The 41 Most Anticipated Movies of 2025 ...Middle East

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The 41 Most Anticipated Movies of 2025

Perhaps even more than usual, many of the biggest movies of the next year will be remakes, reboots, sequels, and adaptations. But as in any year, there’s a wealth of promising new projects, from the indies to the IP fare and potential blockbusters. Here are the most anticipated movies coming up in 2025.

Back in Action (Jan. 17)

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This Netflix action comedy from director Seth Gordon (Baywatch, Identity Thief) reunites Jamie Foxx and Cameron Diaz, who last co-starred in 2014’s Annie. This time, they’re playing former CIA agents who return to the spy game after being exposed. Diaz came out of acting retirement to play the part.

    I’m Still Here (Jan. 17)

    This political drama, Brazil’s entry for Best International Feature Film at the upcoming Academy Awards, received critical acclaim at the Venice International Film Festival this year. Particular praise went to Fernanda Torres’ lead performance as Eunice Paiva, the real-life activist whose dissident politician husband went missing in 1971 during the military dictatorship in Brazil.

    One of Them Days (Jan. 17)

    SZA makes her acting debut in this raunchy buddy comedy opposite Keke Palmer. The pair play two best friends and roommates on a madcap race to cobble together some last-minute rent money. (Think: Friday.) The script comes courtesy of Syreeta Singleton, showrunner of the two-season Max comedy Rap Sh!t, making her own feature debut.

    Wolf Man (Jan. 17)

    Leigh Whannell’s 2020 reboot of The Invisible Man brought attention back to the historic Universal Monsters franchise. Now Whannell returns with a reimagining of the 1941 film The Wolf Man, this one starring Christopher Abbott as a man who turns into a werewolf after an attack at the farmhouse where his father disappeared. Julia Garner co-stars as his wife.

    Presence (Jan. 24)

    Stephen Soderbergh’s latest slow-burn psychological thriller takes a unique angle: it’s presented from the POV of a ghost haunting a suburban home, watching them live their lives.

    Love Hurts (Feb. 7)

    Ke Huy Quan returned to Hollywood in a big way with Everything Everywhere All at Once, and this action comedy similarly plays on his knack for pairing killer martial arts skills with his natural wide-eyed earnestness. Quan stars as a friendly realtor whose crime-lord brother comes after him, forcing him to come to terms with his past as a deadly hitman.

    Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy (Feb. 13)

    Based on Helen Fielding’s 2013 novel of the same name, the fourth Bridget Jones movie, which will stream on Peacock, brings back Renée Zellweger, Hugh Grant, and Emma Thompson (along with Colin Firth as a ghost) and adds two new love interests to the cast: the young and charming Roxster (Leo Woodall) and Mr. Wallaker (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a handsome teacher at Bridget’s kids’ school.

    Captain America: Brave New World (Feb. 14)

    The first Captain America-centered movie since Civil War in 2016, this one picks up where The Falcon and the Winter Soldier left off on the small screen and officially introduces Anthony Mackie’s Sam Wilson as the new cinematic Captain America. Harrison Ford will be replacing the late William Hurt in the role of Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, the newly elected president of the United States, who also doubles as the Red Hulk.

    Paddington in Peru (Feb. 14)

    Sadly, Paul King was too busy making Wonka to return to direct the third installment in this winsome series about a talking bear who loves marmalade sandwiches (and Emily Mortimer has taken over the role once played by Sally Hawkins). But reviews from across the pond have been (mostly) positive for this adventure comedy, which focuses on Paddington’s return to his homeland of Peru with the Brown family to visit his Aunt Lucy.

    The Monkey (Feb. 21)

    Osgood Perkins (son of Anthony Perkins) has made several solid horror movies, but it wasn’t until this year that he really broke out and reached a new audience with his hit Longlegs. His newest darkly comic flick adapts Stephen King’s 1980 short story of the same name about a cursed vintage toy monkey—and the two brothers who make it their mission to destroy it once and for all.

    The Legend of Ochi (Feb. 28)

    This fantasy adventure film from A24 centers on a young villager named Yuri (Helena Zengel) who discovers a baby ochi—a widely feared species that dwells in the nearby forest—and sets out to reunite it with the pack that left it behind. Willem Dafoe, Finn Wolfhard, and Emily Watson co-star.

    Sinners (March 7)

    Ryan Coogler’s newest is his first horror film. Michael B. Jordan stars as twin brothers who return home to leave their dark pasts behind—and find themselves confronting a greater threat. The trailer leaves the nature of the evil unclear, but it’s safe to say demons and/or ghosts are involved.

