What's Coming Out This Week (July 7 - July 13, 2025)
Here's your one-stop guide to all the films and shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
You’ve come to the right place for a quick refresher on this week’s movie and TV releases. We’re here to keep you in the updated on what’s hitting theaters and streaming platforms this week, so you can plan your watchlist accordingly. So, scroll down and take a look at what’s available.
⇩ In Theaters This Week 🎥
★ Superman
(Fri, July 11th — wide release)
The cape is back... and so is the pressure. In the first major installment of James Gunn’s hotly anticipated DC cinematic relaunch, David Corenswet steps into the red boots of the world’s most iconic hero, facing public scrutiny, personal doubt, and a conniving Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult) with no moral limits. With Rachel Brosnahan’s Lois Lane asking the hard questions and a world unsure if it wants a savior, this summer’s most talked-about superhero film aims to ground the Man of Steel with heart, hope, and a whole new DCU blueprint. Will he soar... or sink under sky-high expectations? Well, let’s just say, fans are already flying high... and they’re coming at us faster than a speeding bullet.
★ Daniela Forever
(Fri, July 11th — limited release)
What if you could dream your way back to the one you lost... and never wake up? In Nacho Vigalondo’s latest genre-twisting mind-bender, Henry Golding (Crazy Rich Asians) stars as a heartbroken man who takes an experimental drug that lets him control his dreams, only to get trapped in a romance with a woman (White Lotus: Season 2 breakout Beatrice Grannò) who may be too perfect to be real. Equal parts sci-fi fable and emotional gut-punch, this dark romantic tale dives headfirst into love, loss, and the slippery line between memory and obsession. Because sometimes the woman of your dreams is just that... a dream.
★ Abraham’s Boys: A Dracula Story
(Fri, July 11th — limited release)
Dracula may be gone, but try telling that to Abraham Van Helsing. In this chilling gothic reimagining from director Natasha Kermani and author Joe Hill (based on his short story), Titus Welliver plays the legendary vampire hunter training his two sons in 1915 America, haunted by a past he swears still stalks him. As Dracula’s shadow creeps across their rural home, his boys must decide if Dad's gone mad... or if evil really is knocking at the door. With paranoia, family tension, and bloodthirsty horror, this Gothic tale proves that monsters don’t always stay in the storybooks.
★ Sovereign
(Fri, July 11th — limited release; and on VOD)
Nick Offerman sheds the laughs for loaded guns in this harrowing based-on-true-events thriller about a father who lets ideology steer the wheel. As a staunch anti-government activist, he hits the road with his teenage son (Jacob Tremblay), preaching Sovereign Citizen beliefs—until their crusade catches the attention of a no-nonsense police chief (Dennis Quaid). What begins as fringe rhetoric builds into a deadly standoff, testing the limits of freedom, family, and the fine line between conviction and anarchy.
★ Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight
(Fri, July 11th — limited release, in NY and LA)
Actress Embeth Davidtz makes a powerful directorial debut with this haunting adaptation of Alexandra Fuller’s memoir, set amid the crumbling aftermath of the Rhodesian Bush War. Told through the eyes of 8-year-old Bobo (a breakout Lexi Venter), the film captures the innocence of childhood colliding with the brutal realities of racial division, colonial legacy, and familial unraveling. With Davidtz also starring as Bobo’s volatile mother, this 1980s-era South African drama is a deeply personal, politically charged portrait of a world on the brink... and a girl caught in its crossfire.
★ Don’t Log Off
(Fri, July 11th — limited release)
What if your group chat became a death trap? In this chilling screen-life horror, a friendly video call spirals into a virtual nightmare when one friend vanishes mid-chat... and the others start disappearing, one frozen screen at a time. Modern Family’s Ariel Winter leads a young cast in this tech-fueled horror thriller from brother filmmakers Brandon and Garrett Baer, where staying online might be the only thing keeping you alive... and every glitch, lag, and camera flicker just might be a reason to scream.
★ Bang
(Fri, July 11th — limited release; and on VOD)
Meet the hitman with a change of heart... literally! After surviving a bloody ambush and receiving a new heart, William Bang (Jack Kesy, star of Hellboy: The Crooked Man) trades kill orders for a shot at redemption in this bullet-riddled action redemption tale. But walking away from the life isn’t easy when your old crew wants you dead. Directed by Thai action filmmaker Wych Kaosayananda (aka Kaos), this new action film delivers explosive gunfights, brutal reckoning, and Robocop’s Peter Weller as a villain you’ll love to hate.
