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11 new movies to watch this week: See 'Jurassic World Rebirth' in theaters, rent 'Thunderbolts*,' stream 'Sinners' on HBO Max and more

11 new movies to watch this week: See 'Jurassic World Rebirth' in theaters, rent 'Thunderbolts*,' stream 'Sinners' on HBO Max and more

Yahoo02-07-2025
Hello, Yahoo readers! Film critic Brett Arnold here, and I'm back with another edition of Trust Me, I Watch Everything. With the holiday weekend approaching, it's a big week for movies, and I watched them all so you can plan your screen time wisely — the sun is calling! If the local cineplex's air-conditioning is calling your name, consider catching Jurassic World Rebirth (F1, which I previously recommended and is dominating the global box office, is a great option too).
For the homebodies, or those needing a flick to help drown out the sound of fireworks, there's plenty to choose from, including streaming debuts like Heads of State with John Cena and Idris Elba on Prime Video and The Old Guard 2 with Charlize Theron and Uma Thurman. Exciting recent releases like Marvel's Thunderbolts* and From the World of John Wick: Ballerina become available to rent or buy and vampire drama Sinners premieres on HBO Max. Phew, that's a lot — and I'm just getting started. Read on because there's something here for everyone.
What to watch in theaters
Movies newly available to rent or buy
Movies newly available on streaming services you may already have
My recommendation:
Why you should watch it: Jurassic World Rebirth is a fresh start for the franchise, ditching the Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard characters and swapping in Scarlett Johansson and a slew of other fresh faces, including Wicked's Jonathan Bailey, Oscar-winner Mahershala Ali and Rupert Friend. Johansson plays a mercenary hired by a pharmaceutical company to infiltrate an island full of prehistoric creatures and obtain DNA that could lead to medical breakthroughs. Sound familiar?
David Koepp, the writer of the original Jurassic Park film and its best and first sequel, The Lost World, returns to scripting duties here, and the movie harkens back to the adventure movie energy of the original trilogy. It also sneaks in some meta-commentary about how audiences may be tiring of these movies: there's a whole thread here about society moving on from dinosaurs, once a special thing that became less and less exciting the more prevalent they became in the world.
As the characters traverse the island, the movie cycles through set pieces as fast as it does its obvious influences: a little Jaws here, some King Kong Skull Island antics there, sprinkle in some Temple of Doom for good measure. Director Gareth Edwards (2014's Godzilla, Rogue One) is known for his visual effects, and they look great here, even if you do ultimately feel the lack of the practical element that even the lame last movie, Jurassic World: Dominion, made sure to include.
It's good fun, though, even if it never really makes a case for returning to this world other than "these movies all make a billion dollars each, easy." There's something nice about the fact that it has no grander ambitions than delivering a summer blockbuster that features exciting and tense sequences where humans must outrun and outsmart huge, monstrous dinosaurs, some of which are genetically modified to be even scarier! In short, Jurassic World Rebirth provides what you came for.
🍿 What critics are saying: It's an even split! Mark Kennedy from the Associated Press praises it as "superb," writing that the filmmakers, like the film's mercenaries, have the same mission: "Going back to the source code to recapture the magic of Steven Spielberg's 1993 blockbuster original. They've thrillingly succeeded." Amy Nicholson at the Los Angeles Times, however, was not a fan, writing "the series itself has gotten so bored with the beasties that it continues to invent new ugly mutants."
👀 How to watch: Jurassic World Rebirth is now in theaters nationwide.
Get tickets
Why you should watch it: If you've managed to avoid the meaning of the asterisk until now, congratulations, I won't ruin it for you here. I previously recommended Thunderbolts* when it hit theaters, writing at the time that "I couldn't believe the level of ambition I was seeing in a Marvel movie in 2025."
🍿 What critics are saying: With a 93% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, audiences love it, calling it a return to form for Marvel and the best film from the studio in a while.
👀 How to watch: Thunderbolts* is now available to rent or buy and will likely hit Disney+ in late August or early September.
Rent or buy
🤔 But that's not all!
I previously wrote of Ballerina, "whenever the movie is in hyper-violent action mode, it's a lot of fun. The problem is, that awesome action is almost entirely relegated to the final 45 minutes, which leaves about an hour and 15 minutes of laborious setup." It's still worth a watch for fans of John Wick, and the man himself does appear in the film, courtesy of pretty obvious reshoots. Rent or buy.
