New Movie Releases

New Movie Releases: October 31, 2025 Weekend Lineup Hits Theaters

The new movie releases for Halloween Weekend, October 31, 2025, are not here to play; it’s here to blow your genre-loving brain straight into the multiverse. If your idea of a good time involves haunted self-help seminars, bug-fueled alien conspiracies, mythic sword fights, toddler philosophers, and time-traveling guitar solos, congrats, because youโ€™ve stumbled into the most chaotic, deliciously weird movie lineup of the year.

This weekโ€™s new moive releases are flexing hard: Bugonia delivers arthouse satire with insect metaphors and Emma Stone in full alien-hunting mode; Self-Help turns wellness culture into a blood-splattered horror show thatโ€™ll make you cancel your next retreat; Baahubali: The Epic returns with a four-hour remastered mega-cut that screams โ€œbring a throne and a snack arsenalโ€; Little Amรฉlie or the Character of Rain gives us pastel-colored existentialism from the POV of a three-year-old goddess-in-training; and Back to the Future rolls up in its DeLorean for a 40th anniversary re-release thatโ€™s pure cinematic serotonin.

New Movie Releases: Bugonia – Rated R

Sci-Fi, Crime, Emma Stone, Alicia Silverstone
Photo of Jesse Plemons, Emma Stone, and Aidan Delbis in Bugonia (2025) | Photo by Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features/Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Feature – ยฉ Focus Features

Bugonia is what happens when you toss Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons into a blender of sci-fi satire and corporate chaos. Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos (yes, the same mind behind Poor Things and The Favourite), this English-language remake of the 2003 Korean cult classic Save the Green Planet! dives headfirst into the bonkers premise of two conspiracy-obsessed men who kidnap a pharmaceutical CEO, convinced sheโ€™s an alien from the Andromeda Galaxy plotting Earthโ€™s doom via bee extinction. Think climate anxiety meets corporate paranoia with a dash of arthouse absurdity. Itโ€™s weird, itโ€™s witty, and itโ€™s crawling with metaphors, literally. If Kafka and Succession had a baby raised on bug documentaries, Bugonia would be its final form.

New Movie Releases: Self-Help Rated R

Self-Help, Horror, Thriller
Photo of Amy Hargreaves in Self-Help (2025) |ยฉ 2025 Mainframe Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

Self-Help, the movie (2025), is your worst wellness retreat nightmare wrapped in a blood-soaked bow. Directed by Erik Bloomquist, this psychological horror flick throws a young woman into the belly of a self-actualization cult after her mom drinks the metaphorical Kool-Aid and starts worshipping a guru whoโ€™s equal parts charming and chilling. What starts as a rescue mission turns into a twisted game of mind control, manipulation, and enough trauma bonding to make your therapist cry. With a cast that includes Jake Weber, Landry Bender, Madison Lintz, and Amy Hargreaves, this film doesnโ€™t just dabble in horror; it cannonballs into it, splashing around in themes of identity, power, and the dark underbelly of โ€œfinding your truth.โ€ If youโ€™ve ever side-eyed a motivational speaker or felt personally attacked by a vision board, Self-Help is your cathartic scream into the void.

New Movie Releases: Baahubali: The Epic – Rated NR

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Baahubali: The Epic is what happens when S.S. Rajamouli looks at his already-legendary two-part saga and says, โ€œLetโ€™s make it even more extra.โ€ This nearly four-hour mega-cut fuses Baahubali: The Beginning and Baahubali 2: The Conclusion into one seamless, digitally remastered, IMAX-ready beast of a film, because apparently, your eyeballs werenโ€™t blessed enough the first time.

Starring Prabhas in full mythic hero mode, alongside Rana Daggubati, Anushka Shetty, Tamannaah Bhatia, and Ramya Krishnan (queen behavior, always), this re-release cranks up the drama, the betrayal, and the slow-motion swordplay to operatic levels. Expect sharper visuals, thunderous sound, and a story that still slaps with its Shakespearean stakes and divine destiny vibes. Whether youโ€™re here for the waterfall flex, the flaming bull stampede, or just to scream โ€œWhy did Kattappaโ€”well, you know,โ€ this is your chance to relive the legend in its most gloriously over-the-top form. Bring snacks. And maybe a throne. But remember, just because it is NR, take a look at the film trailer before bringing the little ones, and remember the runtime is close to 4 hours. Buy extra snacks too!

New Movie Releases: Little Amรฉlie or the Character of Rain – Rated PG

Image of Amรฉlie or the Character of Rain (2025) | ยฉ 2025 Maybe Movies, Ikki Films, 2 Minutes, France 3 Cinรฉma, Puffin Pictures, 22D MusicLittle

Little Amรฉlie or the Character of Rain is a hand-drawn animated gem of new movie releases that dares to ask: what if your existential crisis started at age three?

Based on Amรฉlie Nothombโ€™s semi-autobiographical novel Mรฉtaphysique des tubes, this French-Belgian film is directed by Maรฏlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han. It dives into the surreal, sensory-rich world of baby Amรฉlie, a Belgian girl growing up in 1960s Japan. Sheโ€™s slow to walk, slow to talk, and basically vibing in plant mode until a bite of white chocolate sparks a metaphysical awakening. From there, itโ€™s toddlerhood meets theology, with cross-cultural commentary and whimsical visuals that turn early childhood into a full-blown philosophical fever dream. Loรฏse Charpentier voices Amรฉlie with haunting charm, and the filmโ€™s PG-rated 77-minute runtime makes it a bite-sized bildungsroman with big brain energy. If youโ€™ve ever wondered what itโ€™s like to descend from the realm of gods into the chaos of family life, this oneโ€™s your poetic, pastel-colored answer. Bring tissuesโ€”and maybe a philosophy degree.

New Movie Releases: Back to the Future – Rated – PG

Back to the Future, Michael J. Fox, 40th Anniversary, Rerelease
Photo of Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd in Back to the Future (1985) | ยฉ 1985 Universal

Great Scott, itโ€™s happening! Back to the Future is revving up the DeLorean for its 40th anniversary, and yes, itโ€™s coming back to theaters this weekend like it never left 1985. Directed by Robert Zemeckis and powered by peak Michael J. Fox charm, this sci-fi classic throws Marty McFly into a time-traveling mess involving teenage parents, plutonium-powered flux capacitors, and a Doc Brown who makes Einstein look chill.

But this isnโ€™t just a nostalgia pit stop; itโ€™s a full-blown cinematic joyride in IMAX, Dolby Cinema, 4DX, and D-Box, because apparently your childhood memories deserve surround sound and motion seats. Whether youโ€™re quoting โ€œ1.21 gigawatts!โ€ or just here to watch Marty shred a guitar in 1955, this re-release is your chance to relive the chaos, comedy, and paradoxes on the big screen. So grab your hoverboard (or popcorn), and remember: if youโ€™re not watching this in a theater, youโ€™re not thinking fourth-dimensionally.

Final Thoughts: Halloween Weekend

Whether youโ€™re here for the spooky, the snuggly, or the spiritually scrambled, this weekendโ€™s multiplex is serving up emotional whiplash, cosmic chaos, and enough star power to short-circuit your Letterboxd. So grab your hoodie, your overpriced snacks, and your most judgmental movie buddy, because weโ€™re going in, and weโ€™re not coming out the same.

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