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Autumn peeves

Films with a full agenda
By PETER KEOUGH  |  September 11, 2008


VIDEO: The trailer for Zack and Miri Make a Porno

With pundits already reading political significance into summer blockbusters like The Dark Knight (“Is Batman a stand-in for George Bush? Discuss.”), the meatier movies of fall arrive not a moment too soon. This is an election year, after all, and those trying to escape the issues are just going to have to stay home and watch all the campaign ads on TV. These movies take the word “fall” seriously, tending toward the dark and apocalyptic, from Fernando Meirelles’s adaptation of José Saramago’s BLINDNESS to John Hillcoat’s rendition of Cormac McCarthy’s THE ROAD. And speaking of the Apocalypse: we’ll be getting War (Spike Lee’s MIRACLE AT SAINT ANNA), Pestilence (John Erick Dowdle’s QUARANTINE), and Death (Ricky Gervais’s GHOST TOWN), plus Bill Maher making an appearance as the Antichrist in Larry David’s RELIGULOUS.


VIDEO: The trailer for Choke

SEPTEMBER
Before getting into the heavier items on the agenda, let’s start with a tip of the hat to those who made those huge summer grosses possible: the FANBOYS (September 19). Kyle Newman directs this tale about a bunch of Star Wars fans who travel cross-country to break into the Skywalker Ranch so their terminally ill buddy can see Episode I — The Phantom Menace before he dies. If they’d really wanted to do the kid a favor, they’d have let him die in blissful ignorance. Nerd-of-the-moment Jay Baruchel stars.

These are the kids who a generation or two earlier would have been playing cowboys-and-Indians, like Viggo Mortensen and Ed Harris in the latter’s adaptation of Robert B. Parker’s novel APPALOOSA (September 19). They’re a couple of gunslingers out to clean up a Western town in thrall to an evil rancher until a pretty young widow comes between them. I can buy Jeremy Irons as the bad guy, but Renée Zellweger as the femme fatale?

Also on the escapist side is IGOR (September 19), an animated comedy about the hunchbacked assistant to an evil scientist with dreams of becoming an evil scientist himself. John Cusack takes a break from his politicking to provide his voice, along with John Cleese, Steve Buscemi, and Jay Leno. Tony Leondis makes his directorial debut.

The real world, however, makes a comeback in Neil LaBute’s LAKEVIEW TERRACE (September 19), in which an interracial couple’s marital bliss collides with the ill will of an unfriendly neighbor, an African-American cop. Samuel L. Jackson, Patrick Wilson, and Kerry Washington star. At least their antagonist is a living person, unlike the specters that haunt the hero of GHOST TOWN (September 19) — he’s plagued by demanding dead people after he recovers from a near-death experience. David Koepp directs; Ricky Gervais, Greg Kinnear, and Téa Leoni star.

So much darkness and dread and we haven’t even reached the autumn equinox. That arrives September 22, and Hollywood marks the occasion with releases whose titles sound like a checklist of stroke symptoms. In BLINDNESS (September 26), the title malady overwhelms a city; the victims are quarantined in a prison and a microcosmic allegory develops. Julianne Moore, Mark Ruffalo, and Gael García Bernal fumble in the dark. In first-time director Clark Gregg’s adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk’s CHOKE (September 26), a con man pays his mother’s hospital bills by pretending to choke to death. Who needs health insurance? And did I mention that the guy’s a recovering sex addict working in a colonial theme park? No fight club, though. Sam Rockwell and Anjelica Huston star.

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Related: Fall back, Smoke screens, Review: Public Enemies, More more >
  Topics: Features , Celebrity News, Entertainment, Sean Penn,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY PETER KEOUGH
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  •   REVIEW: BAD LIEUTENANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS  |  November 24, 2009
    Nicolas Cage is at his best in Bad Lieutenant
  •   REVIEW: THE ROAD  |  November 24, 2009
    John Hillcoat doesn't stray from Cormac McCarthy's Road For those who found the Coen Brothers' adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's No Country for Old Men too lighthearted, John Hillcoat's relentlessly faithful version of the author's post-apocalyptic Pulitzer-winning novel might hit the spot.
  •   INTERVIEW: NICOLAS CAGE  |  November 24, 2009
    "When people like to label any kind of performance as over the top, I suggest that if you were to go to the Guggenheim and look at a Francis Bacon, would you call that over the top?"
  •   REVIEW: FANTASTIC MR. FOX  |  November 25, 2009
    In The Royal Tenenbaums and The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, Wes Anderson excelled at telling adult stories with childlike whimsy. Telling children’s stories with adult whimsy is another matter.
  •   SWINE FEVER: AN EVENING WITH HUNTER S. THOMPSON  |  November 24, 2009
    Only Hunter S. Thompson could come up with a line like that; no one else had his knack for the near-Biblical proverb. Few writers outside of Madison Avenue or the New Testament can sum up a zeitgeist so cannily in a phrase.

 See all articles by: PETER KEOUGH

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