Tomasz 16, and Mikołaj, 17, analyse what this year’s film releases reveal about the state of the industry
Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya in Dune: Part 2 (2023)
3 April 2026
Will ‘Dunesday’ be Hollywood’s new billion dollar baby? Most awaited premieres of 2026
The awards season has barely closed, and Hollywood is already moving on. Within days of the Oscars ceremony, teasers for both Dune: Part Three and Spider-Man: Brand New Day dropped online — a reminder that the film industry does not pause for reflection.
If the 2025–2026 awards season was dominated by original, indie filmmaking (think One Battle After Another, Sinners, Hamnet, Marty Supreme), then 2026 seems to be a year of ultra-high-budget franchise cinema.
Arguably the most anticipated film of 2026 is Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey, scheduled to premiere on July 17th.
It is the first film ever shot entirely on next-gen IMAX 70mm cameras, with a promise to carry a new cinematic experience for those who will see the film in IMAX theatres – more than a year before the premiere, IMAX tickets sold out within hours of going on sale.
With a budget of US$250 million and a cast that includes Matt Damon as Odysseus, alongside Anne Hathaway, Zendaya, Tom Holland, and Robert Pattinson, it is easily the most expensive and logistically complex project in Nolan’s career.
For the film industry, still debating whether people are willing to leave their homes and spend their dollar to experience a film in a cinema, The Odyssey is a massive creative and commercial bet.
This year will re-test whether simultaneous releases are indeed a winning strategy. On December 18th, Avengers: Doomsday and Dune: Part Three both arrive in cinemas simultaneously, and neither studio has shown any intention of moving. The Russo Brothers return to direct Robert Downey Jr. as Doctor Doom alongside the original Avengers cast, and for the first time, X-Men characters from Fox’s original series — Ian McKellen and James Marsden being among them.
Dune: Part Three, adapting Frank Herbert’s Dune Messiah, picks up 17 years after Part Two, and Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya are to share the screen with Robert Pattinson as the villain Scytale, and Anya Taylor-Joy in a new role.
Chalamet and Downey Jr. have already leaned into the rivalry publicly, joking about calling December 18th “Dunesday” and positioning it as a repeat of “Barbenheimer”.
Whether audiences will rush to the cinemas, split their loyalties or pick a side, or wait for the digital release, will be the central box office question for the Christmas period.
