What's Coming Out This Week In Theaters and On Streaming, VOD & TV: June 15 thru June 21, 2026
All the 🎥 films and 📺 shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
With June in full bloom, we’re already seeing some summer trends take shape as the release calendar starts heating up. Horror is having a moment, original genre titles are finding room to breathe, and some of the usual franchise heavy hitters are having to work a little harder for attention.
Pixar, meanwhile, is dipping back into the toy box with another familiar favorite, hoping nostalgia still has enough juice to carry the weekend box office. And considering how much audiences still love these Toy Story characters, this could be one of those summer releases that reminds everyone why certain brands never really go away.
On TV, HBO is once again turning Sunday into Westeros night, with another season of House of the Dragon bringing fire, blood, family betrayal, and plenty of royal dysfunction back to the small screen. Add in a fresh batch of streaming premieres, VOD arrivals, and smaller titles trying to cut through the summer noise, and this week has a little bit of everything.
As always, we’ve rounded up the new movies and shows arriving over the next few days across theaters, streaming, VOD and TV. So whether you’re heading out to the movies or staying inside with the remote close by, scroll down and see what catches your eye.
🎥 In Theaters This Week
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🎥 Gregg Allman: The Music of My Soul
(Wed, June 17th — limited release)
Gregg Allman’s music came from somewhere deeper than fame, and this documentary traces those roots. Following the blues rocker from childhood tragedy to the sound he helped shape with the Allman Brothers Band, the film uses archival recordings, performances, and public-life chapters, including his marriage to Cher, to paint Allman as an artist whose ghosts never fully left the stage.
🎥 Toy Story 5
(Fri, June 19th — wide release)
The toys are back, and this time the enemy may be progress itself. Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Jessie, and the rest of Bonnie’s toys find themselves facing Lilypad, a cheerful Wi-Fi-enabled smart tablet that instantly grabs Bonnie’s total attention. Directed by Pixar vet Andrew Stanton, with Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, and Joan Cusack returning alongside Greta Lee, Melissa Villaseñor, Craig Robinson, Conan O’Brien, and others in the voice cast, Pixar’s latest sequel once again turns a child’s playroom into a bitter battlefield of relevance, where sometimes the toy with the most wear and tear still has the most heart.
🎥 The Death of Robin Hood
(Fri, June 19th — wide release)
Robin Hood has carried plenty of myths, but this version looks more interested in the scars. Hugh Jackman stars as an older, battered Robin of Loxley, a man weighed down by rebellion, regret, and the lives left behind in his wake. Directed by A Quiet Place: Day One’s Michael Sarnoski and co-starring Jodie Comer, Bill Skarsgård, and Noah Jupe, this moody period thriller trades polished swashbuckling for blood, mud, chilly reflection, and one last shot at redemption. Some heroes don’t always get a clean ending.
🎥 Leviticus
(Fri, June 19th — wide release)
Teenage longing becomes something dangerously literal in this buzzy new supernatural horror story. Joe Bird and Stacy Clausen star as Naim and Ryan, two Australian boys whose secret feelings for each other begin to surface just as a mysterious entity starts taking the form of the person they desire most. Writer-director Adrian Chiarella makes his feature debut with this queer coming-of-age drama, blending intimacy and supernatural horror into a survival test built on identity, desire, and trust. Some cravings don’t just haunt you... they come looking.
🎥 Maddie’s Secret
(Fri, June 19th — limited release)
Food content, viral fame, and psychological collapse make for a very strange recipe in this absurdist thriller. Comedian John Early stars as Maddie, a dishwasher who suddenly becomes a superstar at a trendy food-content company, only for her glossy new life to crack under pressure. Written and directed by Early, the comedy pulls Kate Berlant, Eric Rahill, Claudia O’Doherty, Conner O’Malley, Vanessa Bayer, Chris Bauer, and Kristen Johnston into a spoof of women-in-peril thrillers with a very serious identity crisis at the center.
