What's Coming Out This Week In Theaters and On Streaming, VOD & TV: June 29 thru July 5, 2026
All the 🎥 films and 📺 shows hitting theaters and streaming this week!
July is here, which means fireworks, sparkles, and a summer release calendar that’s only getting brighter. We’ve already seen surprise box-office hits, a few pricey misfires, and enough reminders that summer movie season can still be hard to predict. And judging by the weeks ahead, things are only about to get busier.
So, as always, we’ve rounded up what’s arriving over the next few days across theaters, streaming, VOD, and TV. Whether you’re heading out to catch something on the big screen or staying inside with the remote close by, scroll down and see what catches your eye. Summer isn’t slowing down anytime soon, and your watchlist is starting to look as crowded as a holiday weekend cookout.
🎥 In Theaters This Week
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🎥 Minions & Monsters
(Wed, July 1st — wide release)
The Minions are making a monster movie, which means the real disaster is probably happening behind the camera. Pierre Coffin returns to direct and voice the yellow chaos machines as they search for the perfect creature to star in their kaiju-sized production. Once Hollywood comes calling, their big cinematic dream spirals into pratfalls, gibberish, weaponized cuteness, and banana-fueled mayhem. Featuring the voices of Zoey Deutch, Jesse Eisenberg, Jeff Bridges, Allison Janney, and Christoph Waltz, the film keeps the franchise’s slapstick formula alive as the Minions drag their brand of global mayhem straight into monster-movie territory.
🎥 Flies
(Thu, July 2nd — limited release)
Loneliness has a way of making even the smallest intrusion feel enormous. Teresa Sánchez stars as Olga, a solitary woman whose carefully controlled routine begins to crack when a lodger secretly brings his young son into her Mexico City apartment. Shot in spare black-and-white by Mexican filmmaker Fernando Eimbcke, this intimate drama turns grief, isolation, and one unwanted houseguest into a quiet story about the strange ways connection can sneak in.
🎥 Young Washington
(Fri, July 3rd — wide release)
Before he became a national legend, George Washington was a young soldier facing brutal warfronts, personal trials, and impossible choices that would begin shaping the future of a country not yet born. William Franklyn-Miller stars in this historical drama about the pressure, sacrifice, and rebellious spirit behind the myth, with Mary-Louise Parker, Kelsey Grammer, Andy Serkis, and Ben Kingsley rounding out the cast. Just in time for America’s 250th anniversary, the Jon Erwin-directed epic tells the origin story of the man who would eventually become America’s first president.
🎥 Battle of Oslo
(Fri, July 3rd — limited release; also on ✅VOD/Digital)
One order can turn the tide of history. As German warships close in on Oslo on April 9, 1940, Colonel Birger Eriksen commands the undermanned Oscarsborg Fortress and makes the impossible call to sink the Blücher. Directed by Daniel Fahre and led by Bjørn Sundquist, this Norwegian historical war thriller shifts between the Battle of Drøbak Sound and the 1946 inquiry that forces Eriksen to defend the decision that shaped an invasion.
🎥 Mary Oliver: Saved by the Beauty of the World
(Fri, July 3rd — limited release)
A new documentary explores the life and legacy of Mary Oliver, the Pulitzer-winning poet whose work found mystery, healing, and meaning in nature. Featuring archival materials, personal photos, and interviews with close friends, the film captures Oliver’s private life, literary fame, and lasting influence.
🎥 Citizen Kane: 85th Anniversary
(Sun, July 5th and Wed, July 8th — re-release via Fathom Entertainment)
Some mysteries only grow larger with time. Orson Welles’ landmark classic returns to the big screen for its 85th anniversary. The film follows the mystery of Charles Foster Kane’s final word, “Rosebud,” tracing his rise from inherited wealth to newspaper power, political ambition, and personal ruin. This special anniversary release also includes exclusive insight from film critic Leonard Maltin.
