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2010 Fall Movie Preview: 25 Movies for September

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The first month of Fall has some films worth seeing

Brad Brevet
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Published: Tuesday, August 31st 2010 at 10:30 AM

Justin Long and Drew Barrymore in Going the Distance
Photo: Warner Bros.

How many great movies should we expect from each movie season each year? Looking back at this summer, and not including my trip to Cannes, I reviewed 45 films. Of those 45 films I gave four of them — Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, Inception, Toy Story 3 and Winter's Bone — an A- or higher. Four months and four movies I'd consider really good. Should we expect anything more?

There were, of course, other movies I enjoyed such as having fun with Get Him to the Greek and Knight and Day. As well as other films such as Get Low, The Tillman Story, Howl, Despicable Me, The Kids are All Right and Dogtooth. It was a mixed bag and there were certainly some films that did very little to impress, but that's not important right now. What's important is that Summer 2010 wasn't quite as bad as it originally seemed to be. The problem is there are just too many bad movies being made and cluttering up the scene, which is one of the reasons Fall 2010 looks so great.

A lot of the fat has been cut out of the 2010 movie scene and these past few weeks worth of late August dumping groung features have us moving in to what looks like a lean and mean September through December. We're moving into the heart of the awards season and I have a whole slew of films to look out for and I'm going to break it down on a month-by-month basis over the next four days. We'll start with, obviously, September…

Some of these I've seen. Some I'll be seeing very shortly while in Toronto and some we'll all have to wait a little while longer before the word is out. Either way, let's get started with 25 films from this coming September and go from there.

September has a decent line-up with the most prominent adult fare of the bunch being Never Let Me Go (9/15), The Town (9/17), Going the Distance (9/3) and Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (9/24). I already saw Wall Street at Cannes (my review) and enjoyed it quite a bit, though it is certainly a departure from what we've come to expect from Oliver Stone. It's far more playful and much more of an entertainment piece than we're used to from the Oscar-winning helmer and certainly not a film that will fall into awards consideration later in the year.

The Town looks excellent when you mix the high-octane (and potentially spoilerish) trailer with expectation after director Ben Affleck's debut Gone Baby Gone. And Never Let Me Go has the pleasure of being an adaptation of the highly acclaimed Kazuo Ishiguro ("The Remains of the Day") novel as well as serving as director Mark Romanek's first film since his 2002 feature debut One Hour Photo. With Oscar nominated actresses Carey Mulligan and Keira Knightley along with up-and-comer Andrew Garfield leading the cast, Never Let Me Go is one not to miss. Both of these films will be playing at the Toronto International Film Festival where I will be seeing them and reporting on shortly.

As for the Drew Barrymore and Justin Long romantic comedy Going the Distance, which opens the first Friday of September, it's great. Long and Barrymore play well off each other in a rom-com with smarts and a story where the lead characters make rational decisions rather than creating extra problems for themselves. The film leave the silliness up to the supporting cast, primarily Christina Applegate, Jason Sudeikis and "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" star Charlie Day. In my opinion it's a must see.

Catering to a select group of three different rom-com audiences you also have the crass and juvenile Sex Drive knockoff The Virginity Hit (9/10) and the terrible-looking You Again (9/24). However, there seems to be a small silver lining in the form of Easy A (9/17) starring Emma Stone (Zombieland), which is actually playing in Toronto as well and has already started garnering some good word of mouth.

Genre fans will most likely have their eyes on Robert Rodriguez's Machete (9/3), Resident Evil: Afterlife (9/10), the M. Night Shyamalan presentation Devil (9/17) and the Ryan Reynolds trapped in a box thriller Buried (9/24).

Personally, Buried seems too limited and Machete seems as if it's trying too hard. The trailer for Devil seems pretty good, but the concept appears to be just too silly.

Of the bunch, only Resident Evil: Afterlife has me even remotely interested, and that's because I find that trilogy to be a decent diversion, though nothing I would ever call "great."