⇩ Streaming This Week 🎦
❖ Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story
(Thurs, July 10th — streaming on Disney+/Hulu)
Just when you thought you knew everything about Jaws, this new retrospective documentary drags you back into the deep. Directed by Laurent Bouzereau, this film celebrates the shark that launched the summer blockbuster, featuring new interviews with Steven Spielberg, never-before-seen footage, and stories from the set where chaos, malfunctions, and movie magic collided. With insights from Hollywood legends like John Williams, James Cameron, Guillermo del Toro, George Lucas, Robert Zemeckis, and Jordan Peele, among others, this is the ultimate tribute to the film that made you afraid to go in the water... and still does.
❖ Brick
(Thurs, July 10th — streaming on Netflix)
In this claustrophobic mystery thriller, Matthias Schweighöfer and Ruby O. Fee star as a couple trapped inside their apartment building after a brick wall mysteriously seals them in overnight. With paranoia rising and trust crumbling, the neighbors must work together to uncover the truth… or risk being buried alive.
❖ Zombies 4: Dawn of the Vampires
(Thurs, July 10th — streaming on Disney+)
The claws (and choreography) come out in this fang-tastic new chapter of Disney’s monster musical saga. Zed and Addison hit the road after their first year of college, only to stumble into Sunnyside and Shadyside: two towns locked in a supernatural turf war between vampires and other creatures of the night. With new friends, fresh beats, and plenty of undead drama, this campy musical farce proves that summer break can really bite.
❖ Tyler Perry's Madea's Destination Wedding
(Fri, July 11th — streaming on Netflix)
Madea’s going tropical... and you better believe she packed attitude with her sunscreen. When the Simmons family learns Tiffany’s marrying a rapper she just met, it’s off to the Bahamas to shut it down before “I do” turns into “what did we do?” Tyler Perry returns as the no-nonsense matriarch in this latest Madea installment, where family chaos meets island vibes in a sun-soaked showdown of love, laughs, and plenty of side-eye. The wedding might be questionable... but Madea’s gonna make it unforgettable!
❖ Almost Cops
(Fri, July 11th — streaming on Netflix)
One’s by the book, the other tossed it out the window—welcome to Rotterdam’s most unlikely crime-fighting duo. In this Dutch cop comedy, a rule-following officer (Jandino Asporaat) teams up with a hot-headed ex-detective (Werner Kolf) in a reluctant partnership fueled by grief, grit, and a shared need for justice. As they chase down a killer and uncover buried secrets, these almost cops might just become the real deal.
❖ Push
(Fri, July 11th — streaming on Shudder)
Pregnancy, paranoia, and a stranger who won’t leave ... This takes home invasion horror to a whole new level of dread. Alicia Sanz stars as a pregnant real estate agent trapped in a luxurious estate with a man (Raúl Castillo) who claims the house holds a bloody secret—and hints she might be next. As labor kicks in and escape grows impossible, survival becomes a race against time for both mother and unborn child. From the filmmakers behind The Djinn and The Boy Behind the Door, this new thriller delivers a nerve-shredding blend of body horror and psychological terror.
❖ In the Lost Lands
(Fri, July 11th — streaming on Hulu)
When the end of the world gets a mystical makeover, you call Milla Jovovich—because if she can survive zombies, she can handle a little dark magic. Based on George R.R. Martin's short story, this fantasy actioner throws Jovovich into a post-apocalyptic wasteland where spells are as deadly as swords, and David Bautista is the muscle you want on your side. Reuniting with director Paul W. S. Anderson, Jovovich stars as Gray Alys, a sorceress on a quest for a mythical treasure—one that could change everything, if she doesn’t get eaten by monsters first. With Bautista’s battle-worn drifter at her side, the duo faces cultists, creatures, and plenty of chaos. The film makes its streaming debut this week.
❖ Pavements
(Fri, July 11th — streaming on MUBI)
Pavements is the ultimate throwback for any Gen-Xers who lived for indie rock in the '90s. This documentary from Alex Ross Perry (Her Smell) takes a satirical look at the rise of Pavement, the alternative rock band that captured the hearts of misfits, slackers, and college students everywhere. Featuring Joe Keery as a young Stephen Malkmus and Jason Schwartzman as Matador Records founder Chris Lombardi, Pavements blends stage reenactments, music documentary, and meta-comedy for a wild ride through the band’s quirky legacy. A psychedelic trip that’s part concert, part rock history, and all about indie anarchy. The film makes its streaming debut this week.
