2025 was a year of delays, reshoots, surprise hits, cinematic heartbreaks, and at least three movies we all preferred not to talk about. Franchises were stretched thin while hidden gems quietly carried the year on their backs.
Now comes 2026, stepping into the theatre with a new movies and big promises. 2026 will be a jam-packed year for fans of science fiction, fantasy, horror, superheroes and epic blockbuster movies, something for every movie goer. If the release calendar is anything to go by, 2026 will be the year to remind us why we fell in love with the movies in the first place.
Let’s walk through it month by month.
January: An Adventurous Opening Act
The year explodes into action with a mix of genre flavours. Indie horror, sci-fi continuations and Netflix teasers dominate early January. Titles like 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple directed by Nia DaCosta and The Rip (Netflix) signal that the year’s creative range will stretch wide. Expect returns to eerie worlds (Return to Silent Hill), human stories (A Private Life) and thrillers (Dead Man’s Wire).
February: Romance, Monsters, and Gothic Beats
This month unfolds like a cinematic scrapbook full from cover to cover. Jane Austen vibes with Wuthering Heights (starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi), eerie franchise expansions like The Strangers: Chapter 3, and gothic reinterpretations of classic chills. It’s a tightly packed block where emotion and fright embrace.
March: Sci-Fi Takes the Wheel
March is all about high concepts. Project Hail Mary which is Chris Pratt-less yet still ambitious. An adaptation of Andy Weir’s space adventure anchors the month. NPR listeners, rollercoaster fans and high-altitude thinkers will find company here. The Breadwinner and documentary-style premieres (like Billie Eilish – Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour) ensure variety.
April: Blockbusters Begin Blooming
By April, the studios start flexing. The Super Mario Galaxy Movie blasts into theatres and The Mummy collides with a quirky comedy 4 Kids Walk Into a Bank. Apex hits Netflix right after its theatrical run, blurring lines between release windows.
May: May the Block be with You
Here’s where things start feeling big. The Devil Wears Prada 2 adds sartorial sparks, while Star Wars: The Mandalorian & Grogu brings galaxy dust and baby-Yoda levels of cuteness back to screens worldwide. Throw in Mortal Kombat II and animated detectives (The Sheep Detectives), and you’ve got a month where every ticket stub is a conversation starter.
June: Whimsy and Superpowers
Disney and Warner Bros sprinkle a little magic, muscle, and mayhem. Toy Story 5 pulls at heartstrings, Masters of the Universe hauls out nostalgia, and Supergirl storms screens with high-octane flight.
July: Midyear Power Surge
July hits like a storm in the night. Minions 3 and live-action Moana keep the family crowd buzzing, while Christopher Nolan unleashes The Odyssey. A mythic journey starring Tom Holland and Zendaya, promises spectacle with visceral ambition. And let’s not forget Spider-Man: Brand New Day swinging in to tilt July’s gravity.
August: Cult, Comedy, and Creature Features
August leans into a mashup: Super Troopers 3 for the rib-ticklers, eerie tones with Untitled Insidious, and quirky animated fare like The Dog Stars. It’s a slice-of-everything month, like the perfect pizza with a bit of everyone’s favourite.
September: Drama, Fantasy and Reboots
The Spring queue blends emotional storytelling (Sense and Sensibility) with genre experimentation (Resident Evil, Practical Magic 2). Stalwart franchises rub shoulders with fresh voices and period pieces alike.
October & November: Spooky Pumpkins to Hearthside Tales
Horror heads dominate October with standalone titles like Terrifier 4 and slate of thrillers. November steers us toward The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping, adding dystopian scale right before holiday crowds roll in and the holiday moods begin to simmer.
December: The Blockbuster Bonanza
And here comes the cinematic explosion. Avengers: Doomsday and Dune: Part 3 both drop on December 18. An unprecedented twin-peak event that could reshape box office records. Jumanji 3 and The Angry Birds Movie 3 make December feel like a multi-headed beast meal of spectacle, emotion and family fun.
