2025 is stacking up to be the year for book lovers and film fanatics alike, with a lineup of adaptations that are equal parts swoony, intense, and screen-stealing.

Books jumping to screen is hardly a new trend, but 2024 and 2025 are absolutely stacked with adaptations that actually look good. Not the kind where they erase half the plot or cast someone who doesn’t fit the main character’s entire vibe. We’re talking thoughtful casting, banners with real track records, and stories that already have fanbases foaming at the mouth. From chaotic rom-coms to psychological thrillers and dystopian madness, these upcoming book-to-film projects have us marking calendars and re-reading paperbacks like it’s a school assignment we actually care about.
Let’s dive into the titles making waves, starting with the four that are all set for release and two more that are brewing under the radar. Whether you’re a hopeless romantic or a thrill-chaser, consider this your watchlist refresh.
1. My Oxford Year
My Oxford Year is based on the novel by Julia Whelan, and it’s bringing all the high-brow, soft-hearted drama we live for. The story follows an ambitious American Rhodes Scholar who arrives at Oxford with dreams bigger than her suitcase, only to fall for a man carrying a secret that could unravel everything. It’s intellectual, romantic, and hits you with that emotional maturity most modern love stories dodge. The setup is less ‘quirky meet-cute’ and more ‘this will destroy you, but you’ll thank us later’.
Directed by Iain Morris, the film stars Sofia Carson and Corey Mylchreest, whose chemistry is already making headlines. Production comes from Temple Hill and ACE Entertainment, which is exactly the kind of pairing you want for a story this layered. It’s dropping on Netflix in August 2024, and between the dreamy Oxford setting and the emotional punch, we’re fully expecting this to be the next “I sobbed but felt classy about it” film.
2. You Deserve Each Other
Based on Sarah Hogle’s brilliantly chaotic rom-com, You Deserve Each Other is all about a couple on the verge of a wedding—and a complete emotional breakdown. Naomi and Nicholas are engaged, loathe each other behind closed doors, and are locked into a wedding bill no one wants to pay. Cue mutual sabotage, emotional warfare, and a surprising rekindling of love. It’s enemies-to-lovers with a ring on it, but make it petty, hilarious, and weirdly healing.
The film stars Meghann Fahy (yes, our queen from The White Lotus) and Penn Badgley (reigning king of complex men), bringing just the right amount of slow-burn tension and sarcastic banter. Directed by Michael Lewen and produced by Lionsgate, and we’re already mentally preparing for the scene where the mind games turn into actual feelings. It’s messy, clever, and the ultimate rom-com for people who’ve ever fallen in love with someone they also wanted to strangle
3, The Love Hypothesis
Lili Reinhart is about to enter her fake dating era—but make it STEM and grumpy-sunshine. The Riverdale alum is taking on the role of Olive Smith in the film adaptation of The Love Hypothesis, Ali Hazelwood’s BookTok-blessed romance novel. She’s also executive producing the movie, which is being made by Amazon MGM Studios, directed by Claire Scanlon and written by Sarah Rothschild. In the story, Olive, a biology PhD student, pretends to date the intimidating and annoyingly hot professor Adam Carlsen to help her navigate an awkward situation. Naturally, fake feelings start turning very, very real.
With a novel that sat pretty on the New York Times bestseller list for 10 months and sparked global obsession in 40 countries, this adaptation is giving high expectations. Hazelwood is also on board as executive producer and she’s just as stunned as the rest of us, calling herself “feral” over the team behind it (same). And with Reinhart’s recent success at Series Mania and a stacked upcoming slate—including Hal & Harper with Cooper Raiff and Forbidden Fruits—she’s clearly entering her prime rom-com era. Let’s just say, this is one lab experiment we will be tuning in for.
