Is your engine ready, because Hollywood is about to take Formula 1 racing to a whole new level of cinematic adrenaline. F1, the movie, one of the most anticipated blockbusters of the season, is set to hit theaters on June 27. Directed by Joseph Kosinski, expect a blend of intense action, gripping drama, and jaw-dropping visuals that will captivate you if you’re a die-hard motorsports fan or just a casual moviegoer.
F1 the movie
A High-Speed Spectacle
From the very first frame of the newly released trailer, F1. There is one thing abundantly clear: it’s not just a movie—it’s an experience. The pulse-pounding race scenes will put you in the driver’s seat, making every twist, turn, and neck-rising overtakes feel raw. The film fully embraces immersive cinematography, delivering visuals that will immediately transport audiences onto the racetrack.
F1 was shot in different locations, filmed across some of the world’s most iconic Formula 1 venues, spanning Europe, the U.S., and Asia. The custom race car used in the film was designed by Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team, ensuring authenticity both on and off the track.
If you’ve seen the explosive Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the dramatic race scenes in Formula One will feel quite familiar. The tight bends, high-speed chases, and dramatic overtakes will evoke the excitement of seeing the world’s top drivers compete beneath the sparkling city lights. The film expertly depicts both the beauty and brutality of the sport, making each moment feel monumental.
The costumes worn by the actors were designed by the popular brand Tommy Hilfiger. He created designs that blended the themes of the story—speed and legacy—producing outfits like racing jackets, mechanic shirts, and graphic polos.
Brad Pitt and Damson Idris
New School vs. Old School – A Story with Soul
Beneath all its action, F1 doesn’t just celebrate fast cars and elite racing,it’s a story packed with heart and rivalry. The narrative follows Sonny Hayes (played by Brad Pitt), a veteran racer making an unexpected comeback, and Joshua Pearce (played by Damson Idris), a young hotshot determined to prove his worth. The tension between them is tense, cutting deep on a fierce clash between tradition and innovation.
The trailer expertly captures their dynamic, portraying Hayes as the older legend who relies on instinct and experience, while Pearce represents a more calculated, technology-driven generation of racers. The clash isn’t just about speed—it’s about legacy versus ambition, and the stakes couldn’t be higher.
A glimpse of what to expect
A Must-Watch for All Movie Fans
Even if you don’t follow Formula 1, F1 promises to be an action-packed piece that demands attention. With mind-blowing cinematography, powerful performances, and a razor-sharp script, the film goes beyond the racing genre, making it a must-see blockbuster for anyone who loves high-stakes storytelling.
The trailer builds anticipation teasing the grit and glory of the racetrack, the emotional turmoil behind the wheel, and the brutal world of professional motorsports. Expect explosive drama, unexpected twists, and heart-racing moments that will keep you gripping their seats.
Intense Action
Finally
Get ready for a cinematic ride like no other. With its mind blowing visuals, thrilling action, and emotional depth, F1 is shaping up to be one of the biggest movies of the summer. Whether you’re a Formula 1 fanatic or someone who just loves a good underdog story, this film has something for everyone.
Get ready to feel the rush when F1 hits theaters on June 27—this is one race you don’t want to miss. Add it to your holiday watchlist and make it a thrilling summer.
David Leitch has built a reputation for action filmmaking that prioritizes craft. The first trailer for “How to Rob a Bank”, set for a September 4 theatrical release. The film centers on a crew of bank rob bers whose animal-masked heists turn them into social media celebrities.
The social media angle gives the film an extra layer beyond the robbery itself. By turning its criminals into online celebrities, it taps into modern obsessions with attention, fame, and visibility.
The trailer handles this with enough wit to suggest the film is aware of what it’s doing without letting the concept overwhelm the story.
That visibility ultimately becomes a liability when a veteran FBI agent teams up with a software engineer to track them down. It’s a classic pursuit structure dressed in a contemporary setting, and the combination works.
