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All 7 New Movie Release Dates Revealed by Warner Bros. for 2027 & 2028

Warner Bros. packed its upcoming release calendar with seven new movie titles during CinemaCon, spanning horror sequels, a star-studded heist prequel, and a prestigious awards season contender.

The studio revealed official dates for projects stretching from spring 2027 through late 2028, signalling an aggressive push to fill theatre screens as it navigates a potential merger with Paramount Skydance.

Warner Bors. adds seven movies to 2027 and 2028 release slate

The Revenge of La Llorona (April 9, 2027)

The sequel stars Monica Raymund and Jay Hernandez. It arrives almost exactly eight years after the original premiered on April 19, 2019.

Ocean’s Prequel (June 25, 2027)

The Margot Robbie-led heist prequel lands in the middle of the 2027 summer season. It debuts the week after Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse and the week before Shrek 5.

Evil Dead Wrath (April 7, 2028)

Warner Bros. set the next Evil Dead instalment for an early spring 2028 release.

Final Destination 7 (May 12, 2028)

The seventh instalment faces stiff competition in May 2028. Other releases that month include an untitled Marvel feature and the live-action Lilo & Stitch 2.

The Flood (August 11, 2028)

Weapons director Zach Cregger’s new thriller lands in a quieter August window. It currently faces only one other slated release that month.

Gladys (September 8, 2028)

The Weapons prequel follows the younger years of the sinister Aunt Gladys. Amy Madigan won an Oscar for her portrayal of the character in Weapons.

Untitled Baz Luhrmann Joan of Arc Film (November 22, 2028)

The awards season positioning signals the studio expects the film to contend at the 2029 Academy Awards. Every Luhrmann film since 1996’s Romeo + Juliet has earned at least one Oscar nomination.

Warner Bros. co-chairs Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy have increased output from six films in 2022 to 11 in 2025. “There’s no version of this business that’s risk-free,” Abdy said. “But our job is to step up, make bets and own it when it doesn’t work” (via Variety).


Source: Comingsoon.net