Each winter gives way to spring, to hope eternal, to new movies and TV shows to watch while ignoring the fresh flowers and summer breezes and changing foliage of the unforgiving outdoors. And looking at the upcoming seasonâs release schedule, thereâs no reason to think that 2017 wonât deliver wonders for our eyes and ears. From old favorites (HBOâs âGame of Thrones,â Universalâs âThe Fate of the Furiousâ) to shiny new confections (Jordan Peeleâs âGet Out,â the CWâs âRiverdaleâ), the year to come does what all new years do: dangle promise before us, daring us to reach for it.
Here are the movies and television shows that the L.A. Timesâ Calendar staff are most excited to see in 2017. We donât know if any of them will be any good, but we canât wait to find out.
(Reminder: Release and premiere dates subject to change.)
Movie preview: Films opening through April 21
Below are the films opening theatrically through April 21. Release dates and other details, as compiled by Kevin Crust, are subject to change. Sadly, âAttack of the Lederhosen Zombiesâ (Jan. 13) and âMy Entire High School is Sinking Into the Seaâ (2017 TBA) fall outside of this window
Jan. 20
Alone in Berlin
After their son is killed in World War II, a middle-aged German couple become activists spreading an anti-Nazi message across the city via postcards. With Emma Thompson, Brendan Gleeson, Daniel BrĂźhl. Written and directed by Vincent Perez, based on the novel âEvery Man Dies Aloneâ by Hans Fallada. IFC Films
Antarctica: Ice and Sky
French glaciologist Claude Lorius, whose work provided evidence of man-made global climate change, is profiled in this documentary. Directed by Luc Jacquet. Music Box Films
Detour
A overly trusting law student allows a violent couple to play on his suspicions that his stepfather arranged the car crash that left his mother in a coma. With Tye Sheridan, Stephen Moyer, Emory Cohen, Bel Powley. Written and directed by Christopher Smith. Magnet Releasing
The Founder
Michael Keaton stars as McDonaldâs impresario Ray Kroc, who turned a Southern California burger joint into a billion-dollar business. With Nick Offerman, Linda Cardellini. Written by Robert D. Siegel. Directed by John Lee Hancock. Weinstein Co.
The Red Turtle
Stranded on an island with turtles, crabs and birds, a man experiences the milestones of being human in this silent animated film. Directed by Michael Dudok de Wit. Sony Pictures Classics
Split
A man with 23 distinct personalties struggles with an emerging 24th that threatens to dominate the others. With James McAvoy, Anya Taylor-Joy, Betty Buckley, Jessica Sula, Haley Lu Richardson. Written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan. Universal Pictures
Staying Vertical
A carefree filmmaker becomes a single father after he is seduced by a bohemian shepherdess. With Damien Bonnard, India Hair, Raphäel ThiÊry. Written and directed by Alain Guiraudie. Strand Releasing
Trespass Against Us
The patriarch of a British crime family stops at nothing to keep his son in line when he begins thinking of another way of life for his own family. With Michael Fassbender, Brendan Gleeson, Lyndsey Marshall, Killian Scott, Rory Kinnear, Sean Harris. Written by Alastair Siddons. Directed by Adam Smith. A24
Worlds Apart
Three foreigners each find love with a Greek in this triptych set against the socio-economic turmoil of contemporary Greece. With J. K. Simmons, Christopher Papakaliatis (as Christoforos Papakaliatis), Andrea OsvĂĄrt. Written and Directed by Christopher Papakaliatis. Cinema Libre Studio
XXX: The Return of Xander Cage
Vin Diesel returns for his third outing as a former extreme sports star turned government agent embroiled in a global conspiracy. With Donnie Yen, Toni Collette, Samuel L. Jackson. Written by F. Scott Frazier, based on characters created by Rich Wilkes. Directed by D.J. Caruso. Paramount Pictures
Also: The Axe Murders of Villisca Horror. IFC Midnight ⌠Bakery in Brooklyn Comedy. Gravitas Ventures ⌠Doobious Sources Comedy. Gravitas Ventures ⌠My Father, Die Thriller. FilmRise ⌠Sailor Moon the Movie R Animated. Eleven Arts âŚSaving Banksy Documentary. Parade Deck Films
Jan. 27
A Dogâs Purpose
The meaning of life is explored through one pooch and his humans. With Britt Robertson, KJ Apa, John Ortiz, Dennis Quaid, Josh Gad. Written by W. Bruce Cameron, Cathryn Michon, Audrey Wells, Maya Forbes and Wally Wolodarsky; based on the novel by Cameron. Directed by Lasse HallstrĂśm. Universal Pictures
