2010 Fall Movie Preview: October Brings the Horror and Then Some
From 'Saw 3D' to Eastwood and Fincher, October has it all
Photo: Columbia Pictures
Immediately when you think of October movies you think of horror films and thrillers and October 2010 has got its share, but it also has a bit of a unique flavor to it. This year's batch of fright flicks aren't solely dominated by blood and gore. Certainly we have a new Saw film, we also have the unnecessary sequel to last year's breakout supernatural hit Paranormal Activity. Wes Craven is in tow with a new film, a controversial remake is on its way, Clint Eastwood even has a film dealing with the afterlife and depending on how you look at it, Charles Ferguson's Inside Job documentary may be the scariest, most maddening film of the year.
Yeah, October 2010 appears to have the goods on paper. Let's take a closer look and see what all it has to offer.
Beginning with the Halloween related films everyone wants this time of year we'll look at the two sequels vying for box-office supremacy in that category. When they were first announced there was a bit of a scuffle between Paranormal Activity 2 (10/22) and Lionsgate's Saw 3D (10/29). Initially Paramount set Paranormal Activity 2 up against Saw 3D on October 22 and hired Saw VI helmer Kevin Greutert to direct. In a widely covered fracas, Lionsgate exercised an option forcing Greutert to abandon Paranormal Activity 2 and direct the seventh film in the Saw franchise. Nice right?
It was a bit of dirty pool, and yet Lionsgate was still the first to yell "chicken" and bowed out in the end, electing to move Saw 3D one week later, setting up a fascinating bit of late month box-office competition. I'm sure Lionsgate wants to go out with a bang as this is said to be the final Saw film. So will it ride the 3D express to box-office supremacy, or will Paranormal Activity 2 find lightning in a bottle as did its predecessor or will it simply whither and go away?
Next we have the film fanboys are up in arms about, Matt Reeves's remake Let Me In (10/1) adapted from John Ajvide Lindqvist's best-selling Swedish novel, which itself was adapted into a feature film in its native tongue in 2008. Considering the film is about vampires a small handful of genre film lovers overlooked their hatred of subtitles to watch the original and now consider it one of their favorites and are upset anyone would ever consider remaking it. Just imagine if they watched more foreign language films what they would think of so many American remakes.
Well, this story of an alienated 12-year-old boy (Kodi Smit-McPhee) who befriends a mysterious young girl (Moretz) in his small New Mexico town is getting an English language remake whether they like it or not, and I can only assume most of them will be in line opening weekend to see it.
Moving along, Wes Craven is returning to theaters with My Soul to Take (10/8), an I Know What You Did Last Summer-esque story about a supposed reincarnated serial killer.
I Spit On Your Grave (10/8) is coming to theaters in unrated form after surrendering its R-rating to appear more sadistic to audiences. This is a remake of the 1978 film Roger Ebert called "a vile bag of garbage." He continued on saying, "Attending it was one of the most depressing experiences of, my life… This is a film without a shred of artistic distinction. It lacks even simple craftsmanship." You interested?
Finally, Paramount is dumping their ages old thriller Case 39 (10/1) starring Renée Zellweger and Bradley Cooper at the beginning of the month. This film was expected to hit theaters two years ago and only now is Par finding time to release it into limited theaters. There must be some kind of tax write-off involved.
The horror ends there, but the genre features continue with Summit's Red (10/15), Paramount's potentially hilarious Jackass 3D (10/15) and Gareth Edwards's much talked about low-budget sci-fi feature Monsters (10/29).
I've seen an unfinished cut of Red and it's rather enjoyable, but I won't say it's blowing any doors off. It seems to be trying to mix the camaraderie of Steven Soderbergh's Ocean's 11 remake with the haphazard nature of something like this summer's The A-Team or The Losers.
Despite the fact it's October and horror films are all the rage this time of year, I suspect David Fincher's The Social Network (10/1) will be the most anticipated film on most people's list. I'll say I wasn't particularly impressed with the trailer the same way everyone else was. I know the fact Fincher is directing an Aaron Sorkin script is something that's got most people jazzed, and I personally really want to see The Social Network, but the latest trailer tempered my expectations a bit.
Continuing along the more noteworthy fare for October we come to Disney's Secretariat (10/8), which has the potential for Blind Side-esque Oscar consideration with the Oscar nominated Diane Lane, though she has additional Best Actress competition in the same month from Hilary Swank and her role in Fox Searchlight's Conviction (10/15) co-starring with another potential nominee in Sam Rockwell.
