Jurassic World: Dominion, Elvis, Lightyear, and 15 other must-see movies for June

Summer films head to infinity and beyond with a return to form by David Cronenberg, an adorable League Of Super-Pets, a creepy Ethan Hawke, and more

Film News Jurassic World
Jurassic World: Dominion, Elvis, Lightyear, and 15 other must-see movies for June
From left: Crimes Of The Future (Courtesy Neon), Lightyear (Pixar), Fire Island (Courtesy Searchlight Pictures), Jurassic World: Dominion (Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment) Graphic: Libby McGuire

With Memorial Day upon us, summer movie season is in full swing. Of course, audiences have already been swinging back to theaters with Downton Abbey and Top Gun sequels, but even more blockbuster fare awaits in June. The dinosaurs finally have dominion in a new Jurassic World that stages a reunion with original franchise stars Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldblum; David Cronenberg and Baz Luhrmann cultists have Crimes Of The Future and Elvis, respectively; and a strong summer of animation continues with Lightyear and DC League Of Super-Pets. Here’s a closer look at all the June 2022 movies that are worth a trip to your local multiplex.

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Annette Bening and Bryan Cranston in Image Jake Giles Netter/Paramount+

Film fest favorite Benediction (theaters everywhere June 3) finds Terence Davies following his ode to Emily Dickinson in A Quiet Passion with another depiction of a tortured poet, Siegfried Sassoon. An altogether different festival hit, (select theaters June 10) is, per its logline, an Afrofuturist musical about “an intersex African hacker, a coltan miner, and the virtual marvel born as a result of their union.” The Lost Girls (select theaters June 17) returns to Neverland, sort of, imagining four generations of Darling women. Paramount+ brings a charmer of a biopic to your streaming screen on June 17 with , starring the always-amazing Annette Bening and Bryan Cranston; similarly, I’m Charlie Walker (select theaters and VOD June 10) stars Mike Colter as the real-life eponymous construction entrepreneur cleaning up the San Francisco Bay. Documentary junkies should check out Emelie Mahdavian’s Bitterbrush (select theaters June 17) and Lisa Hepner and Guy Mossman’s The Human Trial (select theaters June 24). And horror weirdos will be satiated this month with Blumhouse’s Unhuman (digital platforms June 3), IFC Midnight’s (select theaters June 24), and especially Phil Tippett’s 30-years-in-the-making stop-motion animation opus (Shudder June 16). [Jack Smart]

11 Comments

  • jpfilmmaker-av says:

    No, Jurassic World Dominion is not, in any way must-see. I’ve never seen a franchise fall so far so fast, or go so far out of its way to insult its audience with how dumb it can be, and I’m a Hellraiser fan.

    • psergiosomatic-av says:

      I’m excited for it, which is weird because I didn’t bother with Fallen Kingdom at all. Pretty sure it’s because they finally have a feathered dino.

    • dirtside-av says:

      I’m right there with you. Jurassic World had plenty of surface-level adrenaline kickers, but the storytelling was so dull and the characters so uninteresting (not to mention the weirdly misogynistic killing of the assistant character) that I tapped out for the sequel (and by all accounts I did not miss much). Dominion’s apparent premise that dinosaurs are everywhere and we just can’t stop them (in a country with more firearms than people) is just too stupid for me to deal with.

      • actionactioncut-av says:

        Zara’s death struck me as so mean spirited. I remember Colin Trevorrow defending it as a moment meant to shock the audience because anyone can die, but then also justifying it because “she was a Bridezilla” (because she… didn’t want her boyfriend to have a bachelor party?). But then, I’ve also read comments about what a bitch she was because she was always on the phone, something personal assistants never do, apparently.

    • actionactioncut-av says:

      I cannot believe it’s taken us 3 of these fucking movies to get to what Jurassic World promised, which was dinosaurs running wild and fucking shit up.

      • jpfilmmaker-av says:

        I mean, we kind of already did, with the third act of Lost World. Dominion basically just seems like a feature version of that.

    • bridge-of-doom-av says:

      I knew it wasn’t going to be a must-see when I heard Colin Trevorrow would be in charge.

  • robert-moses-supposes-erroneously-av says:

    Hadn’t heard of Spiderhead, but it honestly looks really fun. Channing Tatum and Chris Hemsworth are in that rare school of “good-looking hunk who could just be a action/romcom star but instead takes comedy roles that they knock out of the park” I would say Chris Evans and Daniel Craig are partially in that school. Chris Pratt thinks he is, but is not. 

  • omgtkkr-av says:

    Pretty sure Neon is hoping for the former with Baba. Otherwise they’d be pretty shitty businesspeople.

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