This sequel to a straight-to-Netflix Liam Neeson vehicle from 2021 is not on Netflix but is available to rent or buy at home after a brief theatrical run. It's better than the average late-period Liam Neeson action flick yet very strange as a sequel to The Ice Road; it may as well be any old Neeson flick, the connection is so tenuous. Rent or buy.
The filmmakers behind A24's hit horror film Talk to Me are back with another unsettling genre flick about a foster mother with a terrifying secret. The Philippou brothers again prove their ability to craft genuinely shocking moments, but this is pretty familiar stuff.Rent or buy.
This Scottish samurai-western, which I recommended when it was in theaters, is riveting and efficient. Actress Kōki stars as Tornado, a Japanese puppeteer's daughter who gets caught up with criminals when their traveling circus show crosses paths with an infamous gang of criminals. Rent or buy.
Why you should watch it: With Sinners, Ryan Coogler took a huge swing — and knocked it out of the park, with a $364.5 million worldwide box office haul so far, making it one of the top-performing films of the year. Based on an original idea and starring Michael B. Jordan as twins, which he believably portrays as two distinct people, the movie is a period-piece gangster movie that patiently sets up the stakes of its story. The stakes, as I previously pointed out, just so happen to be that this is really a vampire movie, but disguised as a metaphor about the director's feelings on making art as a Black man in an industry that's eager to exploit his perspective.
🍿 What critics are saying: Sinners is one of the most popular films of the year, according to Rotten Tomatoes, scoring high with critics and audiences alike. As Michael Phillips at the Chicago Tribune said, this isn't your average vampire movie.
👀 How to watch: Sinners starts streaming on HBO Max on July 4th.
Stream 'Sinners'
Why you should watch it: Thank you, Amazon Prime, for keeping the big-budget comedy alive. Last month we had Deep Cover, which was unexpectedly funny and entertaining, and now we have Heads of State, another action-comedy with a super fun premise and A-list talent attached. Idris Elba plays the U.K. prime minister and John Cena plays the action-star-turned-U.S.-president, and the two men have a public rivalry that jeopardizes their countries' "special relationship." But when they become targets of a ruthless foreign adversary, they must set aside their differences and begrudgingly rely on each other.
It's typical mismatched buddy action-comedy fare elevated by the high-concept nature of its premise and the commitment to the bit by its leads, as well as co-star Priyanka Chopra Jonas, and a cavalcade of others including Paddy Considine, Jack Quaid and Carla Gugino. Director Ilya Naishuller (Nobody) does a great job with the action, usually a low point of movies like this, and the set-pieces are all exciting and inventive and laced with comedy in that Jackie Chan-esque way we all love, for lack of a better term.
It's a shame we have to settle for watching this at home, as it would surely be a riot in a theater with a packed house, but it'll have to do!
🍿 What critics are saying: Critics are more split than I am. Deadline's Pete Hammond laments that the movie lets "the explosions and gunplay take center stage in a movie where action-to-the-max is our filmmaker's mantra." The Hollywood Reporter's Caryn James calls it "sporadically diverting."
👀 How to watch: Heads of State starts streaming on Amazon Prime Video on July 4th.
Stream 'Heads of State'
🤔 But that's not all!
Charlize Theron returns in this sequel to Netflix's 2020 movie The Old Guard, and Uma Thurman joins the fun this time, though you may be surprised by how little she's actually in the movie despite being the main villain. Now streaming on Netflix.
"Wannabe Coen Brothers" is its own thriving subgenre, and this is a perfectly OK one! A retired hitman's life is turned upside down when his ex-wife and son arrive unannounced during the holidays because they are on the run from his former mob associates. It's impressive that newcomer Miles J. Harvey stands out most among the A-list cast, which is absolutely stacked: Bill Murray, Pete Davidson, Jennifer Coolidge, Ed Harris, Gabrielle Union and Lewis Pullman. Starts streaming on Hulu on July 4th.
A dramatization of the real-life 1984 Press Your Luck game show scandal, in which a man went on a hot streak on the show but may not have been playing fairly. The movie is at its best before it reveals how he did it, frankly, and it runs out of steam from there. Paul Walter Hauser is great in the lead.Starts streaming on AMC+ on July 4th.
That's all for this week — we'll see you next week at the movies.
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How a 'crush' on Loni Anderson helped a gay boy navigate his teenage years
How a 'crush' on Loni Anderson helped a gay boy navigate his teenage years