    Snow White (March 21)

    Marc Webb’s reimagining of the 1937 animated film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, co-written by Greta Gerwig, stars Rachel Zegler in the title role, with Gal Gadot playing the Evil Queen. The production has been riddled with controversy, from the color-blind casting of Zegler to the CGI dwarfs played by mostly non-dwarf actors to the leads’ outspoken opposing stances on the war in Gaza.

    Alto Knights (March 21)

    In this biographical crime drama from Barry Levinson and Goodfellas co-writer Nicholas Pileggi, Robert De Niro plays two roles: Vito Genovese and Frank Costello, the legendary warring Italian-American crime bosses of the Luciano family.

    The Amateur (April 11)

    Based on the 1981 novel of the same name by Robert Littell, this thriller stars Rami Malek as a CIA cryptographer who blackmails the agency into training him in order to hunt down the terrorists who killed his wife.

    Mickey 17 (April 18)

    More than five years after Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite won the Oscar for Best Picture, we’re finally seeing his studio-delayed follow-up. Adapted from Edward Ashton’s sci-fi novel Mickey7, the darkly comic film stars Robert Pattinson as an “expendable”—an employee who, after dying, receives a new body pre-installed with prior memories. But when one of Mickey’s bodies accidentally survives, it’s Pattinson vs. Pattinson.

    A Big Bold Beautiful Journey (May 9)

    Seth Reiss’ script for this romantic fantasy was originally featured on the Blacklist—but with South Korean-born director and video essayist Kogonada (Columbus, After Yang) on board, it’s finally coming to theaters. A romantic fantasy starring Margot Robbie and Colin Farrell, it’s poised to be Kogonada’s most commercial and accessible feature yet.

    Golden (May 9)

    Michel Gondry’s latest is a coming-of-age musical film set in summer 1977 and inspired by Pharrell Williams’ childhood living in Virginia Beach’s Atlantis Apartments. Kelvin Harrison Jr. plays Williams, with Halle Bailey, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Brian Tyree Henry, and many others onboard. Williams also teamed up with Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, known for La La Land and Dear Evan Hansen, on the soundtrack.

    Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (May 23)

    The eighth Mission: Impossible movie (and fourth directed by Christopher McQuarrie) was shot back-to-back with the previous film, Dead Reckoning—which means that in addition to the usual gang of IMF agents, this sequel will bring back franchise newcomers Hayley Atwell, Esai Morales, and Pom Klementieff. Tom Cruise was spotted holding onto the wings of an upside-down flying biplane, which suggests this installment will feature just as many jaw-dropping stunts as usual for the series.

    Ballerina (June 6)

    The fluid fight choreography of the John Wick movies often draws comparisons to ballet, and this spin-off leans into the idea by focusing on a ballerina-assassin on a mission to avenge her father. Set between the third and fourth Wick films, it stars Ana de Armas, Gabriel Byrne, and Norman Reedus alongside previous cast members Anjelica Huston, Lance Reddick, Ian McShane, and Keanu Reeves himself.

    Elio (June 13)

    Pixar’s latest original feature follows an introverted 11-year-old alien obsessive who is beamed up to outer space for the adventure of a lifetime after being mistaken for the ambassador of Earth. At the Communiverse, a sort of United Nations in space, representatives from alien races come together to solve crises all over the universe—and now, Elio is one of them.

    28 Years Later (June 20)

    Danny Boyle’s original 2002 zombie apocalypse film 28 Days Later brought an unsettling new idea to the genre: what if the undead could run? Now Boyle is back to direct the third film set in this world, the first of a planned sequel trilogy. Original screenwriter Alex Garland is also back, along with original star Cillian Murphy.

    F1 (June 27)

    In this underdog sports drama by Top Gun: Maverick director Joseph Kosinski, made in collaboration with FIA, a retired Formula One racer (Brad Pitt) takes a young rookie prodigy (Damson Idris) under his wing. Filmed during actual grand prix races, real-life Formula One teams and drivers will also appear.

    M3GAN 2.0 (June 27)

    Allison Williams, Violet McGraw, Brian Jordan Alvarez, and the titular killer doll herself return for this higher-stakes sequel to 2022’s campy horror delight M3GAN.

    Superman (July 11)

    The DC Universe’s next slate of movies, given the reboot title “Chapter One: Gods and Monsters,” begins with James Gunn’s take on DC Comics’ most iconic character. David Corenswet plays a 25-year-old version of the title role, along with Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane, Skyler Gisondo as Jimmy Olsen, and Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor.

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