Alright! Today, in my yearly tradition of listing the most anticipated movies of the year the Tuesday before Christmas, I am running down the 21 Most Anticipated Movies of 2021. This year has been significantly impacted by COVID - Many of the movies on this list are actually big blockbusters, so I didn't have to scrounge that hard to stretch it to 2021.
For those of you wondering, some high profile movies that would've been on my list if 2020 wasn't a trash fire would be: The Batman, Doctor Strange In the Multiverse of Madness, Black Adam, Avatar 2, Thor: Love and Thunder, Hamilton, The Beatles: Get Back, Indiana Jones 5, Jurassic World: Dominion, and Wicked. Which is terrible, because at least 6 of those would've easily made it into this year's top ten (The Batman, Jurassic World: Dominion, Avatar 2, Thor: Love and Thunder, Hamilton, Doctor Strange In the Multiverse of Madness). Instead, we get 2020's already watered-down schedule combined with a few 2021 leftovers.
Before we get into it, I should add a disclaimer and say that depending on what happens with COVID, all of these are liable to change. Hopefully, Joe Biden will do a bit better at controlling the disease than Trump did, as America not being able to get its act together caused most of the 2020 movies to vacate the year. And, a COVID vaccine has already had successful test rates, so here's to thinking positively.
So, I guess we'll get into it. Here are some honorable mentions that just didn't make the cut:
Cruella - May 28th
F9 - June 25th
Reminiscence - August 27th
Dear Evan Hansen - September 24th
No Time to Die - October 8th
West Side Story - December 10th
Matrix 4 - December 10th
21. Pinocchio - 2021
Starting off the list but with no release date confirmed, this specific Pinocchio project has been in the works for years. A passion project from legendary dark fantasy director Guillermo Del Toro, this is going to be a darker stop motion retelling of the Pinocchio story that takes place in Fascist Italy. Which sounds very, very cool.
If you're wondering what this movie'll be like, take into consideration Del Toro's previous directorial efforts: Hellboy, Blade II, Pan's Labyrinth, Pacific Rim, and The Shape of the Water. He also created Trollhunters, which, while not the biggest television show, is surprisingly good.
And, I would be amiss to not mention the cast: Ewan McGregor as Jiminy Cricket, Tilda Swinton, Cate Blanchett, and Finn Wolfhard. Pinocchio is currently scheduled to be released by Netflix sometime in 2021.
This looks horrifying. I like it. |
20. Space Jam: A New Legacy - July 16th
The first Space Jam is a severely flawed and not good movie. The sound you hear is likely a Millennial dying from shock, but those are just hard facts. But, this sequel is looking very promising. First of all, it's nice that a new live-action/animation hybrid movie is coming out, or that a new Looney Tunes movie is coming out in general. Second off is that the plot actually sounds really, really cool.
Lebron James and his son are somehow trapped inside of Warner Bros. library of content, all ruled by Al-G (Don Cheadle). Lebron and Bugs Bunney need to find all of the Looney Tunes characters to find his missing son and return home, which they do by playing a huge digital basketball game. This is mostly exciting because of the sheer amount of stuff Warner Bros. owns - It, DC, Wizard of Oz, The Mask, Harry Potter, TMNT, The Matrix, Nightmare on Elm Street, and Scooby-Doo. And they've already confirmed Pennywise, Wicked Witch of the West, Joker, and the Mask. This sounds dope and I can't wait to see it. It's shaping up to be Warner Bros.' Ralph Breaks the Internet.
Nice to see the Tunes back on the big screen. The last time that happened was 2003's Looney Tunes: Back in Action. |
19. Luca - June 18th
Pixar's next effort after Soul (Releasing later this week) is Luca, which we don't know much about right now. But, based off of the concept art and the synopsis, the hype is on low. The synopsis is along the lines of, "Luca is a young boy who, over the summer on the Italian Riviera, crafts an unbreakable friendship bond. But Luca has a secret: He is a sea monster from a world just below the water's surface."
To me, this sounds like Call Me By Your Name plus The Shape of Water, neither of which I'm really excited to see smooshed together and put into a Pixar film, but we'll see. I wasn't looking forward to Soul, but then the trailer came out and December 25th can't happen soon enough. I'm cautiously optimistic about this one.