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

How a 'crush' on Loni Anderson helped a gay boy navigate his teenage years

When I was in grade school in the 1970s, every morning started the same way: My mom made breakfast while my brother, my sister, and I sat around our small kitchen table. We circled around the radio, which was always tuned to Pittsburgh's KDKA-AM 1020, the first radio station in the country. Keep up with the latest in + news and politics. The morning DJ was Jack Bogut. Because of Jack, I thought it would be great to be a radio announcer. I also wanted to be president of the United States and host The Tonight Show. But by the time I reached sixth or seventh grade, I came to my senses and figured maybe it would be easier just to become the next Jack Bogut. So I vividly remember when WKRP in Cincinnati debuted on CBS in 1978. Back then, television was limited to three networks, CBS, NBC, ABC, and maybe four if you counted PBS. And color TVs were still something only wealthier families had. Somehow, shortly before my father died the previous year, we got a color television. I don't know how he paid for it, but it meant that when WKRP came on, I saw it in full color. And when Loni Anderson appeared on-screen as Jennifer Marlowe, she was vividly colorful and dazzling. Sadly, Anderson passed away Sunday at the age of 79. Anderson as Marlowe was beautifully blond, with ruby-red lipstick and the kind of glamour that leapt off the screen. She immediately became the magnetic center of that fictional Cincinnati radio station. Her character Jennifer was clearly supposed to lean into the stereotype of the 'sexy secretary,' but even as a kid, I could tell she wasn't a joke. She had a presence. She was surrounded by men, all of whom, in their own way, recognized her vibrant beauty but one by one would be challenged by her intellect. There was the shameless sales manager Herb, tongue-tied station boss Arthur, the suave program director Andy, and nerdy newsman Les Nessman. I didn't have to Google any of those names, by the way. I can even remember their real names and still know the theme song of the show. I loved that program so much, even in reruns; therefore, feel free to hit me with all the trivia you like. Especially about Jennifer Marlowe. Or Anderson. I fell in love with Anderson, or at least, I thought I did. Because every guy in my seventh and eighth grade class talked about her like she was their dream girl, so I talked about her that way too. But the truth was, I also had a serious crush on Andy. And I was confused. But publicly, it was all about Anderson. I went to Catholic grade school, where being in love with a boy was out of the question. Every man I knew was married to a woman, and every boy I knew had a girlfriend. Well, except for the priest who sexually abused me in 1978. That abuse, along with the pressure to be straight, completely upended my understanding of love and desire. So when I said I had a crush on Anderson, I didn't know whether I was trying to fit in or if I genuinely did. Looking back now, I realize that, yes, I had a thing for her, but in a very specific way. She was safe. She was sincere. She let me feel love without shame. As WKRP progressed, so did Jennifer. Her character grew into someone self-assured, self-aware, and deeply kind. I remember one episode where Les Nessman, awkward, balding, and thoroughly uncool, took Jennifer as his date to the Silver Sow Awards. Yes, I've never forgotten the name of that award that sticks out in my head. Even then, I suspected Les might be coded as gay or whatever that was, because he was nerdy and wimpy, and stereotypes had already been hammered into my young brain. But he wasn't. What that storyline did show was Jennifer's real depth. She made Les feel special, not as a joke, not out of pity but out of genuine generosity. That moment stuck with me. It was the kind of kindness I rarely saw in the real world, and it made me love her even more. The show eventually ended, and I grew up. I came out. And I slowly realized I didn't need a pretend girlfriend or to talk about having crushes on famous women. But I always thought of Anderson fondly. When she married Burt Reynolds, I paid attention. When they divorced, I took her side. I remember that divorce process was bitter and long, and I think Anderson got burned by that. And so I think she sort of disappeared from the headlines — and my radar. That is until 2017, when I read about her starring in a web series called My Sister Is So Gay. But for some reason, I never watched it, maybe because 'web series' had such a negative connotation. And because, well, quite frankly, I didn't need to be in love with Anderson anymore. Still, I thought it was great that she took on a project that celebrated queer identity. She had long embraced equal rights. In an interview about My Sister Is So Gay, she said, 'I always say my political party is equal rights,' and talked about loving and accepting her gay children in the show. When I was thumbing through the internet after her death, I came across something special. She once delivered a quiet but powerful bit of dialogue on WKRP when a character was thought to be gay: 'So what if he is? He comes to work. He does his job. He's a fine person. His sex life is his own business.' It might sound simple now, but in the late 1970s, that was radical compassion. And I completely forgot about the fact that she said this or conveniently forgot that she did. I didn't need to be reminded about something I wasn't sure I was. When the news alert popped up on Sunday that Anderson had died, my heart broke a little. As you get older, the people who shaped your world start to leave it. Each time, a small part of the younger you breaks off. Anderson's passing brought me back to a time that was both simpler and painfully confusing. From where I stand now, it's hard to say exactly what I felt for her. Was it desire? Admiration? A desperate need to be like everyone else? Maybe it was all of that. Or maybe it was the first form of affection I could understand. What I know for sure is my feelings for Anderson were real. They were innocent, sweet, and necessary at a time when I needed sincerity more than anything. She made it feel OK to believe I could belong somewhere. And for one little boy sitting too close to a color television in 1978, that was more than enough. Voices is dedicated to featuring a wide range of inspiring personal stories and impactful opinions from the LGBTQ+ community and its allies. Visit to learn more about submission guidelines. Views expressed in Voices stories are those of the guest writers, columnists, and editors, and do not directly represent the views of The Advocate or our parent company, equalpride. This article originally appeared on Advocate: How a 'crush' on Loni Anderson helped a gay boy navigate his teenage years Solve the daily Crossword

