
Nardeep Khurmi’s Land of Gold unveiled the official trailer ahead of its upcoming release in theaters on May 5 before premiering May 15 on HBO Max.

Bleecker Street unveiled the official trailer for The Starling Girl, the independent film drama starring Eliza Scanlen as a 17-year-old girl raised in a fundamentalist Christian community in Kentucky who is trying to figure out her place in the world. Also starring in the film are Lewis Pullman, Wrenn Schmidt, Austin Abrams, and Jimmi Simpson.

Inspired in part by filmmaker Sarah Watts’ own upbringing in a Jehovah’s Witness community, the Canadian drama film You Can Live Forever stars Anwen O’Driscoll as a teenager sent to live with her aunt in a devoutly religious Jehovah’s Witness, and develops a relationship with another young woman in the community.

Samuel L. Jackson, John David Washington, Ray Fisher, Danielle Deadwyler, Michael Potts, and Corey Hawkins will star in The Piano Lesson, directed by Malcolm Washington and based on the play ‘The Piano Lesson’ by August Wilson.

Sony Pictures Classics revealed the first look teaser trailer for The Miracle Club, the comedy film set in Ireland, starring Laura Linney, Maggie Smith, Kathy Bates, Stephen Rea and Agnes O’Casey.

Cinedigm dropped the official trailer for Giving Birth to a Butterfly, Theodore Schaefer’s hauntingly surreal debut feature film set to open in theaters followed by a streaming exclusive on Fandor, next month, in May.

Neon revealed the official trailer for Sanctuary, described as a wickedly dark comedy starring Margaret Qualley as dominatrix Rebecca, and Christopher Abbott as her wealthy client, Hal.

Uncork’d Entertainment unveiled the trailers and release dates for 3 sci-fi themed movies coming to video-on-demand: Space Wars : Quest For The Deepstar, I’ll Be Watching and the horror-adventure Strain 100.

Gravitas Ventures revealed the official trailer for On Our Way, the drama starring Micheál Richardson (Liam Neeson’s son) as a young struggling filmmaker.

KimStim debuted the official trailer for Unrest (Unrueh), a Swiss film filled with a complex mix of love, anarchism, and wristwatches, all set in the Swiss watchmaking town of Saint-Imier in the 1870s.