Also, when the first trailer comes out, expect to hear the "This doesn't feel like Pixar" sentiment that plagued Onward and Brave. Of course it feels different. Most Pixar movies are directed by five dudes - John Lasseter, Pete Docter, Andrew Stanton, and Brad Bird. Their movies make up 15 of the 23 Pixar movies out. That means that the ones that aren't - Brave, Monsters University, The Good Dinosaur, Cars 3, and Onward - all feel a bit "Off" to people. And, yeah. Of course they do. When you got 5 dudes making similar movies, things that break that mold will feel "Different."
It sounds nice, but something about the character designs feels vaguely generic. |
18. Jungle Cruise - July 30th
Jungle Cruise is poised to be Disney's first franchise since 2004's National Treasure, which was... a disappointing amount of time ago. That's what happens when your entire catalog is remakes of existing properties and sequels. But, Jungle Cruise is promising. Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra, the director behind several okay movies and the upcoming Black Adam, this movie is based on the titular Jungle Cruise theme park ride, like Pirates of the Caribbean.
But! Twist! This one stars the Rock and Emily Blunt! Those are two pretty good hosts for a would-be franchise starter. The Rock's bankability is apparently the only way an original Disney flick will make money. And it's basically The Mummy, as in, "During the 1920s, a cool tough guy takes a scientist and her brother on a trip to a magical item while competing with an opposing team also trying to get to that item." And everyone likes The Mummy.
This summer, prepare for The Mummy - On water |
17. Venom: Let There Be Carnage - September 24th
I didn't see the first Venom. I heard it was okay. But, I'm more interested in the sequel than I regularly would be. I'm very excited to see Carnage on the big screen, and I really like seeing Woody Harrelson in movies, so him and Carnage equals... something I'm pretty excited for? Sure. Why not?
And, I guess it's worth noting that it's directed by Andy Serkis, who, while not an acclaimed director yet (Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle was a middling effort), should feel pretty capable with giant CGI monsters by now.
Hopefully, this movie is not a turd in the wind. |
16. In the Heights - June 11th
A holdover from 2020, In the Heights is an adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda's 2005 musical, also titled In the Heights. The story takes place in Washington Heights, New York, and centers around the owner of a small bodega named Usnavi de la Vega.
In the Heights is a thrilling and intimate story - As with any musical, it's a love story. This one has, as I recollect, two. The main character, Usnavi is in love with a lady named Vanessa, and they're the main characters. Usnavi's subordinate, Benny, is in love with college drop-out Nina, and that leads to some of the strongest musical numbers in musical history - Namely Inútil, my personal favorite song in the musical.
This movie's going to be good. It's directed by Crazy Rich Asians director Jon M. Chu, and the trailers have been boasting some visually impressive shots. I'm actually excited for a movie adaptation of a musical! This does not happen often!
15. Mission: Impossible 7 - November 4th
I'm not a big Mission: Impossible guy. I've seen two, and I barely remember the first one. But, I saw the last Mission: Impossible, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, and that was a surprisingly good movie. Lots of cool action sequences and whatnot. I want to see more of the M:I movies, but I have no clue where to find them. I'm especially curious about Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol's sequence where Tom Cruise climbs the Burj Khalifa. That sounds dope.
So, as long as this flick keeps up the tradition of huge action scenes, count me in as watching it whenever it reaches the $3 theater near me. And, while I was typing this up, I pumped myself up into looking up the movie, and it turns out that they're actually going to blow up a bridge in a huge train crash sequence so... that works. I'm sold.
A Mission: Impossible fight on a train would be cool. |
14. Top Gun: Maverick - July 2nd
Did I see the first Top Gun? Yes. Did I like the first Top Gun? Ehh.... it was okay. I'm just there for volleyball and Val. Am I hyped for the sequel? Also ehh. The best thing this thing has going for it, like the first one, is the fight scenes. Based off of snippets in the trailers, as well as the director's previous work (Tron Legacy), these look like the flight scenes to end all flight scenes.
But other than cool visuals, I can't really list a reason why I would see this movie. Tom Cruise does cool stunts, that's a reason. Oh, actually, Val Kilmer is going to be in this, and he hasn't been in a high profile movie since 1998's The Prince of Egypt. He was Batman one time and then had a battle against throat cancer, and then his career just kind of ended. So that's a reason I would see this flick. It's just not a priority right now.