Sean ‘Diddy' Combs is denied release on bond to await sentencing
Sean ‘Diddy' Combs is denied release on bond to await sentencing

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time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Sean ‘Diddy' Combs is denied release on bond to await sentencing

NEW YORK (AP) — Sean 'Diddy' Combs can't go home from jail to await sentencing on his prostitution-related conviction, a judge said Monday, denying the rap and style mogul's latest bid for bail. Combs has been behind bars since his September arrest. He faced federal charges of coercing girlfriends into having drug-fueled sex marathons with male sex workers while he watched and filmed them. He was acquitted last month of the top charges — racketeering and sex trafficking — while being convicted of two counts of a prostitution-related offense. In denying Combs' $50 million bond proposal, Judge Arun Subramanian said the hip hop impresario had failed to prove that he did not pose a risk of flight or danger, adding that the record did not show an 'exceptional circumstance' that would justify his release after a conviction that otherwise requires detention. Combs' arguments 'might have traction in a case that didn't involve evidence of violence, coercion, or subjugation in connection with the acts of prostitution at issue, but the record here contains evidence of all three,' the judge wrote. Messages seeking comment were sent to prosecutors and one of Combs' lawyers. The conviction carries the potential for up to 10 years in prison. But there are complicated federal guidelines for calculating sentences in any given case, and prosecutors and Combs' lawyers disagree substantially on how the guidelines come out for his case. The guidelines aren't mandatory, and Subramanian will have wide latitude in deciding Combs' punishment. The Bad Boy Records founder, now 55, was for decades a protean figure in pop culture. A Grammy-winning hip hop artist and entrepreneur with a flair for finding and launching big talents, he presided over a business empire that ranged from fashion to reality TV. Prosecutors claimed he used his fame, wealth and violence to force and manipulate two now-ex-girlfriends into days-long, drugged-up sexual performances he called 'freak-offs' or 'hotel nights.' His lawyers argued that the government tried to criminalize consensual, if unconventional, sexual tastes that played out in complicated relationships. The defense acknowledged that Combs had violent outbursts but said nothing he did came amounted to the crimes with which he was charged. Since the verdict, his lawyers have repeatedly renewed their efforts to get him out on bail until his sentencing, set for October. They have argued that the acquittals undercut the rationale for holding him, and they have pointed to other people who were released before sentencing on similar convictions. Defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo suggested in a court filing that Combs was the United States' 'only person in jail for hiring adult male escorts for him and his girlfriend.' The defense's most recent proposal included the $50 million bond, plus travel restrictions, and expressed openness to adding on house arrest at his Miami home, electronic monitoring, private security guards and other requirements. Prosecutors opposed releasing Combs. They wrote that his 'extensive history of violence — and his continued attempt to minimize his recent violent conduct — demonstrates his dangerousness and that he is not amendable to supervision.' ___ Associated Press writer Jake Offenhartz contributed from Los Angeles.

