Movie dates coming out in 2018

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2018 Movies: New Upcoming Movies Coming Out in 2018

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Retrieved April 20, 2017. Bohemian Rhapsody Release date: November 2 Cast: Rami Malek, Lucy Boynton, Gwilym Lee, Ben Hardy Directed by: Bryan Singer X-Men: Days of Future Past Why we're excited: Despite serious behind the scenes drama -- Bryan Singer went A. But if three out of five resist temptation, Lauren must shut down her blog and open her heart to Calvin.

Here, working from a script by Spotlight writer Josh Singer, those limits are bigger than ever. Retrieved January 12, 2018. Rowling's Harry Potter prequel series, which follows Ministry of Magic creature expert Newt Scamander Redmayne and a dashing young professor named Albus Dumbledore Law in the early 20th century.

January 2018 Movies

Each year, hundreds of new movies come out in theaters, , and on other platforms, but the release cycle really whips into a frenzy in the final third of the year, when Oscar season begins and studios jockey for maximum buzz by putting out a ridiculous number of gems, duds and everything in between. But which ones actually seem like they'll be worth seeing this fall? Here are the 31 movies that we believe have the best chance of entertaining, intriguing, or frightening the hell out of us as 2018 comes to a close. And if you just want something to watch right this second, try our always updated list of the. This one stars Farmiga's younger sibling Taissa as a nun tasked with investigating the mysterious suicide of one of her fellow Sisters in 1950s Romania. If the are any indication, expect lots of jump scares and loud music. Peppermint Release date: September 7 Cast: Jennifer Garner, John Gallagher Jr. As mom-turned-super-assassin Riley North, Garner goes after the cartel, crooked cops, and the evil judge who failed to bring justice in the murder of her husband and daughter. The Predator Release date: September 14 Cast: Boyd Holbrook, Trevante Rhodes, Jacob Tremblay, Keegan-Michael Key Directed by: Shane Black The Nice Guys Why we're excited: Is it a reboot? With action screenwriter extraordinaire and original Predator co-star Shane Black stepping behind the camera for this update of the pumped-up science-fiction thriller, we don't really care. The convoluted mythology of the Predator series has always been secondary to the tension and the excitement of seeing hyper-competent, ultra-burly commandos facing off against an elite alien species. Black's collection of wisecracking tough guys, which includes Logan villain Holbrook as an Army Ranger, should be up to the task. This '80s true crime tale about a Detroit teen-turned-FBI informant looks like it could do the trick. Playing the father of pubescent drug dealer Richard Wershe Jr. He's got a grimy look that the movie around him appears to emulate. Mandy Release date: September 14 Cast: Nicolas Cage, Andrea Riseborough, Linus Roache, Bill Duke Directed by: Panos Cosmatos Beyond the Black Rainbow Why we're excited: The image of Nicolas Cage swinging a chainsaw in the air to do battle with the forces of evil should be enough to get your butt in the theater for this one. Once you're there, you'll find that the movie around him is far more hypnotic, bizarre, and moving than your average rage-Cage kill-fest. Filming each scene with a patient eye and a total control of mood, Cosmatos has crafted that sets fire to familiar revenge tropes just to watch them burn. The Sisters Brothers Release date: September 21 Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, John C. Reilly, Jake Gyllenhaal, Riz Ahmed Directed by: Jacques Audiard A Prophet Why we're excited: Look at that cast! This adaptation of writer Patrick deWitt's acclaimed features some of the most reliable, versatile actors working today. Eli and Charlie Sisters Reilly and Phoenix are hitmen on the hunt for a brilliant chemist Ahmed and you can bet there are some cowboy hijinks along the way. Night School Release date: September 28 Cast: Kevin Hart, Tiffany Haddish, Rob Riggle, Yvonne Orji Directed by: Malcolm D. Lee Girls Trip Why we're excited: After last year's box office dominating summer hit Girls Trip, scene-stealing comedian Tiffany Haddish is back on the big screen with Night School, which finds her playing a teacher charged with helping Kevin Hart's high-school dropout get his GED. Plus, it's always cool to see two stand-up stars at the peak of their powers play off each other in a movie like this. You can bet there will be plenty of geriatric heists and getaways, but director David Lowery, who directed last year's indie odyssey A Ghost Story and the previous year's Disney adventure Pete's Dragon, will likely bring a slightly whimsical, melancholy touch to the material. Instead of a gritty true-crime epic, this will probably have a shaggier vibe. Venom Release