10A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 9, 1999 New movies appear to brighten dull days of farl By Erin Podolsky Daily Arts Writer Days getting longer. Students getting drunker. Homework pile getting bigger. No, it's not another lame article on how to survive the back-to-school blues. It's the fall movie preview. As always, fall is the best time of year for the movie industry as the cold- er temperatures in most of the country send audiences running for their plush seats in movie houses and the Oscar race heats up to the boiling point. This year promises to be even better than the last with new offerings from power- house directors Martin Scorsese, Frank Darabont, Tim Burton and David Fincher after already seeing master- works from Stanley Kubrick and Jan De Bont. Just kidding about that last one. "Stir of Echoes" (Sept. 10)- Kevin Bacon sees dead people walking around like regular people. Wait, didn't this film already come out and make $200 million? We're wondering what twist could possibly be left. "Blue Streak" (Sept. 17) - Martin Lawrence takes a break from his busy heat exhaustion schedule to bury a dia- mond in an under-construction build- ing, only to discover years later that the building became a police station. Oops. "For Love of the Game" (Sept. 17) - Kevin Costner plus baseball equals good. Kevin Costner plus Kelly Preston equals bad. Wait for video so you can fast-forward through all of the relation- ship crap to the baseball scenes. "Jakob the Liar" (Sept. 24)- Robin Williams plays Roberto Benigni in this American remake of "Life is Beautiful." Well, okay, so it's not a straight remake -- there's a dash of Good Morning Vietnam" thrown in. Is Williams looking to be canonized or what? "Mumford" (Sept. 24) - A small- town shrink turns out not to be a shrink at all in this new comedy from Wolverine Lawrence Kasdan. Prepare for hijinks. "Molly"(Sept. 24)-Autistic savant Elizabeth Shue makes brother Aaron "nobody makes me cum like I do" Eckhart's life hell until she wakes up a genius one morning. Yeah, I guess the lease on the life of "Rain Man" is final- ly up. "American Beauty" (Oct. 1) - One of the most highly anticipated films of the fall and practically guaranteed a slew of Oscar noms, this dysfunctional suburbia-based family dramedy stars Kevin Spacey and Annette Bening as husband and wife. Let the games begin. "Drive Me Crazy" (Oct.1) - Five bucks says there's a Fine Young Cannibals tune stuck somewhere in this misguided romantic comedy between fashion plate Melissa Joan Hart and lost cause crusader Adrian Grenier. "Guinevere" (Oct. 1) - Luminous Sarah Polley plays not the mythical king's faithless wife but a young girl voluntarily caught up in a May- December romance with dough-faced Stephen Rea. "Mystery, Alaska" (Oct. 1) - Jack- of-all-trades David E. Kelley tries his hand at hockey. Let's hope there are no crocodiles up in the tundra. "Plunkett and MaCleane" (Oct. 1)- Trainspotters Robert Carlyle and Jonny Lee Miller reteam to wreak havoc as highwaymen in 18th Century England. Beware: it's directed by Jake Scott, yet another music video refugee (see also: "Stigmata," "Arlington Road" and fifty other hideously bad-yet-visually inven- tive movies released this year). "Three Kings" (Oct. 1) - Another one we're looking forward to. Writer/director David O. Russell ("Flirting with Disaster") looks to be delivering the laughter yet again in this slightly more serious effort about grave-robbing in the days following the Gulf War. Can't go wrong with a cast that includes Jack Foley, Dirk Diggler and Dougboy. "The Big Tease" (Oct. 8) - Formerly titled "J'Mapelle Crawford," co-writer Craig Ferguson stars as a hairdresser with a comic agenda. Watch out for split ends. "Lost Souls" (Oct. 8) - Winona Ryder plays a psychic chick who notices that Satan is coming to town to play with all of the good little kids. Rumor has it this will be running as a double-feature with "End of Days." On the