MEN IN BLACK: INTERNATIONAL This time it’s Tessa Thompson and Chris Hemsworth who suit up as wisecracking agents who thwart threats from nasty aliens (and prevent knowledge of the good ones). F. Gary Gray directs. Emma Thompson and Liam Neeson have also been tailored for the occasion.

OUR TIME (NUESTRO TIEMPO) This mesmerizing overshare from the Mexican filmmaker Carlos Reygadas (“Post Tenebras Lux”) stars the director and Natalia López as a couple whose open marriage is tested when she has an affair with a horse trainer. Reygadas and López are married in real life, lending a voyeuristic pull to the movie .

SHAFT Who are the cats that won’t cop out when there’s danger all about? (Shaft!) In this movie, there are three: Samuel L. Jackson (returning from John Singleton’s 2000 reboot), Jessie T. Usher as his son and Richard Roundtree (returning, of course, from, among other thing s, the Gordon Parks original and several other iterations) as Grandpa Shaft. Regina Hall co-stars.

June 19

THE EDGE OF DEMOCRACY Drawing connections in a way that might have pleased Chris Marker, the master of the essay film, Petra Costa directs this highly personal look at recent political history in Brazil. She uses the lenses of both her family (her parents lived underground during part of the dictatorship that ended in 1985) and agreeably wonky analysis (of, for instance, the body language at the inauguration of former President Dilma Rousseff).

June 21

CHILD’S PLAY This killer-doll franchise is an excellent demonstration of the life cycle of a commercial movie property: Follow a hit original (1988) with two sequels (“Child’s Play 2” and “Child’s Play 3”) and several self-parodies (“Bride of Chucky,” “Seed of Chucky” and straight-to-video follow-ups) — then reboot. Aubrey Plaza and Gabriel Bateman star in this “contemporary reimagining,” with Mark Hamill as the voice of Chucky.