date: October 5 Cast: Tom Hardy, Michelle Williams, Riz Ahmed, Woody Harrelson Directed by: Ruben Fleischer Gangster Squad Why we're excited: We'll admit this one has us a little worried. The early trailers for the long-rumored Spider-Man spinoff about investigative journalist Eddie Brock Hardy getting infected by an inky substance from space and basically going crazy in the process have inspired more memes than actual anticipation for the movie. Still, the supporting cast is impressive and Hardy remains one of our more enigmatic, risk-taking movie stars. Even if this is a disaster, it will likely be stranger than some of the more streamlined superhero products released in recent years. A Star Is Born Release date: October 5 Cast: Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Sam Elliott, Dave Chappelle Directed by: Bradley Cooper Why we're excited: Hollywood is so obsessed with this narrative mash-up of fame, showbiz, and romance that this will be the fourth retelling of A Star Is Born since the 1937 original. But there's good reason for that: It's a great story that's malleable to the demands and peculiarities of the times. If rapturous out of the Venice Film Festival are any indication, this movie will be a mainstay in awards-season discussions in the months ahead. Either way, bring a hanky to wipe away the tears. First Man Release date: October 12 Cast: Ryan Gosling, Claire Foy, Jason Clarke, Kyle Chandler Directed by: Damien Chazelle La La Land Why we're excited: The story of moonwalking astronaut Neil Armstrong might first sound like an odd fit for Chazelle, the Academy Award-winning director of the musical La La Land and the drumming drama Whiplash, but it actually makes sense: He's always making movies about individuals testing their limits. Here, working from a script by Spotlight writer Josh Singer, those limits are bigger than ever. Trading a love of jazz for a love of aeronautical engineering, Gosling plays Armstrong, and the advanced word is that Chazelle really puts him through the ringer, emphasizing the physical turmoil and psychological terror of space travel. Strap in for a bumpy ride. Bad Times at the El Royale Release date: October 12 Cast: Jeff Bridges, John Hamm, Dakota Johnson, Chris Hemsworth Directed by: Drew Goddard Cabin in the Woods Why we're excited: For his directorial follow-up to 2012's horror mind-bender Cabin in the Woods, celebrated screenwriter Drew Goddard, who penned the Oscar-nominated script for The Martian, appears to have cooked up another cockeyed genre riff. In a classic noir premise, a group of strangers, including a suspicious-looking priest played by Bridges, end up at a beaten-down hotel near Lake Tahoe and quickly get wrapped up in a sinister plot. Murder, bags of money, and a shimmying shirtless Hemsworth are all involved. Lots of screaming, fighting, and smashing of furniture follows. Think of it like The Purge meets your most unhinged family gathering. Halloween Release date: October 19 Cast: Jamie Lee Curtis, Judy Greer, Andi Matichak, Will Patton Directed by: David Gordon Green Stronger Why we're excited: John Carpenter's untouchable horror classic has withstood multiple sequels, countless ripoffs, and a reboot from Rob Zombie that's more interesting than you'd think. Seriously, it's pretty good! Decades later, Michael Meyers is still murdering teenagers and Laurie Strode Curtis is still fighting him off. This sequel, which was co-written by Vice Principals collaborators David Gordon Green and Danny McBride, will disregard all the entries that came after the 1978 original and attempt to wipe the narrative slate clean, which is fine. What we're looking for is a handful of scary sequences and a reprise of Carpenter's creepy score. This shouldn't be too hard. The Hate U Give Release date: October 19 Cast: Amandla Stenberg, Regina Hall, Russell Hornsby, Issa Rae Directed by: George Tillman Jr. The Longest Ride Why we're excited: Angie Thomas's bestselling YA novel tells the story of Starr, a young African-American student played by Stenberg in the film who moves between the worlds of her mostly white private high school and her black neighborhood. Following the shooting of her unarmed childhood friend Khalil by a white police officer, she becomes more politically active and begins to question the society around her. There's still plenty of time to read the book before the movie arrives. Mid90s Release date: October 19 Cast: Sunny Suljic, Lucas Hedges, Na-kel Smith, Katherine Waterston Directed by: Jonah Hill Why we're excited: Between , , and , Jonah Hill's directorial debut about a 13-year-old skater Suljic and his older brother Hedges , this is shaping up to be a big year for skateboarding cinema. If the stylish trailer is any indication, Hill's entry in the genre will be a nostalgic slice-of-life drama about growing up in L. Like fellow goofball-turned-A24-backed , who released Eighth