🎥 Girls Like Girls
Fri, June 19th — limited release)
One summer can change everything, especially when the feelings are too big to keep quiet. Maya da Costa stars as Coley, a shy teenager whose connection with Sonya, played by Myra Molloy, pushes her toward a more complicated understanding of herself. From writer-director Hayley Kiyoko, this coming-of-age romance expands on her bestselling novel and music video with a story about identity, risk, and the emotional charge of first love.
🎥 Citizen Vigilante
(Fri, June 19th — limited release; also and On ✅VOD/Digital)
A broken justice system becomes one man’s excuse for a personal crusade in this vigilante action-thriller from B-movie maestro Uwe Boll. Armie Hammer stars as a wealthy American businessman in Zagreb, Croatia, who begins hunting violent offenders and corrupt figures after deciding the institutions around him have failed. Co-starring Costas Mandylor, the thriller suggests justice gets ugly fast when outrage turns into dubious action.
🎥 Peter Asher: Everywhere Man
(Fri, June 19th — limited release)
Some music careers happen center stage, while others quietly shape everything around them. This documentary looks back at the life and career of Peter Asher, from his early pop-music days to his influential work as a producer and manager. With Paul McCartney, James Taylor, and Linda Ronstadt among the film’s voices, it traces a career woven through several major chapters of music history.
🎥 Rose of Nevada
(Fri, June 19th — limited release)
A vanished fishing boat returns from nowhere, and that’s only the beginning of the problem. Callum Turner and George MacKay star as desperate men who take jobs aboard a vessel that mysteriously reappears decades after disappearing at sea. Writer-director Mark Jenkin’s eerie maritime thriller pushes its crew into a time-bending mystery where memory, fate, and folklore start pulling in the same dangerous direction.
🎥 Unidentified
(Fri, June 19th — limited release)
This gripping Saudi murder mystery stars Mila Al Zahrani as Noelle Al Saffan, a newly divorced true-crime obsessive grieving a devastating loss when an unidentified teenage girl is found dead in the desert. As the case drifts toward cold-case oblivion, Noelle pushes for answers. Written and directed by Wadjda filmmaker Haifaa Al Mansour, the film turns grief into a tense search for justice.
🎥 Ocean’s Eleven: 25th Anniversary
(Sun, June 21st & Wed, June 24th — re-release; via Fathom Entertainment)
Danny Ocean and the gang are heading back to the big screen, and the suits still look sharp as ever. Steven Soderbergh’s classic Vegas heist caper celebrates its 25th anniversary, with George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Don Cheadle, Andy Garcia, and Julia Roberts returning to the silver screen once more. The setup remains beautifully simple: one crew, one casino operation, and one plan that turns charm, timing, and personal motives into pure crowd-pleasing pleasure.
🎥 Adolescence of Utena
(Sun, June 21st & Mon June 22nd — re-release)
Kunihiko Ikuhara’s 1999 standalone anime classic heads back to theaters, bringing Ohtori Academy’s swords, secrets, and surreal power games back to the big screen. The story follows Utena as she’s drawn into a hidden dueling society and entangled with Anthy, the mysterious “Rose Bride” at the center of it all; turning fairy-tale imagery into something strange, stylish, and emotionally charged.
🎦 Streaming This Week
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🎦 Your Fault: London
(Wed, June 17th — premiering on Prime Video)
Noah and Nick are back, but real life is starting to crowd the romance. This Amazon original picks up after My Fault: London, with Asha Banks and Matthew Broome returning as a couple tested by distance, ambition, jealousy, and old insecurities. The passion is still there, but this sequel looks more interested in what happens after the first rush fades.
🎦 Never Change!
