Friday, February 28, 2025

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The 100 Most Anticipated Films Of 2016

John Wick
70. “John Wick 2”
Director: Chad Stahelski (“John Wick”)
Cast: Keanu Reeves, Common, Bridget Moynahan, Ian McShane, John Leguizamo, Peter Stormare, Laurence Fishburne
Synopsis: Details are rather thin on the ground at the moment, just a kind of “continuing adventures of…” type deal.
What You Need To Know: All you really need to know to judge whether to be excited for “John Wick 2” is “John Wick” — the sequel brings back most of the original’s [surviving] cast and of course Keanu Reeves as the titular hitman. Chad Stahelski co-directed the first film with David Leitch, but he’ll be solo this time (the better for Leitch to concentrate on James McAvoy Cold War project “The Coldest City“). Sequels tend to have diminishing returns, especially those that come after a surprise sleeper action hit starring an actor on a bit of a downward slide (think of the Liam Neeson/”Taken” model), but we have faith that ex-stunt director Stahelski can bring the goods again. And anyway, if you’re going to “John Wick” films for story as opposed to slick gun stunts and cool noirish spectacle, you’re doing movies wrong.
Release Date: None yet and it’s supposedly still filming, so perhaps a similar October slot to the first one?

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69. “Christine”
Director: Antonio Campos (“Afterschool,” “Simon Killer”)
Cast: Rebecca Hall, Michael C. Hall, Maria Dizzia, Tracy Letts, J. Smith Cameron
Synopsis: The true story of Christine Chubbuck, a Florida news reporter who committed suicide live on air.
What You Need To Know: They might not have a catchy name like mumblecore, but the Borderline Films crew — “Martha Marcy May Marlene” helmer Sean Durkin, “James White” helmer Josh Mond, and this film’s director Campos, who all produce each other’s movies — have been one of the most interesting things to happen to American independent film in a long time, with every one of their distinctive movies packing a serious punch. The latest is “Christine,” which promises to be just as provocative as their previous pictures. Telling the strange, sad, “Network”-esque true story of Christine Chubbuck, this has Campos’s biggest name cast to date, with what promises to be a killer role for Rebecca Hall and “Dexter” star Michael C. Hall as her colleague and crush.
Release Date: Playing at Sundance later this month; hopefully a distributor will step in swiftly.

Captain America: Civil War
68. “Captain America: Civil War”
Director: Joe & Anthony Russo (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier”)
Cast: Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Chadwick Boseman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Holland
Synopsis: After an incident with the Avengers causes collateral damage, the world’s government tries to regulate the world’s superheroes, pitting Captain America against his old ally Iron Man.
What You Need To Know: It’s weird to say about a pair of movies that grossed a cumulative $2 billion, but it felt like the luster came off the Marvel golden goose a little bit last year: “Avengers: Age Of Ultron” was lower-grossing and significantly less liked than its predecessor, and “Ant-Man” sold fewer tickets domestically than any film in the franchise since “The Incredible Hulk.” Can “Civil War” — theoretically a third “Captain America,” but essentially a third Avengers pic, and the beginning of Phase Three of the Marvel project — put them back on top in a year where “Star Wars” and DC are competing for the attention? It’s laden with cast members, with Black Panther and Spider-Man entering the universe and Martin Freeman and Daniel Brühl squaring off against them. We were underwhelmed by that first trailer, which was a bit drab, but the Russos (who’ll go on to the two-part “Infinity War” after this) gave us one of the better Marvels to date with their last go-round with Cap.
Release Date: May 6th

Star Trek Beyond
67. “Star Trek Beyond”
Director: Justin Lin (“Fast Five,” “Fast & Furious 6”)
Cast: Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Simon Pegg, Zoe Saldana, Idris Elba
Synopsis: Finally underway on their mission to explore the final frontier, the crew of the USS Enterprise are stranded on a distant planet where they’re attacked by a fearsome new enemy.
What You Need To Know: With J.J. Abrams having moved on to another franchise beginning with ‘Star’ that we can’t quite recall right now, Kirk, Spock and co. have a new captain, with “Fast & Furious” helmer Justin Lin taking over the helm, and cast member Simon Pegg co-writing the script. We’ve been promised something closer in spirit to the original series, with distant planets and, per the trailer, something of a post-colonialist vibe, with Idris Elba buried under prosthetics as the bad guy, and “Kingsman” star Sofia Boutella,About Time” standout Lydia Wilson and “The Raid” actor Joe Taslim joining the cast. The Beastie Boys-scored trailer divided people, but to us, there was a pleasing “Galaxy Quest”-style vibe to it, and given that “Galaxy Quest” was the best “Star Trek” movie ever [ducks a hail of latex Spock ears], that can only be a good thing.
Release Date: July 22nd

