惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
博客园 - 聂微东
Jina AI
Jina AI
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
罗磊的独立博客
爱范儿
爱范儿
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
博客园 - Franky
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
雷峰网
雷峰网
博客园 - 叶小钗
美团技术团队
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
月光博客
月光博客
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
The Cloudflare Blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
博客园 - 【当耐特】
小众软件
小众软件
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
量子位
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
V
Visual Studio Blog
博客园_首页
IT之家
IT之家
V
V2EX
腾讯CDC
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
博客园 - 司徒正美
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
I
InfoQ
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
J
Java Code Geeks
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Vercel News
Vercel News
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
H
Help Net Security

WIRED

‘Avatar: Aang, The Last Airbender’ Leaked Online. Some Fans Say Paramount Deserves the Fallout NASA Wants to Put Nuclear Reactors on the Moon AI Could Democratize One of Tech's Most Valuable Resources Microsoft Surface PCs Are Getting Big Price Hikes, and the Cheaper Models Are Going Away Why Amazon Is Buying Globalstar—and What It Means for Your iPhone The US Government Will Ask Data Centers How Much Power They Use MAGA Is Starting to Look Beyond Trump Allbirds Is Pivoting to AI Compute. Sure, Why Not Best Smart Smoke Detector (and Why You Still Need a Dumb One) 12 Best Standing Desks of 2026, Tested and Reviewed Best Wi-Fi Routers of 2026 for Working, Gaming, and Streaming Best GoPro Camera (2026): Compact, Budget, Accessories The Caves That Could Help Us Find, or Become, Aliens AI Slop Is Making the Internet Fake-Happy The Deepfake Nudes Crisis in Schools Is Much Worse Than You Thought In the Wake of Anthropic’s Mythos, OpenAI Has a New Cybersecurity Model—and Strategy Telegram Is Still Hosting a Sanctioned $21 Billion Crypto Scammer Black Market The FCC Has a Fast Lane for Complaints About Trump’s Media Critics Top iRestore Deals for Hair Growth and LED Therapy Devices Meta Is Warned That Facial Recognition Glasses Will Arm Sexual Predators You Should Be More Freaked Out by Shingles BYD’s Fastest-Charging Car in the World Is Astonishing—in Good and Bad Ways The 4 Best Water Filter Pitchers (2026): PFAS, Microplastics The Internet's Most Powerful Archiving Tool Is in Peril The Dumbest Hack of the Year Exposed a Very Real Problem AI Agents Are Coming for Your Dating Life ‘The Audacity’ Is the Broligarchy Takedown You Were Waiting For Why Is It So Hard to Fix an Electric Bike? (2026) Best 2-in-1 Laptops (2026): Microsoft, Lenovo, and the iPad There’s a Secret Ingredient to Making Luxury Ice at Home The Screen Time Legends Who Won't Put Down Their Phones Mammotion’s Spino E1 Is Affordable but Doesn’t Quite Deliver You Don’t Have to Drink Lukewarm Coffee Ever Again. Get a Warmer Zuvi ColorBox Review: Please Just Go to a Professional MacBook Neo vs. MacBook Air: Which One Should You Buy? Best Electric Cargo Bikes (2026): Urban Arrow, Lectric, Tern, and More ‘Crimson Desert’ Is a Cat Dad Simulator Your Push Notifications Aren’t Safe From the FBI Flight Path Data Shows How Mosquitoes Target Humans How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors The All-Clad Factory Seconds Sale Is Back—for Now (2026) Artemis II Astronauts Safely Return to Earth After Historic Flight Around the Moon Home Depot Spring Black Friday (2026): Best Tool and Grill Deals Motorola’s Souped-Up Folding Phone Is Almost Half Off Anthropic’s Mythos Will Force a Cybersecurity Reckoning—Just Not the One You Think The Future of the Artemis Program Is Riding on Reentry Suspect