hollywood Movies of 2018 download from vidmate
While everyone continues to fixate on 2017’s ongoing awards season, we are already slowly but surely turning our attention to next year, and its enormous crop of great-looking debut films. As always, the biggest Hollywood offerings will involve heroic and/or wisecracking superheroes (of both a live-action and animated variety). Yet amid those comic-book extravaganzas, we’ll also receive exciting new works from some of world cinema’s most illustrious talents, including Steven Spielberg, Wes Anderson, Steve McQueen, Barry Jenkins, and Ava DuVernay. And then, of course, there’s Martin Scorsese’s gangster epic The Irishman—starring Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, and Harvey Keitel!—which, should it sneak into the end-of-year pack, might make 2018 truly unforgettable.
Mandy (premiering at Sundance)
Panos Cosmatos’ 2011 Beyond the Black Rainbow is one of the decade’s truly great genre films, a trippy sci-fi nightmare that has to be seen to be believed. For his long-awaited follow-up, the director is teaming with Nicolas Cage for this story of a 1983 man who embarks on a mission of revenge against the religious cult that murdered his wife. Sign. Us. Up.
Black Panther (Feb. 16)
Ahead of summer’s all-star Avengers blow-out, Marvel will first drop this Black Panther stand-alone adventure directed by Creed’s Ryan Coogler and starring Chadwick Boseman, Lupita Nyong’o, Michael B. Jordan, Danai Gurira, and Angela Bassett, among many others. Its great trailers suggest it may be the most daring effort from the superhero studio yet.
Annihilation (Feb. 23)
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Alex Garland (Ex Machina) wrote and directed this sci-fi-horror film about a biologist who ventures into an environmental disaster area to search for her missing husband. Early buzz is strong for this ambitious project—and with a cast that includes Natalie Portman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tessa Thompson, Gina Rodriguez, and Oscar Isaac, we understand why.
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A Wrinkle in Time (March 9)
Ava DuVernay (Selma) takes the reigns of this big-budget Disney fantasy film, an adaptation of Madeleine L’Engle’s book about a young girl, her brother, and her friend’s odyssey into space to find her father courtesy of three mystical figures. With Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, Mindy Kaling, Chris Pine, Michael Pena, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, and Zach Galifianakis leading the charge, it seems primed for box-office triumph
Isle of Dogs (March 30)
Nine years after Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes Anderson returns to stop-motion animation with this saga about a boy searching for his missing dog on a quarantined island populated by canines. As always, an all-star cast is along for the ride, and early glimpses suggest it could be one of the year’s most charming offerings.
Ready Player One (March 30)
Can Steven Spielberg turn terrible source material into great cinema? That’s the task he’s chosen by adapting Earnest Cline’s pop culture-obsessed book, which concerns a young kid (Tye Sheridan) going on a virtual reality treasure hunt—and which will no doubt be overflowing with shout-outs to your favorite fictional properties and characters.
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You Were Never Really Here (April 6)
Winner of the Best Screenplay and Best Actor awards at 2017’s Cannes Film Festival, this revenge thriller from writer/director Lynne Ramsay (We Need to Talk About Kevin) stars Joaquin Phoenix as a hired killer who unearths dark secrets while trying to save a girl from a life of prostitution. All the elements are in place for a top-rate genre effort.
Avengers: Infinity War (May 4)
Iron Man, Captain America, Spider-Man, and about 100 more of their super-powered friends team up to stop Josh Brolin’s villainous Thanos from wreaking apocalyptic destruction in this Marvel spectacular, which you will definitely see and probably love.
Solo: A Star Wars Story (May 25)
The cast of the Han Solo movie
StarWars.com
Given that Lucasfilm fired its original directors (The Lego Movie’s Phil Lord and Christopher Miller) mid-production and replaced them with Ron Howard, this origin story for Han Solo (played by Alden Ehrenreich) is one of 2018’s biggest question marks. And, probably, also one of its biggest hits.
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Deadpool 2 (June 1)
Just on the basis of 2015’s R-rated original, we’re eager to see what’s next for Ryan Reynolds’ sarcastic Merc with a Mouth. The fact that he’ll now be paired with Josh Brolin’s time-traveling badass Cable—and that his sequel is being directed by Atomic Blonde’s David Leitch—only further enhances our anticipation.
Ocean’s Eight (June 8)
Playing the estranged brother of George Clooney’s Danny Ocean, Sandra Bullock assembles her own all-star thief team—including Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway, Mindy Kaling, Helena Bonham Carter, Sarah Paulson, and Rihanna (!)—to pull off a heist targeting Damian Lewis’ baddie in this A-list effort, which is being helmed by The Hunger Games’ Garry Ross
The Incredibles 2 (June 15)
Little is know about the plot of Pixar’s sequel to 2004’s beloved superhero adventure. But with original director Brad Bird (and the entire voice cast) once again on board, it’s definitely one of the few 2018 follow-ups we’re actively interested in seeing.
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Widows (Nov. 16)
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Steve McQueen’s last film (12 Years a Slave) won Best Picture at the Academy Awards; for his newest endeavor, he’s collaborating with Gone Girl author Gillian Flynn for a thriller about four women who decide to finish the heist that led to the deaths of their criminal husbands. If that weren’t enough, he’s assembled what’s arguably 2018’s best cast: Viola Davis, Elizabeth Debicki, Michelle Rodriguez, Cynthia Eviro, Colin Farrell, Daniel Kaluuya, Liam Neeson, Robert Duvall, Carrie Coon, Garret Dillahunt, Jacki Weaver, Brian Tyree Henry, and Jon Bernthal.
If Beale Street Could Talk (TBA)
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Barry Jenkins rose to the top of the cinematic food chain with 2016’s Moonlight, and his follow-up sounds like it’ll keep him there. Adapted from James Baldwin’s novel of the same name, it tells the story of a pregnant wife determined to prove that her husband has been falsely accused of rape before their child is born. Expect it to arrive in the fall, right in time for awards nominations.
Hold the Dark (TBA)
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Jeremy Saulnier (Green Room) is one of cinema’s up-and-coming greats, and he’s recently been tabbed to direct the forthcoming third season of HBO’s True Detective (starring Mahershala Ali). Before that, though, he’ll deliver this dark-sounding thriller with Jeffrey Wright, Riley Keough, and Alexander Skarsgard about a wolf expert asked to locate a missing boy in a remote Alaskan town where kids are being ravaged by wolves. We can’t wait.
And then for ten more must-see films:
Mission: Impossible 6 (July 27)
First Man (Oct. 12)
Halloween (Oct. 19)
Holmes & Watson (Nov. 9)
Backseat (TBA)
Destroyer (TBA)
The Man Who Killed Don Quixote (TBA)
The Old Man and the Gun (TBA)
Ad Astra (it’s scheduled for January 2019, but expect a Dec. 2018 limited release)
The Irishman (we hear 2019, but our fingers are crossed for a late 2018 awards-qualifying run)
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