Holiday Movie Preview, 2016
Sam, on host 73.219.99.119
Thursday, November 3, 2016, at 14:15:51
It's that time again!
November 4 - Doctor Strange
This psychedelic turn in the Marvel franchise is already making huge bank overseas, even compared with other Marvel ventures. I keep expecting the superhero craze to flame out (not die, just subside for a while), but there's no sign of it happening yet. Benedict Cumberbatch, an unusually heady actor for Marvel, plays the lead role.
November 11 - Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk
It sounds like a football comedy or something, but it's more of a war commentary contrasting the reality of war with how it is perceived and sold back home. If I told you it starred Kristen Stewart and Vin Diesel, you might not take its awards season gravitas very seriously, though both actors have done occasional prestige work in the shadows of what they are better known for. The director, on the other hand, is Ang Lee, whose last film, Life of Pi, got him a Best Director Oscar. His filmography is exceptionally varied (Crouching Tiger, Sense and Sensibility), but only once failed to garner critical admiration (Hulk).
November 11 - Arrival
Denis Villeneuve is one of the more recent directors on my radar, starting with Prisoners and Enemy. The most recent, Sicario, was brilliantly made but a little too effective: it put me in a depressed funk for a while. Still, I'm always ready to see what he's doing next. This time it's an unexpected foray into science fiction: "A linguist is recruited by the military to assist in translating alien communications." Amy Adams, who gets more interesting with every role, and Jeremy Renner headline the show.
November 11 - Shut In
Naomi Watts plays a widowed child psychologist who is stranded in a remote part of New England during a bad winter storm. Meanwhile, some badguys are lurking about, and there's a boy in trouble somewhere. I don't know much more about it, but I love the genre, and Naomi Watts is good at leading this sort of thing.
November 18 - Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them
This Harry Potter spinoff was inevitable, right? David Yates, who directed the back half of the Harry Potter films, is back to make it a majority. I didn't like his take on #5 and #6, but he redeemed himself with the two-part finale. Obviously I'm looking forward to this, just like everybody else.
November 18 - Nocturnal Animals
I'm not sure why, but movies about art are so often good. Or do they just appeal to me? To cherry pick a couple out of hundreds, Stranger Than Fiction was wonderful movie that demonstrated a genuine understanding of the deep, multi-faceted connection a novelist can have with her characters. The Best Offer, quite a different sort of movie, demonstrates a similarly profound understanding of how the appeal of art can run much deeper than an affection for pretty pictures but speak to the core of our being, fulfilling basic needs we all have but which nature left some of us ill-equipped to fulfill in the usual ways. I stress, in case you have not seen these, that these films are not philosophical ramblings, merely a lighthearted comedy and a dark romance, respectively: but the fact that they are grounded in an insightful understanding of how art works in our lives, they ring true and are all the more compelling for it.
This is a longwinded lead-up to introducing a film that may not, for all I know, demonstrate any kind of understanding at all. But the premise shows the potential: it's a thriller about the owner of an art gallery who reads her ex-husband's horror novel and interprets it as a threat against her. That's two artistic disciplines and a dramatic psychological response right there. The woman is played by Amy Adams, who recently starred in Big Eyes, another film immersed in the art world.
November 18 - Manchester By the Sea
One Internet columnist called this a "male tearjerker." It's a pretty somber drama that is the third film from director Kenneth Lonergan. The first, You Can Count On Me, made a critical splash in 2000. The second, Margaret, came and went without much fanfare. But this time around, people are talking about this being one of the season's few true locks for a Best Picture nomination.
November 25 - Moana
You may not know directors Jon Musker and Ron Clements, but you know their long line of Disney animated films: The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Hercules, Treasure Planet, and The Princess and the Frog. Incredibly, this is their first foray into 3D animation. It's in many ways an old-fashioned adventure film set in the Pacific. Looks like a lot of fun.
November 25 - Lion
An Indian boy gets lost at age 5 and winds up being adopted by an Australian couple. As an adult, he sets out to find his lost family. There is great anticipation for this, plus a lot of awards buzz. Although the subject matter sounds heavy, the early word is that it's quite the crowdpleaser.
November 25 - Allied
Robert Zemeckis is back with this story of a romance between an intelligence officer and a resistance fighter during World War II. But is one of them a double agent? After spending a decade on motion capture films, Zemeckis returned to live-action with the excellent Denzel Washington vehicle Flight.
December 2 - La La Land
Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone headline this lavish musical from Damien Chazelle. Chazelle hasn't made a musical before, but really his last film, Whiplash, was more musical than most musicals. It was also my favorite film of 2014, so of course I'm eager to see his follow up.
