Friday, September 20, 2024

Got a Tip?

The 100 Most Anticipated Films Of 2017

ruby-sparks60. “Wildlife”
Director: Paul Dano
Cast: Jake Gyllenhaal, Carey Mulligan, Ed Oxenbould, Zoe Margaret Colletti
Synopsis: After they move to Montana, a teenager watches his family fall apart.
What You Need To Know: He’s barely into his thirties, but Paul Dano has already worked with a who’s-who of top directors, including Paul Thomas Anderson, Ang Lee, Spike Jonze, Rian Johnson, Steve McQueen and Denis Villeneuve. So it’s perhaps not surprising that he’s moving behind the camera next. His directorial debut (adapted with his real-life partner Zoe Kazan) is an adaptation of a novel by the great Richard Ford, a writer whose outstanding work has so far resisted screen adaptation. But Dano and Kazan have great taste, the excellent Oren Moverman is on board to produce, and they’ve assembled two tremendous actors to headline, with Dano’s “Prisoners” co-star Jake Gyllenhaal and Carey Mulligan playing the parents (and “The Visit” breakout Alex Oxenbould in the lead role).
Release Date: Probably at fall festivals, most likely TIFF.

scarlett-johansson59. “Rock That Body”
Director: Lucia Aniello
Cast: Scarlett Johansson, Kate McKinnon, Jillian Bell, Ilana Glazer, Zoe Kravitz
Synopsis: Five friends from college reunite when they rent a beach house in Miami for a wild bachelorette weekend that goes completely off the rails.
What You Need To Know: Now three seasons in, “Broad City” still stands as one of the freshest new comedy shows of recent years, and the show’s secret weapon might be Lucia Aniello, who directed and co-wrote a sizable chunk of the show. Now she’s making her feature debut with this comedy, co-written with Paul W. Downs (who plays Trey on the show) and it could be the big comedy sleeper of the summer. It sounds like a riff on “Very Bad Things,” but the script we read was closer to something like “Bridesmaids” in tone, and was really, really funny and well constructed. Aniello’s put a killer cast together, with ScarJo, who doesn’t get to do big-screen comedy enough, in the lead, and scene-stealers like McKinnon and Bell along for the ride, and it should look better than most comedies too — “Green Room” and “20th Century Women” DP Sean Porter is lensing.
Release Date: June 23rd, as welcome counter-programming to “Transformers 5

darkest-hour-gary-oldman58. “Darkest Hour”
Director: Joe Wright (“Atonement”)
Cast: Gary Oldman, Lily James, Ben Mendelsohn, John Hurt, Kristin Scott Thomas
Synopsis: Winston Churchill unexpectedly becomes Prime Minister, and must decide whether to pursue peace with Nazi Germany, or fight a war that might well be doomed.
What You Need To Know: Amazingly, until just recently, Gary Oldman had never been Oscar-nominated, let alone won one, until “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” saw him pick up a deserved nod five years ago. Could he finally take the trophy home in early 2018? He might well be the frontrunner at this point, given that he’s playing Winston Churchill under unrecognizably heavy make-up in this new drama from “Theory Of Everything” writer Anthony McCarten. It’d be easy to dismiss this as identikit Brit period drama, but Oldman’s casting, and the presence of Joe Wright in the director’s chair, definitely piques our interest — Wright shit the bed hard with “Pan,” but from his “Black Mirror” episode, looks to be back on course.
Release Date: November 24th — expect it at fall festivals first.

abdellatif-kechiche57. “Mektoub Is Mektoub”
Director: Abdellatif Kechiche (“Blue Is The Warmest Color”)
Cast: Unknown
Synopsis: A young screenwriter returns to his Mediterranean home town where he falls into a love triangle between a local woman and the wife of a movie producer who’s offered to finance his next film.
What You Need To Know: He was already respected among many cinephiles, but a Palme D’Or, awarded by a jury headed by Steven Spielberg, no less, for “Blue Is The Warmest Color” definitely saw Abdellatif Kechiche move up to the next level. It’s taken him four years to get his follow-up going — perhaps in part because of the complaints of his tyrannical nature by his ‘Blue’ stars — but he got underway on a shoot early in the fall on what appears to be another relationship drama. It’s based on a novel called “La Blessure, la vraie” by François Bégaudeau, a film critic for Cahiers du cinema and Playboy, but who you might know better as the co-writer and star of Laurent Cantet’s “The Class,” another Palme D’Or winner. Beyond that, not much more is known, including the cast, but we’ll be there.
Release Date: Cannes is surely the target, but it might have to be Venice given the later filming date.