Fall
Michael Murphy portrays an elderly Roman Catholic priest whose life is shaken by a disturbing visit from the past. With Suzanne Clement. Written and directed by Terrance Odette. Breaking Glass Pictures
Gold
Matthew McConaughey plays a prospector who teams with a geologist to hunt for treasure in the untamed jungles of Indonesia. With Bryce Dallas Howard. Written by Patrick Massett and John Zinman. Directed by Stephen Gaghan. TWC - Dimension
I Am Michael
James Franco stars in this story of the gay rights activist Michael Glatze, who had a religious awakening, renounced his former life and became a Christian pastor. With Zachary Quinto, Emma Roberts. Written and directed by Justin Kelly, based on a New York Times article by Benoit Denizet-Lewis. Brainstorm Media
Resident Evil: The Final Chapter
The sixth and culminating episode in the action-horror franchise once again stars Milla Jovovich as the zombie-slaying Alice, returning to the Hive, where it all began. With Ali Larter, Shawn Roberts. Written and Directed by Paul W.S. Anderson. Screen Gems
The Salesman
Forced to change apartments, a young Iranian couple in Tehran find their lives upended by violence linked to a previous tenant. With Shahab Hosseini, Taraneh Alidoosti. Written and directed by Asghar Farhadi. Amazon Studios / Cohen Media Group
Strike a Pose
A documentary look at seven male dancers, six gay, one straight, who were part of Madonnaâs 1990 âTruth or Dareâ tour. Featuring Luis Camacho, Oliver Crumes III, Salim âSlamâ Gauwloos, Jose Gutierez, Kevin Stea, Sue Trupin, Carlton Wilborn. Directed by Ester Gould and Reijer Zwaan. Bond/360
Also: Get the Girl Comedy. Vertical Entertainment ⌠Kung Fu Yoga Action comedy with Jackie Chan. Well Go USA ⌠Lost in Florence Romantic drama. Orion Pictures ⌠Midsummer in Newtown Documentary. Participant Media / Vulcan Productions ⌠Paris 05:59 Romantic drama. Wolfe Releasing ⌠Sophie and the Rising Sun Drama with Julianne Nicholson and Margo Martindale. Monterey Media ⌠The Sunshine Makers Documentary. FilmRise âŚThey Call Us Monsters Documentary. Matson Films
âSnowfall,â FX
Filmmaker John Singleton has been building up his TV credits as of late, directing for series such as âEmpire, âThe People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Storyâ and âBillions.â But âSnowfallâ takes his small screen dabbling a step further, with Singleton serving as co-creator and an executive producer.
The 10-episode series, set up at FX, will explore the early days of the crack cocaine epidemic in Los Angeles. The series is set in 1983 and follows numerous characters, including Franklin Saint (Damson Idris), a young street entrepreneur on the quest for power; Gustavo Zapata (Sergio Peris-Mencheta), a Mexican wrestler caught up in a power struggle within a crime family; Teddy McDonald (Carter Hudson), a CIA operative running from a dark past who begins an off-book operation to fund the Nicaraguan Contras; and Lucia Villanueva (Emily Rios), the self-possessed daughter of a Mexican crime lord. âI have always been fascinated with that volatile moment in time before crack changed everything,â Singleton said when the series pick-up was announced. âItâs a tense, insane and sexy era that touched every aspect of our culture. I couldnât have better partners for this journey.â âSnowfallâ underwent rewrites, cast changes and reshoots and wasnât ultimately picked up by FX until a year and a half after the cable network ordered the pilot. Dave Andron (âJustified,â âKnight Riderâ) was brought in to run the show.
âStar Trek: Discovery,â CBS All Access
A teaser last summer at Comic-Con â simply, but majestically, showing the new ship the U.S.S. Discovery â was enough to get Trekkers amped up about this new installment of the space-based series, the first âTrekâ series in over a decade, one in which the film franchise was successfully rebooted.
The 13-episode series, created by latter-day âStar Trekâ veterans Bryan Fuller and Alex Kurtzman, will focus on a female starship lieutenant commander â played by Sonequa Martin-Green â and take place roughly a decade before the five-year mission embarked upon in the original series by Capt. Kirk and the gang. It has also been reported that at least one story line will revolve around a famous incident in âStar Trekâ lore that has been discussed but never before seen.