Arrested for Allegedly Throwing Molotov Cocktail at Sam Altman’s Home "Uncanny Valley": OpenAI and Musk Fight Again; DOJ Mishandles Voter Data; Artemis II Comes Home This Clever Bike Bell Can Even Be Heard by People Wearing Noise-Canceling Headphones This Startup Wants You to Pay Up to Talk With AI Versions of Human Experts I Did Not Catch Air on the Aventon Current Electric Mountain Bike, but I Could Have Best Smart Shades, Blinds, and Curtains (2026): Motorized, Tailor-Made, and More How 'Democracy Now!' Became the Blueprint for Indie Media AI Podcasters Really Want to Tell You How to Keep a Man Happy Irrigreen's New Smart Irrigation System Promises Smart Watering Without the Hassle—Almost No One Knows Where US Vaccine Policy Goes Next I Tried Asus' First Open Earbuds for Gamers Meta’s New AI Asked for My Raw Health Data—and Gave Me Terrible Advice How and When to Watch the Artemis II Mission’s Return to Earth Naturepedic Promo Codes: Get 20% Off Plus Free Pillows Hungryroot Coupon Codes: 30% Off This April Govee Discount Codes and Deals: 30% Off We-Vibe Coupon Offers: Couples’ Toys and Gift Set Discounts Sealy Promo Code: Save $200 on Mattresses This Month OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit Liability for AI-Enabled Mass Deaths or Financial Disasters China Is Cracking Down on Scams. Just Not the Ones Hitting Americans The 70-Person AI Image Startup Taking on Silicon Valley's Giants Save $20 on This Already Inexpensive Wireless Mic Set John Deere Is Paying Farmers $99 Million for Allegedly Monopolizing Repair The Iran War Is Tearing MAGA Influencers Apart The FBI Didn’t Answer Texts From Minnesota Investigators for Days After Renee Good’s Killing The Pro-Iran Meme Machine Trolling Trump With AI Lego Cartoons Ridge Wallet Review: A Beacon for the Overencumbered How Meta Cafeteria Workers Took on ICE—and Won Get Peace of Mind With This GPS and Activity Tracker for Pets I Asked Netflix’s Reality TV Boss Why So Many Men On Dating Shows Are Terrible I Tried TCL’s Samsung Frame Competitor and It Didn’t Compare Politicians Are Spending More Money on Security as They Increasingly Become Targets This AI Wearable From Ex-Apple Engineers Looks Like an iPod Shuffle Artemis II Astronauts Witnessed 6 Meteorites Colliding With the Moon Medicube Coupon Code: 40% Off for April 2026 Top Instacart Promo Code: $15 Off for July 2026 Vivid Seats Promo Codes and Deals: Get 10% Off Birdfy Discount Codes: 15% Off Sitewide Google Workspace Promo Codes: 14% Off for June Paramount+ Coupon Codes and Deals for June 2026 NZXT Discount Codes: 50% Off in June 2026 LG Promo Codes and Coupons for June 2026 AT&T Promo Codes: $50 Off This June 2026 TurboTax Full Service Coupons This June Top Peacock Promo Codes: 40% Off June 2026 Therabody Promo Codes: 15% Off June 2026 Surfshark Promo Codes: 87% Off | June 2026 Nomad Goods Promo Codes: Get 25% Off in June 2026 20% Off Sephora Promo Code | June 2026 30% Off Canon Promo Codes | June 2026 Factor Promo Codes for July 2026 Top Dell Coupon Codes: 20% Off for June 2026 Walmart Promo Codes: Up to 65% Off for June 2026 What Is the Best Fitness Tracker in 2026? Garmin, Oura, More
The 12 Best Movies to Stream This Month
Matt Kamen · 2026-06-24 · via WIRED

Temperatures may be soaring, but there’s an unseasonable chill on screens right now—at least when it comes to some of the movie offerings hitting streaming services this month.

Director Yorgos Lanthimos delivers a twisted take on Frankenstein in Poor Things on Netflix, while Shudder digs up painful family secrets and adds a side of demonic possession in The Voices of Our Mother. If you fancy some summer scares that are a bit more Halloween-grade, Netflix also has I Am Frankelda, a mesmerizing tour of a world of monsters and living nightmares, brought to life in stunning stop-motion.