SS_D67-20969.dng

56. “Red Sparrow”
Director: Francis Lawrence (“The Hunger Games: Catching Fire”)
Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Joel Edgerton
Synopsis: A Russian spy forced by her superiors to become a trained seductress is pitted against, and falls in love with, a CIA officer.
What You Need To Know: Given that 2017 will see the inauguration of a president who may well have been put into office thanks in part to the machination of Russian hackers, it feels appropriate that we’re getting a big sexy studio spy movie about the relationship between the modern United States and Putin’s Russia. Based on a best-seller by former CIA agent Jason Matthews, this was considered by David Fincher and Darren Aronofsky, but in the end will reteam Jennifer Lawrence with her “Hunger Games” director Francis Lawrence, and while that might seem like a downgrade, Lawrence is pretty undervalued as a filmmaker: his “Catching Fire” was by miles the best of those movies, and the problems with the third and fourth films were more about the source material than the execution. We’re always down for a smart, sophisticated spy movie, and this could definitely hit the spot, unless Putin decides to “The Interview” it, obviously.
Release Date: November 10th

benedict-cumberbatch-stuart_0955. ‘The Current War”
Director: Alfonso Gomez-Rejon (“Me & Earl & The Dying Girl”)
Cast: Benedict Cumberbatch, MIchael Shannon, Nicholas Hoult, Katherine Waterston, Sienna Miller
Synopsis: Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse compete to create a sustainable, safe electricity system and sell it to the public.
What You Need To Know: The weirdest subjects end up being the subject of those movie brinksmanship games that seem to happen every few years. Volcanos! Snow White! Truman Capote! And the latest seems to be the battle between underdog George Westinghouse and titan Thomas Edison in the race to literally electrify America. “Imitation Game” writer and director Graham Moore and Morten Tyldum are set to reteam for “The Last Days Of Night” starring, perhaps inevitably, Eddie Redmayne (that could yet make a 2017 date if its backers are bullish), but the first into production is “The Current War,” a widely acclaimed Black List script from a few years back. It’s the follow-up to his breakout “Me & Earl & The Dying Girl” for director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon, and he’s built up an enviable cast, with new Spider-Man Tom Holland joining the names above. If it’s just Cumberbatch being a genius dick again, we might pass, but hopefully there’ll be much more to this, especially with Shannon to play off him.
Release Date: None yet, but production begins next month, so expect this to be the Weinstein Company’s big awards play next year.

song-to-song-ryan-gosling-rooney-mara-michael-fassbender54. “Song To Song”
Director: Terrence Malick (“Tree Of Life”)
Cast: Ryan Gosling, Rooney Mara, Michael Fassbender, Cate Blanchett, Christian Bale
Synopsis: Two intersecting love triangles set against the music scene in Austin, Texas
What You Need To Know: We love Terrence Malick as much as the next person twirling around in a field, but all but the most zealous Malick-ites would surely concede that the words ‘returns’ and ‘diminishing’ are starting to come to mind with his work. While his work rate has amped up no end, with three movies in five years, “To The Wonder,” “Knight Of Cups” and even “Voyage Of Time” all sort of felt like variations on a theme established with “Tree Of Life,” and while we’re longing for him to try something else, that may not happen with “Weightless.” The film’s been in the can since 2012, shooting virtually back-to-back with ‘Knight,’ and is said to be something of companion piece. More in that vein would be kind of a bummer and we’re definitely more excited for his WW2-era “Radegund,” but we still live in hope that “Song To Song” could see the master back at its best.
Release Date: March 17th

spider-man-homecoming-tom-holland53. “Spider-Man: Homecoming”
Director: Jon Watts (“Cop Car”)
Cast: Tom Holland, Zendaya, Michael Keaton, Donald Glover, Marisa Tomei
Synopsis: Peter Parker must navigate the threat of the villainous Vulture with something just as terrifying: surviving high school.
What You Need To Know: After the sewage-filled train wreck of “The Amazing Spider-Man 2,” it felt like everyone could have done with a couple of decades off the web-slinger just to get rid of the stink. But then came Sony’s deal with Marvel Studios, and a positively delightful cameo in “Captain America: Civil War” that suggested that new Spidey Tom Holland could be the best Peter Parker yet. We’re not totally reassured on his first solo headline effort — director Jon Watts is untested even by Marvel standards and the “Horrible Bosses” duo wrote the script. But there’s more MCU in its DNA than Sony execs, this can only be a step up from the Andrew Garfield films, and the idea of a Spidey movie indebted to John Hughes is highly appealing. Robert Downey Jr is set to pop up as Tony Stark, while Michael Keaton is on lead villain duties, with Bokeem Woodbine, Michael Chernus and Logan Marshall-Green on back-up.
Release Date: July 7th

