Friday, June 19, 2026

24 Jump Street, The Social Reckoning, and Disclosure Day Lead Week of Major Studio Developments

Several major studio developments dominated industry headlines last week, with Sony unveiling new franchise projects, Steven Spielberg delivering one of his strongest openings in years, and The Super Mario Galaxy Movie becoming the first billion-dollar release of 2026.

Sony Moves Forward With 24 Jump Street

A screenshot of Neal H. Moritz’s Instagram post
A screenshot of Neal H. Moritz’s Instagram post

After years of stalled development, Sony Pictures is officially moving ahead with 24 Jump Street. According to Variety, Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum, and Ice Cube are in talks to return for the next installment of the comedy franchise. Rodney Rothman, co-director of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and co-writer of 22 Jump Street, is set to direct from a screenplay he wrote alongside Hill and Meghan Malloy.

The announcement comes more than a decade after 22 Jump Street earned $331 million worldwide, outperforming the original film’s $201.6 million haul. Since then, several follow-up concepts have been discussed, including a crossover with Men in Black, a female-led spinoff, and other sequel ideas, none of which ultimately moved forward.

Phil Lord and Chris Miller will return as producers alongside Neal H. Moritz and Tania Landau. Moritz recently shared the film’s title page on social media, joking that development took so long the production “had to skip one.”

Aaron Sorkin Returns to The Social Network Universe

Sony also used CinemaCon to unveil the first teaser for The Social Reckoning, a follow-up to 2010’s The Social Network.

Aaron Sorkin returns as writer but will also direct the project, marking a significant change from the original film, which was directed by David Fincher. Rather than revisiting Facebook’s creation, the new film focuses on the controversies that followed the company’s rise, including revelations made by whistleblower Frances Haugen and reporting tied to the Facebook Files investigation.

Jeremy Strong will portray Mark Zuckerberg, replacing Jesse Eisenberg, whose performance in the original earned an Academy Award nomination. Sorkin recently revealed he attempted to persuade Eisenberg to return but said the actor declined because he no longer wanted to be associated with Zuckerberg.

The cast also includes Mikey Madison as Haugen, Jeremy Allen White as Wall Street Journal reporter Jeff Horwitz, Bill Burr, Wunmi Mosaku, Betty Gilpin, and Billy Magnussen. Sony has scheduled the film for theatrical release on Oct. 9.

Disclosure Day Delivers Spielberg’s Biggest Opening in Years

Steven Spielberg’s sci-fi thriller Disclosure Day opened in North American theaters on June 13, posting one of the strongest debuts of the director’s recent career.

The film earned $44 million domestically and $92.9 million worldwide after generating $6 million in preview screenings. The opening marks Spielberg’s largest domestic debut since Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull in 2008 and his strongest global launch for an original feature in years.

Written by David Koepp from a story by Spielberg, the film stars Emily Blunt as a Kansas City journalist who develops unexplained abilities after a close encounter, alongside Josh O’Connor as a man who claims to possess proof that humanity is not alone.

The film currently holds an 82% score on Rotten Tomatoes, with critics frequently highlighting Blunt’s performance. Longtime Spielberg collaborators John Williams and Janusz Kamiński also return, providing the score and cinematography respectively.

With a reported budget of $115 million, industry attention will now shift to the film’s staying power over the coming weeks.

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie Crosses $1 Billion

A scene from The Super Mario Galaxy Movie
A scene from The Super Mario Galaxy Movie

Away from the week’s major announcements, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie quietly reached a significant box office milestone.

The Universal and Illumination sequel surpassed $1 billion worldwide during its tenth weekend in theaters, becoming the first film released in 2026 to achieve the feat.

The animated adventure has now earned $428.5 million domestically and $571.5 million internationally. The total places it behind only 2023’s The Super Mario Bros. Movie among video game adaptations, making it the second-highest-grossing film based on a video game ever released.

Combined, the two Mario films have generated more than $2.3 billion globally, further establishing the franchise as one of Hollywood’s most successful theatrical brands.

A Strong Week for Established Franchises

While film festivals and independent releases continued to attract attention throughout the week, the biggest headlines came from established studio properties.

A long-awaited Jump Street sequel, a return to the world of The Social Network, a major Spielberg theatrical launch, and another billion-dollar milestone for Nintendo’s flagship franchise highlighted a week that underscored the continuing strength of recognizable intellectual property at the global box office.

Read Next >>>> Obsession Set For 400x Return, Sees Mixed Reactions.

The low-budget thriller has become an unexpected box office success, with projections pointing to a remarkable 400x return on its budget, but a debate over crew compensation has complicated its success story. 

Read the full report here

Oghie
Oghie
Oghie is a versatile writer with experience spanning across diverse niches and a particular flair for movies. He loves researching and critiquing different genres, and is an expert in what makes a movie work or what makes it a failure.

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