What's Coming Out This Week (June 23 - June 29, 2025)
Here's your one-stop guide to all the films and shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
From major studio releases to streaming premieres, here’s your guide to what’s opening in theaters and streaming on your preferred TV platforms this week.
We’ve rounded up the latest movie and TV trailers to keep you in the know. So mark your calendars, update your watchlists… there’s plenty to dive into this week.
⇩ In Theaters This Week 🎥
F1
(Fri, June 27th — wide release)
He had the talent to be a legend—now he’s got one last chance to prove it! Brad Pitt stars as Sonny Hayes, a former Formula 1 prodigy whose career was derailed by a devastating crash. Decades later, he’s called back to the track by ex-teammate-turned-owner Ruben Cervantes (Javier Bardem) to help save a failing team... and maybe himself. But sharing the spotlight with brash rookie Joshua Pearce (Damson Idris) means the comeback won’t be smooth—especially when your biggest rival is wearing the same uniform. Directed by Top Gun: Maverick’s Joseph Kosinski and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, with Kerry Condon and Tobias Menzies rounding out the pit crew, this pedal-to-the-metal drama is about pride, pressure, and the pursuit of greatness. But redemption doesn’t come easy—especially at 200 mph!
M3GAN 2.0
(Fri, June 27th — wide release)
She’s rebooted. She’s upgraded. And she’s got competition. In this campy, blood-splattered sequel to the 2022 horror hit, robotic engineer Gemma (Allison Williams) and her niece Cady (Violet McGraw) are targeted by a rogue, military-grade A.I. assassin built from stolen M3GAN tech. Their only hope? Reboot the sassiest, deadliest doll on Earth—and pray she can stop the carnage before it’s too late. But this isn’t the same M3GAN. She’s faster, fiercer, and deadlier than ever. And this time, it’s personal. Directed by M3GAN’s Gerard Johnstone and co-starring Ivanna Sakhno as the rival bot Amelia, this one’s got bigger battles and badder bots. It’s M3GAN vs. Amelia... may the best murder bot win!
Sorry, Baby
(Fri, June 27th — limited release)
Three years after surviving sexual assault, a sardonic college professor struggles to stitch her life back together—armed with dark humor, a loyal best friend, and a local neighbor she’s trying to keep at arm’s length. In her audacious feature film debut, Eva Victor writes, directs, and stars in this sharply funny yet deeply personal, semi-biographical A24 drama, produced by Barry Jenkins and co-starring Naomi Ackie and Lucas Hedges. This Sundance sensation walks the tightrope between pain and punchlines, proving healing is sometimes equal parts heartache and hilarity.
Hot Milk
(Fri, June 27th — limited release)
Sex Education star Emma Mackey leads this simmering psychological thriller as Sofia, a young woman trapped in a life of obligation, caring for her demanding, wheelchair-bound mother (played by Killing Eve’s Fiona Shaw) on the sun-drenched Spanish coast. But when Sofia falls for a free-spirited older woman (Vicky Krieps of Phantom Thread), she begins to imagine a different future—one free from guilt, duty, and the oppressive heat of her current life. And she starts to wonder just how far she’d go to make it happen. Based on Deborah Levy’s novel and directed by She Said screenwriter Rebecca Lenkiewicz, this mother-daughter thriller simmers with emotional tension, moral ambiguity, and Mediterranean heat. Because sometimes, revenge is best served hot... with a side of sunstroke.
Off the Grid
(Fri, June 27th — limited release; and on VOD)
One man. One reactor. And zero room for error. Josh Duhamel stars as a renegade scientist on the run after stealing his own invention—a palm-sized nuclear reactor capable of generating unlimited energy. Now he’s being hunted by a ruthless team of mercenaries led by Greg Kinnear, and it’s brains vs. bullets as the genius engineer turns the wilderness into a weaponized playground. Also starring Peter Stormare and María Elisa Camargo, and directed by stuntman-turned-filmmaker Johnny Martin, this is The Fugitive meets MacGyver—with a nuclear twist.
