Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day comes to cinemas – what to watch this week
With a star studded cast featuring Emily Blunt, Josh O'Connor, Colin Firth, Colman Domingo and our own Eve Hewson, Disclosure Day hits cinemas. Meanwhile, the beloved friends-to-lovers romance Every Summer After is adapted for Prime Video.
June 10
Every Summer After, Prime Video
Adapted from Carley Fortune’s bestselling novel Every Summer After, Prime Video’s Every Year After is a sweeping friends-to-lovers romance told across six transformative summers and one life-changing week. The series follows Persephone “Percy” Fraser and Sam Florek, whose deep connection is forged during idyllic summers at a lakeside cottage in Barry’s Bay — only to be shattered by a mistake neither can forget. The story unfolds across two timelines, moving between the present day, where Percy returns home for a funeral and unexpectedly reunites with Sam, and flashbacks that chart the evolution of their relationship over six pivotal summers.
June 12
Disclosure Day, cinemas everywhere
Directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor, Colin Firth, Colman Domingo and our own Eve Hewson, Disclosure Day asks if aliens have already made contact as a massive government conspiracy unravels and a targeted whistleblower races against time to bring about the extraordinary event that will change human history forever: the day of ultimate alien disclosure.
What else to watch
Not Suitable for Work, Disney+
Created by Mindy Kaling, Not Suitable for Work centres on five work-obsessed 20-somethings striving for professional success and, if they have time, personal happiness in Manhattan’s most glamorous neighbourhood, Murray Hill.
Michael Jackson: The Verdict, Netflix
Michael Jackson: The Verdict is a three-part Netflix docuseries that chronicles the singer’s highly publicised 2005 criminal trial for child molestation. Because cameras were banned from the courtroom at the time, the series uses archival footage, contemporaneous news reports, and firsthand interviews to provide a comprehensive historical reconstruction of the proceedings.
Clarkson’s Farm, Prime Video
Clarkson’s Farm is back, and amidst a government budget that sends the UK farming community into uproar, Jeremy decides some big changes are needed to make the farm run more smoothly.
Masters of the Universe, cinemas everywhere
Four decades on from the Dolph Lundgren-led Masters of the Universe, filmmaker Travis Knight is rebooting the franchise with a fresh story set on Earth. Nicholas Galitzine takes on the role of He-Man, while Idris Elba plays the honourable Man-At-Arms. Rounding out the cast is Jared Leto as Skeletor, Eternia’s iconic skeletal nemesis.
Scary Movie, cinemas everywhere
Shorty, Ray, Cindy and Brenda find themselves targeted by another mad slasher, 13 years since the last reboot of the franchise and 26 years after outrunning a suspiciously familiar masked killer. This run sees the return of Anna Faris, Regina Hall, and the Wayans brothers.
Office Romance, Netflix
Jennifer Lopez is back in the realm of romantic comedy alongside Brett Goldstein in this saucy edition about a secret office romance and the chaos two workaholics get into following their hearts.
Cape Fear, Apple TV
First adapted for the screen in 1962 with Robert Mitchum and Gregory Peck, and later remade by Martin Scorsese in 1991 with Robert De Niro, Nick Nolte, Jessica Lange and Juliette Lewis, Cape Fear is returning once again, but this time as a prestige TV thriller. Executive produced by Scorsese and Steven Spielberg, the series stars Javier Bardem as the vengeful Max Cady, newly released after 17 years behind bars and determined to settle old scores. Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson play married lawyers Anna and Tom Bowden, whose world begins to unravel when they discover that Anna’s former client is back on the outside. As Cady closes in, the family finds itself trapped in a nightmare where nowhere feels safe and every decision carries deadly consequences.






