October 3rd
ANNABELLE (HORROR)
Directed by John R. Leonetti; Starring: Annabelle Wallis, Ward Horton, Alfre Woodard, Eric Ladin, Brian Howe, Tony Amendola
Rated R for intense sequences of disturbing violence and terror.
I liked THE CONJURING- it was one of the more frightening movies in recent years- but I honestly never was all that interested in the threat thrown in with the doll, Annabelle. But now Annabelle is getting her own movie, although I'm not sure whether it takes place before or after THE CONJURING, and the paranormal investigators from that film, the Warrens, are apparently not involved.
After a man give his wife a rare vintage china doll, Annabelle, their house is invaded by members of a satanic cult who attack the couple, and in the act, conjure an entity of evil that possesses the doll. There's an inherent problem to this whole affair; only a totally sick f*** would give a doll like that to his wife. It is an unreasonably creepy-looking doll. On the other hand, I do like the kind of stylish, Gothic horror that this could be. The director has only made a couple of straight-to-home-video sequels and usually works as a cinematographer, it's not too promising.
October 3rd
GONE GIRL (MYSTERY-THRILLER)
Directed by David Fincher; Starring: Ben Affleck, Rosamund Pike, Neil Patrick Harris, Tyler Perry, Kim Dickens, Patrick Fugit, Casey Wilson, Missi Pyle, Scoot McNairy
Rated R for a scene of bloody violence, some strong sexual content/nudity, and language.
This is definitely the most exciting movie of the month- David Fincher (director of THE SOCIAL NETWORK, SE7EN, FIGHT CLUB, ZODIAC) with a critically-acclaimed source material right up his alley (psychological mystery crime-thriller) and a cast led by Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike- could it be more perfect? Well, I was a little cool on Fincher's last film, THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO (it was confusing), but I'm very very excited anyway. Fincher is one of the most interesting directors working in film today, and as usual with his films, the marketing has been stellar (Fincher is known for having a strong hand in the marketing of his films; the two posters are a couple of my favorites this year). Gillian Flynn, who wrote the book and now the screenplay, has said the film deviates significantly from her novel, which I haven't read anyway, but it supposed to be very dense, exploring the psychology and dynamics of long-term relationships through the story of a man whose wife disappears, leading to suspicion that he may have murdered her. I can hardly wait.
October 3rd
LEFT BEHIND (THRILLER/SCI-FI)
Directed by Vic Armstrong; Starring: Nicholas Cage, Chad Michael Murray, Cassi Thomson, Lea Thompson, Jordin Sparks
Rated PG-13 for some thematic elements, violence/peril and brief drug content.
A slightly more prolific entry in the recent boom of films attempting to cater to the conservative Christian demographic, some of which are very successful in spite of that demographic's loudly professed dismissal of "the media" and Hollywood, this second adaptation of 1995 novel Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth's Last Days and subsequent series of books (previously adapted in 2000 starring Kirk Cameron) stars none other than Nicholas Cage. If he goes "Full Cage," then this could be a lot of fun, but the screenplay is from the same team behind the 2000 Kirk Cameron film, which were critically savaged and particularly ridiculed for their dreadful dialogue, and director Vic Armstrong isn't known for directing- he does have a prolific career as a stuntman (including doubling regularly for Harrison Ford, mainly as Indiana Jones) and stunt coordinator, however. It's hard to see where this might go right, but if you're looking for a good movie about the Rapture of Christian dispensationalism, last year's THIS IS THE END is intentionally hilarious.
October 10th
ADDICTED (DRAMA/THRILLER)
Directed by Bille Woodruff; Starring: Sharon Leal, Boris Kodjoe, Kat Graham, William Levy, Tasha Smith, Maria Howell
Rated R for strong sexual content, nudity, language and brief drug use.
In this soapy dramatic-thriller adapted from the best-selling erotic novel by Zane (oh boy, we're off to a great start) a woman with an enviable life -the perfect husband, three kids and a great career- but an addiction to infidelity that threatens to bring her whole life crashing down. Directed by Bille Woodruff, the illustrious name behind HONEY, it's straight-to-video sequel HONEY 2, BEAUTY SHOP, the fourth straight-to-video BRING IT ON sequel (FIGHT TO THE FINISH) and a slew of music videos. Yeah, this doesn't look worthwhile.
October 10th

Directed by Miguel Arteta; Starring: Steve Carrell, Jennifer Garner, Ed Oxenbould, Dylan Minnette, Kerris Dorsey, Bella Thorne, Megan Mullally, Jennifer Coolidge, Donald Glover
Rated PG for rude humor including some reckless behavior and language.