In Vitro
(Fri, June 27th — limited release; on VOD)
Set on a remote Australian cattle farm ravaged by climate collapse, this tense biotech thriller follows Layla (Talia Zucker) and Jack (Ashley Zukerman), a struggling couple using cutting-edge genetics to keep their livestock—and their relationship—alive. But as Jack’s experiments push the limits of science, Layla begins to suspect something far more unnatural is growing in the fields... and it’s not just the livestock that’s being altered. Directed by Will Howarth and Tom McKeith (Beast), this haunting tale spirals into a chilling descent where nature isn’t the only thing being manipulated.
Stealing Pulp Fiction
(Fri, June 27th — limited release; on VOD)
They’re not criminals. They’re cinephiles. In this offbeat comedy caper, a ragtag group of misfit dreamers (Jon Rudnitsky, Karan Soni, and Cazzie David) and their overly invested therapist (Jason Alexander) cook up a wildly misguided plan: steal Quentin Tarantino’s personal 35mm print of Pulp Fiction from his own theater. What begins as a cinephile’s fantasy spirals into a hilariously chaotic odyssey of blown cover stories, film geek freakouts, and vintage reel disasters. It’s a madcap love letter to movies, misfits, and the fine art of screwing everything up.
Ponyboi
(Fri, June 27th — limited release)
In this raw and hypnotic crime thriller, newcomer River Gallo stars as Ponyboi, an intersex sex worker hustling for survival in gritty New Jersey while caught in a toxic web with his pimp and secret lover, Vinnie (Dylan O’Brien). As threats from the mob close in and his sense of self begins to fracture, Ponyboi sets out on a desperate journey toward freedom, identity, and love. Directed by Esteban Arango (Blast Beat) and adapted from Gallo’s acclaimed short film, and also starring Victoria Pedretti, Murray Bartlett, and Indya Moore, this neon-lit queer outlaw odyssey dives into the margins—where the cost of chasing freedom is paid both in heartbreak and self-discovery.
⇩ Streaming This Week 🎦
Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything
(Mon, June 23rd — streaming on ABC/Hulu)
She asked the questions no one else dared, and got the answers the world couldn’t stop talking about. This revealing Hulu documentary traces the trailblazing rise of Barbara Walters, the first lady of broadcast journalism, who turned celebrity interviews into cultural moments and made prime-time history with everyone from Taylor Swift to the Menendez brothers. Directed by Jackie Jesko, this retrospective portrait dives into the ambition, sacrifice, and sheer audacity behind a career that shattered ceilings... and stirred controversy. Because before Oprah, there was Barbara.
My Mom Jayne, A Film by Mariska Hargitay
(Fri, June 27th — streaming on HBO MAX)
It’s the mother of all documentaries as Emmy and Golden Globe winner Mariska Hargitay (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit) not only makes her directorial debut but also opens up about her famed mother, legendary 1960s sex symbol and actress Jayne Mansfield, and her tragic death, for the first time. This HBO original documentary has Hargitay digging deep into family history as she embarks on a decades-late treasure hunt for the mother she barely knew. Through intimate interviews with her siblings, never-before-seen home movies and snapshots, and Jayne Mansfield’s own letters and keepsakes, Mariska peels back the layers of Hollywood’s original blonde bombshell to reveal the real woman behind the starlet persona.
The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie
(Fri, June 27th — streaming on HBO MAX)
The classic Looney Tunes gang is back in this out-of-this-world animated adventure comedy. Daffy Duck and Porky Pig (voiced by Eric Bauza) stumble into an alien mind-control plot, with Bugs Bunny, Tweety, Sylvester, and Wile E. Coyote unleashing more slapstick mayhem than a warehouse full of ACME products. Inspired by ‘50s alien invasion flicks, this zany romp delivers chaos, comedy, and all the Looney Tunes antics you can handle—faster than you can say “That’s all, folks!”