Brock Lesnar makes shocking, controversial return at WWE SummerSlam to confront John Cena
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Brock Lesnar makes shocking, controversial return at WWE SummerSlam to confront John Cena

Brock Lesnar makes shocking, controversial return at WWE SummerSlam to confront John Cena originally appeared on The Sporting News The 'Beast Incarnate' is officially back in WWE. Nearly two years away from the ring, Brock Lesnar finally made his return at Sunday night's SummerSlam—and he immediately made his presence known. Just before that, John Cena had suffered an emotional defeat against Cody Rhodes in a street fight for the Undisputed WWE Championship. Standing alone in the ring, soaking up the crowd's 'Thank you, Cena' chants and knowing his final run would end with retirement this December, the arena suddenly exploded with energy. Lesnar's music hit. He walked down the ramp wearing his trademark cowboy hat and jeans, locking eyes with Cena. It was a chilling callback to their epic 2012 feud, back when Lesnar returned from the UFC aiming right at WWE's biggest star. He slowly circled the ring without taking his eyes off Cena. The crowd was buzzing, totally into it. 📲 Follow The Sporting News on WhatsApp Cena looked shaken—and for good reason. His past had returned to haunt him. Lesnar tipped his hat at ringside, then charged into the ring and slammed Cena with a powerful F-5 right in the center of the mat. The message was clear: Lesnar is back, and he's here to make a statement—not just relive old times. He's here for unfinished business. Cena's farewell tour has already seen a few twists—including a brief heel turn—but he's firmly back in babyface territory. With his rivalry with Rhodes seemingly behind him, it's now Lesnar who stands in his way. If Sunday night was any indication, this could be the final chapter in one of WWE's most iconic rivalries. Lesnar's return hasn't come without some controversy, however. Lesnar's last WWE appearance came at SummerSlam 2023, where he also suffered a loss to Rhodes. Much of his absence was linked to his name popping up in an ongoing lawsuit involving Vince McMahon. Last January, former WWE employee Janel Grant filed a lawsuit accusing McMahon of sex trafficking and abusive sexual acts. Lesnar's name appears in the lawsuit as someone McMahon allegedly offered Grant to for sexual favors. Wrestling Observer Radio's Dave Meltzer reported that WWE's legal team cleared Lesnar about four weeks ago. He speculated that WWE might feel confident the case is heading toward arbitration or nearing a settlement—both scenarios that would reduce Lesnar's legal exposure and clear the path for his return. Putting the controversy aside, there's no question Lesnar's comeback is a huge moment for WWE. With SummerSlam 2026 taking place in Minneapolis—Lesnar's hometown—it's easy to imagine this leading up to a retirement match. If that's the case, we could be witnessing the final run of Cena's career and the last chapter in one of WWE's most memorable rivalries. If Lesnar has his way, Cena's farewell tour might end the same way it just restarted—with an F-5.

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