Dave Franco makes his directorial debut with the intriguing new horror film The Rental starring Alison Brie and Dan Stevens.
The new film The Tax Collector is set on the violent streets of Los Angeles and sees popular actor Shia LaBeouf in a different type of role.
Gerard Butler plays a family man who will stop at nothing to get his loved ones to safety during a cataclysmic event in Greenland.
Jude Law and Carrie Coon play a bitter married couple who are forced to come to terms with the state of their relationship once they discover some painful truths in The Nest.
The Burnt Orange Heresy sees an ambitious art critic attempt to steal a rare painting from a famous painter, when things spiral out of control.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt headlines the intense Amazon Prime film 7500, playing a pilot whose plane has been hijacked by terrorists.
Always looking to outdo himself, Christopher Nolan once again seeks to push cinematic boundaries with his latest film Tenet.
Popular singer-songwriter Janelle Monáe stars in the mind-bending new horror-thriller film Antebellum, from the producer of Get Out (2017) and Us (2019).
Russell Crowe plays a man who is pushed to the edge following a road rage incident, inciting a dangerous sequence of events for the other party involved in Unhinged.
Clark Duke’s directorial debut is a satisfying crime-noir set in his home state of Arkansas, about drug dealers and bad choices.
Butt Boy is a thriller, sci-fi, and comedy film directed by Tyler Cornack. The film’s title is as weird and irreverent as the story told.
The Assistant tells a timely tale that evokes a sense of unease from its audience, though some may struggle with its slow-burning pace.
A college graduate lands a dream job as a personal assistant to a leading entertainment executive and soon discovers her workplace is rife with abuse in The Assistant.
Ever wanted to see a hipster Elijah Wood scream absurdities at the corpse of his deadbeat father? Well, Ant Timpson delivers just that and other kooky scenes in his first feature film, Come to Daddy.
Cinema in its purest form can be seen as the provocative marriage of sound and image, and as such, Alejandro Landes’ Monos is nothing if not cinematic. While gentle on plot, the film is entirely immersive in its atmosphere, drenched in mud, madness, and brutality.
The Hunt follows a group of twelve strangers who wake up in a field at a place called ‘The Manor’, with no understanding of why they are there.


