The most anticipated films of 2026: Steven Spielberg, Greta Gerwig, Christopher Nolan, and the Avengers
Old friends, franchises, and filmmakers are going back to the movies.
Photo: (clockwise from top left) Warner Bros., Universal, Universal, Ketchup Entertainment
After a pitch-black 2025, audiences approach 2026 with fresh eyes. All the better to watch movies with. Media consolidation continues apace as Netflix and Paramount vie for control of 2025’s hottest and oldest studio, Warner Bros. But before the typical tune of Hollywood nihilism becomes an earworm, let us look forward to a host of new, exciting, and original movies coming to theaters this year. 2026 has no shortage of cinema worth getting excited about. Sure, there are the franchises. New Star Wars, Marvel, and DC movies on the way, but also a refresh of Narnia courtesy of Greta Gerwig, Homer’s Odyssey from Christopher Nolan, and a matter of a Bone Temple that still needs clearing up. Plus, the theatrical returns of Sam Raimi, Steven Spielberg, Gore Verbinski, and Boots Riley? Maybe 2026 will be the year everything turns around. Here are 15 of our most anticipated films of 2026.
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (January 16)
The first of two 28 Years Later sequels, The Bone Temple picks up where director Danny Boyle left off. He passes the baton to Candyman filmmaker Nia DaCosta for the latest trip to Zombie Island, which follows up on the previous movie’s gonzo cliffhanger. Spike (Alfie Williams) takes up with the sinister Jimmy Savile enthusiast, Sir Lord Jimmy (Jack O’Connell), as Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) unlocks the secrets of the Alpha (Chi Lewis-Parry). Last year’s legacy sequel overdelivered on terror and surprised with humor, beauty, and grace. Working from another script by series screenwriter Alex Garland, this new film should be a similarly idiosyncratic post-apocalyptic safari.
Send Help (January 30)
A new Sam Raimi horror movie is always cause for celebration, and based on the trailer, he’s bringing the same mean-spirited humor and relentless horror of Evil Dead and Drag Me To Hell to his latest, Send Help. Rachel McAdams plays Linda Liddle, a stinky but capable office drone, unfortunately stranded on a desert island with her awful, useless boss (Dylan O’Brien), who seems to think he’s still in charge. The survival story comes complete with grim irony, plenty of bloodshed, and a Rachel McAdams comedic performance. Who says January is a dumping ground?
Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die (February 13)
Speaking of directors making an overdue return, Gore Verbinski is back on the big screen for the first time in nearly a decade. Verbinski hopes to wash the lingering taste of The Lone Ranger from his viewers’ mouths with a time-travel-based, AI-battling zombie movie starring Sam Rockwell. Rockwell plays a time-traveler who lands in a L.A. diner hoping to recruit fighters in the war against braindead ChatGPT obsessives. The stylish, kinetic, and satirical trailer looks unlike anything Verbinski has ever made.
Wuthering Heights (February 13)
The trailer for Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of Wuthering Heights has annoyed the Brontë-heads online, but have they seen what this movie looks like? Each frame of the trailer looks like the cover of a romance novel, shot on sumptuous VistaVision and with plenty of squishy, flesh-like walls for sets. Margot Robbie plays Catherine, and Jacob Elordi is her Heathcliff in the timeless tale of romance and revenge. Fennell appears intent on making the novel’s subtext text with this steamy new take on the classic, but there might not be a better way to spend Valentine’s Day.