23) The Social Network
Directed by: David Fincher
Starring: Jesse Eisenberg and Justin Timberlake
When the concept for a movie about Facebook’s creators was announced I regarded it as a joke. No way was I even going to give it the time of day. Then, Aaron Sorkin, writer of The West Wing, began to pen the screenplay and I became curious. Shortly after, my curiosity turned to genuine intrigue when David Fincher attached himself to the project. Moreover, I’ve recently heard that the script was leaked and a number of bloggers have showered it with praise. So, now, I’m nothing less than incredibly excited to see just what the hell The Social Network – described by one of the aforementioned bloggers to be about ‘the darker side of Facebook’ - is going to be like.
22) Blue Valentine
Directed by: David Cianfrance
Starring: Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams
An art-house romance movie which looks at the slow break down of a marriage, Blue Valentine is supposed to boast two incredible performances from Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams. This alone makes the film worth seeing. It's set for a December release and, therefore, it seems like Gosling and Williams will both be strong contenders at next year's Oscars. Watch this space.
21) The Descendants
Directed by: Alexander Payne
Starring: George Clooney, Beau Bridges and Judy Greer
Alexander Payne captured middle-aged males as well as any psychological study ever could in this masterpiece Sideways. The film showed his immense talent for getting under the skin of his characters and developing them as the story unfolds. However, what makes Payne brilliant is that he does it all with an understated subtlety that very few directors achieve. Plus, he is able to mix comedy with drama equally as well as the legend that is Billy Wilder. The Descendants, his newest film will star George Clooney as a man who tries to reconnect with his daughters when his wife is involves in a boat accident.
20) The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
Directed by: Neils Arden Oplev
Starring: Lena Endre, Michael Nyqvist and Noomi Rapace
Based on the acclaimed novel, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo has already generated sublime reviews calling it exhilarating, tense, thought provoking and disturbing. This Swedish language thriller is a mystery story about a missing girl and the journalist and computer hacker that try to solve the puzzle. The film exposes the misogyny in Swedish culture and will keep you on the edge of your seat through all it's twists, turns and shocks.
19) Let Me In
Directed by Matt Reeves
Starring Kodi-Smit McPhee, Chloe Moretz and Richard Jenkins
An English language remake of the incredible Swedish vampire film Let The Right One In sounds like the most heartbreaking thing that could happen in cinema this year. After all, you just have to look at Hollywood's history of butchering brilliant foreign language films by recreating them for mainstream audiences. However, Matt Reeves, director of Cloverfield, has spoken out a number of time in regards to making the adaptation faithful yet one that still offers something new. He's certainly passionate about the film, but can we trust him and his cast which includes The Road's Kodi-Smit McPhee, the always stunning Richard Jenkins and the young up-and-coming starlet Chloe Moretz? Whether you're for it, against it, or sit on the fence in regards to a Let The Right One In remake, it's hard not to have a strong opinion, which will make Let Me In unmissable.
18) The Company Men
Directed by: John Welles
Starring: Ben Affleck, Kevin Costner, Chris Cooper, Tommy Lee Jones and Mario Bello
Taking one look at the poor cast, it's easy for one to think: "No, thanks!" But, hold on a minute, the film is in the hands of John Welles who wrote a number of episodes of The West Wing as well as the pilot of Shameless. So The Company Men, therefore, demands at least some attention. The film, which saw it's premiere at Sundance, will chronicle the effects that a round of corporate downsizing at a major company has on three men, their families and their communities.
17) The Ghost Writer
Directed by: Roman Polanski
Starring: Pierce Brosnan, Ewan McGreggor, Olivia Williams and Kim Cattrall
The last time Roman Polanski made a mystery film with political undertones he made Chinatown. Now, if that doesn’t get you excited I don’t know what does. Based on the Robert Harris novel, it tells the story of a ghost writer who uncovers a dangerous secret when writing a former Prime Minister’s memoirs. Opinions of Polanski himself aside, The Ghost Writer has received great reviews from those who have seen it at film festivals and it’s said to be tense, clever and a brilliant metaphor for the British government’s recent history of scandal. Still not your kind of thing? Well, consider this: it even makes Pierce Brosnan look good. Can you think of another director capable of that?
16) Shutter Island
Directed by: Martin Scorcese
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo, Ben Kingsley, Michelle Williams and Max Von Sydow.
I read the novel by Dennis Lehane about a missing criminally insane prisoner on an island some months ago and it gripped me like few other books ever have. However, one of the things I remember thinking as I was reading it was: “If any book should be made into a film it’s this one”. As well as being incredibly cinematic, it’s a mysterious, mind-bending and eerie ode to 1960s paranoia with a great story and a great cast of enigmatic characters. With master-director Scorcese behind the adaptation it’s only fair to assume that Shutter Island will be a brilliant thriller in the vain of The Shining.