I remember as a kid my family owning a VHS cassette of a 1990 HBO animated-musical adaptation of Judith Viorst's children's picture book Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day. I remember hating it. It was annoying and I hated Alexander; he was whiny, uninteresting and dim. He just...he was just a terrible person, and I sympathized more with the day he kept complaining about than I did with him. I'm hoping this Disney film will at least be better than that stupid cartoon. The previews make it look like a Disney Channel movie that somehow managed to snag Steve Carrell (NBC's The Office) and Jennifer Garner (Alias), as it's actually Alexander's Family and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day. The adult actors rounding out the cast though, including Parks and Recreation's Megan Mullally and Community's Donald Glover, are some very funny folks. I'm guessing this is generally hit-and-miss slapstick family comedy.
October 10th
DRACULA UNTOLD (ACTION/HORROR)

Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of warfare, vampire attacks, disturbing images, and some sensuality.
This is kind of a shame. Luke Evans stars as the title character in this blending of the historical Romanian warlord Vlad Tepes (the real-life inspiration for Count Dracula in Bram Stoker's classic novel) and the fictitious Count Dracula. There's some really fun ideas in this, and apparently Universal is hoping to use this to introduce their Marvel-style Universal Monsters universe (Universal doesn't have any major superhero properties to play with like the other major studios are doing post-THE AVENGERS), but this just looks dumb. It's the feature film debut for both the director and the screenwriters, so it isn't clear what we're looking at for behind-the-scenes talent, but the visuals are naturally gray and drab, and there's unintentionally laughable moments in the trailer, such as Dracula supernaturally wielding a hoard of bats against an army. The story revolves around Vlad III the Impaler's (aka Dracula) role in the Wallachian-Ottoman Wars, in which he fought the occupation by the Ottoman Empire, except in this account, in order to secure victory against his enemies, Vlad becomes a vampire, attaining supernatural powers.
October 10th
THE JUDGE (COMEDY-DRAMA)
Directed by David Dobkin; Starring: Robert Downey Jr., Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga, Vincent D'Onofrio, Jeremy Strong, Billy Bob Thornton, Sarah Lancaster, David Krumholtz
Rated R for language including some sexual references.
Robert Downey, Jr. stars as Hank Palmer, an unscrupulous criminal defense lawyer returns to his small town home for his mother's funeral and learns that his estranged, straight-laced father and local judge (Robert Duvall) has been accused of murder for hitting someone with his car. Putting aside old disagreements, Hank decides to defend his father in court, while a hard-edged prosecutor (Billy Bob Thornton) comes at him with the full power of the law. The cast here is excellent, and although the story appears to be teetering on the edge of unearned self-seriousness, if it keeps its balance, this could be really good. The big fat question mark however is director David Dobkin, whose overrated THE WEDDING CRASHERS was a big hit in 2005, but then followed up with FRED CLAUS, THE CHANGE-UP and a story credit on R.I.P.D.
October 17th
THE BEST OF ME (ROMANTIC DRAMA)
Directed by Michael Hoffman; Starring: James Marsden, Michelle Monaghan, Luke Bracey, Liana Liberato, Sebastian Arcelus, Gerald McRaney, Jon Tenney, Caroline Goodall
Rated PG-13 for sexuality, violence, some drug content and brief strong language.
There's not much point in complaining about Nicholas Sparks and the many adaptations of his books; they're basically the women's demographic's equivalent to ultra-dumb action movies, which I complain about anyway, but whatever. Either way, they're not as harmful as THE TWILIGHT SAGA, so that's a plus. The tropes abound in this story of teenage romance ended by an unreasonable father of the female party, but later rekindled when they reunite in their small hometown. It is what it is, so whatever, although one has to wonder what was going on in casting when they cast the young couple against their older versions played by James Marsden and Michelle Monaghan. Maybe the casting director had prosopagnosia, aka "face blindness," or maybe they were playing a joke, but when the previews fade one face over the other, it's impossible not to laugh out loud.
October 17th
THE BOOK OF LIFE (ANIMATION/FANTASY)
Directed by Jorge Gutierrez; Featuring the Voices of: Diego Luna, Zoe Saldana, Channing Tatum, Christina Applegate, Ice Cube, Kate del Castillo, Ron Perlman, Cheech Marin
Rated PG for mild action, rude humor, some thematic elements and brief scary images.
This unusual-looking animated feature started life at DreamWorks Animation but broke away due to "creative differences," and found a producer in the busiest man in Hollywood, Guillermo del Toro, and an animation studio with Reel FX Creative Studios, the makers of last year's dumpy FREE BIRDS. Borrowing elements of Mexican and Mesoamerican folk culture, a pair of powerful spirits place wagers on a love triangle between a charming young man, Manolo, a dashing ladies man, Joaquin, and the beautiful Maria, but one of the spirits decides to hedge his bet by sending Manolo to the underworld, but Manolo is determined to find a way out and back to Maria. I'm not sure how this will all go over for mainstream American audiences, but I'm interested. It's different in just about every way, visuals, themes and background, and the burgeoning Mexican family demographic deserves a good animated film to represent their fairy tales.
