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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Richard Roeper

Fall Movie Preview 2023: Let’s spend the season with Napoleon, Poirot and a snowbound Meg Ryan

Joaquin Phoenix stars in the title role of “Napoleon,” opening Nov. 22. (Sony Pictures/Apple Original Films)

Talk about some heavy hitters in your lineup.

        The fall 2023 movie slate includes new films by a host of acclaimed and successful directors, including Martin Scorsese, Ridley Scott, David Fincher, Kenneth Branagh, Rebecca Miller, George C. Wolfe, David Yates and Alexander Payne. You want star power in front of the camera? We’ve got enough A-list stars to wear out a red carpet: Michelle Yeoh, Anne Hathaway, Marisa Tomei, Peter Dinklage, Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, Meg Ryan, Chris Evans, Emily Blunt, Andy Garcia, Michael Fassbender, Tilda Swinton, Jamie Foxx, Tommy Lee Jones, Colman Domingo, Joaquin Phoenix, to name just, well, to name many.

It’s a time of uncertainty in Hollywood, with virtually all work coming to a halt due to the ongoing strike situation. Just one ripple effect: “Dune Part 2” has been pushed back to 2024, in large part because stars Zendaya, Timothée Chalamet, Florence Pugh and Rebecca Ferguson would not be available for the marketing campaign. The repercussions of the strike will be felt in the months and years to come, but at this point, the slate of films coming to theaters between Labor Day and Thanksgiving looks to be one of the strongest of the 21st century.

Here are a dozen of my most anticipated fall releases, in chronological order of premiere date.

‘A Haunting in Venice’ (Sept. 15)

        Kenneth Branagh once again sports the Rollie Fingers mustache for his third go-round as Hercule Poirot in this Agatha Christie mystery with a supernatural twist. (If the film is faithful to the original source material, titled “Hallowe’en Party,” expect some particularly dark stuff.) As you’d expect, the cast is a fantastically eclectic mix that includes Tina Fey, Michelle Yeoh, Kelly Reilly, Kyle Allen — and in a particularly delightful twist (so to speak), Jamie Dornan is reunited with his “Belfast” son, Jude Hill.

‘She Came to Me’ (Oct. 6)

        Peter Dinklage is one of those actors who always finds a way to create an indelible character, and he seems well-suited to the role of a composer who is creatively stymied and sets out on a journey to find inspiration. The multi-generational plot reportedly touches on a number of love stories, featuring a cast that includes Anne Hathaway, Marisa Tomei and Brian d’Arcy James. Contemporary comedies about grown-ups remain a relatively rare thing these days. “She Came to Me” seems to fit that bill.

‘The Burial’ (Oct. 6)

Tommy Lee Jones and Jamie Foxx in “The Burial.” (Amazon Studios)

Another genre we love to see on the big screen: the good old-fashioned, underdog legal drama based on real events. “The Burial” checks all those boxes, with Jamie Foxx starring as Willie E. Gary, the attorney representing bankrupt funeral home director and former World War II ace pilot Jerry O’Keefe (Tommy Lee Jones) in a lawsuit against a corporation that was gobbling up funeral homes, cemeteries and insurance companies. Spoiler alert: Expect an “Erin Brockovich” type of outcome, complete with end titles telling us what happened to the real-life characters portrayed in the film.

‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ (Oct. 20)

No doubt motivated by the resounding worldwide success of “Oppenheimer,” Apple Studios announced last week that instead of a previously scheduled gradual rollout, Martin Scorsese’s epic will be released in movie theaters around the world simultaneously. Scorsese and acclaimed screenwriter Eric Roth (“Forrest Gump,” “The Insider,” “Munich,” “Dune”) are adapting David Grann’s book about the series of murders in the Osage Nation of 1920s Oklahoma. Lily Gladstone stars, along with a couple of longtime Scorsese collaborators: Robert De Niro (in his 10th film with Scorsese) and Leonardo Di Caprio (his sixth).

