Top 30 Fall Films I Want to See
A new season; a new set of films to look forward to. Some of these films do not have trailers yet so the list was impacted as a result. I will have a synopsis for each film so anyone interested can learn what the film is about. I will also give a short reason for each.
30. Buried
Synopsis: Paul is a U.S. contractor working in Iraq. After an attack by a group of Iraqis he wakes to find he is buried alive inside a coffin. With only a lighter and a cell phone it's a race against time to escape this claustrophobic death trap.
I am not a Ryan Reynolds fan but I secretly want him to prove himself. The success of this entirely hinges on whether or not it can sustain the unique but potentially gimmicky format and whether Reynolds is able to carry the film entirely on his own. I really hope this is good.
29. The Tree of Life
A period piece centered around three boys in the 1950s. The eldest son (Hunter McCracken) of two characters (Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain) witnesses the loss of innocence.
Terence Malick’s long awaited next project has been pushed back for over a year now. Hopefully it will actually come out this December but apparently its release date is still up in the air. Malick’s involvement is the main reason I am excited about it. The cast includes Brad Pitt and Sean Penn which gives two more reasons to be interested.
28. Catfish
Filmmakers Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost document a story involving Ariel's brother, Nev, a 24-year-old New York-based photographer, and Abby, an 8-year-old girl from rural Michigan who contacts Nev via Facebook, asking for permission to make a painting from one of his photographs.
There is A LOT of buzz going around about this faux-documentary. Color me intrigued.
27. The Debt
Synopsis: In 1965, three young Israeli Mossad agents on a secret mission capture and kill a notorious Nazi war criminal. Now, thirty years later, a man claiming to be the Nazi has surfaced in Ukraine and one of the former agents must go back undercover to seek out the truth.
Is this going to be a good film? Probably not but I cannot help but look forward to it. I am a sucker for films that deal with the past catching up with the present so between the premise and the cast (Helen Mirren and Tom Wilkinson), I will be seeing this one.
26. Made in Dagenham
Synopsis: A dramatization of the 1968 strike at the Ford Dagenham car plant, where female workers walked out in protest against sexual discrimination.
I expect this to be pleasant but unremarkable British fare. I know exactly what to expect from it. Sally Hawkins is one of my 5 favorite working actresses today; the entire cast is worthy. Also, anything involving women’s rights issues (whether it be preachy or genuinely effective) is likely to tickle my fancy.
25. L’Illusionniste
Synopsis: Details the story of a dying breed of stage entertainer whose thunder is being stolen by emerging rock stars. Forced to accept increasingly obscure assignments in fringe theaters, garden parties and bars, he meets a young fan who changes his life forever.
Sylvain Chomet of The Triplets of Belleville’s latest. While I cannot claim to love Belleville, despite really liking it, his visuals are top form. Also, the film is based off of an unproduced script of Jacques Tati which does not exactly hurt.
24. Machete
Synopsis: After being betrayed by the organization who hired him, an ex-Federale launches a brutal rampage of revenge against his former boss.
I am a huge Grindhouse fan. This could be an utter disaster but I have a certain amount of faith in Rodriguez and success of failure this promises to be very entertaining either way.
23. All Good Things
Synopsis: All Good Things is a love story and murder mystery based on the most notorious unsolved murder case in New York history. The original screenplay uses newly discovered facts, court records and speculation as the foundation for an imaginative spellbinding story of family, obsession, love and loss.
Another film that has had a troubled road to release. My main reason for having this on the list is this is Andrew Jarecki’s (Capturing the Friedmans) first narrative feature.
22. Jack Goes Boating
Synopsis: A limo driver's blind date sparks a tale of love, betrayal, friendship, and grace centered around two working-class New York City couples.
Philip Seymour Hoffman directing and starring in a romance between him and Amy Ryan? No more needs to be said.
21. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
Synopsis: As the global economy teeters on the brink of disaster, a young Wall Street trader partners with disgraced former Wall Street corporate raider Gordon Gekko on a two-tiered mission: To alert the financial community to the coming doom, and to find out who was responsible for the death of the young trader's mentor.
At first this seemed ridiculous and I am far from a big Oliver Stone fan. I am curious about this though and it garnered positive reviews when it played at festivals.
20. The Tourist
Synopsis: Revolves around Frank, an American tourist visiting Italy to mend a broken heart. Elise is an extraordinary woman who deliberately crosses his path.
Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie in a film together? Off to a good start. It also looks like Depp is not working in the vein of his wacky Burton-fueled characters which at this point is a good sign. The winning factor? This is Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s follow up film to The Lives of Others.
19. The Fighter
Synopsis: A look at the early years of boxer "Irish" Micky Ward and his brother who helped train him before going pro in the mid 1980s.
A new David O. Russell film with Wahlberg and Bale that has also had some production problems (Darren Aronofsky was previously set to direct). Again; premise, director and cast. I can already see my reasons are becoming redundant.
18. Enter the Void
Synopsis: A drug-dealing teen is killed in Japan, after which he reappears as a ghost to watch over his sister.
I have not seen anything by Gasper Noe. I want to see Irreversible but…I need more time to work myself up to it. It seems worth it though. I have a feeling this is going to split people. The length along with the very specific style of it is going to get extreme reactions from folks. I am very much on board with this trippy looking flick.
17. Last Train Home
Synopsis: A family embarks on an annual tormenting journey along with 200 other million peasant workers to reunite with their distant family, and to revive their love and dignity as China soars as the world's next super power.
Cinema verite is my favorite type of documentary and between the attention the film has gotten thus far combined with my interest in the subject adds up to one of my most anticipated Fall films.
16. Miral
Synopsis: A drama centered on an orphaned Palestinian girl growing up in the wake of the first Arab-Israeli war who finds herself drawn into the conflict.
Two words: Julian Schnabel. I am not a Frieda Pinto fan but the trailer to this looks fantastic.
15. Jackass 3D
I normally hate stuff like this but between Spike Jonze being a co-creator, the sheer nonsense of it all and the morbid fascination that it brings out in me makes this one I will be seeing on opening night. It is not meant to function like other films and I also think the creativity going into some of these absurd stunts make seeing the end result such a treat. Also; seeing Bam Margera being smacked with a giant hand? Worth the price of admission alone (I HATE Bam Margera).
14. Freakonomics:
Synopsis: Some of the world's most innovative documentary filmmakers will explore the hidden side of everything.
I have been meaning to read this book for a while now. My main reasons for seeing this is the format. Not only do I want to learn about economics in a way that is literally shown to me but the idea of being able to pick apart how different documentarians work based on how they interpret the material and put it up on the screen seems ripe for analysis.
13. Waiting for “Superman”
Synopsis: Filmmaker Davis Guggenheim reminds us that education "statistics" have names: Anthony, Francisco, Bianca, Daisy, and Emily, whose stories make up the engrossing foundation of WAITING FOR SUPERMAN. As he follows a handful of promising kids through a system that inhibits, rather than encourages, academic growth, Guggenheim undertakes an exhaustive review of public education, surveying "drop-out factories" and "academic sinkholes," methodically dissecting the system and its seemingly intractable problems.
This is going to be the documentary that people talk about this year. Learning about the education system is important and the film’s preachy nature is going to be fully intended. This film does not want to teach. It wants to get people active. The entire point of the film is to get people motivated to make a difference. I cannot wait to see how it achieves this.
12. Tron: Legacy
Synopsis: A virtual-world worker looks to take down the Master Control Program.
I have never seen Tron. It has been at the top of my Netflix queue for a while (perpetually stuck on Very Long Wait). I had no interest in this franchise. Then I saw the trailer. In a matter of two minutes I went from indifferent to psyched.
11. The Way Back
Synopsis: A fact-based story centered on soldiers who escaped from a Siberian gulag in 1940.
Peter Weir is one of my favorite directors. This is his first film since Master and Commander: Far Side of the World.
10. Somewhere
Synopsis: A hard-living Hollywood actor re-examines his life after his 11-year-old daughter surprises him with a visit.
Sofia Coppola’s new film and while it looks like it treads little new ground, I don’t care.
9. Biutiful:
Synopsis: This is a story of a man in free fall. On the road to redemption, darkness lights his way. Connected with the afterlife, Uxbal is a tragic hero and father of two who's sensing the danger of death. He struggles with a tainted reality and a fate that works against him in order to forgive, for love, and forever.
Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu’s new film which received raves at Cannes including a Best Actor win for Javier Bardem.