A Cast That Delivers
Photo: Instagram
Nicholas Hoult leads the crew with an, unpredictable charisma that keeps him constantly engaging. Zoë Kravitz matches him with a composed, assured presence that commands attention without effort. Together, they anchor the trailer convincingly.
The supporting cast adds depth. Anna Sawai, Rhenzy Feliz, Pete Davidson, and John C. Reilly round out an ensemble that feels carefully assembled rather than arbitrarily star-packed. Reilly brings a textural quality to the movie that should prevent the film from tipping too far into self-parody.
Even in trailer form, the action feels meticulously crafted, with chases and confrontations that remain easy to follow without sacrificing intensity. The Pittsburgh street chase is coherent, you know where everyone is, what’s at stake, and what the geography costs. That discipline remains rare in modern blockbusters.
Rather than chasing bigger spectacle, “How to Rob a Bank” appears focused on delivering a sleek, tightly constructed genre thriller. The film positions itself as a tightly constructed thriller with a timely premise , and the trailer indicates it could be one of the more solid theatrical releases this fall.
Summer 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most closely watched film seasons in recent years, with a mix of major studio releases and high-profile projects spanning multiple genres. It’s defined by scale, visibility, and audience expectation heading into the peak moviegoing period.
Here are the most anticipated summer movies.
Supergirl — June 26
Director: Craig Gillespie. Writer:Ana Nogueira.
Cast: Milly Alcock as Supergirl/Kara Zor -El, with Jason Momoa, Matthias Schoenaerts, Eve Ridley, David Krumholtz and Emily Beecham.
The story follows Kara on an interstellar journey built around revenge and moral conflict, moving away from the traditional Earth-arrival origin structure in favor of a more character-driven narrative. It gives the film a more controlled dramatic shape than a standard superhero introduction and makes it feel like a real test of DC’s rebuilding effort rather than just another franchise placeholder.
The supporting cast suggests a production built with real dramatic weight, not just action spectacle. If the film lands, it could set the tone for the new DC era; if it doesn’t, it will be remembered as a missed chance to make something more cinematic than infrastructural.
The Odyssey — July 17
Director: Christopher Nolan.
Cast: Matt Damon, Tom Holland, Anne Hathaway, Zendaya, Robert Pattinson, Charlize Theron, Lupita Nyong’o, Jon Bernthal, and a large ensemble spread across the production.
After the Trojan War, Odysseus is forced into a long and dangerous journey home to Ithaca, where his wife Penelope and son Telemachus wait for him. Along the way, he faces mythic threats such as the Cyclops Polyphemus, the Sirens, Circe, Scylla and Charybdis, and the wrath of the gods, turning his return into a battle of survival, intelligence, and endurance. The story is less about simple travel and more about how far a man can be pushed before he makes it back to the life he left behind.
Christopher Nolan’s adaptation of Homer’s Odyssey extends naturally from his long-standing interest in fractured time, memory, and the cost of long journeys, What makes the project significant is not just the premise, but the scale at which it is being executed, a mythic action epic positioned as one of the summer’s defining theatrical events.
Insidious: Out of the Further
Director and writer: Jacob Chase.
Cast: Amelia Eve as Gemma, with Lin Shaye returning as Elise Rainier, alongside Brandon Perea, Maisie Richardson-Sellers, Sam Spruell, Island Austin, and Laura Gordon.
Five films in, the “Insidious” franchise still holds a clear internal mythology, maintaining continuity in a genre where long-running horror series often fall into repetition. “Out of the Further” introduces Gemma, a young mother who discovers she can travel into the Further and, even more dangerously, bring what lives there back into the real world.
That shift suggests a more deliberate approach to expansion, because the film is not just recycling old family trauma; it is widening the universe while preserving the rules that make it work. The Further functions as a setting with defined logic and atmosphere and the smartest horror sequels are the ones that expand that space without breaking it.