There are also plenty of retro delights surfacing on streamers this month that are more than worth a rewatch. Hulu reinstalls Spielberg’s A.I. Artificial Intelligence, which lands very differently in 2026; Criterion Channel is declassifying Sean Connery’s first outings as 007, with Dr. No, From Russia With Love, and Goldfinger coming to the specialist platform; and Prime Video brings all three Bill & Ted films back to the future (sorry).

Here are WIRED’s picks of the best movies to watch right now.

I Am Frankelda

A gorgeous stop-motion animated outing from Mexico—the country’s first such feature—this supernatural tale follows Francisca Imelda (Mireya Mendoza in both the original Spanish and the English dub), an aspiring young author in late 1800s Mexico with a penchant for the fantastic and the macabre. Taken to the monstrous world of Topus Terrentus by the winged Prince Herneval (Arturo Mercado Jr. in Spanish, Claudis Bridgeforth in English), Francisca is charged with becoming the realm’s new “nightmare teller,” responsible for crafting the tales of terror that its denizens live on. The only problem is the role is already filled, and power-hungry incumbent Procustes (Luis Leonardo Suárez; Mark Lewis), a demonic spider, doesn’t take kindly to being replaced. An exquisitely crafted, visually astounding masterpiece, imagine a mix of The Nightmare Before Christmas, Pan’s Labyrinth, and Alice in Wonderland and you’re almost on the way to conceiving the darkly captivating magic of I Am Frankelda.

Poor Things

If the arrival of Bugonia on Netflix last month left you wanting more from the delightfully deranged pairing of director Yorgos Lanthimos and actor (and producer!) Emma Stone, look no further than Poor Things. Mad scientist Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe) has spent years building a personal menagerie of stitched-together animal chimeras, but his latest and greatest success is his “daughter” Bella (Stone). A reanimated dead woman implanted with the brain of the fetus she was carrying, Bella has a childlike disposition but rapidly learns and evolves, especially under the tutelage of Baxter’s student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef). However, one sexual awakening later and Bella is a runaway on a whistle-stop tour of Europe with lawyer Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo), running into remnants of her (or her body’s) old life, all while delving into newfound philosophies. Based on the novel of the same name by Scottish author Alasdair Gray, this surreal and darkly comedic reimagining of Frankenstein is peak Lanthimos—a visually lavish, almost indescribable strange experience.

Bill & Ted Trilogy

William "Bill" S. Preston Esq. (Alex Winter) and Ted "Theodore" Logan (Keanu Reeves) might appear to be regular teen slackers in 1988, but by 2688 they’re revered as the Great Ones, the music of their band Wyld Stallyns inspiring a utopian future through the divine principle of being excellent to each other. Humanity might not be quite there yet, but here in 2026, both the original time-traveling comedy Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure and its 1991 sequel Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey—which sees the pair killed by their own futuristic robot duplicates before battling Death himself—are definitely firm cult favorites.

2020’s Bill & Ted Face the Music doesn’t enjoy quite the same status, but give it time—it’s no less of a delight, blending another madcap temporal crisis that can only be solved through the unifying power of rocking out with an almost melancholic exploration of what happens when youthful dreams go unfulfilled. With the entire trilogy on Prime Video now, it’s the perfect time to relearn the golden rule: Be excellent to each other.

A.I. Artificial Intelligence

By the 22nd century, human society and Earth itself are on the brink of collapse. Rising sea levels and rampant climate change have led to humanity’s decline, necessitating the creation of humanoid “mechas” to fill the gap. Most are detached automatons, but David (Haley Joel Osment) is different—a robot in the form of an 11-year old boy, he’s the first of his kind, an experimental model capable of feeling emotions. But can his new “mother” Monica (Frances O’Connor) accept him as a real boy?

