A roundup of major summer movie trailers highlights a slate of live-action remakes, sequels and prestige releases arriving in Israeli cinemas in July and August. Most titles have firm local release dates, beginning on 9 July, with the biggest crowd-pleasers and the most anticipated studio films spread through mid-August.
Disney’s live-action "Moana" is described as closely following the 2016 animated original, with Dwayne Johnson returning as Maui and newcomer Catherine Laga’aia replacing Auli’i Cravalho as Moana. The trailer for Olivia Wilde’s "I Want Your Wife", an English-language adaptation of a 2020 Spanish film, has drawn unusually strong reviews after its Sundance premiere, with a 93% Rotten Tomatoes score. Jackass returns for what is billed as its last film, "Jackass: Best And Last," with Johnny Knoxville and the crew back for more stunts and a robot also joining the chaos.
The Israeli film "Mila" stars Evgenia Dodina as a Polish immigrant who returns from years working as a housekeeper in Caesarea to her hometown in Poland to see the daughter she largely knew through a phone screen. "Evil Dead Burn," directed by French filmmaker Sébastien Vanicek, continues the horror franchise with a family arriving at the secluded cabin where the series began. Both "Moana," "I Want Your Wife," "Jackass," "Mila" and "Evil Dead Burn" are all set for 9 July release.
Christopher Nolan’s "The Odyssey," due 16 July, is framed as the summer’s most awaited film, with Matt Damon as Odysseus, Anne Hathaway as Penelope and Tom Holland as Telemachus. Despite backlash over its dialogue, accents and cast choices, the piece predicts it will still dominate the box office. "Spider-Man: A Brand New Day" follows on 30 July, set four years after "No Way Home," with Peter Parker isolated after Doctor Strange’s spell, and with John Bernthal’s Punisher, Charlie Cox’s Daredevil and Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk joining the cast. Other local releases include the Israeli comedy "Hill 338" on 6 August and David Robert Mitchell’s sci-fi thriller "The Quiet Before the Oak Street" on 13 August.