Coming soon: trailers to the next big films

COMING SOON: TRAILERS TO THE NEXT BIG FILMS Dive into a moreish new feature on theartsdesk

Get a sneak preview of major forthcoming movies

Summer's here, which can only mean Hollywood blockbusters. But it's not all Spider-Man, talking apes and World War Two with platoons of thespians fighting on the beaches. There's comedy, a saucy menage-à-trois, a film about golf and even a ghost story. It's called A Ghost Story. We hereby bring you sneak peeks of the season's finest and more titles anticipated in the autumn (and hey, the trailer might even be the best part).

AUGUST

Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets review - Rihanna on pole can't save tiring space opera

★★ VALERIAN AND THE CITY OF A THOUSAND PLANETS Brace for impact: Luc Besson's frenetic space fantasy runs out of warp factor

Brace for impact: Luc Besson's frenetic space fantasy runs out of warp factor

Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets starts promisingly: there’s Bowie’s Space Oddity on the soundtrack (a bit clichéd but evocative) and a sly montage of personnel handovers at an international space station over the decades. Astronauts from different earthly nations are superseded by increasingly awkward and funny encounters between human astronauts and phantasmagorical creatures arriving for their tour of duty – which alien protuberance will include an approximate hand to shake?

War for the Planet of the Apes review – long on budget, short on ideas

★★ WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES 'Apocalypse Now' goes to Stalag Luft III

'Apocalypse Now' goes to Stalag Luft III

There’s been talk about the way this latest instalment of the rebooted Ape franchise, and the one which brings the story of the brainy messianic ape Caesar full circle, is an allegory of Isis’s onslaught in Iraq or the rise of Donald Trump.

Wonder Woman review - Gal Gadot shines in uneven superhero yarn

★★★ WONDER WOMAN Timeless warrior queen goes to the Western Front

Timeless warrior queen goes to the Western Front

After dipping a toe in the new-look DC Comics universe to brighten the otherwise leaden Batman v Superman, now Gal Gadot’s Wonder Woman gets a chance to shine in her own Hollywood movie. Gadot makes a pretty fine job of it too, bringing a bit of soul and empathy to the proceedings, but sometimes it’s more despite than because of the production surrounding her.

DVD: Slaughterhouse-Five

DVD: SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE Deft and faithful film adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut’s bold novel

Deft and faithful film adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut’s bold novel

“I never saw anything like it,” declares Billy Pilgrim in wonderment. “It’s the Land of Oz.” He has just seen Dresden’s splendour from the train carriage into which he and other American prisoners of war are crammed en route to the city. They’ve been told it will be easier there than the prison camp they’ve left: they will experience less hardship at their new quarters. Dresden is not the Land of Oz, though.

Mass Effect: Andromeda review - 'dialogue trumps visual presentation'

★★★ MASS EFFECT: ANDROMEDA Is the final frontier one step too far for this sci-fi epic?

Is the final frontier one step too far for this sci-fi epic?

The latest instalment in this massive open world sci-fi role-playing game joins the 2017 party in full swing, with both Horizon Zero Dawn and Breath of the Wild raising the bar for the RPG genre. But with the Mass Effect games considered the very cream of the crop, the pressure to perform at a new zenith appears a little too much for a trilogy that looks like it has seen better days.

Life review - 'knuckle-gnawing moments of panic'

★★★ LIFE Is there life on Mars? It would appear so

Is there life on Mars? It would appear so

In space, no-one can hear you say “hang on, haven’t I seen this before?” The sprawling, labyrinthine space ship full of ducts and passageways for terrifying creatures to hide in, the laid-back crew who’ve become a little too blasé about life in space, the cute little outer-space organism that looks like an exotic novelty pet…

Logan

Heroic swansong for the battered but unbowed Wolverine

The X-Men films have frequently managed to bring a shot of ethical awareness and emotional engagement to the superhero party, but even so this swansong for Hugh Jackman’s Logan (aka Wolverine) is likely to take your breath away. With James Mangold at the helm as director and co-writer, this is a haunting elegy for times past, battles fought and comrades lost, as Logan finds himself grudgingly dragged out of a drink-sodden semi-retirement as a limo driver.