plus side, this is the directorial debut of Oscar-winning cinematogra- pher Janusz Kaminski. "Random Hearts" (Oct. 8) - Harrison Ford attempts romance with Kristin Scott Thomas after both their spouses are killed in a plane crash. It's better on the rebound, right, folks? "Superstar" (Oct. 8)- Three words: Mary. Katherine. Gallagher. God bless Catholic schoolgirl plaid. "Fight Club" (Oct. 15) - Brad Pitt and Edward Norton bite and scratch their way out of white collar boredom at this adult version of latchkey. David Fincher adds another opus t his techno- ridden, invigorating ouvre. "Scream If You Know What I Did Last Summer" (Oct. 15) - Parody whose title says it all. "The Story of Us" (Oct. 15) - Bruce Willis follows up his success in "The Sixth Sense" with this romantic comedy. He and Michelle Pfeiffer are husband and wife stuck in a midlife cri- sis rut of habit. "The Straight Story" (Oct. 15) - David Lynch has finally done the impossible: submitted a film to the MPAA and been given a G rating. John Deere is sponsoring this tale of an old guy and his cross-country tractor trek. "Anywhere But Here" (Oct. 22) - Pulled from Fox's spring slate, mother Susan Sarandon drags daughter Natalie Portman to posh Beverly Hills so they can reinvent themselves. Ugh. "Bringing Out the Dead" (Oct. 22) - Can Nic Cage pull himself out of the morass of stale popcorn films he's made in the days since his Oscar win with the help of the greatest living American director? Let's hope this is vintage work from Martin Scorsese. "Crazy in Alabama" (Oct. 22) - Hasn't anybody ever told first-time director Antonio Banderas that his wife is a terrible actress? This syndrome also afflicts John Travolta and Kevin Bacon. It's kind of sad. "The Limey" (Oct. 22) - Steven Soderberghs's follow-up to the brilliant "Out of Sight" is a two-fisted tale of Brit terror as Terence Stamp gets into the revenge business with Lesley Ann Warren and Peter Fonda. "Being John Malkovich" (Oct. 29) - There could not possibly be a cooler movie premise this fall than a pup- peteer (John Cusack) who finds a por- tal into the mind of warped genius John Malkovich, who plays himself. "Music of the Heart" (Oct. 29) - Bad title alert. Formerly known as "Fifty Violins," Wes Craven's dramatic directing debut after such successes as the "Scream" franchise stars Meryl Streep as an inner city music teacher. Hankies will be handed out at the door. "Princess Mononoke" (Oct. 29) - One of the top-five grossing film's in Japanese history, this feature anime has been given an English script by the brilliant Neil Gaiman to match the bril- counesy of columba Pia Martin Lawrence plays a jewel thief who pretends to be a pizza delivery man in "Blue Streak." liant animation of Japanese maestro Hayao Miyazaki. Claire Danes, Minnie Driver, Gillian Anderson, Billy Crudup and others pull voice duties. "The Bone Collector" (Nov. 5) - Denzel Washington plays a wheelchair- bound forensic detective on the trail of a serial killer. Angelina Jolie plays his legs. Damn, they make a sexy couple. "The Insider" (Nov. 5) - Tick tuck tick tock tick tock. Tobacco whistle- blower Jeffrey Wigand (Russell Crowe) is caught between hell and a hard place with "60 Minutes." Any movie that can make Crowe look old and ugly has gut to be cool. Directed by Michael Mann, also starring Al Pacino. "The Messenger: Joan of Arc" (Nov. 5) - The trailer looks suspiciously like it stole its ideas from the "Elizabeth" poster campaign, but Luc Besson has done great work in the past, so who's to say this will suck? Now if they'd just get rid of that colon in the title. "Felicia's Journey" (Nov. 1'2) - The latest from Canada's finest son, Atom Egoyan. It doesn't matter what it's about, it's Egoyan. Mark your calendar. "Pokemon: The First Movie" (Nov. 12) - Uh, does this mean there's going to be another one? "Three to Tango" (Nov. 12) - Neve "mmmmnnnnghhhh" Cambell is caught in a love triangle. Too bad for her. "Liberty Heights" (Nov. 