❖ Opus
(Fri, July 11th — streaming on HBO MAX)
Getting an early listen to the greatest album of modern times sounds like a real dream... until you realize the price of admission is total devotion. In this darkly comic thriller, The Bear’s Ayo Edebiri plays a rookie music journalist sent to the secluded compound of an eccentric pop icon (John Malkovich, naturally). But the real story isn’t the music—it’s the cult-like empire he’s built around himself. And if she thinks her fellow journalists will help expose the madness, she’s in for a rude awakening. Co-starring Juliette Lewis, Murray Bartlett, and Amber Midthunder, this twisted industry satire from writer-director Mark Anthony Green proves that in the world of fame and fandom, the real hit is control. It debuts on streaming this week.
❖ Drop
(Fri, July 11th — streaming on Peacock)
Bad dates don’t get worse than this: Meghann Fahy stars in this new Blumhouse horror thriller as a single mother forced to choose between killing her blind date (It Ends with Us’s Brandon Sklenar) or letting her son die. With a kidnapper pulling the strings from within the restaurant, it’s a one-night nightmare that’s as tense as it is twisted. So maybe next time, just swipe left. It debuts on streaming this week.
⇩ On VOD This Week ⏩
✰ Karate Kid: Legends
(Tues, July 8th — on VOD/Digital)
The Karate Kid universe is far from over! Legends brings a fresh chapter to the beloved franchise, bridging together the original Karate Kid films, the Cobra Kai series, and the 2010 Karate Kid remake. This time, martial arts legend Jackie Chan returns as Mr. Han from the 2010 film, teaming up with Ralph Macchio’s Daniel LaRusso. Together, they mentor a new generation, including Li Fong (Ben Wang), a Chinese American student in New York City, who must embrace the fighting styles of both karate and kung fu to defeat his karate-trained tormentors in a high-stakes tournament. 'Cause sometimes the best way to defeat your foes is to blend the best of both worlds.
✰ The Phoenician Scheme
(Tues, July 8th — on VOD/Digital)
Wes Anderson returns with exactly what you’d expect from the master of quirky cinema. Oscar-winner Benicio del Toro stars as Zsa-zsa Korda, a wealthy aviation tycoon with an obsession for planes and a plan to handpick which of his ten children will inherit his fortune. His choice? His daughter Liesl (Mia Threapleton), a nun—whom he hopes will abandon her vows to help him build a utopian community in the desert. Naturally, things go off the rails when radical militias get involved, and the dream turns into a surreal, high-stakes mess. Featuring a stacked ensemble cast, including Scarlett Johansson, Benedict Cumberbatch, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, and many more — and with the filmmaker’s signature deadpan wit, pastel-drenched visuals, and delightfully offbeat storytelling, this might be Wes Anderson at his most Wes Anderson-y!
✰ The Shrouds
(Tues, July 8th — on VOD/Digital)
Legendary filmmaker David Cronenberg (A History of Violence, Fly, Videodrome) takes us on a disturbing journey where the dead don’t rest... they get livestreamed. In Cronenberg’s latest, Vincent Cassel plays a grieving tech mogul who’s turned burial into a high-tech business, offering people the chance to watch their loved ones decompose in real-time. But when vandals strike his late wife’s cemetery and her ghost begins to haunt him, Cassel’s character descends into a spiral of guilt, paranoia, and obsession. A twisted exploration of grief, technology, and the bizarre ways we must hold on to the past.
✰ The Unholy Trinity
(Tues, July 8th — on VOD/Digital)
When Montana newcomer Henry (Brandon Lessard) rides into the lawless town of Trinity to claim his father’s ill-gotten gold, he finds himself caught between a rattlesnake of a bandit (Samuel L. Jackson) and a straight-shooting sheriff (Pierce Brosnan). As double-crosses fly faster than bullets, Henry must decide: stake his claim on justice or dig in for villainy in a gold rush that’s more blood rush.
✰ Watch the Skies
(Tues, July 8th — on VOD/Digital)
You wouldn't know it, but this Swedish sci-fi thriller breaks new ground by using an AI process to create a nearly seamless English dub, syncing actors' lips to the dialogue for a more natural experience. Directed by Victor Danell, this Spielbergian adventure follows a teen (Inez Dahl Torhaug) who believes her missing father was abducted by aliens, sending her on a high-stakes quest for the truth. With innovative AI technology translating Swedish to English without losing the actors' performances, this little sci-fi film could end up revolutionizing how foreign films reach English-speaking audiences... and vice versa.
