Few October Movies

Jean TellerWhile I have a few movies on my October to-see list, I kind of doubt I’ll see many in the theaters. Economics and time. Sigh.

September started out with a viewing of The Debt (well acted and produced, but fairly depressing), rentals In the Valley of Elah, I Am Number Four and Beastly (well-acted with Tommy Lee Jones, but depressing; interesting sci-fi premise but the execution just wasn’t there; another interesting premise without the acting/writing to back it up), a new rental of Changeling (again worth seeing but it’s not a feel-good movie, folks) and Easy A (fun, breezy and a good laugh), and a Netflix viewing of The Devil’s Arithmetic (well done, again not a feel-good movie though it ended on an upbeat).

Oh, my, my movie viewing definitely needs to have a few comedies added to the mix.

Moneyball was on the docket for the first weekend of October. Well acted, an interesting storyline (based on true events), but I found it too slow to really be good. It was entertaining, I just wish the editing had been tighter – shaving off five or 10 minutes might have been a good idea.

On to October!

 Real Steel stars Hugh Jackman and Evangeline Lilly.  

Real Steel , rated PG 13, opens October 7. Starring Hugh Jackman and Evangeline Lilly, takes a science-fiction look at the future of boxing. I like the trailers, so I suspect I’ll break down and see this one in the theaters.

 Ides of March stars Ryan Gosling and George Clooney. 

Also opening this weekend are The Ides of March, rated R, a political thriller starring George Clooney, Ryan Gosling, Paul Giamatti and Philip Seymour Hoffman; in limited release, Dirty Girl, rated R, about two high-school runaways and starring Juno Temple, Jeremy Dozier and Milla Jovovich; and Blackthorn, rated R and also in limited release, with Sam Shepard as Butch Cassidy, now James Blackthorn, longing for home.

  The Thing offers another look at the monster in the Antarctic. 

Opening October 14: The Thing, rated R, a slight prequel to the other movies of the same name but the same premise and starring Joel Edgerton, Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Ulrich Thomsen; Footloose, rated PG, a remake of the Kevin Bacon classic (why oh why?); The Big Year, rated PG, a bird-watching comedy starring Jack Black, Owen Wilson and Steve Martin; Texas Killing Fields, rated R and in limited release, looks at a true-crime story and stars Sam Worthington, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Chloe Grace Moretz and Jessica Chastain; Trespass, rated R and in limited release before it goes to DVD, starring Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman as a couple held hostage; and Father of Invention, rated PG-13 and in limited release, is a comedy about an eccentric inventor (Kevin Spacey).

  The Three Musketters stars Logan Lerman, Matthew Macfadyen, Ray Stevenson and Luke Evans. 

October 21 brings Paranormal Activity 3 to the theaters (not yet rated), along with The Three Musketeers, rated PG 13, a steampunk version starring Logan Lerman as the young D’Artagnan, and Matthew Macfadyen, Ray Stevenson and Luke Evans as the older legends; Margin Call, rated R, a look at investment banking starring Zachary Quinto, Stanley Tucci and Kevin Spacey; and in limited release Martha Marcy May Marlene, rated R, which focuses on a young woman (Elizabeth Olsen) trying to re-assimilate to the world after time with an abusive cult.

  Anonymous stars Rhys Ifans and looks at who might have written Shakespeare's plays. 

For October 28, watch for Anonymous, rated PG-13, a period political thriller starring Rhys Ifans, Vanessa Redgrave and David Thewlis and looking at who really wrote Shakespeare’s plays. This one’s on my radar.

Also opening the last weekend of the month are Puss in Boots, rated PG, a prequel for the cat from Shrek, with the voices of Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek and Zach Galifianakis; In Time, rated PG-13, a science-fiction thriller starring Justin Timberlake, Amanda Seyfried and Cillian Murphy that asks the question of what do you do when you have to buy time to stay alive; The Rum Diary, rated R, stars Johnny Depp as a journalist in Puerto Rico during the 1950s; and Like Crazy, rated PG 13, a cross-continent romance between Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin.

Only a few for me to see in October; I’ll try to see Real Steel, The Three Musketeers and Anonymous, and maybe Margin Call. As for November, keep a look out for Tower Heist (looks funny, although I’m not a Ben Stiller fan), My Week With Marilyn (buzz is high for Michelle Williams’ performance as Marilyn Monroe), J. Edgar (Oscar buzz already for Leonardo DiCaprio as FBI’s J. Edgar Hoover), Happy Feet Two (more animated fun), The Descendants (George Clooney as a dad trying to hold it together after learning of his wife’s infidelity), Hugo (a young boy ponders the mystery left to him by his father), A Dangerous Method (Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud and the birth of psychoanalysis – the trailers look better than it sounds), and The Artist (a glimpse into the 1927 Hollywood of silent films).

And looking toward the holiday season, I have on my wish list: Ticker Tailor Soldier Spy (a remake starring Gary Oldman with great buzz), New Year’s Eve (another romantic comedy from Garry Marshall), Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (highly anticipated sequel to the Robert Downey Jr./Jude Law classic detective tale), The Iron Lady (Meryl Streep as Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher), The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (an American adaptation of the bestselling Swedish novel), Misson: Impossible – Ghost Protocol (could Tom Cruise be turning the reins of this franchise over to Jeremy Renner?), The Adventures of Tintin (an animated version of the classic book series), The Darkest Hour (sci-fi tale of an alien invasion set in Russia), We Bought a Zoo (Matt Damon as a dad who moves his young family to the country), and In the Land of Blood and Honey (a look at romance during the Bosnian War, directed by Angelina Jolie).