8. Norwegian Wood
Synopsis: Upon hearing the song "Norwegian Wood," Toru (Matsuyama) remembers back to his life in the 1960s, when his friend Kizuki killed himself and he grew close to Naoko, Kizuki's girlfriend. As the two try, in very different ways, to contend with their grief, Toru forms a bond with another woman, Midori.
An adaptation of Haruki Murakami’s novel. I’ve been interested in reading his stuff for a while and this coming out will motivate me to start.
7. Blue Valentine
Synopsis: The film centers on a contempo married couple, charting their evolution over a span of years by cross-cutting between time periods.
This film has been 12 years in the making and has also gotten critics and festival-goers in awe with two reportedly incredible performances from Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams.
6. Another Year
Synopsis: A year in the lives of a couple and the friends they surround themselves with.
Mike Leigh’s new film. Enough said.
5. True Grit
Synopsis: A tough U.S. Marshal helps a stubborn young woman track down her father's murderer
The Coen Brothers reuniting with Jeff Bridges for a new adaptation of the novel previous made into the John Wayne film. Excitement does not quite begin to cover it.
4. The Social Network
Synopsis: A story about the founders of the social-networking website, Facebook.
David Fincher’s new film which looks rather incredible. Aaron Sorkin wrote the screenplay who sometimes is a bit much but him writing this project could be great. Trent Reznor is doing the score and even though I am not a fan, I am fascinated as to how these elements will all come together.
3. Never Let Me Go
Synopsis: As children, Ruth, Kathy and Tommy, spend their childhood at a seemingly idyllic English boarding school. As they grow into young adults, they find that they have to come to terms with the strength of the love they feel for each other, while preparing themselves for the haunting reality that awaits them.
An adaptation of Ishiguro’s novel, one of my all-time favorites, with a cast that basically seems hand-picked to suit my interests and a trailer that seems to have visually captured Ishiguro’s prose.
2. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1
This film franchise beginning to come to a close is very surreal. I have grown up with these books. I have re-read them five times over. I think the films have mostly been a great success and I cannot think of a film franchise that has been this consistent and managed to retain its entire cast outside of Richard Harris’ death and a few VERY minor changes. Every British actor alive has appeared in these films and we now welcome Bill Nighy among others to the fold this time around. The first trailer managed not only to excite HP fans but got people normally not interested in the series to admit the quality of the preview. It would have to take one hell of an anticipated project to match and beat my excitement over this….
1. Black Swan
Synopsis: A thriller that hones in on the relationship between a veteran ballet dancer and a rival.
…and then this trailer arrived on the scene. It seems as if someone sat down and picked out all of the elements I would look for in a film and came up with this. Films that question and deal with identity are some of my favorite subjects for exploration (Mulholland Drive, Persona, 3 Women, etc.). Putting aside the anticipation alone that comes with the knowledge of this being Darren Aronofsky’s next project; have you seen this trailer? Anyone who watches this trailer and has no reaction to it…I might not be able to relate to you as a fellow person. My mind melted as I watched this; Aronofsky seems to be using directors such as Cronenberg and Argento as influences. Oh and Clint Mansell is once again providing the score. Also; Winona Ryder being given a substantial role? And Vincent Cassel? The ballet? I can’t say anymore at this point. The more I type, the more I am upset it isn’t December 1st.
31. The Girl who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest
32. Carlos
33. Hereafter
34. Love and Other Drugs
35. The Town
36. Conviction
37. Mesrine: Public Enemy Number 1
38. The King’s Speech
39. How Do You Know?
40. Morning Glory
41. Welcome to the Rileys
42. Due Date
43. Howl
44. Night Catches Us
45. Making the Boys
46. A Woman, a Gun and a Noodle Shop
47. 127 Hours
48. Bruce Lee
49. The Tempest
50. Red Dawn
51. Devil
52. Wild Target
53. Hideaway
54. Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench
55. Monsters
56. Stone
57. The Next Three Days
58. I Love You Philip Morris
59. Nowhere Boy
60. Inside Job
61. It’s Kind of a Funny Story
62. You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger
63. Vision
64. The American
65. Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn Treader
66. RED
67. Chain Letter
68. Tamara Drewe
69. Secretariat
70. Gulliver’s Travels
71. The Winning Season
72. Fair Game
73. The Company Men
74. My Soul to Take
30. Buried
Synopsis: Paul is a U.S. contractor working in Iraq. After an attack by a group of Iraqis he wakes to find he is buried alive inside a coffin. With only a lighter and a cell phone it's a race against time to escape this claustrophobic death trap.
29. The Tree of Life
A period piece centered around three boys in the 1950s. The eldest son (Hunter McCracken) of two characters (Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain) witnesses the loss of innocence.
Terence Malick’s long awaited next project has been pushed back for over a year now. Hopefully it will actually come out this December but apparently its release date is still up in the air. Malick’s involvement is the main reason I am excited about it. The cast includes Brad Pitt and Sean Penn which gives two more reasons to be interested.
28. Catfish
Filmmakers Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost document a story involving Ariel's brother, Nev, a 24-year-old New York-based photographer, and Abby, an 8-year-old girl from rural Michigan who contacts Nev via Facebook, asking for permission to make a painting from one of his photographs.
There is A LOT of buzz going around about this faux-documentary. Color me intrigued.
27. The Debt
Synopsis: In 1965, three young Israeli Mossad agents on a secret mission capture and kill a notorious Nazi war criminal. Now, thirty years later, a man claiming to be the Nazi has surfaced in Ukraine and one of the former agents must go back undercover to seek out the truth.
Is this going to be a good film? Probably not but I cannot help but look forward to it. I am a sucker for films that deal with the past catching up with the present so between the premise and the cast (Helen Mirren and Tom Wilkinson), I will be seeing this one.
26. Made in Dagenham
Synopsis: A dramatization of the 1968 strike at the Ford Dagenham car plant, where female workers walked out in protest against sexual discrimination.
I expect this to be pleasant but unremarkable British fare. I know exactly what to expect from it. Sally Hawkins is one of my 5 favorite working actresses today; the entire cast is worthy. Also, anything involving women’s rights issues (whether it be preachy or genuinely effective) is likely to tickle my fancy.
25. L’Illusionniste
Synopsis: Details the story of a dying breed of stage entertainer whose thunder is being stolen by emerging rock stars. Forced to accept increasingly obscure assignments in fringe theaters, garden parties and bars, he meets a young fan who changes his life forever.
Sylvain Chomet of The Triplets of Belleville’s latest. While I cannot claim to love Belleville, despite really liking it, his visuals are top form. Also, the film is based off of an unproduced script of Jacques Tati which does not exactly hurt.
24. Machete
Synopsis: After being betrayed by the organization who hired him, an ex-Federale launches a brutal rampage of revenge against his former boss.
I am a huge Grindhouse fan. This could be an utter disaster but I have a certain amount of faith in Rodriguez and success of failure this promises to be very entertaining either way.
23. All Good Things
Synopsis: All Good Things is a love story and murder mystery based on the most notorious unsolved murder case in New York history. The original screenplay uses newly discovered facts, court records and speculation as the foundation for an imaginative spellbinding story of family, obsession, love and loss.
Another film that has had a troubled road to release. My main reason for having this on the list is this is Andrew Jarecki’s (Capturing the Friedmans) first narrative feature.
22. Jack Goes Boating
Synopsis: A limo driver's blind date sparks a tale of love, betrayal, friendship, and grace centered around two working-class New York City couples.
Philip Seymour Hoffman directing and starring in a romance between him and Amy Ryan? No more needs to be said.
21. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
Synopsis: As the global economy teeters on the brink of disaster, a young Wall Street trader partners with disgraced former Wall Street corporate raider Gordon Gekko on a two-tiered mission: To alert the financial community to the coming doom, and to find out who was responsible for the death of the young trader's mentor.
At first this seemed ridiculous and I am far from a big Oliver Stone fan. I am curious about this though and it garnered positive reviews when it played at festivals.
20. The Tourist
Synopsis: Revolves around Frank, an American tourist visiting Italy to mend a broken heart. Elise is an extraordinary woman who deliberately crosses his path.
Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie in a film together? Off to a good start. It also looks like Depp is not working in the vein of his wacky Burton-fueled characters which at this point is a good sign. The winning factor? This is Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s follow up film to The Lives of Others.
19. The Fighter
Synopsis: A look at the early years of boxer "Irish" Micky Ward and his brother who helped train him before going pro in the mid 1980s.
A new David O. Russell film with Wahlberg and Bale that has also had some production problems (Darren Aronofsky was previously set to direct). Again; premise, director and cast. I can already see my reasons are becoming redundant.
18. Enter the Void
Synopsis: A drug-dealing teen is killed in Japan, after which he reappears as a ghost to watch over his sister.
I have not seen anything by Gasper Noe. I want to see Irreversible but…I need more time to work myself up to it. It seems worth it though. I have a feeling this is going to split people. The length along with the very specific style of it is going to get extreme reactions from folks. I am very much on board with this trippy looking flick.
17. Last Train Home
Synopsis: A family embarks on an annual tormenting journey along with 200 other million peasant workers to reunite with their distant family, and to revive their love and dignity as China soars as the world's next super power.
Cinema verite is my favorite type of documentary and between the attention the film has gotten thus far combined with my interest in the subject adds up to one of my most anticipated Fall films.
16. Miral
Synopsis: A drama centered on an orphaned Palestinian girl growing up in the wake of the first Arab-Israeli war who finds herself drawn into the conflict.
Two words: Julian Schnabel. I am not a Frieda Pinto fan but the trailer to this looks fantastic.
15. Jackass 3D
I normally hate stuff like this but between Spike Jonze being a co-creator, the sheer nonsense of it all and the morbid fascination that it brings out in me makes this one I will be seeing on opening night. It is not meant to function like other films and I also think the creativity going into some of these absurd stunts make seeing the end result such a treat. Also; seeing Bam Margera being smacked with a giant hand? Worth the price of admission alone (I HATE Bam Margera).
14. Freakonomics:
Synopsis: Some of the world's most innovative documentary filmmakers will explore the hidden side of everything.
I have been meaning to read this book for a while now. My main reasons for seeing this is the format. Not only do I want to learn about economics in a way that is literally shown to me but the idea of being able to pick apart how different documentarians work based on how they interpret the material and put it up on the screen seems ripe for analysis.
13. Waiting for “Superman”
Synopsis: Filmmaker Davis Guggenheim reminds us that education "statistics" have names: Anthony, Francisco, Bianca, Daisy, and Emily, whose stories make up the engrossing foundation of WAITING FOR SUPERMAN. As he follows a handful of promising kids through a system that inhibits, rather than encourages, academic growth, Guggenheim undertakes an exhaustive review of public education, surveying "drop-out factories" and "academic sinkholes," methodically dissecting the system and its seemingly intractable problems.
This is going to be the documentary that people talk about this year. Learning about the education system is important and the film’s preachy nature is going to be fully intended. This film does not want to teach. It wants to get people active. The entire point of the film is to get people motivated to make a difference. I cannot wait to see how it achieves this.
12. Tron: Legacy
Synopsis: A virtual-world worker looks to take down the Master Control Program.
I have never seen Tron. It has been at the top of my Netflix queue for a while (perpetually stuck on Very Long Wait). I had no interest in this franchise. Then I saw the trailer. In a matter of two minutes I went from indifferent to psyched.
11. The Way Back
Synopsis: A fact-based story centered on soldiers who escaped from a Siberian gulag in 1940.
Peter Weir is one of my favorite directors. This is his first film since Master and Commander: Far Side of the World.
10. Somewhere
Synopsis: A hard-living Hollywood actor re-examines his life after his 11-year-old daughter surprises him with a visit.
Sofia Coppola’s new film and while it looks like it treads little new ground, I don’t care.
9. Biutiful:
Synopsis: This is a story of a man in free fall. On the road to redemption, darkness lights his way. Connected with the afterlife, Uxbal is a tragic hero and father of two who's sensing the danger of death. He struggles with a tainted reality and a fate that works against him in order to forgive, for love, and forever.
Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu’s new film which received raves at Cannes including a Best Actor win for Javier Bardem.
8. Norwegian Wood
Synopsis: Upon hearing the song "Norwegian Wood," Toru (Matsuyama) remembers back to his life in the 1960s, when his friend Kizuki killed himself and he grew close to Naoko, Kizuki's girlfriend. As the two try, in very different ways, to contend with their grief, Toru forms a bond with another woman, Midori.
An adaptation of Haruki Murakami’s novel. I’ve been interested in reading his stuff for a while and this coming out will motivate me to start.
