Action hype can usually be determined through a trailer and is relatively fussier. Action fans are not just asking whether the movie is big. We are asking what kind of velocity it promises. Is it built around star charisma, physical jeopardy, giant myth, kinetic wit, revenge grammar, or that very old-fashioned pleasure of watching one determined person move through impossible space while everything around them catches fire?
That is why an upcoming action ranking can look a little strange. It’s not going to be spot-on either because a trailer can be made to look flashy and the movie can just suck. A movie can be huge and still not feel charged in the right way. Another can look a little less colossal and still feel like it has genuine motion in its bones. These 6 upcoming action movies? This is how they’re looking so far.
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‘Mutiny’ (2026)
Mutiny being built around Jason Statham framed for the murder of his billionaire boss and forced to punch his way through an international conspiracy is such a sturdy piece of action architecture that I barely need more than the sentence. The film is set for August 21, 2026, Jean-François Richet is directing, and the official site is already live, which gives the whole thing a satisfying “this is coming, not just developing” solidity.
And yet this is exactly the sort of Statham vehicle where my excitement is confident rather than feverish. I know the baseline will probably work. He will carry the frame, the threat map will stay readable, someone will badly underestimate how angry he is, and there will be at least one sequence where professionalism turns into annihilation. That is a nice floor. It is not automatically a sky-high ceiling. I am ready. I am just not vibrating. Statham has to change something here.
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‘Masters of the Universe’ (2026)
Masters of the Universe is much easier to get emotional about because the risk is part of the thrill. He-Man (Nicholas Galitzine), Skeletor (Jared Leto), Teela (Camila Mendes), and Duncan (Idris Elba) already suggest a movie that at least understands it needs physicality, pulp myth, and a little weird old toy-box grandeur to survive. The film opens June 5, 2026.
What excites me is the possibility of full-bodied fantasy action, swords, transformations, cosmic villainy, the kind of heroic scale modern franchise movies sometimes flatten into gray sludge. He-Man should not feel tasteful. He should feel like a primal action-fantasy image with absurd sincerity behind him. If the movie really leans into Eternia as a place of muscle, tragedy, and theatrical evil rather than bland CG sprawl, this could jump much higher by release. For now, the anticipation is real because the movie could either become a delirious win or a spectacular wreck. Both are energizing in their own way.
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‘Supergirl’ (2026)
Supergirl is where the ranking starts getting genuinely hot for me. Kara Zor-El (Milly Alcock) leads, Craig Gillespie directs, and the early reporting around the project has stressed the rougher, harsher texture of this version of Kara. That matters. Supergirl works best for me when she is not just female Superman, but a more bruised, more displaced, more emotionally scorched figure carrying cosmic power with a different kind of wound.
What makes it especially promising as action is that the film does not sound soft-edged. The early descriptions of pirate attacks, rougher space-travel texture, and a less polished heroic surface suggest a movie that wants the action to feel dangerous rather than merely pretty. That is exactly the right instinct for Kara. If this movie really gives her rage, loneliness, and momentum instead of just iconography, it could be one of the year’s biggest action surprises.
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‘Avengers: Doomsday’ (2026)
Avengers: Doomsday is anticipation powered by pressure. Joe Russo and Anthony Russo are back, and Doctor Doom (Robert Downey Jr.) gives the whole project a kind of unstable voltage. It is not just another ensemble movie now. It is an explicit attempt to make Marvel feel dangerous, event-sized, and globally discussable again. Would it happen the same way Infinity Wars and Endgame did? I’m not sure.
As an action fan though, the appeal is obvious. Avengers movies work well when they stop feeling like adjacent solo-brand maintenance and start feeling like large-scale impact design. Convergences. Clashes. Giant movement across multiple fronts. Characters meeting each other’s action grammar in ways we have not seen before. Doom adds another layer because he promises authoritarian force and theatrical intelligence rather than just another sky-beam problem. If the Russos can reintroduce that Infinity War–Endgame sense of converging momentum, this could be huge in exactly the sweaty, communal way blockbuster action is supposed to be.
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‘Spider-Man: Brand New Day’ (2026)
Spider-Man: Brand New Day is the one that makes me grin because the setup is so clean. Peter Parker (Tom Holland) was left, by the end of No Way Home, stripped down, isolated, and forced to rebuild from the pavement up. That is where Spider-Man action gets springy again. Smaller rooms, harder landings, more improvisation, less multiversal fireworks covering for the absence of personal jeopardy.
And Holland is perfectly positioned for that kind of comeback. The ending of No Way Home left Peter in a version of the character’s loneliest lane, and that loneliness is fantastic action fuel. It changes how every swing feels. Every fight. Every escape. Every decision about whether he can afford to be heroic when no larger safety net is waiting behind the mask. It’s like the perfect yin-and-yang balance. This is why I have it above Avengers: Doomsday in pure action anticipation: I can already see the physical language. Rainy alleys, scrappier combat, momentum with bruises in it. That gets me every time.
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‘The Odyssey’ (2026)
The Odyssey had to be number one. Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey and Odysseus (Matt Damon) already make this feel like a studio flex from a healthier era. The cast around him is absurdly stacked. But even before the cast, the material itself makes this the most exciting action prospect on the board. This is not just a prestige epic. It is one of the foundational action stories in Western storytelling: shipwrecks, monsters, sieges, archery, disguises, rage, endurance, fathers and sons, men trying to come home through a world that keeps refusing to let them.
And Nolan, when he is really locked in, is a war architect of momentum. He understands ordeal. He understands scale as movement rather than wallpaper. He understands how to turn one man’s objective into a sequence of giant physical trials without losing the obsession at the center. That is why The Odyssey is the most anticipated action movie here for me. It has the chance to be huge without feeling synthetic, mythic without feeling dead, and action-heavy in a way that still hurts. That is the dream.
The Odyssey
- Release Date
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July 17, 2026
- Runtime
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172 Minutes