Back in 2001, A.I. Artificial Intelligence was “just” an eminently serviceable outing from Steven Spielberg (picking up the reins from Stanley Kubrick, who’d been trying for decades to bring this adaptation of Brian Aldiss’ short story “Supertoys Last All Summer Long” to the screen). It blends Spielberg’s penchant for authentic family drama with the sci-fi sensibilities honed on the likes of Close Encounters and raises interesting questions about what makes us us (even as it goes on a pretty weird tangent into a self-aware cyberpunk retelling of Pinocchio in its latter half, with Jude Law’s hooker-bot Gigolo Joe as a loose Jiminy Cricket parallel). A quarter-century on, as its environmental warnings feel closer than ever and we grapple with the rise of AI in the real world, the film hits very differently. An eerily prescient piece of filmmaking that’s more powerful now than ever.

Classic James Bond

Everyone has their favorite Bond, but Sean Connery’s turn as Ian Fleming’s iconic British superspy remains foundational. If you’ve never encountered what is, for many, the quintessential incarnation, then now’s your chance, as 007’s opening trilogy is available to stream through Criterion. 1962’s Dr. No starts strong, seeing Bond on a mission to Jamaica to investigate a murder that soon escalates into a global crisis, while also introducing shadowy criminal organization SPECTRE, whose desire for revenge on Bond drives 1963’s more ambitious follow-up From Russia With Love. Then, 1964’s Goldfinger is where the series really cemented its (slightly camp) identity for a generation, with near-supervillain threats like Auric Goldfinger (Gert Fröbe), hat-throwing henchman Oddjob (Harold Sakata), and best-named Bond Girl Pussy Galore (Honor Blackman). Sure, these earliest James Bond movies are a little … of their time … but they also remain some of the most entertaining and engaging thrillers ever put to film.

The Voices of Our Mother

When aging Harriet (Sheila McCarthy) begins acting strangely in the wake of her mother’s passing, her own adult children are called in to make plans for her care. It’s an unwanted family reunion for estranged siblings William (Mark O'Brien, also the film’s writer and director), Annika (Georgina Reilly), Therese (Carolina Bartczak), and Martin (Alex Ozerov-Meyer), who haven’t seen each other in years, but as the four find themselves trapped by obligation in their old family home, it becomes clear the demons tormenting this family aren’t just metaphorical.

Doctors think Harriet’s increasingly disturbing behavior is from dementia; Father Roslovic (Shawn Doyle) suspects darker forces at work. Maybe it’s just bad ol’ familial trauma, given many of the film’s more horrific moments are down to the unbridled cruelty humans can inflict without unholy influence. O’Brien’s slow-burn approach keeps things tense, while classic gothic imagery and McCarthy’s brilliantly unsettling performance hit all the horror high notes genre fans crave.

Blue Scuti: Tetris Crasher

A documentary centered on the competitive Tetris scene is an admittedly offbeat recommendation, but one that proves gently compelling. Award-winning director Chris Moukarbel follows Willis “Blue Scuti” Gibson, who rose to prominence in 2023 for being the first person to ever “beat” Tetris, forcing the NES version of the game to crash by overloading its memory through extremely high-level play—a feat previously only ever achieved by AI and tool-assisted speedrunners. Even more impressive? Gibson was only 13 years old at the time.

While much of Moukarbel’s film plays as a sports film, following the impact of Gibson’s achievement and his later competing in the Classic Tetris World Championships, the exploration of the passing of Gibson’s father and the impact it has on the young gaming savant adds a more somber slice-of-life touch.

The Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act

From a viral web web show to a cinematic breakout, The Amazing Digital Circus has defied all expectations since it debuted on YouTube in 2023. Focusing on a group of humans trapped in a virtual world, robbed of their memories, stuck in the forms of inhuman avatars, and subjected to the capricious whims of a godlike AI, the series’ seven episodes to date have taken its cast—including jester Pomni, doll-like Ragatha, and nihilistic rabbit Jax—into surprisingly dark and unsettling territory.

The Last Act is the long-awaited movie-length finale, coming to streaming off the back of a successful theatrical release that puts it firmly in pop-culture phenomenon territory. While longtime fans will get the most from the payoffs to long-simmering character arcs and relationships, The Last Act proves an unexpectedly emotional ride even for newcomers, subverting its childish visuals to offer a mature and often deeply introspective examination of what it means to be human in an increasingly digital world.