‘Pain Hustlers’ (Oct. 27)

Chris Evans (from left), Andy Garcia and Emily Blunt in “Pain Hustlers.” (Netflix)

On the heels of the Netflix series “Painkiller,” which included a story thread about a fictional young pharmaceutical sales hotshot peddling OxyContin as a miracle drug, here comes the Netflix original film “Pain Hustlers,” based on a New York Times magazine article and subsequent fictionalized book by Evan Hughes. Emily Blunt stars as a high school dropout who lands a job with a pharmaceutical start-up, with dire consequences. Chris Evans co-stars, and the director is … David Yates, best known for directing the final four films in the “Harry Potter” series and the three “Fantastic Beasts” movies. OK, David, we see you, changing it up!

‘What Happens Later’ (Nov. 3)

Speaking of genres and we ARE speaking of genres, Meg Ryan can handle just about any material, but she will forever have a place in our hearts for 1980s and 1990s rom-com classics such as “When Harry Met Sally …,” “Sleepless in Seattle” and “You’ve Got Mail.” Eight years after Ryan’s last substantial film role in the little-seen “Ithaca” (which she also directed), she stars in and directs “What Happens Later,” in which her character Willa is Reunited Cute with an ex (David Duchovny) when they’re stranded in the same airport during a snowstorm. Oh great, it’s YOU, might well turn into, Oh great, it was YOU!

‘The Holdovers’ (Nov. 3)

Some 18 years after director Alexander Payne and the great Paul Giamatti helped make Pinot Noir more popular than ever with “Sideways,” they reunite for the story of a not-particularly-popular teacher at a New England prep school in 1970 (it takes little imagination to picture Giamatti in THAT role!) who is stuck with the responsibility of looking after a handful of students who aren’t returning home for the holidays for various reasons.

‘Rustin’ (Nov. 3)

The esteemed theater and film director George C. Wolfe (“Angels in America,” “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom”) helms this biographical drama, with the brilliant Colman Domingo playing the gay civil rights activist Bayard Rustin. Chris Rock, Glynn Turman, CCH Pounder, Jeffrey Wright, Audra McDonald and Da’Vine Joy Randolph headline the outstanding supporting ensemble.

‘The Killer’ (Nov. 10)

David Fincher (“The Social Network,” “Seven,” “Fight Club,” “Zodiac”) is one of those rare directors whose films create such a buzz we get excited about the damn poster, let alone the trailer. Based on the French graphic novel series of the same name, “The Killer” stars the always compelling Michael Fassbender as an assassin who gets involved in an international manhunt after a hit goes sideways.

‘Maestro’ (Nov. 22)

        Bradley Cooper takes on hyphenate duties as director/co-writer/producer/star of this prestige period-piece project (say that three times fast) about the great American composer Leonard Bernstein and his wife, Felicia Montealegre, who will be played by the wonderful Carey Mulligan.

‘Wish’ (Nov. 22)

        That’s a ton of grown-up fare on our fall movie slate, but the extended Thanksgiving weekend also gives us “Wish,” the 62nd animated film from Walt Disney Pictures, with Oscar winner Ariana DeBose voicing Asha, a 17-year-old girl who wishes on a star (hey!) to save the Kingdom of Rosas, off the Iberian Peninsula. As far as I know, there have been no controversies about the casting, or the storyline, or any other elements of “Wish” prior to release. Come on, trolls, you’re sleeping on the job!

‘Napoleon’ (Nov. 22)

        Few directors deliver awesome spectacle on the level of Ridley Scott (“Alien,” “Blade Runner,” “Gladiator”), who at 85 shows no signs of downsizing his ambitions with the historical biopic starring Joaquin Phoenix as Napoleon Bonaparte and Vanessa Kirby as Empress Joséphine. The film will reportedly feature six full battle sequences that will no doubt fill every inch of the big screen with absorbing and bloody good action. According to those good-time folks at the MPAA, “ ‘Napoleon’ has been rated R for strong violence, some grisly images, sexual content and brief language.” No doubt it was the brief language that cemented that R label.

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