Moana
Director: Thomas Kail.
Cast: Catherine Lagaʻaia as Moana, Dwayne Johnson reprising Maui, with John Tui as Chief Tui, Frankie Adams as Sina, and Rena Owen as Gramma Tala.
The story follows Moana as she sets out to restore balance to her world, guided by the demigod Maui across an oceanic journey rooted in Polynesian mythology and cultural specificity.
Disney’s recent live-action adaptations have varied in their ability to preserve the spirit of their animated sources while adjusting to the demands of scale. “Moana” begins with material strong enough to survive the translation, but the real question is whether the production keeps the specificity and feeling that made the original resonate.
Voicemails for Isabella
Written and directed by Leah McKendrick, the film stars Zoey Deutch as Jill, Nick Robinson as Wes, Nick Offerman as Chef Bastien, and Lukas Gage as Arthur.
“Voicemails for Isabella ” moves away from a standard romance structure. It builds its story around absence and delayed communication, using voicemails as both a plot device and a structural choice that shapes how the relationship is experienced.
Building the romance through messages heard out of order, or after they were meant to be received, forces the story to show how people rebuild each other from incomplete information, that gives the film a more grounded psychological angle than most studio romances attempt, with the distance between characters becoming the subject rather than just the obstacle.
72 Hours
Director: Tim Story.
Cast: Kevin Hart, Marcello Hernández, Mason Gooding, Teyana Taylor, Zach Cherry, Ben Marshall, Kam Patterson, Michael Mando, Mike Epps, and Andy Garcia.
“72 Hours” works within a familiar comedic structure built on a compressed timeline, escalating complications, and an ensemble cast navigating increasingly chaotic situations. The film’s premise centers on a forty-year-old executive who gets pulled into a wild three-day bachelor party after being accidentally added to a group text, which gives the comedy a simple, modern engine.
That setup is exactly the kind of thing movie audiences latch onto because it is easy to understand and easy to market. The compressed timeframe also gives the movie a built-in sense of urgency which is often what separates an efficient studio comedy from a forgettable one. What makes it work.
The strongest movie in this slate all come with more than release dates. They arrive with a director, a cast, and a story angle that tells readers what kind of experience they are buying into.
Vertical released the trailer for “Couture,” the Paris-set drama from writer-director Alice Winocour. The film is slated for a theatrical release on June 26. Led by Angelina Jolie, “Couture” follows Maxine, an American filmmaker who arrives in Paris during Fashion Week. A professional assignment during Fashion Week gradually becomes a personal reckoning. As Maxine crosses paths with women of different ages and backgrounds, each grappling with their own claim to autonomy, she finds herself drawn into a quiet love story with a past collaborator. The professional visit becomes a personal reckoning with the choices that have shaped her life.
Photo: Vertical
The film premiered at TIFF in the Special Presentations section before Vertical picked it up for North American distribution. Runtime is approximately 103–106 minutes.
With “Couture,” Winocour continues her focus on female-centered stories about survival. In her previous film, “Proxima,” Alice Winocour examined the personal cost of ambition through a mother preparing for a space mission away from her daughter. “Paris Memories” follows a woman rebuilding her life in the aftermath of a terrorist attack, further extending Winocour’s focus on female characters navigating trauma, resilience, and emotional recovery.
Here, the fashion world becomes her latest lens, a controlled, image-driven environment where the line between public spectacle and private fracture is increasingly thin.
Photo: Instagram
Jolie, who also produces, said the film is about life rather than loss, especially in how it approaches illness. “Too often, films about women’s struggles, especially cancer, talk about endings and sadness, rarely about life,” she noted. “Alice has made a film about life, and that’s why the sensitive subjects it addresses are handled with such delicacy.”
The supporting cast features Louis Garrel, Ella Rumpf, Garance Marillier, Anyier Anei, and Vincent Lindon. “Couture” opens in theaters via Vertical on June 26.