From Superman to I Know What You Did Last Summer – these are the films to watch at the cinema and stream at home this year 2025
Eddington
Best known as the horror auteur who chilled audiences with Hereditary and Midsummer, Ari Aster moves on to state-of-the-nation satirical comedy with his latest film, Eddington. The title is the name of a small desert town in New Mexico where the sheriff, Joaquin Phoenix, is at loggerheads with the business-minded mayor, Pedro Pascal. Their feud has something to do with the sheriff's wife, Emma Stone, but it spirals out of control in 2020 when the town is hit by the Covid-19 pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests.
Aster "transforms everyday American insanity into one of the most artistically complete and compulsively watchable doom-scrolls of the year", says Tomris Laffly in Elle. "It's insightful, gloriously bonkers, and often very funny… both the definitive Covid movie and a modern-day Western of sorts, culminating into a superbly directed and gradually darkening finale."
Released
on 18 July in the US and on 24 July in Australia
Heads
of State
What
is it about US Presidents becoming action heroes at the moment? In April, Viola
Davis was a gun-toting, butt-kicking POTUS in G20. Now, Heads of State has John
Cena as a President who used to be a Hollywood actor, and Idris Elba as the
UK's Prime Minister. When their plane is shot down over hostile territory, they
have to battle their way back to civilisation, with some help from a supporting
cast that includes Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Jack Quaid and Paddy Considine.
Directed by Ilya Naishuller, this action comedy probably won't win many Oscars,
but Naishuller's last film, Nobody, had some of the best fight scenes in years,
and Cena proved in The Suicide Squad that he knows how to send up his tough-guy
image. "This one was pretty much just me getting beat up, and that is my
forte," Cena said on Extra. "We have a little
introduction as to who these people are, and then once it jumps off, you are on
the edge of your seat the whole time. Once it goes, it doesn't stop."
Released
on Prime Video on 2 July internationally
(Credit: Kismet Movies)
Together
Allison
Brie and Dave Franco, a real-life married couple, star in this icky horror
drama as another couple, Millie and Tim, who may be a little too closely
entwined for their own good. They move from Melbourne to the Australian
countryside, where Millie is starting a teaching job. After Tim drinks some
stagnant water in a mysterious cave, he can't bear to be apart from Millie, but
when he touches her, their bodies start to fuse together. Written and directed
by Michael Shanks, Together currently has a 100% fresh rating on the Rotten
Tomatoes reviews round-up site – but whether it would work as a date movie is
open to debate. "This delightfully unhinged spin on the body horror joint…
should leave audiences yelping and tittering in equal measure," says
Kate Erbland in IndieWire. "It's hard not to get pulled into the
spectacle, stuck to the story, really connected to this crowd-pleasing (and
-screaming) little ditty of a midnight treat."
Released
on 30 July in the US, Canada and the UK, and on 31 July in Australia
40
Acres
The
debut film from writer-director RT Thorne is a dystopian survival thriller set
in Canada. Animals have been wiped out by a pandemic, and food is scarce, so if
you are lucky enough to have your own farm, you might be inclined to build a
high fence around it, and do whatever it takes to keep gangs of hungry
strangers outside. The farmers on this particular property are people of colour
– Danielle Deadwyler plays a matriarch with a military background, and her
husband is played by a First Nations actor, Michael Greyeyes – which gives 40
Acres another layer of complexity: enslaved people were promised homesteads of
"not more than 40 acres" after the American Civil War. The film is
full of gory action, but, according to Chase Hutchinson in The Wrap,
it has some profound issues in mind. "Is there room for community and care
when everyone is at each other's throats in what was already a painful
existence? The question remains the main point of thematic tension with no easy
answers as we follow a family struggling to find a way forward together."
Released
on 2 July in the US
Superman
Superman
is the first film in the new DC Universe, as revamped by James Gunn (Guardians of the Galaxy,
The Suicide Squad). It looks as if it might be more cheerful than Zack Snyder's
moody Man of Steel (2013): the trailers don't just feature Lois Lane (Rachel
Brosnahan) and Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult), but the outlandish likes of the
Green Lantern, Hawkgirl, Superman's robot assistants, and Krypto the Superdog.
But what can we hope for from Superman himself, as played by David Corenswet?
"We can expect a Superman who is about the compassion of the human
spirit," Gunn said in Screen Brief. "Yes, he's an alien
from another planet who's super powerful, but he is also deeply, deeply human…
This is about a complex character, and I think that’s the thing that audiences
are going to be completely surprised by."
