The new movies this weekend fall into all of the major genres; comedy, drama, thriller, which means there is enough to satisfy any movie-goer. Here’s a sneak peak and what to expect from movies debuting this weekend.

Duplicity starring Clive Owen and Julia Roberts puts a romantic spin on a traditional spy thriller. CIA officer Claire Stenwick (Roberts) and MI6 agent Ray Koval (Owen) have left the world of government intelligence to cash in on the highly profitable cold war between companies run by their former bosses played by Tom Wilkinson and Paul Giamatti. The couple shares a steamy love affair while trying to pull off the ultimate con, and they end up finding more than they bargained for as they learn they can’t live with each other and can’t live without each other.

I Love You, Man is a comedy about Peter (Paul Rudd) who has recently gotten engaged to Zooey (Rashida Jones), but does not have any guy friends to be his best man. So he goes on a series of man dates to find an instant best friend to be in his wedding. What he finds is Sydney (Jason Segel), who may not be perfect, but he is oddly just what Rudd needs. The only problem is that his new BFF begins to put a strain on his relationship with his fiancée. Can these three learn to live happily ever after? The comedy has been advertised as filled with hysterical moments, but we wonder if it can be as good as Rudd’s performance in Role Models.

If you knew where or when the world was going to end, what would you do? Knowing asks exactly that. Astrophysicist John Koestler, played by Nicholas Cage, discovers that the contents of a time capsule he finds at his son’s elementary school makes predictions about future disastrous events. Now that he has the knowledge, he must decide what to do with it to keep his family safe. The film has the potential to be a real nail-biter, and Cage is a screen veteran, so we are keeping our fingers crossed for this one.

Sin Nombre is Cary Fukunaga’s feature debut that premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. It won two awards there, including Fukunaga's for directing and a cinematography award for Adriano Goldman. The film is set on the Mexican border, where a group of teenagers are making their journey across Mexico to the United States. The trip is full of unexpected events, as the teens dream of a better life, if they can just make it to the US.

—Jessica Delli Santi