15) The Killer Inside Me
Directed by: Michael Winterbottom
Starring: Casey Affleck, Kate Hudson and Jessica Alba
It’s release at Sundance caused a wave of controversy regarding its brutal depictions of sexual violence against women. But, well, isn’t sexual violence brutal in real life? Wouldn’t it be worse to glorify the violence by sanitizing it? Regardless of what you’re opinion is, The Killer Inside Me is a neo-noir that is likely to shock, stun and leave you in awe with it’s brutal subject matter and powerful character study of the causes and effects of insanity in a West Texas deputy sheriff. A Clockwork Orange for the new generation? We’ll see.
14) The Conspirator
Directed by: Robert Redford
Starring: Robin Wright Penn, James McAvoy, Justin Long, Tom Wilkinson and Evan Rachel Wood
Robert Redford hasn't really made a good film since Quiz Show in 1994. His newest film, though, will see the legendary film icon capture Robin Wright Penn as the woman charged as a co-conspirator to the murder of Abraham Lincoln. A drama set in post-civil war Washington, The Conspirator looks set to, first of all, have an amazing lead role from Robin Wright Penn, and second of all, be a welcome return to greatness for Redford. What I'm most looking forward to, however, is the performance from British actor Toby Kebbell who is magnificent in everything he appears in yet never gets any recognition. The Dead Man's Shoes and Control actor will play the role of John Wilkes Booth.
13) Betty Anne Waters
Directed by: Tony Goldwyn
Starring: Hilary Swank, Sam Rockwell, Juliette Lewis, Minnie Driver and Melissa Leo
Tony Goldwyn's newest film will see Hilary Swank as a working mother who puts herself through law school to defend her wrongfully convicted brother. Swank has won an Oscar before for her portrayal of hope and ambition in Million Dollar Baby so Betty Anne Waters is guaranteed to see her get a nod at next year's Academy Awards. Not only that, but Sam Rockwell, the single most underrated actor of the last two decades, is playing her brother. He's an actor who has the ability to make any picture worth a watch regardless of genre or role and, I pray, it will finally see him gain some recognition at awards season.
12) Buried
Directed by: Rodrigo Cortes
Starring: Ryan Reynolds
Ryan Reynolds wakes to find he is buried alive inside a coffin with only a lighter and a mobile phone and must race against time to escape this claustrophobic death trap. That’s just about all we know of this new thriller and, with such an amazing and unique premise, part of me doesn’t want to know any more and ruin the surprise. One thing we can be sure of though is that Buried is going to be a suspenseful, tense and emotional rollercoaster ride in claustrophobia and panic. As Cortes remarked before the premiere at Sundance where film receive stunning reviews: “Take a deep breathe, cause it’s the last one you will take for 90 minutes.”
11) Hereafter
Directed by Clint Eastwood
Starring Matt Damon and Bryce Dallas Howard
The supernatural genre and the Oscars don’t mix very well. The last time they did was a number of years ago for The Sixth Sense and it still didn’t win a single award. But with one of America’s greatest living directors in charge, with a script written by Peter Morgan who is famous for The Queen and Frost Nixon, and with Matt Damon in the leading role, this one is sure to catch the Academy’s eye as well as becoming a huge success. Whether it will be good or not is a different matter, but with a trio like that it’s hard not to expect something stunning.
10) The American
Directed by: Anton Corbijn
Starring: George Clooney
The story of a hired assassin hiding out in a foreign location and waiting for his final job is one that’s, well, let’s be honest, become a little clichéd over the last decade or two. But The American is certainly intriguing nonetheless and the reason why is simple: Anton Corbijn. The director of Control showed in his feature length debut that he is incredible at capturing the emotions of his characters, creating a haunting atmosphere, and telling honest, human stories. Let’s hope The American is no different. The gorgeous set photographs from Italy and Sweden already seem to suggest it’s a lock for cinematography awards at the end of the year and let’s not ignore the fact that it stars Hollywood’s biggest leading man George Clooney. Watch this space because The American could be something wonderful.
9) Somewhere
Directed by: Sofia Coppola
Starring: Stephen Dorff, Benicio Del Toro, Michelle Monaghan and Elle Fanning
Lost In Translation is nothing short of a masterpiece. It's one of the single most atmospheric and quietly touching movies that I've ever seen. However, Sofia Coppola's following film, Marie Antoinette, was poorly received by both viewers and critics alike. But she's back after four years with Somewhere, the story of a hard living actor who is forced to re-examine his life when his daughter arrives on a visit. Very little can be known about the film at such an early stage but if this is a return to form for the daughter of auteur Francis Ford Coppola then I will certainly be there to see it on opening night.
08) Miral
Directed by: Julian Schanabel
Starring: Hiam Abbass, Willem Dafoe and Frieda Pinto
The story of a man’s effort to establish an orphanage in Jerusalem following the creation of the state of Israel. It seems like a fascinating concept and it even stars Hiam Abbass who broke through with a heartbreaking role in The Visitor two years ago. But even if it sounded like the most pointless, dull, terrible story ever conceived in cinematic history and starred Nicholas Cage and Hilary Duff, I’d still anticipate it with child-like excitement for one reason alone: it's directed Julian Schnabel who made The Diving Bell And The Butterfly, arguably one of the most beautiful films ever committed to celluloid. If it’s anywhere close to the beauty of that life-affirming picture then Miral is a definitely going to be one my favourite films of the year.