Released
from 8 July internationally
Smurfs
A
tribe of tiny, brightly coloured, music-loving humanoids who live in a forest
village? Over the past decade, the most popular characters who met that
description were the Trolls, not the Smurfs: Trolls was a disco-powered smash
in 2016, and Smurfs: The Lost Village couldn't match it a year later. Still,
maybe the latest Smurfs film, in which animated Smurfs are zapped to a
live-action Paris, will put them back on top. The biggest selling point is
Rihanna, who voices the Smurfette and contributes new songs (the working title
was The Smurfs Musical). But Peyo's original Belgian comic strips were what
mattered to the director, Chris Miller (Puss in Boots). "The DNA in Peyo's
original drawings guides so many creative choices in the film," Miller said at last
year's Annecy Animation Festival. "All of the action lines and thought
bubbles from the comics are going in the movie, and the comics have inspired
the style of animation to be fun and buoyant, with plenty of squash and
stretch."
Released
from 16 July internationally
I
Know What You Did Last Summer
In
the original I Know What You Did Last Summer, which came out in 1997, a group
of teenagers ran someone over in their car, fled the scene of the crime, and
were hunted down by a serial killer known as the Fisherman. The film set off a
craze for teen slasher films in the 1990s, alongside Scream (which had the same
screenwriter, Kevin Williamson). And now that the Scream franchise is back,
maybe it was inevitable that I Know What You Did Last Summer would follow. This
legacy sequel has a new set of teens, and another car accident, but it's set in
the same universe as the first film, and features Jennifer Love Hewitt and
Freddie Prinze Jr as the two survivors of the first killing spree, Julie and
Ray. "I came to this originally wanting to dig into: if this thing had
happened to you, how would that shape you, and what person do you become after
it?" Jennifer Kaytin Robinson, the writer-director, said in
Entertainment Weekly. "So really wanting to look at both Ray and Julie
and say, 'Okay, how did this thing shape both of them and where would they be
today?'"
Released
from 16 July internationally
The
Fantastic Four: First Steps
Once
a decade, it seems, someone tries to launch a big-screen franchise based on
Marvel comics' first superhero team, the Fantastic Four. There was a 2005 film,
which was successful enough to merit a sequel, and then there was Josh Trank's
dark reboot in 2015, which wasn't. And now, in 2025, there is yet
another version – but it looks a lot more fantastic than the others. The team
is now played by Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby (who shares a surname with the
co-creator of the Fantastic Four, legendary artist Jack Kirby), Joseph Quinn
and Ebon Moss-Bachrach. The twist is that the film isn't set in the Marvel
Cinematic Universe but a parallel reality which is a bright and shiny
space-aged, 1960s utopia. "This is very much about the spirit of the Space
Race," Matt Shakman, the director, said in Empire magazine.
"It's about JFK and optimism. It's imagining these four going into space
instead of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. This idea is that they are the most
famous people in America, because they're adventurers, explorers, astronauts –
not because they're superheroes."
Released
from 23 July internationally
Apocalypse
in the Tropics
The
state of Brazil's democracy is firing up film-makers at the moment: see last
year's Oscar-winning I'm Still Here, and the
forthcoming Cannes award-winner The Secret Agent. In the documentary field,
Petra Costa's personal take on her country's political divisions, The Edge of
Democracy, was Oscar-nominated in 2020. And now she returns with Apocalypse in
the Tropics, which examines the influence that evangelical Christian leaders
have over voters: former president Jair Bolsanaro was embraced by Christians
and nicknamed "the Messiah". Costa "explores the history of
evangelism to try and grasp how its apocalyptic visions managed to capture the
hearts and minds of so many Brazilians", says Jordan Mintzer in The
Hollywood Reporter. "By doing so, she sheds light on a
phenomenon present not only in Brazil and America, but in countries around the
world where 'faith in progress and democracy' is currently being tested like
never before."
Released
Netflix on 14 July internationally
Jurassic
World Rebirth
Jurassic
World Rebirth is a Jurassic World reset. The last film in the dino-series,
2022's Jurassic World Dominion, was a globe-trotting action caper with
science-fiction and spy-thriller elements, whereas the new one goes back to
basics: it's written by David Koepp, who scripted the first two Steven Spielberg-directed Jurassic
Park films, and it returns to the classic concept of having a small
band of intrepid adventurers (Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali, Jonathan
Bailey, Rupert Friend) being trapped on a tropical island with some hungry
prehistoric animals. The director, Gareth Edwards, demonstrated his skill with
CGI behemoths in Godzilla (2014) and his low-budget debut, Monsters (2010), but
in this instance he's happy to pay loving homage to Spielberg. Jurassic World
Rebirth "really does feel that it's welcoming people to celebrate the
original film", Bailey said in Empire magazine.
"It has that wonder and awe, while not being scared to re-inject the
thrill and the fear."
Released
in cinemas internationally from 2 July
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