una-blackbird-rooney-mara-telluride52. “Mary Magdalene”
Director: Garth Davis (“Lion”)
Cast: Rooney Mara, Joaquin Phoenix, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Taharm Rahim, Hadas Yaron
Synopsis: The story of Mary Magdalene, often referred to as the thirteenth disciple, the first person to see Christ after his resurrection, and potentially a former prostitute.
What You Need To Know: Perhaps because of the backlash faced by movies like “The Last Temptation Of Christ,” or because of the opposite firestorm caused by “Passion Of The Christ,” too few serious filmmakers try to take on stories about Jesus and those around him, or other Biblical figures, despite the big bucks made by religious movies in recent years. But step in “Mary Magdalene,” a take on the most prominent woman in the gospels, and someone who’s been the focus of much debate over the years. “Lion” director Garth Davis is the man in charge here, and while we didn’t click to his breakthrough feature completely, he’s definitely a talent, and he’s brought along ace DP Greig Fraser from that film — the kind of photographer a film with a cast as superb as this deserves. Could this be the rare movie about religion and faith that has real artistry behind it too?
Release Date: Filmed in October, so look for it at the fall festivals before a likely Christmas release.

aki-kaurismaki51. “The Other Side Of Hope”
Director: Aki Kaurismaki (“Le Havre”)
Cast: Sakari Kuosmanen
Synopsis: A poker-playing restauranteur and former traveling salesman befriends a group of refugees newly arrived from Finland.
What You Need To Know: Being Finland’s greatest film director might sound like a backhanded compliment — on the surface, it just means that you’re better than Renny Harlin. But because Finland’s greatest filmmaker is Aki Kaurismaki, the master of dryly funny and deeply humane cinema, it should be taken as sincere. The veteran director’s been absent since six years ago, but was meant to shoot his new film, which like the last will look at the refugee situation in Europe, this fall. Assuming everything went to plan, that’s great news — any year with a new Kaurismaki should be a good one.
Release Date: The fall shoot means Cannes might be a bit soon, even if it is the director’s usual choice of premiere, so look for it at Venice.

About The Author

Related Articles

62 COMMENTS

  1. PTA’s TWBB was not set in the Depression-era, it was early the early 20th century, starting even before, in 1898, and ending before the Great Depression, in 1927. Any cinefile would know (though maybe not the specifics), and any idiot knows TGD was in the late 1920s through the 30s.

  2. It may not qualify for this film list, but it’s also worth remembering that Twin Peaks makes its return next year as well (and, if rumors are true, may see some form of theatrical release for selected episodes).

  3. “Lady Bird” is NOT Greta Gerwig’s directorial debut. She previously directed “Nights and Weekends”, which is one of the greatest movies of the last decade (at least according to me).

    • I would guess that they covered it in their list for 2016. A lot of international films that are likely to get US release dates next year were probably covered there.

  4. OK, the omission of Alfonso Cuaron’s next film is a HUGE mistake in so many ways. 1) It represents a hasty job of making this list 2) You guys had him at #12 in your 100 Best Director list, and said about his next film “going back to Mexico to shoot a smaller-scale Spanish-language drama, only makes us love him more”. ?????? 3) It’s freaking Alfonso Cuaron, and he’s making a Mexican-language film. How do you make a mistake like that?

    • Easy, by him pulling a totally moronic move like making a mexican movie in mexican language. if you want a movie watched, if you want to share some message with your film, it needs to be in ENGLISH, period. It is the de facto standard international language. . It gains the director nothing because it paints him as some douche bag trying to get labled as artistic and brilliant when in reality it just makes you an ignorant ass who doesnt care about his potential viewing audience. The film loses because no one is going to watch it except for hipster douchebags and mexicans who are just going to pirate it because they cant afford a burrito, let alone going to a movie. Us potential viewers lose big time because we miss out on something that might of been a great flick by a talented directed who fkced the pouch by putting it out in mexicali. Its one thing if your uneducated and dont speak english to make a foreign him. But if you not only know english, you have demonstrated you can make a phenomenal english language film,.your just being a moron at best to make a film in anything but english and at worse an arrogant asshat Who thinks making a film in such a way that he guarentees it wont bewatched by almost anyone is some sort of artistic statement instead of being a fool

  5. You need an editor. For starters, where is The Lost City of Z? You’re not eager to see it next year? It was one of the best reviewed films at the NYFF just a few weeks ago (at 87% on RT right now), ten years in the making, and directed by James Gray. How do you explain an oversight like that? Especially when this list has some real junk. And in what universe is Olivier Assayas considered a “smart young filmmaker”? Bad editing. Pattinson is working with lots of smart, young filmmakers, and I’m far more excited about seeing Damsel, from the Zellner brothers than anything that Assayas might put out. Idol’s Eye is still a pipe dream, Assayas doesn’t know if he can even get it together (according to his latest interview out of a film festival in Argentina). I’d even rather see Harmony Korine’s The Trap than Idol’s Eye.