7. Blue Valentine
Synopsis: The film centers on a contempo married couple, charting their evolution over a span of years by cross-cutting between time periods.
This film has been 12 years in the making and has also gotten critics and festival-goers in awe with two reportedly incredible performances from Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams.
6. Another Year
Synopsis: A year in the lives of a couple and the friends they surround themselves with.
Mike Leigh’s new film. Enough said.
5. True Grit
Synopsis: A tough U.S. Marshal helps a stubborn young woman track down her father's murderer
The Coen Brothers reuniting with Jeff Bridges for a new adaptation of the novel previous made into the John Wayne film. Excitement does not quite begin to cover it.
4. The Social Network
Synopsis: A story about the founders of the social-networking website, Facebook.
David Fincher’s new film which looks rather incredible. Aaron Sorkin wrote the screenplay who sometimes is a bit much but him writing this project could be great. Trent Reznor is doing the score and even though I am not a fan, I am fascinated as to how these elements will all come together.
3. Never Let Me Go
Synopsis: As children, Ruth, Kathy and Tommy, spend their childhood at a seemingly idyllic English boarding school. As they grow into young adults, they find that they have to come to terms with the strength of the love they feel for each other, while preparing themselves for the haunting reality that awaits them.
An adaptation of Ishiguro’s novel, one of my all-time favorites, with a cast that basically seems hand-picked to suit my interests and a trailer that seems to have visually captured Ishiguro’s prose.
2. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1
This film franchise beginning to come to a close is very surreal. I have grown up with these books. I have re-read them five times over. I think the films have mostly been a great success and I cannot think of a film franchise that has been this consistent and managed to retain its entire cast outside of Richard Harris’ death and a few VERY minor changes. Every British actor alive has appeared in these films and we now welcome Bill Nighy among others to the fold this time around. The first trailer managed not only to excite HP fans but got people normally not interested in the series to admit the quality of the preview. It would have to take one hell of an anticipated project to match and beat my excitement over this….
1. Black Swan
Synopsis: A thriller that hones in on the relationship between a veteran ballet dancer and a rival.
…and then this trailer arrived on the scene. It seems as if someone sat down and picked out all of the elements I would look for in a film and came up with this. Films that question and deal with identity are some of my favorite subjects for exploration (Mulholland Drive, Persona, 3 Women, etc.). Putting aside the anticipation alone that comes with the knowledge of this being Darren Aronofsky’s next project; have you seen this trailer? Anyone who watches this trailer and has no reaction to it…I might not be able to relate to you as a fellow person. My mind melted as I watched this; Aronofsky seems to be using directors such as Cronenberg and Argento as influences. Oh and Clint Mansell is once again providing the score. Also; Winona Ryder being given a substantial role? And Vincent Cassel? The ballet? I can’t say anymore at this point. The more I type, the more I am upset it isn’t December 1st.
31. The Girl who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest
32. Carlos
33. Hereafter
34. Love and Other Drugs
35. The Town
36. Conviction
37. Mesrine: Public Enemy Number 1
38. The King’s Speech
39. How Do You Know?
40. Morning Glory
41. Welcome to the Rileys
42. Due Date
43. Howl
44. Night Catches Us
45. Making the Boys
46. A Woman, a Gun and a Noodle Shop
47. 127 Hours
48. Bruce Lee
49. The Tempest
50. Red Dawn
51. Devil
52. Wild Target
53. Hideaway
54. Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench
55. Monsters
56. Stone
57. The Next Three Days
58. I Love You Philip Morris
59. Nowhere Boy
60. Inside Job
61. It’s Kind of a Funny Story
62. You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger
63. Vision
64. The American
65. Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn Treader
66. RED
67. Chain Letter
68. Tamara Drewe
69. Secretariat
70. Gulliver’s Travels
71. The Winning Season
72. Fair Game
73. The Company Men
74. My Soul to Take




















































Thoughts from a Cinephile
Thoughts from a TV Watcher
McHenryFilmBuff - I am really looking forward to The Town but I just felt more strongly about these other ones. It looks quite good. Also, Jon Hamm is in it which means I am obligated to see it either way!
Horrorphile
Catherine, I sometimes get the impression you breathe and consume film to live.