Grade to stellar reviews this summer, Hill is staying behind the camera for this one. Johnson stars as Susie Bannion, a gifted dancer who journeys to Berlin to study under the enigmatic Madame Blanc Swinton and begins to unravel a sinister, deadly mystery. If early reviews from the film's debut at the recent Venice Film Festival are any indication, this one will either test your patience with its long runtime or leave you completely entranced in its hypnotic rhythms. Bohemian Rhapsody Release date: November 2 Cast: Rami Malek, Lucy Boynton, Gwilym Lee, Ben Hardy Directed by: Bryan Singer X-Men: Days of Future Past Why we're excited: Despite serious behind the scenes drama -- Bryan Singer went A. Sacha Baron Cohen was long attached to the role, eventually leaving the project over creative differences in 2013, but Malek will likely erase any thoughts of Borat fronting the band from the second you see him in the trailer. He's got the moves, the swagger, and the look down. The singing voice you hear? That's still Mercury -- there's no replicating that. The Girl in the Spider's Web Release date: November 9 Cast: Claire Foy, Sverrir Gudnason, LaKeith Stanfield, Sylvia Hoeks Directed by: Fede Alvarez Why we're excited: As much as we loved Rooney Mara in David Fincher's gripping The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo from 2011, the long-promised sequels clearly aren't coming. Maybe the cast, which included Daniel Craig as Mikael Blomkvist, was just too expensive? So, we'll go for this leaner-looking follow-up that swaps out Mara for The Crown's Foy, abandons Stieg Larsson's original Millenium trilogy for a later sequel written by a different writer, and cedes the director's chair to the younger Alvarez, the gifted technician behind 2013's grueling Evil Dead remake. It's not an ideal situation but never count out Lisbeth Salander. Sure, the concept has been done before, mostly in video games and comics, but has it been approached at this grand scale? Add a cast of young actors, including Fences stand-out Adepo and , and a hint of that mystery-box storytelling from super-producer J. Abrams -- the project was long-rumored to be set in the Cloverfield universe -- and you'll be clawing your way to the theater for this one. Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald Release date: November 16 Cast: Eddie Redmayne, Katherine Waterston, Jude Law, Johnny Depp Directed by: David Yates Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them Why we're excited: More wizards! At this point, you probably know whether or not you're part of the target audience for the latest entry in author J. Rowling's Harry Potter prequel series, which follows Ministry of Magic creature expert Newt Scamander Redmayne and a dashing young professor named Albus Dumbledore Law in the early 20th century. Their latest adventure finds the two tracking down an evil wizard Gellert Grindelwald Depp and you can expect Rowling, who penned the script, will have planted all sorts of references to Potter-lore throughout the film. Widows Release date: November 16 Cast: Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki, Colin Farrell Directed by: Steve McQueen 12 Years a Slave Why we're excited: When a group of criminals get killed in a heist gone wrong, it's up to their widows to clean up the mess and finish the job. It's such a deliciously simple hook, swiped from a 1983 crime TV series that aired in Britain, but what will likely set Widows apart is the high caliber of the cast -- a murder's row of award winners like Davis, Liam Neeson, and Robert Duvall, along with relative newcomers like Daniel Kaluuya and Cynthia Erivo -- and the behind the scenes talent, which includes Gone Girl scribe Gillian Flynn and Oscar-winning director McQueen. This looks like high-octane pulp made by deadly serious professionals. The Ballad of Buster Scruggs Release date: November 16 Cast: Tim Blake Nelson, James Franco, Liam Neeson, Zoe Kazan Directed by: The Coen Brothers No Country for Old Men Why we're excited: In a that's veered between absurd comedies and violent crime dramas, the Coen Brothers have rarely steered us wrong. This anthology film set in the Old West, which was initially announced as a Netflix miniseries but will now be released as a film, will give the brothers a chance to return to familiar terrain they covered in their True Grit remake but the format should give them a chance to experiment. At the same time, the pair appear to be in their comfort zone, which inevitably includes some dead bodies and bags of money. Why mess with what works? Creed II Release date: November 21 Cast: Michael B. Jordan, Sylvester Stallone, Tessa Thompson, Dolph Lundgren Directed by: Steven Caple Jr. The Land Why we're excited: In some ways, 2015's Creed was such a brilliant reinvention of the larger Rocky mythos that it's tempting to imagine a world where it didn't get the inevitable