      • Lost City of Z we’ve already seen and reviewed so that goes on another list which you’ll see soon.. Harmony Korine’s The Trap is currently on hold, fyi and he may not even make it- certainly not in 2017. So it’s actually the trap that’s a pipe dream whereas Idol’s Eye is actually going forward and has money and backers, etc.. The Cuaron was an omission that we rectified.

  6. So right about a Phoenix film always feeling like an event 🙂 The films don’t always come through for me, but he does. My favorite film of late is The Immigrant. His performance shook me to tears

    • Phoenix is on the roll this decade – The Master, Her, The Immigrant, Inherent Vice. Even when the final result is a little bit underwhelming (Irrational Man) he makes the movie interesting. And I agree about ‘The Immigrant’, excellent film and very underrated. Can’t wait for ‘Mary Magdalene’.

  7. I could not get on board with The Lobster. I guess it’s just the whole genre. I didn’t find it funny. But your right Farrell was great. He’s just gotten better and better these days. Raffey Cassidy is so adorable, little nervous about seeing her in a Yorgos film

  8. So appropriate to have a PTA/DDL reunion at #1. There Will Be Blood was brilliant and Day Lewis created one of the greatest characters ever, endlessly quotable. You look like a fffffool, dont you Tilford?

  9. Your opinions are insufferable. It seems like you hate pretty much everything, except the usual stuff internet geeks love (PTA etc.). You put Alien Covenant, the new Polanski and the new Allen movies on the list, but rip their recent work apart in the text. Makes no sense.

  10. WEIGHTLESS should be in the Top 20 at least. I completely understand why people aren’t enthusiastic about this project anymore but it deserves much more for that glorious cast alone. Best ensemble of the decade ? I think so !

    • We don’t know how many of them will even make the cut though and how many scenes they’ll get. Knight of Cups had a great cast too but some actors were basically a glorified cameo if you could even identify them to begin with.

      Really want a trailer already though.

      • I hope that at least main six (Gosling, Mara, Fassbender, Portman, Bale, Blanchett) are in the final cut and with as much screen time as possible. If Weightless premieres in Berlin (and it’s likely) then we can expect trailer this month (that was the case with Knight of Cups). Seriously, I’m tired of waiting for this movie.

  11. Wait, why was “Loving Vincent” not mentioned? There’s no chance that film is going to be anything other than a mindblowing spectacle of animation. Is it still that relatively unknown?

  12. Are you serious with that Polanski write up? Why are you joking about him sexually assaulting a minor? Is that really not that big a deal to you, do you think it shouldn’t cloud peoples views of his films??

    • Uh… what?

      I got the complete opposite reaction to that. It’s a joke, sure, but a very serious one. What possible reason would they have to mention it so many times if they felt it wasn’t a big deal or shouldn’t cloud peoples views of his films? I mean, I honestly can’t understand how you can have gotten that impression.

    • I’m a fairly loud feminist and even I found it kind of needless. The only person who deserves to hate him is his victim and she has forgiven him and wants to move on with her life. You can see something close to a filmed apology with the way Polanski handles TESS and DEATH AND THE MAIDEN.

  13. {though the themes of racism and police brutality will undoubtedly make it feel just as of-the-moment}……
    Oliver Dear: You neglected to add In Obama’s America to the bracketed statement.

  14. Alien Covenant at 91 is madness, for one I will never understand the Prometheus hate, that was an excellent movie and worthy prequel, the abortion scene is one of the best body horror scenes of all time, for another to get Scott back with the Xenomorphs is just about the most hype thing to happen in cinema for a while.

  15. Well gee, could you at least leave out the innuendo about Polanski? And you said the film stars his “partner”. Your journalistic skills are indeed lacking if you can’t IMDB him and find out Emmanuelle Seigner is not his partner, but his WIFE of 28 years. So please, next time do your actual research and find out that said “13 year-old” has been staunchly on his side for the past almost four decades. So again, you do yourself a great disservice when you don’t get the facts straight.

  16. I don’t know, Kingsman: The Golden Circle seems much more exciting than the rest of these movies (at least to me), but I forgot that it’s a shitty racist, sexist, and homophobic movie that nobody should like.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -spot_img
Stay Connected
0FansLike
19,300FollowersFollow
7,169FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles