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Archive of posts filed under the 2010 September Movies category.

The Experiment

The Experiment

The film is a remake of the German psychological thriller Das Experiment directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel, which centered on a group of ordinary men recruited to take on the roles of guards and prisoners as part of a research study and examined how the effects of assigned roles, power and control affected the participants.

Brody portrays the de facto leader of the prisoners while Whitaker plays a guard who’s corrupted by the power he’s given.

Directed by: Paul Scheuring
Starring: Adrien Brody, Fisher Stevens, Forest Whitaker, Cam Gigandet, Clifton Collins Jr.
Screenplay by: Mario Giordano, Paul Scheuring
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Columbia Pictures (Sony)
Release Date: September 24th, 2010

You Again

You Again

No matter how old you are, you never get over high school. Successful PR pro Marni (Kristen Bell) heads home for her older brother’s (Jimmy Wolk) wedding and discovers that he’s marrying her high school arch nemesis (Odette Yustman), who’s conveniently forgotten all the rotten things she did so many years ago.

Then the bride’s jet-setting aunt (Sigourney Weaver) bursts in and Marni’s not-sojet-setting mom (Jamie Lee Curtis) comes face to face with her own high school rival. The claws come out and old wounds are opened in this crazy comedy about what happens when you’re reunited with the one person you’d like to forget.

Directed by: Andy Fickman
Starring: Kristen Bell, Sigourney Weaver, Betty White, Odette Yustman, Kristin Chenoweth, Jamie Lee Curtis
Screenplay by: Moe Jelline
MPAA Rating: PG for brief mild language and rude behavior.
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
Release Date: September 24th, 2010

Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole

Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole

Acclaimed filmmaker Zack Snyder makes his animation debut with the fantasy family adventure Guardians of Ga’Hoole, based on the beloved books by Kathryn Lasky. The film follows Soren, a young owl enthralled by his father’s epic stories of the Guardians of Ga’Hoole, a mythic band of winged warriors who had fought a great battle to save all of owlkind from the evil Pure Ones.

While Soren dreams of someday joining his heroes, his older brother, Kludd, scoffs at the notion, and yearns to hunt, fly and steal his father’s favor from his younger sibling. But Kludd’s jealousy has terrible consequences–causing both owlets to fall from their treetop home and right into the talons of the Pure Ones. Now it is up to Soren to make a daring escape with the help of other brave young owls.

Together they soar across the sea and through the mist to find the Great Tree, home of the legendary Guardians of Ga’Hoole–Soren’s only hope of defeating the Pure Ones and saving the owl kingdoms.

Directed by: Zack Snyder
Starring: Emilie de Ravin, Helen Mirren, Hugo Weaving, Geoffrey Rush, Abbie Cornish
Screenplay by: John Orloff, John Collee, Kathryn Lasky
MPAA Rating: PG for some sequences of scary action.
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Release Date: September 24th, 2010

You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger

You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger

Woody Allen’s “You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger” follows a pair of married couples, Alfie (Anthony Hopkins) and Helena (Gemma Jones), and their daughter Sally (Naomi Watts) and husband Roy (Josh Brolin), as their passions, ambitions, and anxieties lead them into trouble and out of their minds. After Alfie leaves Helena to pursue his lost youth and a free-spirited call girl named Charmaine (Lucy Punch), Helena abandons rationality and surrenders her life to the loopy advice of a charlatan fortune teller.

Unhappy in her marriage, Sally develops a crush on her handsome art gallery owner boss, Greg (Antonio Banderas), while Roy, a novelist nervously awaiting the response to his latest manuscript, becomes moonstruck over Dia (Freida Pinto), a mystery woman who catches his gaze through a nearby window. Despite these characters’ attempts to dodge their problems with pipe dreams and impracticable plans, their efforts lead only to heartache, irrationality, and perilous hot water. Taking its title from the prediction fortune tellers use to beguile their marks, “You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger,” illustrates with wry humor how easy it is for our illusions to make fools of us all.

Directed by: Woody Allen
Starring: Naomi Watts, Josh Brolin, Anthony Hopkins, Antonio Banderas, Freida Pinto
Screenplay by: Woody Allen
MPAA Rating: R for some language.
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Release Date: September 24th, 2010

Enter the Void

Enter the Void

One of the most anticipated cinematic events of the year, Gaspar Noe’s Enter the Void is a visionary thrill ride that’s riveted audiences at the Cannes, Toronto, Sundance and SXSW film festivals. At Cannes, Manohla Dargis of The New York Times called it an exceptional work… the work of an artist who’s trying to show us something we haven’t seen before.