✰ Everything’s Going to be Great
(Fri, July 11th — on VOD/Digital)
Sometimes chasing your dream means dragging your whole family with you. Bryan Cranston stars as Buddy Smart, a passionate yet scatterbrained theater manager who uproots his wife Macy (Allison Janney) and their two teenage sons (Benjamin Evan Ainsworth and Jack Champion) to chase his dream of running a regional stage theater in New Jersey, circa 1970s. But as Buddy’s big plans start to crumble, the family must figure out how to hold it together... or fall apart spectacularly. From I, Tonya writer Steven Rogers and Stan & Ollie director Jon S. Baird, this heartfelt coming-of-age dramedy blends showbiz ambition with family dysfunction—where big dreams can sometimes lead to family meltdowns, yet also spark unexpected moments of growth, healing, and connection.
✰ Nuked
(Fri, July 11th — on VOD/Digital)
Birthday cake, bad decisions, and a bombshell of a surpise. In this high-stakes, high-as-a-kite comedy, a 40th birthday bash goes from nostalgic reunion to nuclear meltdown when a wayward phone check reveals a missile is en route. As the weed kicks in and the panic sets in, this group of old friends must face the end of the world… or just the end of their pot-induced buzz. Starring Anna Camp, Justin Bartha, Lucy Punch, Tawny Newsome, and Natasha Leggero, this is a doomsday comedy where the only fallout is from their own freak-outs.
✰ Nobu
(Fri, July 11th — on VOD/Digital)
From humble beginnings to Michelin-starred mastery, this profile slices into the extraordinary life of chef Nobuyuki Matsuhisa, the man behind the name that changed modern dining forever. Directed by Matt Tyrnauer (Studio 54, Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood), this revealing doc rolls out an intimate portrait of the sushi sensation who blended Japanese tradition with bold Peruvian flavors, winning over the world (and Hollywood) with dishes to die for. Nobu didn’t just build a restaurant... he built a lifestyle empire.
✰ Forgive Us All
(Fri, July 11th — on VOD/Digital)
When the world eats itself alive, what’s left to forgive? In this brutal post-apocalyptic neo-western, Evil Dead Rise’s Lily Sullivan stars as a hardened loner clinging to solitude in the New Zealand wilderness—until a wounded stranger (Lance Giles) arrives, dragging chaos to her doorstep. Cannibals roam the forest, a brutal gang is closing in, and survival means facing not just the monsters outside, but the darkness within.
⇪ Bang, also on VOD (see above)
⇪ Sovereign, also on VOD (see above)
⇩ On TV This Week 📺
✪ Jim Thorpe: Lit by Lightning
(Mon, July 7th — airing on the History Channel)
Before there was LeBron, Brady, or Bo... there was the man, the myth, the legend: Jim Thorpe. This two-hour documentary charges headfirst into the life of one of the most overlooked icons in sports history. Thorpe wasn’t just an Olympian... he was the Olympian. The first Native American to win Olympic gold for the U.S., he was a multisport phenom who dominated football, baseball, basketball, and track like it was no big deal. From his battles against racism and injustice to his unmatched athletic brilliance, this new doc paints a portrait of a man who didn’t just break records, he broke barriers. Executive produced by LeBron James and Maverick Carter, the doc tells the story of an American icon whose impact was as thunderous as his stride.
✪ Such Brave Girls: Season 2
(Mon, July 7th — on Hulu)
The gloriously chaotic Johnsons are back, and somehow even more emotionally unhinged. In the second season of this darkly funny British comedy, Josie’s existential spiral deepens, Billie’s love life is a walking red flag, and mum Deb’s latest scheme is just one delusion away from disaster. Created by and starring Kat Sadler, this BAFTA-winning comedy returns with more cringe, more chaos, and the kind of family dysfunction that’s painfully relatable—and hysterically watchable.
✪ Quarterback: Season 2
(Tues, July 8th — on Netflix)
The huddle’s back and so are the hits... on and off the field! Netflix’s smash sports docuseries returns with Joe Burrow, Kirk Cousins, and Jared Goff stepping into the spotlight to break down the plays, pressure, and personal moments that defined their seasons. From clutch throws to crushing defeats, they’re calling their own plays this time. Get the drama behind the drive!