So there you have it, a slow movie season in October, with a bit more in November and a whole lot to see in December. Can we keep up?! LOL.

See ya at the movies!

September Movies

Jean TellerMy movie watching in August was downgraded to practically non-existent. Books took center stage (I’m currently trying to catch up with Nevada Barr’s Anna Pigeon series – on Borderline at the moment, and I have Deborah Harkness' debut novel, A Discovery of Witches, waiting in the wings).

Netflix provided The Invisible (yawn), The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai in the 8th Dimension (a 1984 camp-fest with a lot of familiar faces – it was fun), and the wrong Changeling (I could have sworn I selected the right one! Sigh). I have In the Valley of Elah (starring Tommy Lee Jones) waiting in my DVD player.

I also rented Arthur (the remake with Russell Brand and Helen Mirren – not that good, tho Mirren was terrific as always) and Paul(raunchy, fun, but ultimately not that great).

I did see Captain America, and it’s worth the trip to the theater, tho it might already be gone from most cineplexes.

Captain America: The First Avenger stars Chris Evans as the comic book hero. 

Other August films I thought I might see – I’ll add The Help, One Day, Fright Night, Conan the Barbarian and Griff the Invisible to my to-rent list. The others, I’m ignoring.

Now on to September!

The Debt opens this weekend, and stars Helen Mirren, Tom Wilkinson, Sam Worthington and Jessica Chastain. Rated R, the film takes place during two different time periods, following a Mossad secret mission during the 1960s, and how that event affects the participants today. I’m hoping to see The Debt this weekend – I’ll let you know.

Also opening over the Labor Day weekend: Apollo 18, rated R, shot in the style of The Blair Witch Project, the tagline says it all “There’s a reason we’ve never gone back to the moon”; and A Good Old-Fashioned Orgy, rated R, follows the misadventures of a group of friends, now in their 30s, attempting to capture the care-free feelings from high school.

 Contagion stars Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jude Law, Laurence Fishburne and a host of others. 

For the weekend of September 9, we have Contagion opening. Rated PG-13, the movie stars a host of familiar faces, including Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Laurence Fishburne, John Hawkes and Jude Law. Too scary for me – I’ll pass. Also opening is Warrior (more my speed), rated PG-13 and starring Tom Hardy, Nick Nolte and Joel Edgerton, which pits two brothers against each other in the extreme fight scene.

Drive stars Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan. 

One of the films I’m looking forward to this month opens September 16: Drive, rated R, stars Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan, Ron Perlman and Bryan Cranston. Gosling is a stuntman moonlighting as a driver for those with criminal intentions. Looks intense. Also opening this weekend are I Don’t Know How She Does It, starring Sarah Jessica Parker, Pierce Brosnan and Greg Kinnear and not yet rated; and Straw Dogs, starring James Marsden and Kate Bosworth in this remake of the 1971 film.

Moneyball stars Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill. 

Abduction stars Taylor Lautner. 

September 23 brings another movie I’m anticipating: Moneyball, starring Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill and Robin Wright. The baseball movie (tho it’s about more than just the sport) is based on a true story and is not yet rated. The weekend also finds opening Abduction, rated PG-13 and starring Taylor Lautner as a young man who discovers he was abducted as a baby; Machine Gun Preacher, rated R, starring Gerard Butler as a former biker who finds God and then goes to the Sudan to fight for children being forced to become soldiers (it’s based on a true story); Killer Elite, rated R, which stars Jason Statham, Clive Owen and Robert De Niro; and Dolphin Tale, rated PG, starring Morgan Freeman, Ashley Judd, Harry Connick Jr. and a dolphin without a tail.

Dream House stars Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz. 

For the last weekend of month, we can find in the theater: 50/50, rated R and starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Seth Rogen in a film penned by Rogen’s friend Will Reiser (JGL’s character is based on Reiser and Rogen plays a version of himself); Dream House, rated PG-13, a horror flick starring Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz (the romance began here); What’s Your Number, rated R, starring Anna Faris, Chris Pratt, Chris Evans, Ryan Phillippe and Joel McHale in a comedy about finding true love; Margaret, rated R, starring Anna Paquin, Matt Damon and Mark Ruffalo, is an indie originally shot in 2005 and just now being released; Take Shelter, rated R, with Michael Shannon and Jessica Chastain about a man who thinks he may be going insane; and Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, rated R, which stars Tyler Labine and Alan Tudyk as two mountain vacationers pitted against a group of college kids (while I love Tudyk, I’m going to skip this one).

Tucker and Dale vs. Evil stars Tyler Labine and Alan Tudyk. 

For October, keep an eye on Real Steel (sci-fi with Hugh Jackman and robots!), The Ides of March (political thriller with Ryan Gosling – busy guy), Footloose (a remake – I have no idea why), The Three Musketeers (another tale of the sword – looks good), The Rum Diary (Johnny Depp’s latest), Anonymous (period piece about who really penned Shakespeare’s plays) and Safe (Jason Statham – do I need to say more?). And for November, watch for Tower Heist (even with Ben Stiller this looks good); Happy Feet 2 (happy!); Hugo (the trailers look great): Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (remake alert); The Descendants (lastest from George Clooney); and The Artist (look back at 1927 Hollywood).

What do you recommend? See ya at the movies!


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