A film that didn't get as much buzz out of Sundance as I expected was John Wells's corporate downsizing feature The Company Men (10/22), which I get the feeling The Weinstein Co. is dropping off here in September with more Oscar expectations placed on other titles in its possession. No matter, the biggest film having to do with the current state of the economy wouldn't have been The Company Men anyway, it will be Charles Ferguson's Inside Job (10/8).
I've now seen Inside Job one-and-a-half times after having to bail on it at Cannes due to lack of sleep and finally seeing it to completion here in Seattle only a few days ago in advance of the Toronto Film Festival. Simply put, this is one scary documentary and one that will sit alongside the Weinstein's The Tillman Story as the two frontrunners for Best Documentary at this year's Oscars. Inside Job does a great job of explaining a lot of the jargon you may have heard on television and makes Michael Moore's Capitalism look like it was made with crayon. Of course, over saturation of this kind of material may also be its Oscar downfall, but that doesn't change the fact it's a great movie.
Speaking of Oscar and October, here is Clint Eastwood with Hereafter (10/22), a film that will be screening in Toronto in something of a clandestine fashion as it's currently set for only one, out of the way, press screening and one public screening. It's been described as a supernatural thriller in the vein of The Sixth Sense written by Peter Morgan (Frost/Nixon), but Warner Bros. has since toned down that language and is referring to it as a drama dealing with the afterlife. We can only speculate as to how good it actually is and I can only hope to see one of those screenings at TIFF.
I've already seen Tamara Drewe (10/8) from Stephen Frears at Cannes and as my review said "neither the story nor the characters as written are weighty enough to carry this film for the duration."
George Hickenlooper's Casino Jack (10/1) is heading to TIFF as well where I hope to catch a screening and the same goes for It's Kind of a Funny Story (10/8) from Focus starring Keir Gilchrist, Zach Galifianakis and Emma Roberts.
The Weinstein Co. seems to be just dumping off Nowhere Boy (10/8) the same as The Company Men, which doesn't surprise me after seeing the trailer for this film about John Lennon's childhood with Kick-Ass lead, Aaron Johnson, playing Lennon. Warner's Life as We Know It (10/8) starring Katherine Heigl and Josh Duhammel looks like a poop joke spread out over 105 minutes and there is some good buzz going for Stone (10/8) starring Ed Norton and Robert De Niro, but I just can't get over how generic the film looks.
Finally, the third film in the Millennium trilogy arrives in The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets' Nest (10/27), a Swedish film that is also getting an American adaptation with David Fincher directing the first in the series, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. It's a bit surprising the online fanboys aren't in a huff over that one. Then again, there aren't any vampires so they probably haven't seen the original.
Just like September's list, I have seen a few of these so instead of doing a ranked list of my most anticipated films I have done a list ordered by release date of those I liked already and those I am still anticipating. I've marked the films I've seen with an *.
- The Social Network (10/1)
- Let Me In (10/1)
- Inside Job (10/8)*
- It's Kind of a Funny Story (10/8)
- Stone (10/8)
- Red (10/15)*
- The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets' Nest (10/27)
- Hereafter (10/22)
- Paranormal Activity 2 (10/22)
- Monsters (10/29)
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The original "I Spit on Your Grave" isn't half as bad as Roger Ebert said. It's not great, but it got my attention and some violence sequences are quite good. I don't know what to think of a remake. These are such politically correct times for remaking of a movie like this…
I want to see "Let Me In" more than "The Social Network", actually. Apart from these two, I really want to see "Secretariat". I love me some Diane Lane.
I resent the fanboys not being in a huff over the Dragon Tattoo remake, the reason the fanboys aren't up in arms over the remake is because David Fincher is behind it and apart from Alien 3 he's not had a bad movie, unless you wanna count Panic Room… I'm a fanboy and I've seen the original, i'm totally against the whole vampire tween thing it pisses me off, I'm weary about Let Me In because Matt Reeves only has one good film under his belt, and Let the Right One In was a much more than a tween vamp flick…
Jackass 3D FTW
Fall is always the best season for film going. Looking forward to pretty much everything but The Secretariat, though I do need a Malcovich fix, I'm hoping RED can give me that!