Free State of Jones
66. “Free State Of Jones”
Director: Gary Ross (“Seabiscuit,” “The Hunger Games”)
Cast: Matthew McConaughey, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Mahershala Ali, Keri Russell, Brendan Gleeson
Synopsis: The true story of the Knight Company, a group of anti-slavery Confederate deserters who turned to the union side, and their leader Newton Knight’s romance with a freed slave.
What You Need To Know: Having launched a multi-billion dollar franchise back in 2012 with the first “Hunger Games” movie, Gary Ross had the kind of momentum that can get a passion project greenlit, and “Free State Of Jones” is the result. It’s sort of remarkable that the story of the Knight Company hasn’t been brought to the screen since 1948’s “Tap Roots” (and even that glossed over the inter-race romance elements), but Ross has a big name to lead it, with Matthew McConaughey, whose comeback wasn’t injured too badly by “Sea Of Trees” last year, in the lead role, and the great Gugu Mbatha-Raw as his future wife. Ross is somehow undervalued as a director, but in the current climate, will this be welcomed, or seen as another cinematic example of white-savior syndrome?
Release Date: May 13th

Little Men
65. “Little Men”
Director: Ira Sachs (“Keep The Lights On,” “Love Is Strange”)
Cast: Theo Taplitz, Michael Barbieri, Greg Kinnear, Jennifer Ehle, Paulina Garcia
Synopsis: A sensitive, artistic boy befriends a more extroverted kid at his grandfather’s funeral, but the friendship is put to the test when their parents become embroiled in a rent dispute.
What You Need To Know: Over time, director Ira Sachs has found an ever growing audience with his finely honed, nuanced movies: “Keep The Lights On” was a critical hit, and “Love Is Strange” even more so. His latest, premiering at Sundance later in the month, sees him return to NYC for another movie that looks to be compassionate and moving. Gentrification is the subject here (it was a subplot in “Love is Strange”), seen through the eyes of two young boys, but we’re not lacking in big-screen talent here, with Paulina Garcia, star of the great “Gloria,” making her English language debut, and Talia Shire and Alfred Molina joining Ehle, Kinnear and the two young newcomers. There’s always some risk involved at Sundance, but Sachs feels like one of the safest bets out there.
Release Date: Hits Sundance in a few weeks.

Finding Dory
64. “Finding Dory”
Director: Andrew Stanton (“Finding Nemo,” “Wall-E”) and Angus MacLane (“Toy Story Of Terror!”)
Cast: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Diane Keaton, Ty Burrell, Idris Elba
Synopsis: Six months after Nemo was found, short-memoried Dory remembers something about her lost family, and sets out with her friends to find them.
What You Need To Know: Pixar’s return to original movies had mixed success last year — “Inside Out” was one of their biggest critical and commercial successes, but “The Good Dinosaur” was probably the company’s first flop. “Finding Dory” shouldn’t have them sweating though: It’s the sequel, 13 years on, to one of their best-loved pictures. Marking Andrew Stanton’s first Pixar movie since “Wall-E” (and his hopeful bounceback from “John Carter”), this shifts focus to Ellen DeGeneres’ Memento-brained Dory, and looks to introduce a whole new school of characters, with Eugene Levy, Kaitlin Olson, Ed O’Neill and Dominic West also involved. We do worry that it might be going through the motions, but if it’s closer to “Toy Story 3” than “Monsters University” or “Cars 2,” we’ll be happy.
Release Date: June 17th

 The Lonely Island Movie
63. “Top Secret Untitled Lonely Island Movie”
Director: Akiva Schaffer (“The Watch”) and Jorma Taccone (“MacGruber”)
Cast: Andy Samberg, Akiva Schaffer, Jorma Taccone, Imogen Poots, Sarah Silverman
Synopsis: After his last album flops, a rapper reluctantly sets out to put his old boy band back together.
What You Need To Know: Few words send a shiver up the spine like the words ‘comedy-musician,’ but over several years at SNL, Lonely Island managed to pull it off, with several best-selling albums and a plethora of viral hits behind them. Separately, their big-screen careers haven’t quite taken off: Andy Samberg has found success in “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” but has faltered in theaters, Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone directed comedy flops “The Watch” and “MacGruber.” But together, in this Judd Apatow-produced pic, it could be different. Rumored to be called “Conner4Real,” and apparently mocking music docs like “Justin Bieber: Never Say Never,” it’s got a prime summer release date, and if nothing else, should have the best/funniest original soundtrack of the year. Fingers crossed for a Michael Bolton cameo.
Release Date: June 3rd