If this movie doesn't have a volleyball scene, then what's the point? |
13. Finch - November 5th
Finch is a new original movie starring Tom Hanks. The gist of the movie is that the last man on Earth, Finch (Tom Hanks), creates a robot to protect his dog after he dies. I don't know if the movie'll be good. I don't know if the movie'll be interesting. But, I can hope. Tom Hanks is cool.
This movie is also directed by this guy named Miguel Sapochnik, who you probably have never heard of, but his directing credits include Hardhome, which is often cited as one of the best episodes of Game of Thrones. And it's nice for a studio to release an original star+concept movie. I'm placing this as an optimistic bet for a great original movie.
The man. The myth. The legend. |
12. Black Widow - July 9th
Black Widow was a movie I was hyped for. But that was when it was the next MCU flick in rotation, not the first MCU movie in a year and a half. Black Widow has always felt like a, "Watch this to get to the new stuff you actually want to see," like Eternals or Shang-Chi.
But, other than feeling somewhat unnecessary seeing as how timeline-wise Black Widow is dead, I am excited for this movie regardless. Just not for Black Widow. I'm excited to see Taskmaster up on the big screen. Right now I'm getting Captain America: The Winter Soldier vibes from this, so Taskmaster in that movie with some cool choreography would go a long way towards my overall appreciation of the movie. Also a perk is David Harbor's Red Guardian, who, if the trailers are any indication, will be several people's favorite part of the movie. He seems hilarious.
And, let's just get it out of the way. This should've been Marvel's first solo-female movie, but I'm glad it isn't. It let Captain Marvel take all the "The hero is her" marketing crap that made so many people hate it before they saw it. So Black Widow dodged that bullet and is being treated as a regular action blockbuster. Which is great. True equality is being given the same treatment.
11. Free Guy - August 13th
Free Guy was supposed to come out last week had this year not been trash. But, at least for this original idea+star concept, we have some footage. Free Guy is about Ryan Reynolds as a guy named Guy, who, unbeknownst to him, is an NPC (Non-playable character) in an open world video game in which he is a bank teller.
This is promising to... not be that good. Based on director Shawn Levy's previous movies, which include the Night at the Museum trilogy and a few okay episodes of Stranger Things, this is looking to be an agreeable but unspecial movie, and the trailers haven't really shown anything to the contrary.
Obviously, Ryan Reynolds (Deadpool) is a big draw. He's a fairly big action movie star. The niche "New yet familiar" concept is good. The supporting cast includes Joe Keery (Steve Harrington from Stranger Things) and Taika Waititi (Korg), and they're both funny in whatever roles they're in. Overall, this looks like a perfectly average action-comedy.
This looks good, just not too good. |
10. The Tomorrow War - July 23rd
Chris McKay is back at it again. Known as the director of The LEGO Batman Movie and a future Nightwing movie, this is yet another original star+concept movie. And by golly, does this sound like a cool concept.
In the future, a war against aliens has caused scientists to develop a way to draft soldiers from the past. So time traveling forward to fight aliens is an incredibly dope concept. And who is the leading man in our war against aliens? Chris Pratt, who will be playing a husband and father from the past who is drafted.
This is an incredibly exciting and cool concept (Simple enough to understand, clever enough to make you feel smart), and if it's half as good as The LEGO Batman Movie, this could easily be one of the best movies of the year. And original at that!
Fun fact, some of the working titles for the movie were Saving Private Ryaalien, World War A, Ghost War, and The Destiny War. |
9. Ghostbusters: Afterlife - November 11th
Ghostbusters has always been a rocky franchise. You had the first two Ghostbusters in '84 and '89, a canceled third Ghostbusters, a tv show, a reboot, and now this third movie. They're also making an animated Sony movie told from the perspective of the ghosts and a prequel movie/tv show about the characters first meeting (Excluding Winston, I guess).
But, speaking of this movie specifically, it looks good. It follows the grandchildren of the late Egon Spengler as they inherit his house and Ghostbusters gear. Apparently, a large part of this movie is that people think the first Ghostbusters never happened and that the Ghostbusters are myths. I guess they forgot what happened in Ghostbusters 2? When they mobilized the Statue of Liberty? Whatever.
But, this movie is on the right track. It's cast a couple of actors who seem in-line with the Ghostbusters universe like Finn Wolfhard (Stranger Things), Paul Rudd, and J.K. Simmons. They're also bringing back the original Ghostbusters, as well as Sigourney Weaver's Dana and the secretary, Janine. And it's being directed by Ivan Reitman's son Jason (Ivan Reitman directed the first Ghostbusters), so there will obviously be a lot of respect for the previous movies.
Something about this movie just feels right. |
8. Godzilla vs. Kong - March 31st
I'm not expecting Godzilla vs. Kong to be any good, mostly because it's bringing back the cast of Godzilla: King of the Monsters, who were some of the blandest characters I've ever seen. But, there are perks to it. For one, Godzilla. For two, King Kong. And.... that's it. I just want to see these two guys go toe to toe.
But, since the movie will undoubtedly feature humans to give us exposition while the monsters fight, we might as well go over them. We're getting a new main character for this movie, Alexander Skarsgård, who will be playing a geologist. That's cool. He looks like an action movie hero. But, we're also getting Millie Bobby Brown and Kyle Chandler's Madison and Mark Russell characters back, so... yay...
In terms of style, each film in Warner Bros.' MonsterVerse has had its own style. Godzilla was slow and epic, Kong: Skull Island was a fun adventure film, Godzilla: King of the Monsters was... a movie. And I can't wait to see what flair Godzilla vs. Kong ends the MonsterVerse on.
I'm not expecting much from this in terms of quality, but it better have the smackdown of 2020. |
7. Eternals - November 5th
I have no clue what I was thinking when I ranked this as last year's most anticipated movie. I guess I was really optimistic or was just blinded by my MCU fanboy heart, probably the latter. But, 2020 already had a pretty weak schedule, even back when it... had a schedule. So that was my bad.
But, I am hyped for Eternals, previously called The Eternals. They dropped the "The." Regardless of the fanboy hype, this sounds like a pretty epic story. It supposedly spans thousands of years and has some very cool looking robot concept art, so that's all a big draw. And, the film has a huge cast of aspiring actors the MCU is so fond of making A-Listers (Hemsworth, Evans, Johannson), including Richard Madden (1917, Game of the Thrones), Kumail Nanjiani (LEGO Ninjago Movie, MIB: International), Kit Harington (Game of Thrones, How to Train Your Dragon), and Brian Tyree Henry (Spider-Verse, Joker, Godzilla vs. Kong). Oh, and Angelina Jolie.
That's a huge cast of solid actors. And, it looks like it's introducing some pretty awesome characters: Makkari, who will be the first deaf superhero in the MCU, Black Knight, who I've always wanted to see in a live-action movie, and Phastos, who will be the first main character to be gay in an MCU film, which is great. Diversity is great as long as it's not the main draw, and with an ensemble and story this big, there's no way "Superhero #4 is gay" can be the main draw, so I have no fear of "What makes her a hero?" type of message from this.
I'm very excited for Eternals. It looks epic. It feels epic. Would've already come out if 2020 didn't blow.
Forget Guardians of the Galaxy and Ant-Man, if Marvel can sell this they can sell anything. |
6. Raya and the Last Dragon - March 5th
Raya and the Last Dragon, at the time of my writing this, was literally just given a trailer today. My main take away from the trailer was that it is pronounced Rye-A, not Ray-A, as I had been pronouncing it. So that's going to mess me up for a very long time.
Raya and the Last Dragon is Disney's next animated movie. It's about the titular Raya and her efforts to find the last dragon, who will be able to restore her world, Kumandra, and the divided inhabitants of said land. Kumandra is inspired by southeastern culture, by the way. But overall, this movie had me at "Dragon." Dragons are cool, guys. You put a dragon in something and it becomes a must-watch.
However, one worrying aspect of this movie is that it's the first Disney flick to not have the input of John Lasseter since Chicken Little. John Lasseter, the director of Toy Story and Cars, is apparently a really scummy #MeToo victim - but there's no denying he's a brilliant filmmaker. Any Disney or Pixar flick since 2005 has had his input. So let's just hope that Disney retained a bit of that and can continue their winning streak.