(Wed, June 17th — premiering on Hulu/Disney+)
High school never really ends, especially when a tornado leaves unfinished business scattered all over the place. John Reynolds and Sofia Black-D’Elia star as former classmates who return to North Meadows High years after their graduation was derailed, only to find old rivalries, awkward baggage, and adult disappointment waiting in the hallways. Written by Reynolds and directed by Marty Schousboe, this ensemble comedy leans into deadpan nostalgia with the unpleasant reminder that growing older does not always mean growing up.
🎦 André Is an Idiot
(Wed, June 17th — streaming on Netflix)
Mortality gets the last word in this Sundance-winning documentary, where self-described “idiot” André Ricciardi turns the camera on himself after a devastating colorectal cancer diagnosis. Blending candid vérité with surreal stop-motion, he chronicles his final chapter with dark humor and blunt self-awareness. Less a sentimental goodbye than a clear-eyed warning, the film becomes a pointed call to action about checkups, colonoscopies, and the cost of waiting too long.
🎦 Project Hail Mary
(Thurs, June 18th — streaming on Prime Video, with MGM+)
The sun is dying, and humanity is out of time. Ryan Gosling stars as a mild-mannered middle-school science teacher unexpectedly recruited for a desperate interstellar mission to save Earth. Stranded alone in deep space with fading memories of how he got there, he discovers an unusual rock-like alien he names Rocky, who becomes an unlikely partner as they work together to solve the cosmic mystery threatening both their worlds.
🎦 Voicemails for Isabelle
(Fri, June 19th — premiering on Netflix)
Sometimes romance starts with a message meant for someone else, yet somehow lands with the right person to hear it. Zoey Deutch stars as Jill, a grieving woman in San Francisco who keeps leaving messy, confessional voicemails for her late sister, only for the number to be reassigned to an Austin real estate agent played by Nick Robinson, who finds himself growing increasingly drawn into her heartfelt messages. Turning accidental voicemails into an offbeat connection, this bittersweet rom-com suggests love can sometimes find us through the strangest wrong number.
🎦 Husbands in Action
(Fri, June 19th — premiering on Netflix)
Nothing says teamwork like being forced to save the woman who connects two men who can barely stand each other. Jin Sun-kyu and Gong Myoung star in this Korean action comedy about a detective who must partner with his ex-wife’s new husband after she is kidnapped. Directed by Park Gyu-tae, the Netflix film proves that jealousy, bruised pride, and personal resentment can be pushed aside when someone needs rescuing, even though the awkwardness clearly rides shotgun.
🎦 The Voices of Our Mother
(Fri, June 19th — on Shudder)
A mother’s sudden illness brings the family home, but this supernatural horror quickly suggests something darker is waiting in the house. Sheila McCarthy stars as an ailing mother whose four estranged children return during a health crisis that begins to feel less medical and far more nefarious. Written and directed by Ready or Not star Mark O’Brien, who also co-stars alongside Georgina Reilly, Carolina Bartczak, and Alex Ozerov-Meyer, this haunted family thriller turns caregiving, resentment, and blood ties into a grim domestic reckoning.
🎦 Stepfather
(Fri, June 19th — premiering on Tubi)
Taye Diggs stars as a stepfather chasing the idea of the perfect family, but his new wife and daughters soon discover his version of domestic bliss may come with a dangerous catch. Co-starring Tamar Braxton, Kalani Jules, Jessica Jarrell, and Janeline Hayes, this Tubi horror-thriller turns family bonding into a survival story where getting out of the house alive becomes the real challenge.
🎦 How to Make a Killing
(Fri, June 19th — streaming on Netflix)
Blood is thicker than water… until there’s money involved. In this darkly comic satirical thriller from Emily the Criminal director John Patton Ford, Glen Powell stars as a disowned heir who plots to eliminate his obscenely wealthy relatives and fast-track his inheritance, with Margaret Qualley, Ed Harris, and Topher Grace fueling a razor-sharp spiral of greed, entitlement, and family dysfunction. Because some family trees deserve to be trimmed... just maybe not this mercilessly.