✪ It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: Season 17
(Wed, July 9th — on FXX/Hulu)
Seventeen seasons in and still absolutely unfit for society, the gang from Paddy’s Pub returns with more mayhem, delusion, and moral bankruptcy. This year, Frank (Danny DeVito) becomes a deranged Golden Bachelor, while the rest of the crew fumbles their way into a crossover with Abbott Elementary—because of course they do. Rob McElhenney, Glenn Howerton, Charlie Day, Kaitlin Olson, and DeVito are back to prove that aging doesn’t mean maturing in TV’s longest-running exercise in lovable depravity.
✪ Ballard
(Wed, July 9th — on Prime Video)
Crime never sleeps... and neither does she! In this new cop series, Maggie Q steps into the Bosch universe as Detective Renée Ballard, a no-nonsense LAPD investigator tasked with cleaning up a department in disarray. Juggling cold cases, political landmines, and a public losing faith, Ballard brings grit, brains, and zero patience for outdated rules. With guest appearances from Titus Welliver’s Harry Bosch, this Amazon original is a sharp, modern procedural where justice doesn’t wait for backup.
✪ The Gringo Hunters
(Wed, July 9th — on Netflix)
When American fugitives cross the border, they don’t escape justice... they just meet a new kind of law. This new Spanish-language Netflix series follows an elite Mexican police unit tasked with tracking down U.S. criminals hiding out in Mexico. Based on true events, this gripping crime series dives into the tangled web of corruption, loyalty, and international pursuit, where every arrest is a high-stakes gamble... and the truth is never black and white.
✪ Too Much
(Thurs, July 10th — on Netflix)
Hacks breakout Megan Stalter stars as a hot mess in Heathrow in this cheeky, cross-continental rom-com series from Girls creator Lena Dunham. Fresh off a breakup and drowning in self-pity, New Yorker Jessica (Stalter) escapes to London, only to fall hard for Felix (White Lotus’s Will Sharpe), a charming British musician with enough baggage to rival hers. Their chemistry is electric, their dysfunction undeniable, and their love story might just be a beautiful disaster.
✪ Foundation: Season 3
(Fri, July 11th — on Apple TV+)
This acclaimed sci-fi spectacle returns with more galaxy-shaking drama as the fight to shape the future of civilization reaches new heights. Based on Isaac Asimov’s legendary sci-fi saga, this Apple TV epic continues its lavish, mind-bending march through destiny, decay, and the power of mathematics. With returning stars like Lee Pace and Jared Harris—and new faces including Pilou Asbæk and Troy Kotsur—Season 3 promises more betrayal, spectacle, and existential dread than ever. Sci-fi fans, your post-Andor binge has officially arrived.
✪ Dexter: Resurrection
(Fri, July 11th — on Paramount+ with SHOWTIME)
Just when you thought the Dark Passenger was gone for good… he wakes up in Manhattan. This new Dexter spinoff series revives Michael C. Hall’s beloved blood-spatter analyst-slash-serial killer for one more stab at redemption—this time in the city that never sleeps, and definitely never stops killing. Fresh out of a coma and haunted (again) by the ghost of his dad (James Remar), Dexter navigates a twisted New York underworld, crossing paths with a sinister serial killer superfan played by Peter Dinklage. With a stacked cast including Uma Thurman, Krysten Ritter, and Neil Patrick Harris, this bloody revival asks the question: can a killer really change… or is he just sharpening new knives?
✪ One Night in Idaho: The College Murders
(Fri, July 11th — on Prime Video)
On a quiet November night in 2022, four college students were brutally stabbed to death in their off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho. Who was the culprit? And why were there so many unanswered questions during the investigation? From acclaimed directors Liz Garbus (Lost Girls, I’ll Be Gone in the Dark) and Matthew Galkin (Murder in the Bayou), this four-part true-crime docuseries offers an intimate, emotionally raw look at the tragedy through exclusive interviews with the victims’ families. With no dramatizations or reenactments, this is the story told solely by those closest to it—friends, family, investigators—shedding light on the impact, the unresolved questions, and the community’s fight for justice.
✪ The Institute
(Sun, July 13th — on MGM+)
Based on Stephen King’s best-selling novel, this new series centers around gifted teens with psychic powers locked away in a secret facility where the experiments are cruel and the escape plans are telekinetic. Newcomer Joe Freeman stars as Luke Ellis, a prodigy desperate to break free, while Ben Barnes plays a small-town ex-cop whose curiosity may be the kids’ only hope. With Mary-Louise Parker as the sinister director and Jack Bender behind the camera, this Amazon MGM+ thriller blends Stranger Things with Stephen King-sized paranoia—because growing up is hard, but being weaponized is worse.