Summer movie season heats up with the release of blockbuster after blockbuster after blockbuster this month: A new Transformers movie! A new Pixar movie! The new Indiana Jones! June's slate includes multiple superhero movies (including The Flash's long-gestating solo outing and the sequel to the Oscar-winning Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), as well as new offerings from Oscar-nominated filmmakers Wes Anderson and Julie Cohen. Plus, Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence stars in the R-rated comedy of her dreams.

All in all, moviegoers shouldn't have a hard time finding something to look forward to this month. With that in mind, here is A.frame's guide to all of the movies arriving in theaters and streaming at home this June.

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

Arriving four years after Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, which took home the Oscar for Best Animated Feature Film, the Spider-Verse sequel sends Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) on another adventure with his Spider-pals (Hailee Steinfeld's Ghost-Spider and Jake Johnson's Peter B. Parker). This time, it's Miles who's traveling the multiverse, where he'll be pitted against the web-slinger Miguel O'Hara aka Spider-Man 2099 (Oscar Isaac) and the villainous Spot (Jason Schwartzman).

Watch it: In theaters June 2


Past Lives

The directorial debut from writer-director Celine Song, this tender romantic drama unfolds over multiple decades: As children growing up in South Korea, Nora (Greta Lee, in a long-overdue leading role) and Hae Sung (Teo Yoo) are each other's first crushes. Twenty years after her family left to immigrate to the U.S., the long-lost friends — along with Nora's husband (played by John Magaro) — are reunited over the course of one week together.

Watch it: In select theaters June 2


Flamin' Hot

The latest directorial effort from Eva Longoria, her first narrative feature film as a director, Flamin' Hot tells the true story (or so he says) of how Frito-Lay janitor Richard Montañez (Jesse Garcia) invented the titular spicy Cheeto and forever revolutionized the snack food industry. Annie Gonzalez, Dennis Haysbert and Tony Shalhoub co-star. The movie had its world premiere at SXSW this year, where it won the festival's Headliners Audience Award.

Watch it: On Hulu and Disney+ June 9


Transformers: Rise of the Beasts

Five years after 2018's Bumblebee pumped new gas into the Transformers franchise, the '90s-set Rise of the Beasts casts Anthony Ramos and Dominique Fishback as the hapless humans caught in the middle of an intergalactic battle between the Autobots and the Decepticons — and the new animalistic faction, the Maximals. Pete Davidson and Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh are among those voicing Transformers this go-around, with Creed II director Steven Caple Jr. at the helm.

Watch it: In theaters June 9


Asteroid City

The new yarn from seven-time Oscar nominee Wes Anderson follows a troupe of eccentric characters who wind up quarantined together after a Junior Stargazer convention goes awry. The cast is comprises oodles of Anderson regulars — including Jason Schwartzman, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, and Tilda Swinton — as well as newcomers like Oscar winner Tom Hanks and Oscar nominees Scarlett Johansson, Hong Chau, and Margot Robbie. Oscar nominee Bryan Cranston, who voiced the stray dog Chief in the director's Isle of Dogs (2018), will be appearing in an Anderson film for the first time.

Watch it: In select theaters June 16, nationwide June 23


The Blackening

Based on a viral short film by Comedy Central and directed by Barbershop and Think Like a Man's Tim Story, the horror comedy centers on a group of Black friends who find themselves trapped in a remote cabin with a ruthless killer, with the ingenious tagline: "We can't all die first." The Blackening's ensemble cast comprises Jermaine Fowler, Melvin Gregg, Dewayne Perkins, Jay Pharoah, and Yvonne Orji.

Watch it: In theaters June 16


Elemental

Directed by The Good Dinosaur helmer Peter Sohn, Pixar's latest offering is set in a world where the four elements — fire, water, land, and air — live together in tenuous harmony. Elemental follows Ember (voiced by Leah Lewis), a fiery young woman, and Wade (Mamoudou Athie), a watery guy, as they discover just how much they have in common. The movie's voice cast includes Wendi McLendon-Covey, Joe Pera, and Catherine O'Hara.

Watch it: In theaters June 16


The Flash

Directed by IT filmmaker Andy Muschietti, The Flash follows Barry Allen (Ezra Miller) as the superhero speedster travels back in time to save his mom's life — and in doing so, accidentally breaks the multiverse. Along the way, Barry not only crosses paths with alternate versions of himself, but also Michael Keaton's Bruce Wayne, reprising his role over 30 years after Batman Returns, and a new iteration of Supergirl, played by DC newcomer Sasha Calle.

Watch it: In theaters June 16


No Hard Feelings

After revisiting her indie roots with last year's Causeway, Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence now tries her hand at something new: An R-rated studio comedy. Here, Lawrence plays Maddie, a car-less Uber driver who answers an online ad to "date" a socially awkward 19-year-old (Andrew Barth Feldman). Based on a real Craigslist ad, the raunchy comedy hails from Bad Teacher and Good Boys writer-director Gene Stupnitsky.

Watch it: In theaters June 23


Every Body

The new documentary from Oscar nominee Julie Cohen, Every Body focuses on the lives of three intersex activists — actor and screenwriter River Gallo, political consultant Alicia Roth, and Ph.D. student Sean Saifa Wall — and explores how each overcame ignorance and prejudice to become a prominent figure in the global movement to raise greater awareness about the intersex community. Cohen received a Best Documentary Feature Film nomination for 2018's RBG, about the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Watch it: In theaters June 30


Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

Harrison Ford is dusting off his trusty ole fedora one final time. Set during the Space Race of the 1960s, the fifth installment in the franchise sees Ford's hero archaeologist racing to recover the eponymous artifact before it falls into the wrong hands, with a cast that also includes Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Mads Mikkelsen, and Antonio Banderas. The Dial of Destiny is the first Indiana Jones movie not to be directed by Steven Spielberg; instead, the action-adventure film was helmed by two-time Oscar nominee James Mangold (Logan and Ford v Ferrari).

Watch it: In theaters June 30

Also out in June: The Boogeyman (in theaters June 2), Shooting Stars (on Peacock June 2), The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster (in theaters June 9), Blue Jean (in select theaters June 9), Dalíland (in theaters and on VOD June 9), Extraction 2 (on Netflix June 16), Maggie Moore(s) (in theaters and on VOD June 16), The Perfect Find (on Netflix June 23), Nimona (on Netflix June 23), Run Rabbit Run (on Netflix June 28), and Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken (in theaters June 30).

RELATED CONTENT:

'Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny' Is 'Everything Everybody Wants' (Exclusive)

Inside the Spider-Verse: An Oral History of 'Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse' (Exclusive)

'Anatomy of a Fall' Wins Palme d'Or at 2023 Cannes Film Festival: See the Full Winners List