LOS ANGELES (AP) â â â is a hard act to follow.
The summer of 2023 brought a new enthusiasm for moviegoing, with the of âBarbieâ and â ,â and surprise hits like â ,â helping the seasonâs box office crack $4 billion for the first time since 2019. But before the industry could take a victory lap, there was another crisis looming with , which for months.
In the fallout, theaters lost big titles like âMission: Impossible 8â and âCaptain America: Brave New Worldâ to 2025. But they gained a gem in Jeff Nicholsâ âThe Bikeridersâ (June 21), about a 1960s Midwestern motorcycle club, as studios moved films around on the summer chessboard. âDeadpool & Wolverine,â once set to kick off the summer season on May 3 like many Marvel movies before it, is now opening July 26, patiently waiting to dominate the summer charts.
The kickoff weekend instead belongs to an original film about a different kind of superhero: The stunt performer. â ,â starring Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt, is an earnest crowd-pleaser that could jumpstart a season that feels like a throwback, with full-throttle spectacle (âFuriosa: A Mad Max Saga,â âTwistersâ), comedies (âBabesâ), IMAX wonder (âThe Blue Angelsâ) and even a Kevin Costner Western.
Producer Jerry Bruckheimer has seen the highs and lows of summer movies over the decades. This season, he has three very different offerings on the calendar, two are fourth installments in popular franchises â âBeverly Hills Copâ (July 3, Netflix) and âBad Boysâ (June 7, theaters) â and one was planned for streaming but tested so well that itâs getting a theatrical rollout (âYoung Woman and the Sea,â May 31).
âPeople just want to be entertained,â Bruckheimer said. âIt really comes down to us to make the right movies that they want to go see.â
âThe Bikeridersâ could be one of those. It already has stellar reviews from last fall's Telluride Film Festival hailing star turns for Austin Butler and Jodie Comer and was originally planned for December but pushed when it became clear that the strikes werenât going to resolve in time for a press tour.
âIt was kind of like walking on frozen glass for three months,â Nichols said. âI was touring around doing press and trying to build this energy on my own. Let me tell you, itâs not the same as Austin Butler.â
Later in June, , Kevin Costner will begin rolling out his two-part Western epic âHorizon: An American Saga,â set during the Civil War. And as always there are a slew of Sundance breakouts peppered throughout the summer, from âI Saw the TV Glowâ and âDidiâ to â â and âGood One.â
Family films also go into hyperdrive in the summer, capitalizing on long days out of school. This year has plenty, like âThe Garfield Movieâ and âDespicable Me 4.â But perhaps none has more anticipation behind it than âInside Out 2â (June 14, theaters), which meets up with Riley as she enters her teenage years as a new group of emotions crash Joyâs party, including Anxiety, Envy, Ennui and Embarrassment.
âThat age gives us everything we need and love for a Pixar film,â director Kelsey Mann said.
John Krasinski is also delving into the inner world of children with his ambitious live-action hybrid âIFâ (May 17, theaters) about the imaginary friends that get left behind and two humans (Ryan Reynolds and Cailey Fleming) who can still see them.
Audiences seeking the adrenaline rush of horrors and thrillers have an array of options, including âMaXXXine,â the conclusion to Ti Westâs accidental Mia Goth trilogy (âXâ and â â) that debuts around the fourth of July.
Gothâs aspiring actress has made her way to Hollywood where a killer is stalking Hollywood starlets around the time of the home video boom of the 1980s. âWe recreated the sleazy side of Hollywood in a hopefully charming way,â West said. âItâs definitely a pretty wild night at the movies.â
On June 28, audiences can also delve into the beginnings of âA Quiet Placeâ with a prequel set on âDay Oneâ starring Luptia Nyongâo and âStranger Thingsââ Joseph Quinn. Later, Fede Ălvarez brings his horror acumen to âAlien: Romulusâ (Aug. 16), set between the first two.
M. Night Shyamalan is back as well with a thriller set at a pop concert (âTrap,â Aug. 9) and his daughter, Ishana Night Shyamalan, makes her directorial debut with the spooky, Ireland-set âThe Watchersâ (June 7) with Dakota Fanning.
âItâs very suspenseful and unexpected,â Ishana said. âAnd itâs very much built for the experience of being in a theater.â
The streamers have movie stars and spectacle, too, with the festival favorite âHit Man,â the Anne Hathaway romance âThe Idea of You,â Jerry Seinfeldâs starry pop-tart movie âUnfrostedâ and a Mark Wahlberg/Halle Berry action comedy âThe Union.â
There are even franchises, like âBeverly Hills Cop: Axel F,â in which Eddie Murphyâs Axel Foley reunites with his estranged daughter (Taylour Paige). It also sees the return of Judge Reinhold, John Ashton, Paul Reiser and Bronson Pinchot and adds Kevin Bacon and Joseph Gordon-Levitt.
âWe raised our hand to make sure we got the franchise right and kept the integrity and fun of the original,â Bruckheimer said.
Lindsey Bahr, The Associated Press