sequel. But come on: That wouldn't be the Rocky way. Creed director Ryan Coogler isn't returning for this follow-up, which finds Adonis Creed training for a fight against the son of Ivan Drago, but Jordan and Stallone, who shares a writing credit on this one, are still throwing the punches in this never-ending boxing saga. The Favourite Release date: November 23 Cast: Emma Stone, Olivia Colman, Rachel Weisz, Nicholas Hoult Directed by: Yorgos Lanthimos The Lobster Why we're excited: Lanthimos, the Greek filmmaker behind surreal movies like The Lobster and The Killing of a Sacred Deer, has developed an ultra-dry, clipped style of comedy that's instantly recognizable. On the surface, the period drama The Favourite looks like a departure: Based on actual history, the story follows Queen Anne Colman as she deals with two of her subjects, played by Stone and Weisz. But the madcap tone of the trailer, complete with respected thespians flailing about and looking ridiculous, screams Lanthimos. If Beale Street Could Talk Release date: November 30 Cast: Kiki Layne, Stephan James, Regina King, Teyonah Parris Directed by: Barry Jenkins Moonlight Why we're excited: Did you see Moonlight? The Best Picture winner from 2016 remains one of the most arresting features of the last few years, a work of deep emotion and formal ambition, so it only makes sense that the next film from Jenkins, an adaptation of James Baldwin's 1974 novel about a pair of young lovers, would be greeted with a high degree of anticipation. Even the trailer has more striking images than most whole movies released this year. Don't expect a Will Ferrell cameo as Dubya. Though there haven't been many details about the movie to emerge beyond the casting news and some on-set photos of a heavily made-up Bale, it's likely the political drama will feel more like HBO's recent Succession than your average episode of The West Wing. In an odd turn of events, his next film, a more intimate historical drama set in Mexico City in the 1970s and filmed in black and white, will be distributed by Netflix, meaning many viewers might end up seeing it on their laptops. That will likely be a reoccurring discussion point as Netflix attempts to position the movie as a Best Picture candidate in the coming months. Though Dick Van Dyke is the only member of the original cast to return, it should be a pleasure to see Blunt, fresh off wielding a shotgun to protect her family in the spring's horror hit A Quiet Place, step into the role of the magical nanny with a fondness for pairing medicine with a spoonful of sugar. We're guessing this one will be suitably sweet. Aquaman Release date: December 21 Cast: Jason Momoa, Amber Heard, Willem Dafoe, Patrick Wilson Directed by: James Wan Furious 7 Why we're excited: No longer an Entourage joke, a big-budget adaptation of Aquaman will finally swim into theaters this winter armed with a multi-pronged trident and the knowing smirk of star musclebound lead Jason Momoa. While the character's appearance in 2017's Justice League didn't exactly get us psyched for his stand-alone adventure -- to be honest, it's hard to remember exactly what happened in DC's disappointing team-up-- the early images of the underwater kingdom of Atlantis look eye-popping and the first trailer has a goofy glow to it. Wan can deliver slick thrills, Momoa has movie star charisma, and DC desperately needs a win. So why not dive in? But this one wasn't directed by Michael Bay, doesn't star Mark Wahlberg, and probably won't be 150 minutes long like the last couple robot-fighting epics. Instead, it's a more human-scaled story of a teenager Steinfeld growing up in 1980s California who befriends Bumblebee, the beat-up Volkswagen sidekick from the original films. On the surface, it sounds like it will take the element that worked in the first Transformers movie -- the relationship between an adolescent and a car -- and add a little Stranger Things-like nostalgia to the mix. That might be enough to rev the engine on this lumbering franchise.

Sure, the concept has been done before, mostly in video games and comics, but has it been approached at this grand for. Then suddenly Jeffrey starts to change into a sci-fi character called Kasimir. Retrieved July 21, 2018. However, Liam never got over Josie, his one true love, nor did he ever forget his Southern roots in the small community where he was born and raised. Met November 21, 2017. We're ready for all of the video game, Disney, and Internet Easter eggs. On the heels of their six-time Academy Award®-winning smash, La La Land, Oscar®-winning director Damien Chazelle and star Ryan Gosling reteam for Universal Pictures' First Man, the riveting story of NASA's limbo to land a man on the moon, focusing on Neil Armstrong and the years 1961-1969.

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released December 15, 2018

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