✅ On VOD This Week
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✅ Pressure
(Tues, June 16th — On VOD/Digital)
History doesn’t get much heavier than the days before D-Day. Brendan Fraser stars as General Dwight D. Eisenhower, facing the impossible call of when to launch the Allied invasion, while Andrew Scott plays meteorologist James Stagg, whose weather forecast could alter the course of World War II. Directed by Hotel Mumbai helmer Anthony Maras, this tense historical drama turns military strategy into a nerve-rattling countdown where hesitation and miscalculation could cost thousands of lives.
✅ Deep Water
(Tues, June 16th — On VOD/Digital)
The friendly skies turn feeding frenzy in this survival thriller starring Aaron Eckhart and Ben Kingsley as airline pilots forced to ditch their plane in the open ocean. But surviving the crash is only the first nightmare, as stranded passengers cling to wreckage while sharks circle below. Directed by Renny Harlin, this disaster thriller puts panic, pressure, and predators on the same flight plan.
✅ The Wizard of the Kremlin
(Tues, June 16th — On VOD/Digital)
Power doesn’t just rise; it gets carefully scripted. In Olivier Assayas’ icy political drama, Paul Dano plays a soft-spoken Russian filmmaker drawn into the inner circle of Jude Law’s emerging KGB strongman, Vladimir Putin, where image, manipulation, and fear become tools of control. As he helps shape a regime built on illusion, the stage grows larger, the stakes turn global, and the performance becomes impossible to escape.
✅ Busboys
(Tues, June 16th — On VOD/Digital)
Comedians David Spade and Theo Von team up as two aimless friends who think waiting tables will somehow fix their lives... until their total lack of skill turns every shift into a full-blown disaster. With botched orders, frustrated coworkers, and chaos piling up by the minute, this fast, loose comedy serves up a nonstop stream of trouble where nothing (and no one) comes out unscathed.
✅ The Last One for the Road
(Tues, June 16th — On VOD/Digital)
Some comeback stories come with a lot of bad ideas and worse hangovers. Filippo Scotti and Sergio Romano star as aging small-time hustlers chasing buried riches after an old partner resurfaces with one last scheme. Directed by Francesco Sossai, this scruffy Italian road-trip caper wanders through taverns, detours, and the dusty remains of glory days gone sideways.
✅ Two Pianos
(Tues, June 16th — On VOD/Digital)
Old flames have a way of playing out of tune. François Civil stars as a globe-trotting pianist who returns to Lyon for one final performance with his demanding former teacher (Charlotte Rampling), only to be pulled back toward a volatile ex (Nadia Tereszkiewicz) who refuses to fade quietly. Writer-director Arnaud Desplechin turns this intimate French romantic drama into a chamber piece of love, loyalty, and unfinished business.
✅ Finnegan’s Foursome
(Fri, June 19th — On VOD/Digital)
A round of golf becomes a very complicated family goodbye. Edward Burns and Brian D’Arcy James star as rival brothers who bring their adult children to Ireland to scatter their late father’s ashes on the coastal course he loved. Written and directed by Burns, this Ireland-set comedy uses missed shots, old resentment, and one final wish to find a warmer path toward forgiveness.
✅ Land of Wolves
(Fri, June 19th — On VOD/Digital)
A rescue mission goes bad, and survival turns into a spectator sport. Starring James William Clark, Matthew Gray, Felix Alexander, and Russell Shealy, this action thriller follows four elite Navy SEALs who are captured and forced into an underground deathmatch staged as a bloodsport for billionaires. File this under: a brawl-fest for those who like their action films stripped down, mean, and ready to throw hands.
⇯ See Above: ✅Citizen Vigilante (Fri, Jun 19; VOD/Digital)
📺 On TV This Week
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📺 America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Season 3
(Tues, June 16th — on Netflix)
The sparkle is polished, but the pressure is brutal. Netflix’s hit docuseries returns with a new group of Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders hopefuls chasing a coveted spot on one of the most recognizable squads in sports entertainment, where precision, stamina, and stage-ready confidence have to look effortless.