The long-awaited follow up to his controversial Irreversible, Enter the Void is an immersive and mind-bending experience. Nathaniel Brown and Paz de la Huerta star in a visceral journey set against the thumping, neon club scene of Tokyo, which hurls the viewer into an astonishing trip through life, death, and the universally wonderful and horrible moments between.

Directed by: Gaspar Noé
Starring: Paz de la Huerta, Nathaniel Brown, Cyril Roy, Emily Alyn Lind, Jesse Kuhn
Screenplay by: Gaspar Noé
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: IFC Films
Release Date: September 24th, 2010

Alpha and Omega

Alpha and Omega

What makes for the ultimate road trip? Hitchhiking, truck stops, angry bears, prickly porcupines and a golfing goose with a duck caddy. Just ask Kate and Humphrey, two wolves who are trying to get home after being taken by park rangers and shipped halfway across the country.

Humphrey is an Omega wolf, whose days are about quick wit, snappy one-liners and hanging with his motley crew of fun-loving wolves and video-gaming squirrels. Kate is an Alpha: duty, discipline and sleek Lara Croft eye-popping moves fuel her fire. Humphrey’s motto – make ‘em laugh. Kate’s motto – I’m the boss. And they have a thousand miles to go.

Back home rival wolf packs are on the march and conflict is brewing. Only Kate and Humphrey can restore the peace. But first, they have to survive each other.

Directed by: Anthony Bell, Ben Gluck
Starring: Justin Long, Hayden Panettiere, Christina Ricci, Danny Glover, Dennis Hopper
Screenplay by: Chris Denk, Steve Moore
MPAA Rating: PG for rude humor and some mild action.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010
Studio: Lionsgate Films

Devil

Devil

A group of people, including a formerly alcoholic homicide detective (Messina), trapped in an elevator discover that one of them is the devil. Written and produced by M. Night Shyamalan.

Directed by: John Erick Dowdle, Drew Dowdle
Btarring: Chris Messina, Geoffrey Arend, Caroline Dhavernas, Jacob Vargas, Matt Craven
Screenplay by: Brian Nelson, M. Night Shyamalan
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for violence and disturbing images, thematic material and some language including sexual references.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010
Studio: Universal Pictures

Jack Goes Boating

Jack Goes Boating

Jack Goes Boating is a tale of love, betrayal, friendship and grace centered around two working-class New York City couples. The film stars John Ortiz (American Gangster), Daphne Rubin-Vega (Broadway’s “Rent”), Amy Ryan (Gone Baby Gone) and Philip Seymour Hoffman (Capote), with Hoffman making his feature directorial debut. Bob Glaudini (“A View From 151st Street”) adapted his acclaimed Off Broadway play for the screen.

Jack (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Connie (Amy Ryan) are two single people who on their own might continue to recede into the anonymous background of the city, but in each other begin to find the courage and desire to pursue their budding relationship. In contrast, the couple that introduced them, Clyde (John Ortiz) and Lucy (Daphne Rubin-Vega), are confronting unresolved issues in their marriage.

Jack is a limo driver with vague dreams of landing a job with the MTA and an obsession with reggae that has prompted him to begin a half-hearted attempt at growing dreadlocks. He spends most of his time hanging out with his best friend and fellow driver Clyde and Clyde’s wife Lucy.

The couple set Jack up with Connie, Lucy’s co-worker at a Brooklyn funeral home. Being with Connie inspires Jack to learn to cook, pursue a new career and take swimming lessons from Clyde so he can give Connie the romantic boat ride she dreams of. But as Jack and Connie cautiously circle commitment, Clyde and Lucy’s marriage begins to disintegrate. From there, we watch as each couple comes face to face with the inevitable path of their relationship.

Directed by: Philip Seymour Hoffman
Starring: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Ryan, John Ortiz, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Tom McCarthy, Elizabeth Rodriguez
Screenplay by: Bob Glaudini
MPAA Rating: R for language, drug use and some sexual content.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010
Studio: Overture Films

Never Let Me Go

Never Let Me Go

Kathy, Tommy and Ruth live in a world and a time that feel familiar to us, but are not quite like anything we know. They spend their childhood at Hailsham, a seemingly idyllic English boarding school. When they leave the shelter of the school and the terrible truth of their fate is revealed to them, they must also confront the deep feelings of love, jealousy and betrayal that threaten to pull them apart.

