This week there are no movies coming out. April Fool's! There are lots of movies coming out! Movies about a creepy animated Easter Bunny, some sad adult superheroes, sexy gun-shooting criminals, and a murderous rubber tire. Seriously on that last one. No fooling.

Cat Run

A curious cast of Janet McTeer, Paz Vega, and Christopher McDonald tells a tale of accented wheeling and dealing and hard drives and guns and whatnot. The preview makes it look kind of fun, but it is also probably very bad? Either way, watching Janet McTeer crack her neck like that is definitely great. (Limited release)

Hop

James Marsden's suicide note is sadly released this weekend. Not much more to say about this. (Wide release)

In a Better World

Susanne Bier won a bunch of awards, including an Oscar, for this Danish-language feature about wars at home and abroad. A Swedish doctor lives partly in Denmark with his family and partly in the Sudan doing relief work. The doctor's young son is being bullied at school, so issues of violence and revenge are brought up in vaguely allegorical fashion and whatnot. Naturally, it's a musical. (No, it's not, but I wish it was.) (Limited)

Insidious

This horror film stars Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne as a couple struggling with a haunted house that has seemingly afflicted their son. Only then they find out that their son is the one who's haunted! Spoooooky. No, not the subject matter. It's spooky that this is what otherwise good actors have to do to pay the bills. (Wide)

The Last Comedian

Korean comedian Shim Hyung-rae stars in this bizarre-looking slapstick comedy that's basically Korean Mr. Bean Joins the Mafia. Yup. So, if that's your thing, and really it's so many people's thing, go see it. (Limited)

Queen to Play

Kevin Kline and Jennifer Beals have supporting roles (in French!) in this movie about an unassuming Corsican housemaid who dreams of becoming a chess superstar. And it looks as though that's just what she does! Well, if not superstar, at least local champion? Anyway, this is how the French do feel-good. (Limited)

Rubber

This is a totally normal movie about a rubber tire in the American Southwest that rolls around killing people with its mysterious powers. Obviously this was going to be a big summer tentpole flick, like Transformers, but I guess the summer felt too crowded or something. (Limited)

Source Code

America's sexy but mysteriously unavailable boy next door Jake Gyllenhaal stars in this thriller about a train explosion and the man who is sent back, over and over again, eight minutes into the past to stop, or at least figure out who did, said train explosion. That way he can stop another terrorist attack from flattening Chicago. Just another day at the train-office. (Wide)

Super

Rainn Wilson and Ellen Page star in this remake of Kick-Ass and Mystery Men. It's apparently violent and swear-filled, just like Kick-Ass, and about bumbling adult superheroes, just like Mystery Men. OK guys. We done with the whole superhero thing now? Great. Thought so. (NY, LA)

Trust

David Schwimmer, yes the David Schwimmer, directs this Lifetime-esque drama about online predators. Clive Owen and Catherine Keener play the parents of a girl who gets lured into a terrible web of false identity on, well, the web. In 2002, maybe. In 2011, like, no duh? (Limited)

Wrecked

Adrien Brody continues to tarnish his Oscar with this thriller about a man who wakes up in a crashed car (a wrecked car, even) and has no idea who he is. But, he begins to suspect that he may be a bank-robbing murderer. Oops! Never too late to turn it all around, I guess! Unless all your bones are broken and you're in the middle of the woods. So is Adrien actually a bad guy? Only one way to find out. (Limited)