📺 The Season
(Wed, June 17th — on Hulu and Disney+)
Paradise looks a lot better before the revenge plot kicks in. Jessie Mei Li stars as Cola, a newcomer entering Hong Kong’s luxurious high-society boating world with a hidden agenda and the powerful Hext family in her sights. What begins as a sun-drenched summer of wealth, status, and elite leisure slowly turns into a glossy power game of lies, secrets, and consequences. The water may be calm, but this circle of privilege is clearly built to sink someone.
📺 The Simpsons: Extreme Makeover — Homer Edition
(Wed, June 17th — on Disney+)
Homer Simpson still has room for self-improvement, though Springfield probably should not hold its breath. This Disney+ special finds Marge’s patience tested after Homer leaves Bart, Lisa, and Maggie unsupervised with only a doorbell camera as a babysitter, sending their date night into tipsy fantasy territory. From there, the story spins into a trilogy of “what if?” scenarios built around different versions of Homer trying, and probably failing, to become a better husband and father.
📺 I Will Find You
(Thurs, June 18th — on Netflix)
A father’s worst nightmare becomes something even harder to explain. Sam Worthington stars as David Burroughs, a man imprisoned for murdering his own son, only to receive shocking information suggesting the boy may still be alive. Based on Harlan Coben’s bestselling novel, this twisty mystery turns grief, guilt, and wrongful conviction into a desperate search for the truth.
📺 The Capture: Season 3
(Thurs, June 18th — on Peacock)
Holliday Grainger returns as Rachel Carey, now acting head of SO15 after exposing a secret deepfake program that shattered public trust in surveillance technology. But her new position pulls her into another dangerous crisis when a coordinated terrorist attack opens the door to a wider geopolitical conspiracy.
📺 Sugar: Season 2
(Fri, June 19th — on Apple TV)
Colin Farrell returns as John Sugar, the stylish Los Angeles private detective whose latest case involves the troubled older brother of an up-and-coming local boxer. But while Sugar follows that trail, his search for a beloved missing sister keeps pulling him toward something larger and more sinister. With Sasha Calle, Jin Ha, Raymond Lee, Tony Dalton, Laura Donnelly, and Shea Whigham joining the mix, Season 2 looks ready to send its bruised detective deeper into the city’s shadows.
📺 Oasis
(Fri, June 19th — on Netflix)
This Spanish teen crime thriller follows a group of privileged young people trapped inside an elite vacation paradise after one of the guests mysteriously vanishes and the investigation locks everyone in place. Ana Garcés, Tomy Aguilera, Victoria Kantch, Berta Castañé, Manel Duarte, Ada Molina, Álex Mola, and Cande Méndez star as suspicion spreads through the sun-soaked escape. The result looks like rich-kid panic with a mystery hiding somewhere under the poolside glamour.
📺 House of the Dragon: Season 3
(Sun, June 21st — on HBO/HBO Max)
The Targaryen family tree is burning from both ends now. Emma D’Arcy’s Rhaenyra fights to defend her claim to the Iron Throne as Westeros sinks deeper into civil war, while Ewan Mitchell’s Aemond tightens his grip on power after turning against his own brother. Olivia Cooke’s Alicent finds herself shaken by what her son has become, pushing old loyalties into dangerous new territory. With political betrayal, fractured bloodlines, and dragon-fueled war closing in, Season 3 looks like the realm’s last stop before everything goes up in fire and ash.
📺 The Agency: Season 2
(Sun, June 21st — on Paramount+)
Spy work gets uglier when the betrayal comes from inside the room. Michael Fassbender returns as Martian, a compromised CIA operative caught in the fallout of London Station’s mole hunt while still haunted by the woman he could not save. Jeffrey Wright and Richard Gere are back in this psychological espionage drama, where loyalty is temporary, secrets are currency, and every answer seems to open another trapdoor.