This is as good an opportunity as any to wax on about Whiplash. It's that rarest of things in the world of cinema: a true original, nothing like anything I'd ever seen before. I don't know how it got made: the script couldn't possibly have suggested the wonder and power of the final film. So much of the drama resides not in the words of the script but in the acting and in the ebb and flow of the music as it is played and conducted by its characters. But this is no mere concert film: the film pushes our emotional buttons unashamedly, and we find ourselves desperately routing for our hero. It all culminates in an incredibly suspenseful and emotional dramatic crescendo that is uniquely cinematic. No other narrative form could do what Whiplash does. Somehow, even cinema hasn't done it before either.
Anyway, Chazelle is obviously a brilliant guy, and I can see how he could make one humdinger of a musical romance. So, apparently, can many others. After Whiplash made a stronger than expected showing at the Oscars, La La Land is primed for accolades of its own.
December 2 - Kidnap
After Halle Berry's son is kidnapped and the authorities prove unhelpful, she takes matters into her own hands. From the trailer, it's clear Berry isn't playing someone with a special set of skills, like Liam Neeson in Taken, but an ordinary woman terrified beyond measure.
Though it's hard to tell from the trailer, the movie certainly doesn't look groundbreaking, but it could possibly be a fun way to pass a couple of hours. On the other hand, as the father of a young child myself, I've been having a harder and harder time facing stories like this. Haven't decided yet if I'm going to watch this one.
December 16 - Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
While we're all waiting for Episode VIII, Disney, the new caretaker of the franchise, is keeping us occupied with one-shot spinoffs set at different times in the Star Wars universe. This one takes place just before the original film and concerns the building of the first Death Star. Director Gareth Edwards' previous film was the 2014 Godzilla remake. But I suspect the choice of director for these films may not matter as much as it does for most movies. (See also: Marvel, Disney's other big blockbuster franchise.)
December 16 - Collateral Beauty
David Frankel's filmography to date has a lot of nice, gentle movies that are out of fashion these days and easily dismissed. But Marley & Me was a lot better than it had any right to be, and I have a soft spot for The Big Year, a comedy about, of all things, birders. (Don't call them birdwatchers!) His films to date haven't exactly transcended established genres, but he's done great work within them.
His next is a drama about a New York advertising executive (Will Smith) who suffers a tragedy and copes with it by withdrawing from life and writing letters to the universe. Then the universe starts to answer. It feels like it has an It's a Wonderful Life kind of appeal, only with more modern sensibilities.
December 16 - A Kind of Murder
Patricia Highsmith's The Blunderer is the source novel on which this period noir thriller is based. Highsmith's work, despite being rooted in its times, has never really fallen out of fashion. After bursting to flame in the early 1950s thanks to Alfred Hitchcock's great adaptation of her first novel, Strangers On a Train, her work has appeared on cinema screens ever since, most notably with various adaptations of her Ripley novels and last year's Carol. I suspect the reason her work hasn't aged even as the genres she works in have is that it's always rooted in the psychology of its characters. Once a character is psychologically compelling, it doesn't matter so much what trappings you find them in.
December 21 - Passengers
A spacecraft is carrying thousands of people to a distant colony planet. There's a malfunction and two passengers are awakened 90 years too soon. There are a number of ways this could play out, some good and some bad. One pitfall it has to dodge is being too existential and meditative without the narrative pull to keep it engaging. Beyond that, a lot depends on the chemistry of its stars, Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt. It's not fashionable to like either these days, but I am unimpressed by the fickleness of the moviegoing public. Lawrence is a genuine talent with an incomparable screen presence, and Pratt, while untried in a project with gravitas, struck just the right tone in Guardians of the Galaxy and Jurassic World, two of the best summer popcorn flicks in recent memory.
December 21 - Assassin's Creed
Beware video game adaptations! There should be more good ones than there are, but there aren't. How many can you name?
December 21 - Silence
Martin Scorsese spent 20 years working on this film, about two Jesuit priests who face persecution for their faith in 17th century Japan. Expect it to be a factor in the awards race this year.
December 30 - Gold
Matthew McConaughey scours the Indonesian jungle for gold. He seems to like to hunt for gold, as he's done it on two prior occasions (Sahara and Fool's Gold). Anyway, this film, which sounds like an old-fashioned adventure film, probably isn't: it appears to spend equal or better time in the world of high finance back home, exploring the consequences of his sudden riches.
December 30 - Live By Night
Ben Affleck directs this tale of Prohibition-era gangsters. Affleck's directorial career continues to amaze. While unreliable as an actor, there's no reason to think his fourth directorial effort will break his perfect winning streak that culminated in 2012's Argo, a fun caper that won the Best Picture Oscar.
January 13 - Patriots Day
This account of the Boston Marathon bombing follows police commissioner Ed Davis throughout the lead-up and the aftermath.
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