Other cast members will include Anthony Rapp (âDazed and Confused,â âRentâ), Michelle Yeoh (âCrouching Tiger, Hidden Dragonâ) and Doug Jones (âThe Strainâ).
Though Fuller has moved on as show runner â handing the reins off to Gretchen J. Berg and Aaron Harberts â we still canât wait to beam aboard.
âFargo,â FX
After five Emmy wins and near-universal critical acclaim over two seasons and as many casts, where does Noah Hawleyâs âFargoâ go for the third season?
With the show having begun filming this month, details have been about as hard to come by as landmarks on a frozen Minnesota highway. But what we do know is Ewan McGregor portrays two brothers with distinctive hairlines, âA Serious Manâ star Michael Stuhlbarg will return to the Coen brothersâ Midwestern universe to play a character named Sy Feltz and the small-town sheriff will be played by âThe Leftoversââ Carrie Coon, who will occupy the Frances McDormand-esque role as a force of decency in an unsavory world.
The third season will also occur closer to present day, and executive producer Warren Littlefield hinted that there will be some crossover with someone from the seriesâ first season, which was set in 2006. With that you can also expect some amount of commentary about the impact of technology on creating additional distance between people and a deeper dive into the characters as a result of a smaller cast and, presumably, a much smaller body count than the gang war at the center of Season 2. Based on Hawleyâs track record, is that enough to whet our appetite? You betcha.
âSilicon Valley,â HBO
It may struggle to escape the shadow of the dragon-sized dramas of schedule-mate âGame of Thronesâ this year, but this series, co-created by Mike Judge, continues to offer sharp satire of the odd personalities and absurd economics of the tech industry. Last season saw Richardâs (Thomas Middleditch) company Pied Piper spiral through various stages of assured success and disaster while trying to launch its platform. And its inability to be understood by non-engineers resulted in the company being nearly swallowed by the Google-esque Hooli before being rescued by Erlich Bachman (T.J. Miller) and Big Head (Josh Brener).
For the fourth season, Pied Piper has pivoted to video thanks to an effort by Dinesh (Kumail Nanjiani) that holds some promising possibilities in the changing dynamics between the programmers, particularly with regard to the dryly amoral Gilfoyle (Martin Starr). Like the area it skewers, the show still tilts primarily male, and thereâs a chance it could become even more so as Suzanne Cryerâs investment firm has pulled out, which would leave Amanda Crewâs Monica as the showâs biggest female character. However, now that sheâs working closer with Pied Piper than ever with last seasonâs finale, thereâs still lots of potential for this start-up to pay off.
âArcher,â FXX
Now heading into its eighth season, âArcherâ has stayed so consistent that itâs easy to take it for granted. But with âThe Simpsonsâ weathering its uneven golden years and âSouth Parkâ showing signs of wear, this quietly subversive series, created by Adam Reed, may be the most inventive animated half-hour comedy on TV. Still centered around the clueless yet effective secret agent Sterling Archer (voiced by H. Jon Benjamin), âArcherâ has risen beyond its nesting doll of blink-and-you-miss-it in-jokes and loving âSmokey and the Banditâ references. Now itâs bolstered by unhinged characters voiced by the likes of Judy Greer, Aisha Tyler and Jessica Walter and a perversely fearless drive toward experimentation. Beginning as a sort of id-driven spoof of James Bond, âArcherâ has grown to encompass season-long reinventions as a cocaine-and-country-music-fueled âArcher Viceâ and a âCharlieâs Angelsâ-esque private-detective agency. This seasonâs time-jump to 1947 Los Angeles goes hand in hand with the showâs move to FXX.
âThe Americans,â FX
Like its central characters, FXâs âThe Americansâ has always lived dangerously. The couple at the heart of the show, Elizabeth and Philip Jennings, are undercover KGB agents posing as an ordinary American suburban husband and wife, so fans of the show are rooting for protagonists who, at their best, are anti-American and, at their worst, want to bring the country down. The show also has situations that could be considered a little too convenient. Stan Beeman, their closest friend â and neighbor â is an FBI agent targeting Russian spies and for the most part has little suspicion of the true identifies of the nice couple across the street.