Christian Bale And Oscar Isaac, Promise
62. “The Promise”
Director: Terry George (“Some Mother’s Son,” “Hotel Rwanda”)
Cast: Christian Bale, Oscar Isaac, Charlotte Le Bon, James Cromwell, Jean Reno
Synopsis: A love triangle between an American journalist, a French woman and a medical student set against the backdrop of the last days of the Ottoman Empire and the 1915 Armenian Genocide.
What You Need To Know: Few people have had runs like Oscar Isaac recently: “Inside Llewyn Davis,” “A Most Violent Year,” “Ex Machina,” “Show Me A Hero” and, oh yeah, “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.” His next move, aside from blockbuster villainy in “X-Men: Apocalypse,” is sweeping period romance “The Promise,” which marks a return to directing for “Hotel Rwanda” helmer Terry George. Co-written with “Benjamin Button” pensmith Robin Swicord, it delves into a part of history that few have tackled cinematically, the genocide of as many as 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire, something that the Turkish government still refuses to actually call ‘genocide.’ Unlikely to get a run in Istanbul multiplexes, then, but George did a fine job with “Hotel Rwanda,” and he’s got a killer trio here, with Christian Bale and “The Walk” star Charlotte Le Bon joining Isaac.
Release Date: None yet — could be at Cannes, Venice, Telluride or TIFF.

Matthew McConaughey, Edgar Ramirez, Gold
61. “Gold”
Director: Stephen Gaghan (“Syriana”)
Cast: Matthew McConaughey, Edgar Ramirez, Bryce Dallas Howard, Corey Stoll, Toby Kebbell
Synopsis: Two down-on-their-luck men head out to find gold in the jungles of Borneo.
What You Need To Know: Though “Syriana” was moderately successful, it’s a decade since “Traffic” Oscar-winning screenwriter Stephen Gaghan directed a movie. But he’s back in 2016 with “Gold.” Michael Mann and Spike Lee were once attached to the project, penned by “Friday Night Lights” writer Patrick Massett and John Zinman, but it’ll be an interesting change of pace for Gaghan, seeming to be more of an action-adventure vibe. Matthew McConaughey (in a, um, striking bald set-up) and Edgar Ramirez topline; while the supporting cast includes ringers like Corey Stoll, Toby Kebbell,Veep” standout Timothy Simons, Stacy Keach and Bruce Greenwood; and Robert Elswit shot it, so it should look great, if nothing else. And hopefully there’ll be a lot more too.
Release Date: The Weinstein Company are distributing, but haven’t set a date yet. Late summer or early fall seem most likely.

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57 COMMENTS

  1. I know he\’s not on many "must-see" lists recently, but Rob Reiner\’s "LBJ" with Woody Harrelson as Johnson, the killing-it-in-everything Jennifer Jason Leigh and Richard Jenkins, and Bill Pullman is shaping up extremely well already.

  2. Although Niki Caro did direct "The Zookeeper\’s Wife," the script is an original by Angela Workman. Diane Ackerman\’s book was utilized for research but this is not a direct adaptation.

  3. Seriously Terrance Davies work is given an honorable mention while this list includes Batman vs. Superman? Really? Well I for one am a huge Davies fan and love Emily Dickenson so I can\’t wait for that to be released.

  4. Wow, Kristen Stewart\’s bitter fans embarassing themselves yet again. Pattinson doesn\’t even have a PR rep. When he gets coverage it\’s on merit, not because of a PR rep. Stewart on the other hand is the awards-thirsty "actress" who\’s had the same PR rep since she was 14. He\’s the on working with directors on the leading edge of filmmaking, Corbet, the Safdie brothers, Korine, as well as the masters like Cronenberg and Herzog. And his popularity just kills you, doesn\’t it? Stings that his films came in way ahead of hers on this list, does it? Stay pressed.

  5. Looks like Pattinson needs some boost with some other obscure arthouse BS sans boxoffice and playlist as usual is more than happy to offer the service. This dude is 90% PR and 10% acting in small supporting roles. Oh yes he\’s rich as well…lol

  6. Have been very excited about the upcoming Dr Strange until right now – when I saw the name "Derrickson " attached as Director. Does anything else need to be said ? Too bad !

  7. the only film that I really looking forward this year that you hadn\’t mentioned was Christopher Guest\’s Mascots; which will debut onNetflix in June

  8. What a breathtaking list.Looking forward this year\’s amazing films such as Silence,The Passengers,Billy Lynn and many more.Also an Oscar nod for Andrew Garfield.

  9. Yeah, please try to be professional and stop with the R-patz crap. It\’s extremely disrespectful and offensive, as he\’s on record as saying he hates it. I don\’t see you writing about J-Law or C-Blanc. It\’s 2016, way past time to bury that stupid abbreviation. Great to see his films represented here, and so high on the list. He\’s been making really smart choices in his career and building a filmography any actor his age would be proud of.