The Woman in the Yard
(Fri, June 27th — streaming on Peacock)
There’s someone in the yard, and spoiler alert: it’s not your friendly Amazon driver. In this new Blumhouse supernatural thriller, Danielle Deadwyler plays a grieving, widowed mom stuck at home on crutches, just trying to keep it together. But things take a terrifying turn when a ghostly woman in black (Okwui Okpokwasili) shows up in the backyard—silent, still, and very much not friendly. Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra (Orphan, The Shallows), this eerie shocker pits one determined mother against a supernatural force that controls shadows and shows up when you least expect it. Boo!
⇩ On VOD This Week ⏩
I Don’t Understand You
(Tues, June 24th — on VOD/Digital)
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?
Found Footage: The Making of the Patterson Project
(Tues, June 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Lights, camera… Bigfoot? This mockumentary horror-comedy follows Chase (Brennan Keel Cook), a clueless but passionate wannabe director hellbent on recreating the infamous 1967 Bigfoot sighting—with zero budget, a sketchy camcorder, and a man in a gorilla suit. But when strange things start happening on set, the crew begins to wonder if they’ve summoned something a little too real. Directed by Max Tzannes and executive produced by the Radio Silence team (Scream, Ready or Not), it’s a love letter to DIY filmmaking and cinematic delusion.
Pavements
(Tues, June 24th — on VOD/Digital)
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.
Tim Travers & the Time Travelers Paradox
(Tues, June 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Killing your past self? What could possibly go wrong? When narcissistic physicist Tim Travers (Samuel Dunning) builds a time machine just to spice up his miserable life, he decides to test the ultimate theory—by murdering his younger self. But one impulsive shot sets off a domino effect of contradictions and cosmic absurdity. Written and directed by Stimson Snead and co-starring Danny Trejo, Joel McHale, Keith David, and Felicia Day, this mind-bending sci-fi comedy proves that sometimes, the most dangerous person to time travel with... is you.
The Last Rodeo
(Tues, June 24th — on VOD/Digital)
Band of Brothers star Neal McDonough saddles up for this new neo-western family drama, where he plays a retired rodeo legend who decides to risk it all to secure money for his sick grandson. With everything on the line, he steps back into the bull ring for one final ride, aiming to win a high-stakes bull-riding competition as the oldest contestant to ever compete. Directed by Jon Avnet (Fried Green Tomatoes) and also starring Sarah Jones and Mykelti Williamson.
The President's Wife
(Tues, June 24th — on VOD/Digital)
In this new French biopic from filmmaker Léa Domenach, screen legend Catherine Deneuve stars as Bernadette Chirac, the woman who spent years in her husband’s shadow, only to emerge as a powerful political figure in her own right. Set against the backdrop of the 1995 French presidential election, this whip-smart drama follows Bernadette’s calculated rise from political spouse to media icon.
The Ritual
(Fri, June 27th — on VOD/Digital)
From Godfather to God-fearing, Al Pacino stars as Father Theophilus Riesinger, called to wage a holy war against a devilish force in this new horror thriller based on the real-life 1928 exorcism case. Joined by skeptical Father Joseph Steiger (Dan Stevens), they seek to help Emma (Abigail Cowen), whose body and soul are claimed by an ancient, demonic evil. Backed by nuns (Ashley Greene, Patricia Heaton), the two priests must reclaim Emma’s life before their own faith—and her very existence—are consumed. But as faith and fear collide, the question is whether their fragile beliefs can withstand the devil’s onslaught.
The Last Front
(Fri, June 27th — on VOD/Digital)
In this sweeping World War I epic, Iain Glen plays a Belgian farmer thrust into the chaos of invasion when German troops storm his peaceful village. As violence encroaches, his son (James Downie) falls deeply for a local aristocrat (Sasha Luss), igniting a forbidden romance that defies both class and conflict. With a brutal Nazi soldier (Joe Anderson) sowing destruction, the family must choose between surrendering to fear or standing their ground.