19) - Barry Levinson follows up his Baltimore-centric "Diner" and "Avalon," starring Adrien Brody, Joe Mantegna, and one-to-watch Ben Foster. Set in everyone's favorite decade, the 80s. Just kidding, it's the 1950s. "Sleepy Hollow" (Nov. 19) - Johnny Depp plays legend Ichabod Crane, Christopher Walken plays the headless horseman and Christina Ricci plays - wait, who cares who she plays. It's about time Tim Burton made a movie. "The World is not Enough" (Nov. 19)' - It might not be, but at least the world will be rid of Denise Richards after she plays Bond girl to secret agent Pierce Brosnan. "Anna and the King" (Nov. 24) - "The King and I" without the songs. Jodie Foster and Chow Yun-Fat dance around romance in long-ago Siam. "End of Days" (Nov. 24) - Do- gooder Arnold Schwarzenegger returns to the silver screen after a two and a half year absence to battle Satan. If he gets to say, "This is the end of days - for you," there's no telling how much money this will make. "Ride With the Devil" (Nov. 24) - Ang Lee, having conquered suburban ennui in the 1970s with "The Ice Storm," attacks the old West. Then again, this stars pop whiner Jewel. "Toy Story 2" (Nov. 24) - Supposedly this is better than the orig- inal. To infinity squared and beyond! "The End of the Affair" (Dec. 3) - Neil Jordon recovers from the disaster otherwise known as "In Dreams" with this gorgeously shot retelling of the Graham Greene novel. Ralph Fienne's derrier isn't bad, either. "The Cradle Will Rock" (Dec. 10) - Tim Robbins directs this period piece about Orson Welles' staging of a banned play. Hank Azaria, Vanessa Redgrave, Susan Sarandon, Cary Elwes and others star. "Galaxy Quest" (Dec. 10) - Actors in space this time instead of muppets. Sigourney Weaver plays a character named Tawny, so it can't be all bad. "Magnolia" (Dec. 10) - Paul Thomas Anderson's latest exotic pic- ture has been kept so secret that all we know is who's in it, and the only per- son on that list that matters is Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who is serendipi- tously playing a character named Phil. Takes place in the Valley over the course of two days. 0 "Scream 3" (Dec. 10) - Screar hard with a vengeance. "Stuart Little" (Dec. 10) - El White's tale of a boy and his mou, brother gets the big screen treatment I Geena Davis, little tyke Jonaths Lipnicki and the voice of Michael Fox star. "Bicentennial Man" (Dec. 17) - Robin Williams draws on his histo' Mork to play a menial androidW sprouts emotions a la Data from "St Trek." 'The Gicen Mile" (Dec. 17) - Fra Darabont's first film since"The Shawshar Redemption," is without question the m highly regarded and sure-shot to come e this fall. Add Michael Clark Duncan, Day Morse and Tom Hanks to the mix as there's no way this can go wrong. "The Cider House Rules" (Dec. 1 - Author John Irving's period O6 tion epic has certainly been changed its journey to the screen, but hopeful that won't drown out the light t1 emanates from a cast that includ' Tobey Maguire, Charlize Theron ar Paul Rudd. "Any Given Sunday' (Dec. 25) - In between drug busts, Oliver Stor actually makes movies. This footba saga stars Al Pacino, Dennis Quai twenty of their closest Hollywoosa and, of course, the great Frat Gifford. "Hanging Up" (Dec. 25) - Walt Matthau plays daddy to Meg Rya Diane Keaton and Lisa Kudroa Prepare for copious high-pitche shrieking. "Man on the Moon" (Dec. 25) Milos Forman directs Jim Carrey dearly departed funnyman Ant Kaufman. Here's a little ghost for 5t offering. "Next Friday" (Dec. 25)- Not tof confused with last Friday, or tw Fridays from now. "Reindeer Games" (Dec. 25)- Gary."sinus headache" Sinise and Be Affleck have shiny red noses just time for Christmas. Also being released for Oscar ct tention but not in time f Michiganders to see before the tua' the millennium: "Girl, InterruA "Angela's Ashes," "Snow Falling Cedars," and "The Talented M Ripley." 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