07) Black Swan
Directed by: Darren Aronofsky
Starring: Nathalie Portman, Mila Cunis, Winona Ryder and Vincent Cassel
I’m still undecided about what to think of Darren Aronofsky. While I found Requiem For A Dream and The Fountain to be pretentious trash, I loved Pi and think The Wrestler will, in years to come, be regarded as a classic film. But regardless of my split opinion on the director’s body of work, I can’t help but think Black Swan is going to be stunning. The story will study the relationship between a veteran ballet dancer and her rival - yes, that’s right, it’s a ballet thriller - and will touch on supernatural and sexual undertones. Could Black Swan be to this decade what Mulholland Drive was to the noughties? Hmm.
06) The King’s Speech
Directed by: Tom Hooper
Starring: Colin Firth, Helena Bohnam Carter, Guy Pearce, Geoffrey Rush and Michael Gambon
Not only has Tom Hooper, who did an admirable job with The Damned United, assembled one of the best British casts in several years for his newest film; he has also developed a concept that sounds absolutely fascinating. An interesting take on the usual ‘monarchy’ genre - as it focusses on King George VI's struggle to fight his speech difficulties - The King’s Speech looks set to be a brilliant picture. Colin Firth, who blossomed into a stunning actor in last years criminally underrated A Single Man, has seemingly landed himself another wonderful role as the aforementioned king. It’s sure to be a contender for the Oscar’s this time next year and it’ll be one not to miss.
05) Selma
Directed by Lee Daniels
Starring Hugh Jackman and David Oyelowo
2009 saw the very first woman win an Oscar for Best Director. Could 2010 see the award go to an African American for the first time? It certainly looks hopeful with Precious director Lee Daniels onboard for the cinematic look at the civil rights marches in the 1960s that would change America forever. With the number of historical stories coming to screen lately, it was only a matter of when the story would hit screens. Yet, still, it’s an ambitious feat for the director and especially for little-known actor David Oyelowo who will be playing Martin Luther King. But I remain optimistic that Selma could be one of the best films of 2010.
04) Inception
Directed by: Christopher Nolan
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen Page, Cillian Murphy and Joseph Gordon-Levvitt
A science fiction film set with in the architecture of the mind? What the hell does that even mean? Whatever it means, Christopher Nolan is going to unleash another groundbreaking blockbuster this summer with his film Inception. Whether it will be as good as The Dark Knight or not is a matter we can dispute all day long, but we are guaranteed to be in safe hands with the British director who has before created Memento and The Prestige. Expect to have your mind blown this July.
03) True Grit
Directed by: Joel Coen and Ethan Coen
Starring: Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon and Josh Brolin
Whenever the Coen brothers announce they are making new movie, even if it’s simply just the title, it immediately becomes one of my most anticipated released. The thought of the Coen brothers making a western raises my eyebrows just that little bit higher. But the thought of that western being a remake of True Grit starring Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon and Josh Brolin pretty much makes their upcoming release an absolute must see. Promising to be closer to the book which is apparently brutal, dark and full of black comedy, True Grit sounds like it could be a welcome return to greatness for the Coen brothers after the disappointing A Serious Man and Burn After Reading.
02) 127 Hours
Directed by: Danny Boyle
Starring: James Franco
You can always count on Danny Boyle to throw a curveball; he’s made a horror film with 28 Days Later, a kids film with Millions, a comedy with Life Less Ordinary, a sci-fi with Sunshine and won an Oscar for his epic fantasy drama Slumdog Millionaire. So what does he do next? He’s filming the story of a mountaineer crushed under a rock for 127 hours. Early reports even suggest that almost an hour of the picture will be, in the vain of There Will Be Blood and 2001: A Space Odyssey, without dialogue for the opening act of the film. Moreover, it will see Boyle and Slumdog writer Simon Beufoy reunited again. It’s another dramatic change of direction for Mr. Boyle and one that I’m ecstatic to experience.
01) The Tree Of Life
Directed by: Terrence Malick
Starring: Sean Penn and Brad Pitt
Because Terrence Malick spends 5 to 10 years perfecting every movie he makes, it’s not so much a matter of whether one of his films will be brilliant or not, it’s more a matter of just how brilliant it’s going to be. Every frame is like a paining, every line is thought provoking and every expression from his actors is so full of depth and emotion. His movies are visual poetry; always so powerful and breathtaking and never conforming to what is custom or clichéd in cinema. The Thin Red Line, Days Of Heaven and Badlands are all in my list of favourite films of all time and The New World is quite likely to place there too after some repeated viewings. The Tree Of Life, however, seems to be the film Malick has always wanted to create having been two decades in the making. Therefore, there is every possibility that it could be his best yet, which would, in turn, place it among the top 20 films ever made. "Anticipation" can’t even begin to describe how excited I am for The Tree Of Life.
2 comments:
where's Another Year? This list makes no sense. ;)
- Jack Moulton
Hello there. I have just one problem with this post...your Pierce Brosnan comment..pfft haha
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