Directed by: Mark Romanek
Starring: Keira Knightley, Andrew Garfield, Carey Mulligan, Charlotte Rampling, Sally Hawkins
MPAA Rating: None.
Release Date: September 15th, 2010
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures

Easy A

Easy A

After a little white lie about losing her virginity gets out, a clean cut high school girl (Emma Stone) sees her life paralleling Hester Prynne’s in The Scarlet Letter, which she is currently studying in school – until she decides to use the rumor mill to advance her social and financial standing.

Easy A is an ensemble 2010 romantic comedy film written by Bert V. Royal and directed by Will Gluck. Partially inspired by the novel The Scarlet Letter, the film was shot at Screen Gems studios and in Ojai, California. Screen Gems distributes with an expected release on September 17, 2010.

Directed by: Will Gluck
Starring: Emma Stone, Stanley Tucci, Amanda Bynes, Cam Gigandet, Patricia Clarkson
Screenplay by: Bert V. Royal
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for mature thematic elements involving teen sexuality, language and some drug material.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010
Studio: Sony ScreenGems

Heartbreaker

HeartbreakerA terrifically entertaining new romantic comedy from first time director Pascal Chaumeil, may just be the answer to all of your summer blockbuster woes. Re-envigorating an often tiresome formula as only the French can, this effortlessly charming romp stars the suave Romain Duris (The Beat that My Heart Skipped) as Alex, a globe-trotting playboy ingenue with a business all his own – he’s hired by friends, family or jealous lovers to break up relationships. But when this professional casanova meets his toughest mark yet in the gorgeous Juliette (Vanessa Paradis), will his game finally change?

Charming, funny and effortlessly cool, Alex (Romain Duris) is a professional Don Juan who makes a living breaking up couples with his sister Mélanie (Julie Ferrier of Micmacs). Because business is slow, they go against their principles to break up only unhappy couples and agree to work for M. Van Der Bercq.

Alex has only one week to stop the wealthy man’s daughter Juliette (Vanessa Paradis) from marrying the man she is madly in love with. Alex is soon thrown into his own hilarious seduction “mission impossible” that risks him being caught by his ruthless personal creditors, angry exes and the beautiful and independent Juliette herself. But worst of all, will he discover to his own cost that when it comes to love, the perfect plan doesn’t exist?

Directed by: Pascal Chaumeil
Starring: Romain Duris, Vanessa Paradis, Julie Ferrier, François Damiens, Amandine Dewasmes
Screenplay by: Laurent Zeitoun, Jeremy Doner, Yohan Gromb
MPAA Rating: None.
Release Date: September 10th, 2010
Studio: IFC Films

The Romantics

The Romantics

Over the course of one raucous night at a seaside wedding seven close friends, all members of a tight, eclectic college clique, reconvene to watch two of their own tie the knot. Laura (Katie Holmes) is maid of honor to Lila (Anna Paquin), her golden girl best friend.

The two have long rivaled over the groom, Tom (Josh Duhamel). Friendships and alliances are tested and the love triangle comes to a head the night before the wedding, when the drunken friends frolic in the nearby surf and return to shore… without the groom.

Based on the heralded novel by producer, novelist, director Galt Niederhoffer, The Romantics is a Zeitgeist love story and generational comedy that breathes new life into the genre and recaptures the camaraderie of youth.

Laura and Lila were once as close as could be–college roommates at the center of a tight-knit group of friends. But the friendship has wilted a bit. Now, ten years after college, the friends–and the boyfriend they shared–have reunited for Lila’s wedding at her family’s seaside estate in Maine. Laura is reserved, single, and the only Jew in the group, while the bride, Lila, is a WASP-y moneyed golden girl, and the groom, Tom, a swim team star from a working class Catholic background, is a perfect paradox of confidence and confusion.

As the wedding draws near and wine flows faster, the disappointments and desires of the reuniting friends come quickly to the surface. A drunken game on the estate’s dock goes awry when the revelers are pulled out to sea by the current. When they swim back to shore, they are short by one—the groom. The search throws the group’s shifting allegiances into relief and results in new betrayals as well as confessions.

Directed by: Galt Niederhoffer
Starring: Katie Holmes, Anna Paquin, Josh Duhamel, Malin Akerman, Jeremy Strong
Screenplay by: Galt Niederhoffer
MPAA Rating: None.
Release Date: September 10th, 2010
Studio: Paramount Pictures