The indie sect will have Woody Allen's You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger (9/22) to gaze at, though I saw it in Cannes and was none too impressed. For a better bit of independent film watching, check out James Franco in Howl (9/24). I saw Howl at the Seattle Film Festival (my review) and enjoyed it as an alternative piece of art. Give it a look and go in with an open mind.

Also, kicking off the month with a Wednesday, September 1 release, is Anton Corbijn's assassin feature The American (9/1) starring George Clooney. I actually just saw this film yesterday and enjoyed it quite a bit, but don't go in expecting the typical assassin movie. The American is more of a moody and atmospheric tension builder. As would be expected from Corbijn, it's photographed beautifully, but it's going to be a hard sell for Focus considering selling it as a balls-out actioner would certainly be a lie, but to portray it for what it is will turn off general audiences entirely.

Other indie opportunities include Gaspar Noe's controversial Enter the Void (9/24), Zhang Yimou's remake of the Coen brothers' Blood Simple, A Woman, a Gun and a Noodle Shop (9/3), part two of the excellent two-year-old French thriller Mesrine: Public Enemy No. 1 (9/3) (note: part two is not as good as part one), Lovely, Still (9/10) and Philip Seymour Hoffman's directorial debut Jack Goes Boating (9/17), which I have already seen and can't recommend.

September also brings three hotly anticipated documentaries in the form of the Joaquin Phoenix "Is it a documentary? Mockumentary" I'm Still Here (9/10), the Sundance hit Catfish (9/17) and Davis Guggenheim's Waiting for 'Superman' (9/24).

Families will most likely have their eyes fixated on the Sam Rockwell feature The Winning Season (9/3), which looks downright terrible and fellow Lionsgate release Alpha and Omega (9/17), which I'm still waiting to see if the studio will use the fact it is Dennis Hopper's last film role (even though it's animated voice acting) for their marketing.

The other animated selection of the month is Zack Snyder's animated attempt with Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole (9/24) based on the books by Kathryn Lasky. The trailers for this one look sort of cool, but I can't say I am all that interested in seeing it.

All that said, and considering I've already seen some of these, I won't give you a ranked list of what I am most anticipating from September, but instead a list of films I would place at the top of the list based on those I have seen and those I am looking forward to seeing. This list is in release date order and I've marked those I've seen with an *, which should give you a good indication of what I think of them if I haven't yet reviewed them officially.


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Showing 25 Comments

  1. Alex

    Are you know that Going the Distance is very "rotten"

    • Brad Brevet (Post Author)

      I don't base my opinion on the opinion of others.

      Posted On August 31st, 2010 at 10:54 am in reply to Alex.
      • Alex

        Good for you

      • Neither do I, but what's interesting to me is, if opinions of others are almost all negative, that doesn't concern you… at all? If a movie I'm very interested in gets lots of negative reviews, I'll still see it, but I'll be much more nervous than I would be had the opinions all been glowing.

      • m1

        Like Sex and the City 2 for instance?

      • Henchoz

        Oddly I read reviews after I've seen the movie, that way I see what attracts me to the film in the first place ie the story, the director or the cast, it's only afterwards I check out reviews to see what other people thought of that movie alot of the time critics jump on board and are only to happy to go with the majority so bravo Brad for suggesting a movie like Going the Distance that you enjoyed not based on what others think, that my friends is what makes this such a cool website

  2. Bloomy

    Do you think The American is still an Oscar contender

  3. Mari S

    Of these I look forward to Never Let Me Go, The American and Buried. Also Enter the Void is getting my attention. At first it looked really strange but I'm warming up to it and probably will go see it. Most of these will not be opening here in September but some of them I'll be able to see at the Helsinki Film Festival at the end of the month.

    Also Resident Evil will me in the audience. I have a strange fondness for the series.

  4. americanrequiem

    Never Let me Go will probly be the biggie of the month
    Im looking forward to the town the most i think

  5. Central Ohio

    Thanks, Brad. 'The American' is what I'm waiting for. I'm glad you said you liked it and that it's not a typical assasin movie. That makes me even more eager to see it.