  10. There are a few films that I think could have found there ways onto this list in some fashion and I hope are still on track for a 2016 release. Gary Oldman\’s "The Flying Horse" (which he\’s directing) about Eadweard Muybridge, starring Ralph Fiennes as Muybridge, along with Benedict Cumberbatch, Amanda Seyfried, and Oldman. Garth Davis\’ "Lion" starring Dev Patel, Nicole Kidman, and Rooney Mara debuted some footage last year courtesy of The Weinstein Co. and seemed to be a hot release for them this coming year. Ed Zwick\’s "The American Can" starring Will Smith was scheduled for release this year and seemed like a strong vehicle for him. And also, Kathryn Bigelow\’s "The True American" with Tom Hardy and Alfonso Gomez-Rajon\’s "The Current War" with Benedict Cumberbatch & Jake Gyllenhaal could be surprise releases this fall/winter, as both films look primed to be awards contenders.

  11. Rosie, I don\’t care at all if audiences stayed away from Sils Maria, it\’s still a great movie. actually, it doesn\’t matter if you like it or not, Assayas filmography is great, he\’s a master, and I\’ll anticipate anything he does. I love most of the filmmakers you mentioned too, I just don\’t think anything that Michod does will be as interesting as anything those filmmakers can do.

  12. Was the lack of Okja an oversight, or are you not expecting it to be released this year? Would have expected to see that high up, given Bong\’s track record. And just a minor correction, but Johansson is also a returning figure to the Coens\’ world, having had one of her first roles in The Man Who Wasn\’t There.

  13. Rosie, half of your list are of filmmakers that audiences also stayed away in droves from (Michod, Gray, Denis, to the wonder). not exactly a criteria on which to care about film/filmakers.

    ps clouds roolz

  14. LOL, hard to believe anyone cares about a film by Assayas in a year with films by Michod, Gray, Denis, Korine, Dolan, Greengrass, Scorsese and Malick. Some critics like Sils Maria, audiences stayed away in droves. Let\’s not make him into more than what he is.

  15. \’\’Sci-fi with R-Patz\’\’?Really?How old are you Kiang and Lyttelton?Still playing your twiligth games?Grow up because you sound like tabloid reporters.I haven\’t seen you calling other actors from twilight insulting nicknames.

  16. I thought it was a possibility that Shane Carruth\’s The Modern Ocean would be done this year but I guess that yeah if you think about it, its probably not gonna coming out before 2017…Still hoping it does tough..

  17. hard to believe anyone cares about a David Michod movie in a year with new films by Spielberg, the Coens, Gray, Assayas and Linklater. I\’m also dreading Assassin\’s Creed, just hope it isn\’t as awful as Macbeth

  18. Also, I\’d think Sully would have a spot in the top 100 most anticipated. You could use it to replace the new one from the wildly overrated Xavier Dolan.

  19. Good list, although I\’d certainly put Everybody Wants Some and Personal Shopper in my top 10. Clouds of Sils Maria, by the way, was one of last year\’s best, and I\’m shocked that Doctor Strange and Assassin\’s Creed (yawn to both) are higher than PS.

  20. How many Matthew McConaughey movies were there on the first half of this list? He has four 2016 movies listed on IMDb so that sort of makes sense since the only thing he did last year was The Sea of Trees.

    Also about The Sea of Trees does anyone know what is happening to it, it hasn\’t been released anywhere since Cannes?

  21. The Free State of Jones: if you read the Wikipedia entry on Newton Knight, the Knight Company wasn\’t really anti-slavery (though they weren\’t supporters of it), they were anti-Confederacy and it was class warfare as much as racial: there was an infamous law which allowed slaveholders to be exempt from fighting in the Civil War which meant it was fought by poor white farmers (like the Knight Company) to protect the wealth of the slaveowning ruling class. So it isn\’t so much a \’white savior\’ movie as it is \’class struggle\’ with poor whites and blacks fighting together. The racial element is only really important because Newton Knight married a former slave, raised a family of biracial children whose descendants suffered the consequences of Jim Crow Mississippi.

  22. Have been very excited about the upcoming Dr Strange until right now – when I saw the name "Derrickson " attached as Director. Does anything else need to be said ? Too bad !

  23. How many Matthew McConaughey movies were there on the first half of this list? He has four 2016 movies listed on IMDb so that sort of makes sense since the only thing he did last year was The Sea of Trees.

    Also about The Sea of Trees does anyone know what is happening to it, it hasn’t been released anywhere since Cannes?

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