🎦 Streaming This Week
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🎦 Bang My Box: The Robin Byrd Story
(Tues, June 30th — streaming on HBO/HBO Max)
Before influencers and livestream fame, Robin Byrd was turning New York public access into a sex-positive late-night playground. This HBO documentary revisits the cult host of The Robin Byrd Show, whose blend of adult entertainment, experimental art, queer visibility, AIDS awareness, and frank sex talk made her both a community lifeline and a censorship target. Produced by Sarah Jessica Parker, the doc follows a now 70-year-old Byrd as she reflects on her outsider career and how a bawdy cable-access oddity became a fearless, funny New York institution.
🎦 Enola Holmes 3
(Wed, July 1st — premiering on Netflix)
Millie Bobby Brown returns as Enola Holmes, whose latest case lands at the worst possible moment. While preparing to marry Lord Tewkesbury (Louis Partridge), the young detective is drawn into a dangerous Malta-set mystery after her older brother Sherlock Holmes (Henry Cavill) suddenly disappears. With Adolescence helmer Philip Barantini taking over directing duties, the third Netflix installment raises the stakes as Enola is forced to choose between love, duty, and the future she wants on her own terms. For Enola, the real mystery may be figuring out what kind of life she’s actually chasing.
🎦 Ready or Not 2: Here I Come
(Thurs, July 2nd — streaming on Hulu/Disney+)
In this sequel to the hit horror-comedy, Grace (Samara Weaving) has just survived her in-laws’ twisted deadly ritual game, but the nightmare isn’t over yet. When a powerful new family dynasty tied to the same sinister tradition pulls her back into another life-or-death contest, she’s forced to fight once again… this time with her sister (Kathryn Newton) dragged into the blood-soaked mayhem. As alliances shift and the hunt begins anew, Grace must rely on her instincts to survive another round of a twisted family game that never seems to end.
🎦 The Choral
(Thurs, July 2nd — streaming on Netflix)
A grieving Yorkshire town on the World War I home front finds a fragile sense of hope when an enigmatic German chorus master (Ralph Fiennes) arrives to revive its fading choral society. As the war drains the village of its men and spirit, music becomes an unlikely lifeline, binding civilians and wounded soldiers together in harmony, where song doubles as both solace and quiet defiance.
🎦 Summer’s Last Resort
(Fri, July 3rd — premiering on Tubi)
M3GAN’s Violet McGraw stars in this daughter-mother comedy as a teen determined to stop her mother (Sofia Bush) from stumbling into another bad relationship, only to send their luxury getaway spiraling off course. Also starring Jerry O’Connell and directed by Wynonna Earp actress Melanie Scrofano, the film turns daughterly concern into full-blown vacation panic, where good intentions can cause just as much trouble as the bad decisions they’re trying to stop.
🎦 Lee Cronin’s The Mummy
(Fri, July 3rd — streaming on HBO Max)
Eight years gone, and she comes back like nothing ever happened. Jack Reynor stars in this eerie supernatural horror thriller as a journalist whose missing daughter (Natalie Grace) is discovered inside a 3,000-year-old sarcophagus, unchanged in body but deeply unsettling in spirit. As he and his wife (Laia Costa) try to welcome her home, strange and violent signs begin to surface, pointing to something ancient taking hold. Sometimes the real horror isn’t losing someone... it’s getting them back.
🎦 Protector
(Fri, July 3rd — streaming on Prime Video with MGM+)
Cross the wrong mother and the payback won’t be gentle. Milla Jovovich stars in this action thriller as Nikki, a decorated war hero forced back into fight mode when her teenage daughter is kidnapped by a trafficking ring. Directed by Adrian Grünberg, the film sends Nikki on a brutal rescue mission that mixes Rambo-style survival grit with Taken-style urgency, as one group of predators realizes far too late they chose the wrong target.
✅ On VOD This Week
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✅ The Devil Wears Prada 2
(Tues, June 30th — on VOD/Digital)
Fashion never forgets, even when Miranda Priestly pretends she does. Anne Hathaway’s Andy Sachs returns to Runway as the magazine faces a shifting media landscape, forcing her back into orbit with Meryl Streep’s icy editor-in-chief and Emily Blunt’s sharp-tongued Emily Charlton. With Stanley Tucci also back as fashion director Nigel Kipling, this glossy sequel proves office politics still look better in couture.
✅ Obsession
(Tues, June 30th — on VOD/Digital)
Be careful what you wish for, especially when love is involved. Michael Johnston stars as a socially awkward music store employee who uses a mysterious novelty item to make his longtime crush (played by this year’s breakout Inde Navarrette) fall for him. But in Curry Barker’s feature debut, affection turns dangerous fast, transforming one lonely guy’s romantic fantasy into a supernatural nightmare with no safe word.
✅ The Get Out
(Tues, June 30th — on VOD/Digital)
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.
✅ Pitfall
(Tues, June 30th — on VOD/Digital)
One wrong step turns a peaceful outdoor trip into a dirt-covered nightmare. Richard Harmon stars as a young man who gets separated from his friends and falls into a spike-lined pit that definitely wasn’t built by nature. Trapped, injured, and possibly being watched, he must figure out how to survive when escape is ten feet above him and danger may be waiting at the edge.
✅ Silent Friend
(Tues, June 30th — on VOD/Digital)
Tony Leung Chiu-wai steps into another contemplative role as a grieving neuroscientist in this quietly poetic drama from acclaimed Hungarian filmmaker Ildikó Enyedi. Set around a German botanical garden watched over by a centuries-old ginkgo tree, the film connects lives across generations, with Léa Seydoux drifting through time. Nature may be silent, but here it remembers everything.
✅ Blades of the Guardians: Wind Rises In The Desert
(Tues, June 30th — on VOD/Digital)
In this sweeping wuxia epic from legendary action maestro Yuen Woo-Ping, Wu Jing plays a hardened blade-for-hire escorting the empire’s most wanted outlaw (Jet Li) across a lawless landscape where honor has become a death sentence. Joined by heavyweights Nicholas Tse, Tony Leung Ka-fai, Max Zhang, and Kara Wai, this balletic martial-arts saga turns every ambush into operatic bloodshed as shifting alliances and buried loyalties slice as sharply as any sword.
✅ Man of War
(Fri, July 3rd — on VOD/Digital)
Some rescue missions are dangerous from the start, but this one cuts deeper. Special Ops: Lioness actor LaMonica Garrett stars as an elite American Special Forces veteran pulled back into combat when his adopted daughter, an aid worker, is kidnapped by Russian mercenaries during the invasion of Ukraine. As the mission drives him through a brutal war zone, survival becomes less about orders than how far one man will go for family.
⇯ See Above: ✅Battle of Oslo (Fri, Jul 3; VOD/Digital)
📺 On TV This Week
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📺 Zorro
(Tue, June 30th — on MHz Choice)
Jean Dujardin stars in this French-language period action-comedy as Don Diego, a reluctant mayor in 1821 Los Angeles who brings his masked alter ego back after a ten-year absence. With the city sliding into disorder, Diego becomes Zorro again, only to find that the suit feels tighter, the heroics are rusty, and the town now prefers the legend to the man behind the mask.
📺 Louis C.K.: Ridiculous
(Tue, June 30th — on Netflix)
Louis C.K. returns to the stage in New York for a new stand-up comedy special built around absurd stories, uncomfortable hypotheticals, and blunt observations. The special puts him back in familiar territory: one man, one microphone, and a head full of darkly comic thoughts that wander into places most comics would rather avoid.