It's nice to see a Disney fantasy that's not a musical. Last one was... Treasure Planet? Doesn't feel right as a comparison to Raya. Let's go with The Black Cauldron. |
5. Encanto - November 24th
Encanto is Disney's next animated musical, their first one since Frozen II, and first original one since Moana. And this doesn't even seem based off of anything (Like how Moana was loosely based on Polynesian culture) which would make Encanto their first original musical not based on anything since The Lion King. This one's synopsis is "A Columbian girl who, in spite of coming from a magical family, lacks magical powers." So is this lady the next Disney Princess? That would be cool. If she sings and wears a dress, she is a princess.
Besides the brilliant animation Encanto is sure to boast, as well as the Columbian vibe and magical fantasy elements, Encanto is also getting songs from Lin-Manuel Miranda (Hamilton, Moana), whose work has literally never disappointed. And it's being directed by the same guy who directed Zootopia, and Zootpia was great. Does this mean we're getting two princess movies in one year? Possibly.
But how is she different from Raya and Moana before her? |
4. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings- September 3rd
I have no clue who Shang-Chi is. I'm really into Marvel, but I had literally never heard of him until this movie was announced at 2019's Comic-Con, so I'm excited to see what this dude is about. What are his powers? Motivations? Is this an origin story? A flashback origin story a la Batman Begins? I'm excited about this unknown variable you don't see a lot of in blockbusters nowadays.
But even knowing nothing, I am excited about the movie. They're bringing back the Mandarin, Iron Man's arch-nemesis, as the villain for this movie. And Mandarin needs a proper cinematic treatment after Trevor Slattery (A good twist at the time, but disappointing in hindsight). And there are also rumors, or at least my own personal speculation, that this movie could introduce Fin Fang Foom, a space dragon in Marvel comics. And like I said before - Dragons are a must-see element.
I'm also very excited to see the fight sequences. Asian flicks are known for their over the top and ridiculous fight scenes, and I'm curious to find out whether Shang-Chi will go that Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon route or take Mulan's "American fight scene disguised as Chinese" route.
Marvel's next Black Panther? Maybe. |
3. A Quiet Place Part II - May 28th
It's not often I'm excited about a horror film. But, it's equally rare we get a legitimately good PG-13 horror flick. I absolutely hate the idea that all good horror needs to be R-Rated. Sometimes, having restrictions can be even scarier than whatever you can show on screen. So the first A Quiet Place immediately caught my eye, and it's one of the best horror flicks I've ever seen.
So the sequel is something I'm really looking forward to. It's expanding the world of the first one, but without collapsing in on itself by trying to launch a cinematic universe. And it's introducing the ever underappreciated Cillian Murphy, who shines in everything he's in (Inception, Batman Begins). And, this movie was delayed from 2020 literally a week before it came out. This was supposed to come out in March.
People apparently review bombed A Quiet Place Part II on google because of the delay, and I get it. Fans were really sad. But, I also get why Paramount would do that. Paramount is in desperate need of hits. Dreamworks is taking a break, Transformers is no longer profitable, Terminator ended, Mission: Impossible is ending soon, and they can't live off of Rocketman and Dora. They need the money, basically, especially with an entire year of lost profit.
I like how they're upping the ante with the baby. Babies are notoriously not quiet. |
2. Spider-Man: No Way Home - December 17th
Spider-Man: Homecoming was great. Spider-Man: Far From Home was also great. So this third Spidey flick is presumably... great. And every time new news comes out about the movie, I get even more excited. They're bringing back Doctor Strange! Jamie Foxx as Electro, which is very strange. Is that a multiverse connection or is it just giving the guy another chance at an iconic B-List Spidey villain? And, they've confirmed Alfred Molina is returning as Doc Ock, and I'm sure confirmation of Andrew Garfield and Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man, and even Kirsten Dunst as Mary Jane aren't far behind. Although, to be honest, she's probably only there to break up with Peter and get back with him after he starts crying.
There's also this fan theory out there that says the main villain is Kraven the Hunter, who will be hunting Spider-Men throughout the multiverse, which will bring our three Spideys together. That also sounds very dope. It is Kraven's time to shine, y'all. We need to cast Jason Momoa.