But such shortfalls have been overcome by the electric chemistry and performances of Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys, a vivid sense of its period setting in the â80s and its suspenseful stories and plot lines that also put the Jennings at the brink of danger and being discovered â and what that would mean for their likable family. Even more importantly, the regularly roller-coaster family dynamic brings a clearly identifiable element to the proceedings â there are marital woes, bratty teens and steamy sex on both sides of the Cold War.
Though critically acclaimed, âThe Americansâ has existed mainly as a ratings sleeper since its premiere in 2013, but emerged as a true contender in its fourth season, earning both Emmy and Golden Globe recognition. The show has maintained a steady sense of urgency and excitement even as the stakes are raised for the Jennings. The confession by the couple to their inquisitive daughter Paige (Holly Taylor) of their true identity â and Paigeâs betrayal of her parents by telling her church pastor that her parents are Russian spies â could have been disastrous for the showâs momentum (see the second and third seasons of âHomelandâ), but instead has taken the drama to another crackling level. The Jennningsâ fascination and growing affection for the American way of life brings another layer that makes the drama even more complex. Canât wait for the new season.
âShots Fired,â Fox
Foxâs âShots Firedâ is almost certain to prompt debate and discussion behind its provocative premise, which reflects some of the most explosive headlines of the day â the shooting of unarmed African American men by white police officers.
In the central story line of the 10-hour drama, the topic is given a surprising twist: The victim is a young white man and the shooter is an African American police officer. The shooting in a small town in North Carolina puts the community on edge. But the atmosphere becomes even more charged when the spotlight switches to the neglected murder of an African American teen, which reopens wounds that threaten to tear the town apart.
The series comes from the powerhouse couple of Gina Prince-Bythewood (âLove & Basketballâ) and Reggie Rock Bythewood (âNotoriousâ), who said in a statement that they were inspired by questions raised by their young son following the George Zimmerman trial in which Zimmerman was acquitted of the murder of Trayvon Martin. They hoped to create a project that would address âthe policing of African Americans, our broken criminal justice system, and race-relations that would also ask difficult questions and spark real conversation and change.â
Giving the limited series more force is the cast, which includes Sanaa Lathan (âLove & Basketballâ), Stephen Moyer (âTrue Bloodâ) and Oscar winners Helen Hunt and Richard Dreyfuss.
âSun Records,â CMT
The story of the âMillion Dollar Quartetâ â the nickname given to the formidable foursome of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins â has been told in both book and musical form. Now the tale is coming to TV via CMT and an eight-episode series that traces the rise of the famed label of the title, its genius producer Sam Phillips and the four disparate, but complementary musicians
âSun Records,â executive produced by Leslie Greif and Gil Grant, is based on the Tony-winning musical âMillion Dollar Quartetâ and arrives shortly after the 60th anniversary of the legendary one-off recording session featuring the four men.
Among those stepping into some very big, and in at least one case blue suede shoes, are Elvis impersonator Drake Milligan as Presley, Chad Michael Murray (âOne Tree Hillâ) as Phillips, Billy Gardell (âMike & Mollyâ) as famed Presley manager Colonel Tom Parker, Kevin Fonteyne (âMasters of Sexâ) as Cash, British actor Christian Lees as Lewis and Dustin Ingram as Perkins.
Set in Memphis against the backdrop of the changing political and social climate and racial tensions, the seriesâ main focus is Phillips and the early days of rock ânâ roll and R&B and the country and blues music with which those genres intersected. Among the other famous names woven into the story are Ike Turner, Jimmy Swaggart, Eddy Arnold and Hank Snow.
âPlanet Earth II,â BBC America
After a divisive political season, it can be a comfort to return to a series that offers a riveting, sumptuously filmed reminder of the one unifying issue we can agree on: the beauty and wonders of the natural world. The first edition of the series, in 2006, helped usher in the HD era, and the sequel continues that legacy by going one better as the first BBC production filmed in 4K resolution â assuming youâre one of those early adopters. Having already aired in the U.K., the series (again narrated by Richard Attenborough) earned strong numbers with an average of more than 10 million viewers per night. It features jarringly intimate looks at locales that include âIslands,â âMountains,â âGrasslandsâ and, intriguingly, âCities.â Can zoomed-in looks at animals and their potentially endangered habitats heal the political divides of 2017? Probably not, but no program this year is going to look as stunning in the effort.
