorga’s play The Boy in the Last Row, the series turns mentorship into a slow-burning mind game about control, creative possession, and the disturbing power of a story.
📺 Agent Kim Reactivated
(Fri, June 26th — on Netflix)
A quiet father has a very loud past. Based on the Webtoon Manager Kim, this Netflix action series stars So Ji-Sub as a mild-mannered savings bank employee and single father hiding years of special-ops missions behind an ordinary civilian life. When his daughter disappears, the dangerous skills he tried to bury come roaring back in a high-stakes fight driven by how far a father will go.
📺 Camp Snoopy: Season 2
(Fri, June 26th — on Apple TV)
Snoopy and the Beagle Scouts are back on badge duty. After learning their troop may be on the verge of disbanding, Snoopy leads the group into nature with the Beagle Scout Manual as their guide. Meanwhile, Charlie Brown and the Peanuts gang settle into summer at Camp Spring Lake, where hiking, swimming, campfires, and camp mishaps bring the new season plenty of classic Peanuts charm.
📺 The Doomies
(Fri, June 26th — on Disney+)
One portal can ruin a perfectly peaceful coastal town. Max Mittelman voices Bobby and Madison Calderon voices Romy in this Disney+ animated adventure comedy about two best friends who accidentally open a doorway to evil. With monsters on the loose and Bobby becoming a major target, the duo must uncover the mystery behind the portal while facing creatures, supernatural danger, and the inner demons that can test a friendship.