↑ Stealing Pulp Fiction (See above: on VOD/Digital)
↑ In Vitro (See above: on VOD/Digital)
↑ Off the Grid (See above: on VOD/Digital)
⇩ On TV This Week 📺
Marvel's Ironheart
(Tues, June 24th — on Disney+)
Being a genius is one thing... knowing who to trust is another. This new MCU miniseries follows Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne), a teenage engineering prodigy fresh from Wakanda, as she returns home to Chicago to forge her own path—with a self-built Iron Man–style suit and a mission to make a difference. But when shadowy benefactor Parker Robbins (Anthony Ramos), aka The Hood, steps in with an offer too good to be true, Riri must decide whether his help is worth the risk. Created by Chinaka Hodge and executive produced by Ryan Coogler, with Alden Ehrenreich, Lyric Ross, and Manny Montana co-staring, prepare for a hero’s story about power, purpose, and protecting what you build.
The Bear: Season 4
(Wed, June 25th — on FX, Hulu)
With their restaurant finally open and the hype at an all-time high, Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) and his makeshift family of chefs and kitchen staff (Ayo Edebiri, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Liza Colón-Zayas, Lionel Boyce, Matty Matheson) aren’t just cooking anymore... they’re fighting to survive the reality of fine dining’s brutal pace. As money dwindles, tempers flare, and perfection becomes a moving target, Carmy must reckon with his past and his crippling need for control… or risk losing everything they’ve built. The Bear isn’t just a restaurant anymore, it’s a high-wire act with no safety net.
Countdown
(Wed, June 25th — on Prime Video)
Supernatural star Jensen Ackles trades demon-hunting for doomsday-prevention as LAPD detective Mark Meachum, the reluctant leader of a newly minted task force racing to stop a deadly conspiracy before it detonates across Los Angeles. After a Homeland Security officer is assassinated in broad daylight, the team uncovers a chilling plot that could change everything—unless they can stop it in time. Co-starring Eric Dane, Jessica Camacho, Violett Beane, Elliot Knight, and Uli Latukefu, this new procedural action-thriller, created by Derek Haas (Chicago P.D., FBI: International), promises high-stakes tension, explosive twists, and a pulse-pounding race against time that will keep both the task force—and viewers—on edge.
Squid Game: Season 3
(Fri, June 27th — on Netflix)
The global phenomenon nears its end as Squid Game returns for a final, blood-drenched chapter. Picking up after Season 2’s explosive finale, Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae) is done playing by the rules—now, he’s trying to destroy the game from within. But with new players, deadlier traps, and a system that adapts to stay in power, taking it down may cost more than just his life. The show broke language barriers, streaming records, and audience expectations. Season 3 ends the saga on its most dangerous level yet—with one final, brutal reminder: the real enemy was never just the game.
Smoke
(Fri, June 27th — on Apple TV+)
In this searing new Apple original series from Dennis Lehane (Mystic River, Black Bird), Taron Egerton plays Dave Gudsen, a world-weary arson investigator tracking a string of infernos devastating Los Angeles. But when the fires start pointing in his direction, suspicion from detective Michelle Calderone (Jurnee Smollett) turns the heat up... way up. Is Gudsen hunting the firestarter… or hiding his own flame-fueled secrets? This white-hot mystery suddenly turns into a hunt for a serial arsonist who might be closer than anyone dares to believe.
Nautilus
(Sun, June 29th — on AMC/AMC+)
Jules Verne’s legendary antihero, Captain Nemo, dives deeper than ever in AMC’s new lavish steampunk reimagining of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas. Star Trek: Discovery actor Shazad Latif stars as an imprisoned Indian prince-turned-submarine-stealing prison escapee, navigating imperial oppression, mythical treasure, and high-seas sabotage—all from the helm of the most advanced vessel ever dreamed. With rival empires in hot pursuit and a ragtag crew of escaped convicts at his side, Captain Nemo charts a course for revolution beneath the waves. Victorian politics, steampunk tech, and deep-sea danger collide in this high-stakes adventure where the real treasure might just be freedom itself.