âBaskets,â FX
A sad clown story thatâs actually about a sad clown, and the first great series of 2016, returns for a second season. Zach Galifianakis (co-creator with Louis C.K. and director Jonathan Krisel) takes the dual role of antagonistic twin brothers Chip and Dale Baskets, with Emmy winner Louie Anderson as their mother, Christine. Season 1 ended with Chip, the clown, hopping a freight train out of Bakersfield â âItâs OK, Iâm a hobo,â he tells the railroad bulls who discover and deal with him â as Dale began some sort of relationship with Chipâs sole friend, Martha (the exquisitely deadpan Martha Kelly). Now Chip is on the road, less angry, but even sadder. âI went to France to study to become a clown,â he tells a pack of young travelers whose path he crosses, âbut I donât think clowns are needed as much since the world has become so clownish.â The show can be difficult to watch, not because the characters are horrible or cringe-worthy, but because they so desire love and so donât know how to get it, or how to recognize it when it comes their way. As before, Anderson is something beyond brilliant. Making tender a role that could easily become grotesque, he is completely alive as Christine. There isnât a line that comes from his mouth that doesnât seem to have been born in the moment he speaks it.
âStar Wars: Episode VIIIâ
Director: Rian Johnson.
Cast: Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Adam Driver, Mark Hamill
Precious little is known at this point about the next installment in the âStar Warsâ saga â even the movieâs title is still under wraps. But for many fans, one fact alone has been enough to keep excitement at a boil for more than two years: Johnson is at the helm as writer and director.
The mastermind behind films such as 2005âs high school noir âBrickâ and 2012âs sci-fi action film âLooper,â Johnson has a knack for crafting brain-tickling cinematic puzzles and upending genre conventions. âRian is definitely going to places and investigating things that havenât really been done in the âStar Warsâ universe,â Oscar Isaac, who will reprise his role as Rebel pilot Poe Dameron in âEpisode VIII,â told The Times last year. âIn some ways it feels like weâre making an independent film.â
âThe Force Awakensâ (2015) relaunched the series with a heavy dose of nostalgia, climaxing with the appearance of Luke Skywalker as a grizzled Jedi hermit Ă la Obi Wan Kenobi. In the next chapter, expect to see Rey further hone her skills under Skywalkerâs tutelage, even as the Empire, led by Kylo Ren, regathers its strength. If âThe Empire Strikes Backâ is any precedent, things could get dark â and, on a sad note, the film will mark the final appearance of Carrie Fisher as Princess Leia.
Beyond that, what Johnsonâs outside-the-box sensibility might mean for the âStar Warsâ saga is anyoneâs guess. And, for a franchise thatâs celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, that unpredictability in itself is thrilling.
âCocoâ director Lee Unkrich gets down with the Day of the Dead for Pixarâs fall release
Since we were formally introduced to Pixar via a hopping desk lamp and a rubber ball in the animated short âLuxo Jr.â three decades ago, the studio has brought to life toys, insects, monsters, fish, cars, rodents, robots and, increasingly as the technology caught up, humans.
In âCoco,â directed by Lee Unkrich and opening Nov. 22, Pixar will focus its talents toward something else entirely: skeletons.
The film takes place in Mexico and tracks the journey of a fully fleshed 12-year-old named Miguel, who is consumed with his familiaâs generations-long ban on music. This is particularly vexing to the boy since his dream is to be become a great musician like the late Ernesto de la Cruz.
Miguel hails from a village named for Santa Cecilia, the patron saint of musicians, and modeled by Pixar on towns in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. A mystical, magical chain of events leads Miguel to the skeleton-populated Land of the Dead, and accompanied by a street-wise vagabond named Hector, he tests his musical prowess and unravels a family mystery he never knew existed.
Unkrich has long been fascinated by the celebration of DĂa de los Muertos, or the Day of the Dead, especially the iconography and folk art surrounding the event, when the living and the dead are briefly reunited. âIt seemed like a really beautiful celebration,â said the director, who comes to âCocoâ with âMonsters Inc.,â âFinding Nemoâ and âToy Story 3â under his belt. âThis idea of actively and joyously remembering your loved ones who are no longer with you seemed like a great place to tell a real emotional family story, and also have a lot of fun.â
Five years ago, Unkrich began planning his film but âCocoâsâ path to fruition was not without bumps. In 2013, the Walt Disney Co., Pixarâs parent, withdrew an application to trademark âDĂa de los Muertosâ following a public uproar over the companyâs cultural insensitivity. âIt was a mistake that happened and we regretted it immediately,â Unkrich said.