    I'm also waiting for 'The Town'. If it's as well done as 'Gone Baby Gone' people better watch out for Ben Affleck.

  6. Alex G

    I'm really excited for Machete, Catfish, The Town, and Never Let Me Go. I don't get all the buzz surrounding The American and Easy A because neither of these sounds too exciting to me.

  7. I think The American is going to tell us a lot about George Clooney's star power. I'd liken it to a movie like The Last Samurai, which was a non-mainstream film with no recognizable co-stars released during Tom Cruise's peak that relied solely on his drawing ability. It still pulled in a sizable audience, based solely on Cruise's name (and maybe a bit of Oscar buzz). Clooney has never really had such a challenge.

    Regardless, The American has one of the coolest posters I've seen in a long time.

    • The Last Samurai was a big-budget historical epic. It wasn't "non-mainstream". But I see your point – Clooney is pretty much the one and only thing that is going to draw general audiences in the cinema. The question is, how many people exactly.

  8. Andrew

    The Town and Never Let me Go are on my list to see for the season. I'm hoping Easy A is worth a look too. I love Emma Stone. She's the funniest comedic actress of her age group to me.

  9. Ian

    I'm definitely looking forward to Wall Street and it's nice to hear a good review of Going the Distance. I think it looks quite funny from the trailer, and R-rated rom-coms are somewhat rare now, unless you throw Apatow-produced films into that category. I won't be able to see it this weekend as I'm prioritizing Machete and The American, but maybe I'll try and catch it next weekend. I'm also encouraged by the early word on The American that it's not a straight-up actioner. Though that marketing coupled with Clooney's pull with the older crowd could allow it to make a run at the top of the box office this weekend.

    I actually don't have very high hopes for The Town. I have a feeling that it could be a classic case of a "sophomore slump" after Affleck's great debut with Gone Baby Gone. I really think it just looks like yet another knock-off of The Departed, but of course with less talent on both sides of the camera. Maybe I'll be proved wrong though.

    I don't know much about all the indies up there (including if I'll have the opportunity to see any of them in theatres), but I do think that Never Let Me Go looks extremely cheesy. I know it's practically blasphemy to badmouth serious-looking foreign art films, but I really think it looks incredibly schmaltzy and cheesy. And that shot from the trailer of Andrew Garfield screaming in the street is laugh-out-loud terrible…I'm talking Darth Vader's "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!" in Revenge of the Sith bad.

    • m1

      I agree that the scream in the street was "WTF?" inducing, but other than that, it looks like a good movie.

      Posted On August 31st, 2010 at 2:05 pm in reply to Ian.
    • That scream seemed very dramatic to me. And while The Town could be a "sophomore slump", it also has a chance to be the next Heat. You never know.

      Posted On September 1st, 2010 at 5:34 am in reply to Ian.
  10. Solid month ahead. Can't wait to check out "The American" tonight.

  11. Jimmy.

    Never Let Me Go, Howl, Enter the Void, and Mesrine are the most I'm looking foward to.

  12. Kevin

    Nothing on The Romantics? I think it looks like a great way to start the fall season. So many good movies coming out this month!

  13. Charlie

    I think the American would be a nice first film to see as I am turning 17 tomorrow.
    I am also looking forward to Devil mainly because of visual aspect and The Town which looks in my opinion awesome but looks like WB is trying to push it like The Departed in a way.

  14. Tom

    What do you mean Buried is "too limited" ? I don't fully understand that comment. Does this refer to it's appeal or something else?

  15. Jack Pandatica

    I'm waiting to see THE VIRGINITY HIT the weekend after labor day. The buzz is that its good fun with hot chicks – My kind of movie. Leave all the weeping and worries for watching the stock market and foreclosure news.

  16. Just Myself

    The only movie I have to really look forward to in the month of September is The Town. The book it's based upon is fantastic, Ben Affleck proved he has the potential to be a powerhouse behind the camera with Gone Baby Gone, and at the end of the day I love a good Boston-set crime thriller.

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