October 17th
FURY (WAR DRAMA/ACTION)
Directed by David Ayers; Starring: Brad Pitt, Shia LeBeouf, Logan Lerman, Michael Pena, Jon Bernthal, Jason Isaacs, Scott Eastwood
Rated R for strong sequences of war violence, some grisly images, and language throughout.
There have probably been more good and great war movies made about World War II than any other war, so the most important factor of any new WWII film is how it differentiates itself from its predecessors. FURY, a new WWII epic about the crew of a U.S. M4 Sherman tank led by a war-hardened sergeant (played by Brad Pitt) as they push through the to Berlin during the last month of the European Theatre, has a strong line-up of talent, but it's unclear what particularly about it is different or if it'll work. Writer/director David Ayers' last two films were the critically-savaged flop SABOTAGE and the acclaimed hit END OF WATCH, so this is a wild card. Brad Pitt has a knack for picking good projects though, so we'll see.
October 17th
JOHN WICK (ACTION-THRILLER)
Directed by Chad Stahelski; Starring: Keanu Reeves, Bridget Moynahan, Willem Dafoe, Jason Isaacs, Bridget Regan, Adrianne Palicki
Rated R for strong and bloody violence throughout, language and brief drug use.
It seems like JOHN WICK came out of nowhere- the release date was only just announced in August- and while I dislike Keanu Reeves in all but a few movies, this looks pretty good. The story, about a former hitman who comes out of retirement to kick everyone's ass TAKEN-style after gangsters destroy his life, is clearly nothing special, but advertised action looks kinetic and brutal, and Reeves seems surprisingly intense. Plus, the early reviews are very positive.
October 24th
LAGGIES (ROMANTIC-COMEDY)
Directed by Lynn Shelton; Starring: Keira Knightley, Chloe Grace Moretz, Sam Rockwell, Ellie Kemper, Mark Webber
Rated R for language, some sexual material and teen partying.
Keira Knightley gives a feminine spin on the oft-told story of the man child's coming-of-age in this Sundance acquisition about a woman in her late-20s who works as a sign-flipper and lives with her high school boyfriend but panics at a marriage proposal and starts hanging out with a 16-year old played by Chloe Grace Moretz (she is in everything these days). Knightley looks unusually loose-limbed and breezy, but the whole affair could be too twee for some.
October 24th
OUIJA (HORROR-THRILLER)
Directed by Stiles White; Starring: Douglas Smith, Olivia Cooke, Daren Kagasoff, Matthew Settle, Ana Coto, Bianca A. Santos, Shelley Hennig
Rated PG-13 for disturbing violent content, frightening horror images, and thematic material.
Apparently Ouija boards were patented back in 1891 and are trademarked, owned by the Hasbro company, so I guess it makes more sense now to call it a "board game adaptation," even if Oujia is more of a parlor trick or a tool (depending on your beliefs) than a board game with rules and an objective. Anyhow, the combination of Hasbro, Michael Bay and Blumhouse Productions (the independent horror film company behind PARANORMAL ACTIVITY and INSIDIOUS) has produced this "adaptation," in which a group of teenage friends attempt to contact a friend who was killed in a horrific accident, but the Ouija board they use unleashes a deeply sinister force on them. It's from the writing team behind BOOGEYMAN, one of whom can also be held partially responsible for THE POSSESSION and KNOWING, plus Michael Bay is involved, so the whole affair does not bode well.
October 31st
BEFORE I GO TO SLEEP (MYSTERY-THRILLER)
Directed by Rowan Joffe; Starring: Nicole Kidman, Colin Firth, Mark Strong, Anne-Marie Duff, Dean-Charles Chapman
Rated R for some brutal violence and language.
Based on the best-selling novel by S.J. Watson, this psychological thriller stars Nicole Kidman as woman with amnesia who wakes up everyday having forgotten who she is, how she got there and why she can't remember. Using a video journal, she tries to dig up the truth and discover who her real enemies and allies are. It's unclear what the story is beyond that, but it sounds somewhat similar to Christopher Nolan's excellent 2000 thriller MEMENTO, and doesn't look as good. Check the reviews on this one.
October 31st

Directed by Dan Gilroy; Starring: Jake Gyllenhall, Bill Paxton, Rene Russo, Riz Ahmed, Kevin Rahm, Eric Lange, Jonny Coyne, Michael Hyatt
Rated R for violence including graphic images, and for language.
Jake Gyllenhall stars as a sociopath in unrelenting pursuit of the dark side of the American Dream as he films grisly accident and crime scenes in Los Angeles to sell the footage to television news stations where the demand for these horrors is high enough to drive people into bidding wars and criminality. Since it premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival just a couple weeks ago, Gyllenhall has become one of the early contenders for the coming awards season and the film has been getting acclaim as a pitch-black satire and intense thriller; looks promising.