I thought the last Social Network trailer was fantastic.
Yeah, I know I am in the minority on that one.
I'll agree that the trailers are interesting, but the script is horrid. It's very one-note and makes Zuckerberg look like a villain with NO redeeming qualities. I mean, from Fincher, I would have thought he could have chosen a script with a lead that has a LITTLE depth. On top of that, it portrays Zuckerberg as being desperate, pathetic (watch the ending), disloyal and easily manipulated.
Reading the script took away all the excitement I had after seeing the trailers.
Brad, I also saw the unfinished cut of RED and I loved it!!! Not Oscar worthy, but still one of my favorite movies of the year. I'm going to check it out again to see if they changed anything because the studio execuitives told me personally that the print we saw was the "Director's cut" and the final print will be only 90 minutes long. I doubt this since the unfinished version was already rated PG-13 by the MPAA.
Nowhere Boy is actually pretty good. I'd recommend seeking it out.
I agree, i was presently suprised when i saw Nowhere Boy.
Its a shame its just being dumped out.
I know there's a lot of buzz surrounding The Social Network, but is it just me or is Jesse Eisenberg channeling Michael Cera even more than usual? It looks like a trainwreck just waiting to happen, but I'm willing to give it a shot. Something tells me Eastwood's Hereafter is going to be the big winner in October, especially if it gets any Oscar buzz. All in all, I liked your list, the only change being I'd probably have inserted Conviction in over Paranormal Activity 2. But I'm just a snob that way…
I agree that the "Stone" trailer looked pretty weak, but I'm still jazzed to see the film opening night at the Chicago International Film Festival.
I'm amused you included "I Spit On Your Grave" in the list; I wasn't aware it was going to get a release wide enough to appear on here. The original film is crap, but it's also the essence of rape-and-revenge flicks. "Last House on the Left" is the best rape-and-revenge flick, but I Spit is more indicative of the genre. You watch LHOTL because it's an awesome low-budget exploitation flick & Wes Craven's first (and, in my opinion, best) film. But you watch ISOYG because it's THE rape-and-revenge flick of rape-and-revenge flicks.
Most looking forward to "The Social Network." I disagree with you about the most recent trailer; it is, in fact, the best trailer I've seen all year, and perhaps the best trailer I've seen since the trailer for "Doubt."
Also really looking forward to "Hereafter." It's going to get #1 for the weekend, easily beating Paranormal Activity 2. PA2 is going to have a very disappointing opening and a quick drop-off, as will Saw VII (sorry, "Saw 3D"). Their little tiff is of no consequence, since both are doomed.
"Let Me In"–good motherfucking God, I'm STILL so mad about the title change! Everything else about the remake looks great: I mean, you could have hardly picked two better stars to play the children, and Matt Reeves directing is also a good sign. But a title is SO indicative of a film, and by dumbing down the title, it bodes poorly for the entire film, even though the pedigree is awesome.
FYI, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest has moved to 10/29 according to its distributor's website (musicboxfilms.com).
Re: I Spit On Your Grave – won't it have distribution problems by going out Unrated? Many theaters still won't show unrated films and some newspapers won't accept advertising for them. I'm surprised they don't do the usual pattern these days of R-rated theatrical release followed by over-hyped Unrated DVD/Blu-ray release.
10/27. Hornet's Nest has moved to 10/27.
I think Let Me In has my vote this time in being most anticipated. My vote and also some worries.. Having first seen the film and then read the book I appreciate the story even more. I think the movie left some things a bit vague but the book cleared all of that out for me. I love both the book and the movie and that's rare for me. Leads are fantastic and I'm willing to give Reeves a fair shot.
Also Hereafter sounds interesting but then anything Clint makes always does. I've seen Monsters and wouldn't exactly call it a genre film. I was a bit disappointed about that at first but now after a while I like the film much more.
One of the least interesting to me is The Social Network.
I probably shouldn't admit it – but the trailer for 'My Soul to Take' actually makes the flick look like cheesy fun.
You're not alone. I think it could be a FANTASTIC horror film.
Social Network, Jackass (2D) and Red may be the only movies I have to see this October
The Social Network was not good at all.
Nowhere Boy is pretty average. Caught it at SIFF and while there's nothing really wrong with it, it's kind of unmemorable. Seattle isn't getting Never Let Me Go until October 1st, apparantely, so that would be my most anticipated of that month.