New Movie Releases: December 5, 2025 – Weekend Lineup Hits Theaters
This week’s new movie releases are a buffet for fans of every flavor—anime diehards, horror gamers, folklore enthusiasts, and Tarantino cultists all get something to chew on. From cursed energy battles exploding onto IMAX screens in “Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution,” to animatronic nightmares returning in “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,” to feminist fairy‑tale rebellion in “100 Nights of Hero,” and finally Tarantino’s blood‑drenched opus “Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair,” it’s a lineup that screams variety while still hitting that sweet spot of hype, nostalgia, and chaos.
New Movie Releases: “Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution” – Rated R

If you’ve ever wished that cursed energy battles could level up from your laptop screen to full cinematic chaos, “Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution” is your dream come true. This film throws us straight into the legendary Shibuya Incident arc—aka the arc that every JJK fan has been bracing for—where Gojo squares off against scheming curse users and Yuji Itadori gets dragged into the fallout of the most brutal showdown yet. But the real kicker? The movie doesn’t stop at Shibuya—it launches us right into the Culling Game arc, where Yuta Okkotsu is tasked with Yuji’s execution. That’s right, one of the fandom’s most beloved sorcerers is suddenly holding Yuji’s fate in his hands. It’s heartbreak, hype, and cursed techniques dialed up to eleven, designed for fans who know that watching domain expansions explode across an IMAX screen is the ultimate power-up.
New Movie Releases: “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2” – Rated PG-13

So, apparently, we’re all signing up for another night shift at Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza—because clearly one movie of murderous animatronics wasn’t enough trauma. Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 drags us back into the neon nightmare, this time with even more creepy robots who look like they were designed by someone who thought “children’s entertainment” should double as a horror simulator. The sequel leans harder into the lore, pulling new characters into the chaos while expanding the backstory that fans have been piecing together from grainy minigames and cryptic phone calls for years. It’s bigger, darker, and yes, probably full of jump scares you’ll pretend didn’t get you—but we all know you’ll be clutching your popcorn like it’s a security blanket.
New Movie Releases: “100 Nights of Hero” – Rated PG-13

“100 Nights of Hero” is what happens when bedtime stories get weaponized against the patriarchy—because why settle for sheep-counting when you can spin epic tales to outwit power-hungry men? This adaptation takes Isabel Greenberg’s graphic novel and cranks the folklore dial to eleven, serving up a world where two women use storytelling as both a survival strategy and rebellion. Think of it as a mash-up of fairy tales, feminist rage, and mythic world-building, with visuals that scream “storybook chic” while reminding you that narrative power can be sharper than any sword. For nerds who grew up obsessing over mythology and sarcastically side-eyeing outdated tropes, this film is basically a love letter to the art of telling stories that fight back.
New Movie Releases: “Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair” (2006) – Rated R

So here we are, finally getting Tarantino’s revenge opera the way he always wanted it—stitched together into one glorious blood‑soaked mixtape. “Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair” (2006) isn’t just a movie; it’s a four‑hour flex where The Bride slices her way through samurai showdowns, grindhouse grit, and spaghetti western swagger like it’s her weekend hobby. It’s Tarantino at his most extra: every frame dripping with references, every fight choreographed like a love letter to the VHS tapes we wore out in the 90s. And sure, it’s violent, but that’s kind of the point—this is cinema that winks at you while splattering the walls, daring you to keep up with its genre mash‑up chaos. For film nerds, it’s basically the director’s cut equivalent of finding the rarest action figure in the box set: indulgent, over the top, and absolutely worth bragging about.
Final Thoughts: New Movie Releases
Whether you’re here for sorcerers throwing domain expansions, robots that make you rethink pizza parties, bedtime stories turned into weapons, or Uma Thurman slicing her way through cinematic history, this week’s releases prove that genre storytelling is alive, well, and gloriously over the top. The real question is: which of these worlds are you diving into first—anime curses, animatronic nightmares, feminist folklore, or Tarantino’s ultimate revenge saga?