We need this crossover. It has to happen at some point, right? |
So, the characters are taking form. You can almost see a storyline for Phase 4 through all of this - In WandaVision, Wanda Maximoff will shatter reality. In Spider-Man: No Way Home, Peter will deal with the fallout, and then in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Doctor Strange will stop Wanda and fix the multiverse, likely bringing in X-Men and Fantastic Four as a result. Can't wait to see any of that stuff.
And this Spider-Man movie gets to tell a story that's never been told! Based off of Far From Home's cliffhanger, Spider-Man's secret identity as Peter Parker has been revealed to the entire world! We've never seen a Spidey flick like that, so I'm excited about the possibilities that presents (But if they adapt One More Day, I'm done. No magicking out of consequences).
We need an MCU Spidey movie where he's on his own. No Stark, no bailouts, just Spidey. |
1. Dune - October 1st
If you use social media (Or the internet in general) prepare for the onslaught of Dune hype you are sure to hear over the next 10 months. Dune was originally positioned as 2020's big end of the year billion-dollar four-quadrant flick, the next Lord of the Rings. And they had the timing right as well - since 2015, December has been the launchpad for four billion-dollar Star Wars movies as well as Aquaman, and 2020 had nothing big scheduled for December, so Warner Bros. wisely put Dune there.
Things did not go according to plan. 2020 was a dumpster fire of unfortunate events and all movies got delayed to 2021. The delayal of Dune actually caused my original #1 Most Anticipated Movie, The Batman, to go to 2022. So a very mixed bag there. But if you're still in the dark about what Dune is, don't stress it. I myself didn't read the book until this year during quarantine, and I can only prepare you for the incredibly dense story.
Check out the cinematography. |
Originally written by Frank Herbert in 1965, the story takes place far in the future when humanity has collapsed and rebuilt itself back to monarchies and political machines. Duke Leto Atreides, although he knows it is a trap, takes stewardship of the planet Arrakis (Also known as Dune), the one source of the spice Melange on which the universe runs, which is capable of extending human life and makes lightspeed travel possible. After the trap culminates, the Duke's son Paul and his wife Lady Jessica must travel the perilous sand dunes of Arrakis, where the giant sandworms who guard the spice reside. Paul and Lady Jessica are then led to the Fremen, the natives of Arrakis, with whom they plan to take Arrakis back from the giant empires.
It sounds very very complicated, but once you get into it it becomes easy to understand. Fun fact, a canceled adaptation of Dune from the 70s was going to be 12 hours long (Although that was taking several... creative liberties with the source material).
But who exactly are our players in this epic? Well, Oscar nominee/teen heartthrob Timothée Chalamet (Interstellar, Call Me By Your Name, Little Women) is Paul Atreides. Rebecca Ferguson (M:I - Fallout, The Greatest Showman), Oscar Isaac (Star Wars), Josh Brolin (Deadpool 2, Avengers: Infinity War), Dave Bautista (Guardians of the Galaxy), Zendaya (Spider-Man: Homecoming, The Greatest Showman), and Jason Momoa (Aquaman, Game of Thrones) are all starring. So take a moment to 1) Appreciate the huge ensemble of critically acclaimed actors, and 2) Imagine Thanos, Aquaman, Poe Dameron, Zendaya, Drax, and Timothee Chalamet in realistic Oscar-bait Lord of the Rings in space. That is Dune.
Meet the young protagonist, Paul Atreides. |
And they've got the right director for it. Denis Villeneuve's previous work has included two things that give me true Dune vibes: Arrival and Blade Runner 2049. Arrival was a very good, very realistic movie about aliens making contact with Earth, and Blade Runner 2049 was also a very beautifully made movie, and both were nominated for Best Picture. Arrival was even nominated for Best Director. So the dude's got slow, epic sci-fi movies down.
They released the first trailer a couple months ago (Which actually got more views than The Batman trailer), and everything looks pitch-perfect. Legendary is pumping a ton of money in this thing (The budget is rumored to be $165 million) and it's showing. The visual effects, the cinematography - They all look amazing. This movie will cover roughly half of the original Dune book, which means that if this movie is popular enough we can probably get 6 more Dune movies after this one since the book has five sequels. This is primed to be one of, if not the, best movies of the decade.
This is gonna be huge.
Just check out how dope this looks. This shot alone should be worth seeing the movie. |
Well, that's the list. Here's to hoping that 2021 will be better than 2020.
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