📺 Elle
(Wed, July 1st — on Prime Video)
Before Harvard Law, Elle Woods had to survive high school. Set in 1995, this comedy prequel follows teenage Elle as a family move from sunny Southern California to rainy Seattle drops her into grunge-era cliques, awkward romances, and flannel-heavy judgment. Lexi Minetree stars as the future legal icon, with June Diane Raphael and Tom Everett Scott as her parents. Reinvention, it turns out, starts early when Elle Woods is involved.
📺 X-Men ’97: Season 2
(Wed, July 1st — on Disney+)
X-Men ’97 returns for a second season as Apocalypse brings mutant mayhem, time-twisting chaos, and extinction-level stakes back into the animated world of the 1990s. With the X-Men scattered across the ancient past, present day, and a distant future, the team must fight its way home while mutant intolerance grows stronger in their absence.
📺 Worst Neighbor Ever
(Wed, July 1st — on Netflix)
Bad neighbors can make life miserable. Dangerous ones can make it fatal. Netflix’s true-crime docuseries returns with firsthand stories of neighborhood conflicts that escalate into threats, harassment, and deadly fixation. Built from testimonials, bodycam footage, and animated reenactments, the series taps into a deeply uncomfortable fear: the person living next door may be the one you should fear most.
📺 Survival of the Thickest: Season 3
(Thu, July 2nd — on Netflix)
Mavis Beaumont heads into her final season with sharp style, big emotions, and one last shot at building the future she wants. Michelle Buteau returns as the plus-size Black stylist thriving in the designer fashion world, while Mavis and Luca begin the life-changing journey toward starting a family. Based on Buteau’s acclaimed essay collection, this farewell season brings back the romance, chosen family, self-worth, and pointed comedy that made Mavis impossible to ignore.
📺 Human Vapor
(Thu, July 2nd — on Netflix)
A killer cloud is about to make society hold its breath. This eight-episode Netflix series follows suspended detective Kenji Okamoto (Shun Oguri), who investigates after a professor swells and explodes on live television. When the Human Vapor (UTA) announces more deaths, Kenji teams with reporter Kyoko (Yu Aoi) to track an impossible culprit. Based on Toho’s 1960 film, this new version turns a classic monster premise into eerie spectacle.
📺 Chainsmoker Cat
(Thu, July 2nd — on Netflix)
Based on the manga serialized in Kodansha’s Weekly Young Magazine, this offbeat anime comedy follows Yani, a catgirl with a bad smoking habit and a life stuck in a messy loop of rent problems, job trouble, failed fresh starts, and cravings that keep winning. Directed by Taku Kimura, the series turns quitting into comic survival.
📺 Silo: Season 3
(Fri, July 3rd — on Apple TV)
The outside world is only part of the mystery. Season 3 of this Apple sci-fi drama follows Juliette Nichols (Rebecca Ferguson) as she keeps exposing the lies holding humanity inside the silos. While survivors face rebellion, fractured loyalties, and a new threat underground, the story jumps to the “Before Times,” where journalist Helen Drew (Jessica Henwick) and Congressman Daniel Keene (Ashley Zukerman) uncover the conspiracy that may have sealed humanity’s fate. The truth isn’t just buried underground; it was built that way.
📺 Hammerhead Sharks Up Close with Bertie Gregory
(Sun, July 5th — on NatGEO, Hulu/Disney+)
Wildlife filmmaker Bertie Gregory heads into Mexico’s Pacific waters for this National Geographic nature special about one of the ocean’s most recognizable predators. As Gregory investigates why hammerhead shark sightings have become increasingly rare, the special looks at protected waters, conservation hope, and the power of a rare shark encounter in the wild.
📺 Sparks of Tomorrow
(Sun, July 5th — on Netflix)
Set in a smoke-covered alternate-history version of early 20th century Kyoto, this anime follows Kihachi Sakamoto and Inako Momokawa as their paths cross because of the mysterious 20th Century Electrical Catalog. Kyoto Animation’s series turns their search for one missing book into a story of grief, invention, and fragile hope.