4. The Woman in Cabin 10
Ruth Ware’s bestselling psychological thriller is sailing onto screens with The Woman in Cabin 10, and Netflix has pulled out the big guns. Keira Knightley stars as Lo Blacklock, a travel journalist who boards a luxury yacht for a dream assignment—only to witness a woman being thrown overboard. The twist? All passengers are accounted for, and no one believes her. It’s Agatha Christie meets Gone Girl, but trapped on the open ocean. With Lo spiraling between paranoia and truth, this one’s set to deliver the kind of tension you’ll want to watch through your fingers.
Directed by Simon Stone (The Dig), the film also stars Guy Pearce, Hannah Waddingham, and David Ajala, plus a ridiculously stacked supporting cast including Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Kaya Scodelario, and David Morrissey. The script comes from Stone alongside screenwriting duo Joe Shrapnel and Anna Waterhouse. Filming wrapped in late 2024 after shoots in Dorset and on the luxe yacht Savannah, and the film is set to stream on Netflix in Fall 2025. With that cast and this kind of slow-burn psychological drama, it’s basically a locked-room mystery—on a boat—with Knightley in full sleuth mode. Yes, we’re watching.
5. The Map That Leads to You
Madelyn Cline and KJ Apa are about to sweep you away in The Map That Leads to You, a new romantic drama arriving on Prime Video August 20, 2025. Based on J.P. Monninger’s bestselling novel, the film follows Heather, a meticulous post-grad on a European adventure with her friends, and Jack, a charming backpacker retracing his grandfather’s travel journal. Their chemistry is instant, and as they check off destinations together—from wild bull runs in Spain to lavender fields in France—the line between fleeting travel romance and something deeper begins to blur. But when secrets come to light and life pulls them in different directions, they’re forced to ask the dreaded question: does a love born abroad have a return ticket?
Directed by Lasse Hallström, the film blends classic summer romance tropes with a refreshing emotional depth. Jack’s free-spirited spontaneity clashes with Heather’s structured outlook, making their journey not just romantic, but transformational. The film also stars Sofia Wylie, Madison Thompson, Orlando Norman, and Josh Lucas, and is soundtracked to emotional highs like Maggie Rogers’ “Anywhere With You.” With its release timed for the tail end of summer, The Map That Leads to You feels like one last golden-hour escape before reality kicks back in.
6. The Running Man
Edgar Wright is turning the dial way up with The Running Man, dropping on November 7, 2025, and starring none other than Glen Powell in full action-hero mode. Based on Stephen King’s 1982 novel — and not the cheesy 1987 Arnold version — this one’s going back to its gritty roots. The story? In a bleak, surveillance-obsessed future, Powell plays Ben Richards, a desperate father who volunteers to be hunted on a national TV show to save his sick daughter. Yeah, it’s as dark as it sounds. But that’s where it thrives — Powell’s stunt-heavy performance is being called the most intense of his career, and with Edgar Wright directing and Michael Bacall (Scott Pilgrim, 21 Jump Street) co-writing, expect stylized chaos and social commentary wrapped in explosive spectacle.
The cast is stacked: Josh Brolin is the ruthless producer Dan Killian, Colman Domingo brings flair as the chilling host, and Lee Pace, Michael Cera, Jayme Lawson, and Daniel Ezra fill out a lethal lineup of rebels and hunters. Paramount Pictures is producing, with cinematography by Chung-hoon Chung, who already made Last Night in Soho look like a fever dream. And yes, Powell reached out to Arnold himself — through Patrick Schwarzenegger — and got his blessing. With high-stakes action, reality-TV critique, and Wright’s signature energy, this one’s set to be a cultural juggernaut.
Whether you’re a hopeless romantic, a thriller enthusiast, or someone who just loves seeing your favorite books leap onto the big screen, 2025 is serving adaptations with style, substance, and stacked casts. From jet-engine chaos to love-hate banter and everything in between, these stories and adaptations are ready to reel you in again. Bookmark those release dates, refresh your Goodreads shelf, Kindle and get ready to judge if the movie did the book justice.
Sources: People’s, Variety, Express Tribune, Netflix, Cinema Express, Brit, Elle, Deadline
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