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The Space Between Us (July 29)
There is no shortage of adolescent romance to be found in you local metroplex, but The Space Between Us, formerly titled Out of This World
(I’m really glad they changed that), looks like something other than
your typical dystopian teen love triangle. People fall in love online
all the damn time, however, it’s a bit more complicated than living in
different states when a 16-year-old boy (Ender’s Game’s Asa Butterfield) from Mars falls in love with a young woman from Earth (Tomorrowland’s
Britt Robertson) and he sets out to meet her. The stakes are even
higher because he’s the first person born on Mars, and is totally secret
from the rest of the world. Gary Oldman and Carla Gugino add their
presence to the cast, and with a prime summer release date, someone
appears to have high hopes for this one.02
Star Wars: Rogue One (December 16)
Given the record-breaking success of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the next installment, Star Wars: Rogue One has some added pressure on its shoulders. It’s also the first of the standalone Star Wars Story films, which explore that far, far away galaxy outside of the scope of the Episode
films. This one has been described as both a heist film and a gritty
war movie, and centers around a group of Rebels who steal the plans for
the first Death Star that Luke Skywalker and company use to blow the
weapon out of the sky in A New Hope. Rogue One looks to deliver something quite different from the Star Wars films that we’re used to, but it sounds pretty damn awesome, and with as good as The Force Awakens was, we can’t wait to see what this movie has in store.03
Assassin’s Creed (Dec 21)
Video game movie adaptations have, at best, a spotty track record, but if any film has the potential to change that, it’s Assassin’s Creed.
When a bartender discovers he is the descendent of a long line of
assassins, he relives their memories to gain their knowledge and put
their skills to use in the present day battling a huge corporation.
Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard top line a great cast, and they
rejoin director Justin Kurzel, who they worked with on last year’s
adaptation of Macbeth. Something tells me this is going to be a very different movie, but Macbeth is a visually stunning film, and Assassin’s Creed should be beautiful to look at. And it’s got some balls going up against Rogue One, so the studio must have confidence in this one.04
Passengers (December 21)
Another big sci-fi film that’s opening dangerously close to the next Star Wars movie, Passengers
can do that sort of thing because it boasts two of the biggest stars in
the world in Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt in the lead. On a
spacecraft travelling to a distant planet they intend to colonize,
thousands of people sleep away the journey. One man accidentally wakes
up 60 years early, realizes he’s going to grow old and die alone with
just androids for company, and, in kind of a dick move, wakes up a
female passenger. Passengers has been bouncing around for years
with Keanu Reeves and a number of high-profile actresses attached, but
with Lawrence and Pratt, and The Imitation Game director Morten Tyldum at the helm, it finally got rolling, and with a huge payday for both stars.05
Star Trek Beyond (July 22)
Despite a sturdy box office haul and largely positive critical reviews, Star Trek Into Darkness takes a lot of heat, especially from fans, and Paramount hopes to change that narrative this summer with Star Trek Beyond.
And with the third chapter in the rebooted franchise, there are some
big changes in store. The core cast is more or less intact, but Fast & Furious’
Justin Lin took over the directing duties from J.J. Abrams, star Simon
Pegg was tapped to rewrite the script (which I assume means Scotty is
the captain now), and the story reportedly finds the crew of the
Enterprise in the midst of their traditional five-year mission instead
of hanging around Earth. The first trailer left a lot of people,
including some of the cast members, wanting, but with new additions like
Idris Elba playing the villain, and Sofia Boutella, there is a lot to
look forward to in Star Trek Beyond.06.
The Purge 3 (July 1)
Though The Purge movies often get lumped in with horror, there’s a dystopian sci-fi streak that informs the world of these films. The Purge: Anarchy
was a gritty throwback to exploitation titles of an earlier time, and I
dug it way more than the first, which was a low-budget, self-contained
home invasion yarn. We don’t know a ton about the plot of The Purge 3,
but there has been talk it revolves around a Presidential candidate who
opposes the Purge—the annual night where all crime, including murder,
is legal—who has been targeted for assassination. Frank Grillo’s grim,
stoic character, Sergeant, is coming back, and as this has been referred
to as The Purge: Beginnings, it sounds like it could be a
prequel and that we’ll learn some more about the near-mute anti-hero.
There is space for a variety of different social commentaries, and while
the first films touched on them, they’ve been generally unexplored, so
hopefully The Purge 3 will tackle some of that.07
Independence Day: Resurgence (June 24)
Sure, you won’t see Will Smith’s Stephen Hiller on screen—he’ll have reportedly died in the twenty years since Independence Day—but the franchise is soldiering on without him with Independence Day: Resurgence.
Now it’s up to a new generation to defeat the aliens, who, a few
decades after the fact, have returned. Sounds like that first visit was
just an advanced party. Fortunately, humanity used the recovered alien
tech to bolster our own defenses that cover the entire planet. Still,
nothing can prepare us for the coming onslaught, and it will be up to a
few brave, inventive men and women (you just know that Jeff Goldblum’s
David Levinson is going to be one of them) to save the day, again.08
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out Of The Shadows (June 3)
I wasn’t a huge fan of the latest Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
movie, but to be fair, that wasn’t the fault of the Turtles themselves.
When they’re actually on screen—my biggest problem was that the movie is
more about April O’Neil than the title characters—they managed, at
least for me, to capture spirit and energy of the quartet, despite the
fact that they look terrible. Hopefully Out of the Shadows
will rectify this and put Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello, and
Raphael front and center and leave April as the side character she
should be. And we’re also going to get to see fan favorite villains
Rocksteady and Bebop, and reportedly Krang, so if nothing else, TMNT 2 promises to be interesting in that regard.09
High-Rise
J.G. Ballard’s dystopian 1975 novel, High-Rise,
about a modern high-rise apartment complex, where every need is catered
to, but that devolves into a violent, vicious class war between floors,
may have found the perfect director to bring it to the screen in Ben
Wheatley. The man behind such genre-benders as Sightseers, Kill List, and A Field In England
has a sharp satiric eye, a twisted sense of humor, and a mean streak
that suits this material to a T. With a cast that features Tom
Hiddleston, Jeremy Irons, Sienna Miller, and Luke Evans, among others, High-Rise
got mixed reviews out of the Toronto International Film Festival last
year, but this is still something I’m wildly stoked about and can’t wait
to see for myself.10
Midnight Special (March 18)
Parents will do almost anything to keep their children safe, and that’s at the core of Jeff Nichols’ upcoming sci-fi thriller Midnight Special.
Roy’s (Michael Shannon) son, Alton (Jaeden Lieberher), has powers, the
kind of things that the likes of a government task force led by Adam
Driver and a cult fronted by Sam Shepard, would really like to use for
their own nefarious ends. Rather than hand him over, Roy and Alton head
out on the run to protect themselves, and possibly the fate of the
world. Midnight Special has been finished for a while and pushed back a couple times, but it will debut at SXSW 2016 and hit theaters shortly after
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