In Fantastic Four: First Steps, Marvel’s first family returns with cosmic powers and even bigger stakes. But it’s the emotional bonds that steal the spotlight. The trailer blends thrilling glimpses of Silver Surfer and Galactus with tender moments of family, teasing a superhero saga where saving the world starts at home.
Browsing: Movies & TV
With haunting visuals and a pulse that never slows, the trailer for Sugarcane dives headfirst into trauma, truth, and the terrifying ease with which someone can vanish.
Four Letters of Love whispers a soulful, windswept trailer that promises a romance etched in fate and framed by the poetic hush of the Irish countryside.
Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow is set to soar onto the big screen in 2026, bringing a bold new chapter to the DC Universe. Starring Milly Alcock as Kara Zor-El, the film adapts Tom King’s acclaimed comic and follows Supergirl on a cosmic journey of vengeance, justice, and self-discovery.
As Marvel gears up for Avengers: Doomsday, speculation swirls around the future of the Black Panther mantle.With Letitia Wright’s Shuri confirmed to return and whispers of new cast members—possibly including Damson Idris and even Michael B. Jordan reprising a multiversal Killmonger, the MCU is poised for bold shifts.
With soaring vocals, deeper emotional stakes, and a shimmering new look at Oz, Wicked: For Good promises a finale that’s as heart-wrenching as it is magical. The trailer teases a powerful reimagining of what it means to be good, wicked, and everything in between.
Idris Elba plans to relocate to help make African films that are not framed by colonialism but ‘own those stories of our tradition, of our culture, of our languages’
A haunting rural thriller simmering with tension, Echo Valley finds Julianne Moore and Sydney Sweeney at their most raw and riveting.
In Trust, safety is an illusion and betrayal cuts deeper than any blade. With Sophie Turner at the helm of this psychological storm, the trailer hints at a thriller that’s less about survival—and more about what’s left of you when the people closest turn into strangers.
Eva Victor’s Sorry, Baby is a tender and unflinching exploration of trauma, memory, and friendship, told with a fractured grace that feels both intentional and intimate. With a sharp, soulful performance at its core and a script that balances quiet humour with deep emotional resonance.