
Toy Story 5 gives Jessie her long-overdue spotlight in a heartfelt Pixar sequel about technology, friendship, and growing up.

A woman stands alone, refusing to conform in the vibrantly feminist Tribeca Audience Award Winner: One Woman One Bra

In their mid-thirties, a group of unhappy people returns to high school to graduate—and their regrets, failed romances, and other tortures are still waiting for them in Never Change!

Writer-director Ran Ran Wang cuts deep into the malicious heart of manipulation in I THINK ABOUT KILLING YOU from Tribeca 2026

A fractured friendship is tested for a second time in the Tribeca 2026 debut feature Mother Future Self

Disclosure Day is a thrilling and hopeful Spielberg sci-fi epic that balances modern anxieties with the wonder and optimism that define his best work.

John Carney’s Power Ballad hits different.

In a film where the core premise is about He-Man finding his place, Masters of the Universe struggles with its own identity.

Backrooms turns liminal internet horror into a creepy, claustrophobic nightmare led by strong performances and genuinely haunting imagery.

Boots Riley’s I Love Boosters blends fashion, friendship, and labor politics into a stylish, absurdist triumph led by a fantastic Keke Palmer.

Stranger Things collides with Cocoon in The Boroughs. The paranormal beware, ’cause these Elders do not go softly into any X-Files shenanigans

The Mandalorian and Grogu is a fun, crowd-pleasing Star Wars adventure with great action, standout creature work, and a killer Ludwig Göransson score.

Jack Ryan: Ghost War offers solid action and a likable cast, but this spy thriller feels outdated and ultimately like empty-calorie entertainment.

IS GOD IS twists, turns, and burns like a snake in the guts. This is an odyssey born of peak Southern gothic rage, and it’s brilliant.

Mortal Kombat II fixes many problems from the first film with brutal fights, tournament action, and a great Johnny Cage, even if the story still feels uneven.

The Devil Wears Prada 2 delivers sharp performances and modern relevance, expanding its world and characters into a rare sequel that might outdo the original.

It’s Shears Out rather than “Knives” in the cozy family mystery, The Sheep Detectives starring Hugh Jackman, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and the unusual suspects

Anne Hathaway and Michaela Coel are haunted by resentment and regret in Mother Mary