From the beginning, Unkrich sought to involve members of the Latino community in the process âso that at every turn we could have as much authenticity and as specific a voice as possible. Hopefully, it will never be tone deaf or lapse into cliche. Based on the reactions from the consultants who weâve shown the film to already, we feel confident that weâre doing a great job and doing right by the culture.â
The quest for authenticity extended to the characters and casting. Ernesto de la Cruz, voiced by Benjamin Bratt, is a composite of beloved Mexican musicians such as Pedro Infante, Jorge Negrete and Vicente FernĂĄndez. Character actress RenĂŠe Victor (âWeedsâ) voices another key character, Miguelâs abuelita.
âOne of the joys of working on the film has been Gael GarcĂa Bernal,â Unkrich sadi. The âMozart in the Jungleâ star plays Hector, Miguelâs trickster sidekick. âHeâs just an amazing guy and heâs brought so much charm and fun.â
According to Unkrich, âfinding a good kid actor is like finding a needle in a massive haystack.â For the crucial part of Miguel, the filmâs star, the director cast 11-year-old Anthony Gonzalez, who lives in Los Angeles and has since turned 12. âItâs been a race against time to get this done before his voice changes,â said the director. âHeâs really great and Iâm lucky to have found him. He makes the movie super-special.â
Though itâs not strictly speaking a musical, there are a lot of songs in âCoco,â as virtually all of the characters are performers. The soundtrack will be a mix of original music and Mexican standards. âWhen people think of Mexican music, they most often think of mariachi, and that of course is one part,â Unkrich said. âBut thereâs really a vast landscape of music and weâve tried to embrace all of it.â
Unkrich brushed off concerns of similarities to Jorge GutiĂŠrrezâs 2014 âBook of Life,â an animated musical fantasy produced by Guillermo del Toro, which was also set in Mexico around the Day of the Dead. âWeâre telling a very different story than he was,â said the filmmaker. âObviously, itâs still set against the holiday so there are a few common elements here and there, but the two stories are completely different. You can have more than one Christmas story.â
Correction: An earlier version of this story misidentified âCocoâsâ title character as Abuelita (voiced by Renee Victor). It is Mama Coco (voiced by Ana Ofelia Murguia).
âBaby Driverâ
Director: Edgar Wright.
Cast: Jamie Foxx, Ansel Elgort, Jon Hamm, Kevin Spacey, Jon Bernthal and Eiza GonzĂĄlez
Wright makes movies with an exuberance and joy unlike few other filmmakers today. And thatâs something audiences can always use more of, especially as this will be his first project to reach theaters since 2013âs apocalyptic comedy âThe Worldâs End.â
The new film has Wrightâs biggest-name cast to date in the story of a young getaway driver (Elgort) who constantly listens to music to battle his tinnitus. After he falls for a young woman (Lily James), he tries to to leave the criminal life. And we all know how that usually works out.
All of which makes âBaby Driver,â written and directed by Wright, look to be both a continuation and a departure. A continuation in that its mix of action and music should provide a thrilling platform for the kind of pure kineticism, an almost out-of-control feeling, that Wright can uniquely keep his grip on. And the film promises to be a departure in that it looks to have a grit and tension that he hasnât shown before.
Wright has long espoused his admiration for Walter Hillâs 1978 existential action picture âThe Driver,â and even if this is simply his riff on that, it should be worth the wait.
âMurder on the Orient Expressâ
Director: Kenneth Branagh.
Cast: Branagh, Johnny Depp, Willem Dafoe, Penelope Cruz, Judi Dench, Michelle Pfeiffer, Josh Gad, Michael PeĂąa, Derek Jacobi, Leslie Odom Jr., Daisy Ridley
Oscar-nominated director Branagh directs Oscar-nominated thespian Branagh (along with a star-studded cast) in the role of Agatha Christieâs beloved and iconic sleuth Hercule Poirot, the Belgian detective who boards a crowded passenger train only to find murder afoot in a new adaptation of the classic mystery.
Christieâs original 1934 novel has been adapted for radio, television and the big screen many times before; the 1974 film, directed by Sidney Lumet and starring a powerhouse lineup of stage and screen icons, notched six Oscar nominations and a supporting actress win for Ingrid Bergman.
This time around, Branagh, who also stars in Christopher Nolanâs summer World War II actioner âDunkirk,â has surrounded himself with an intriguing roster of established and up-and-coming talent (including Odom in his first post-âHamiltonâ film role) as the passengers aboard the Orient Express.
âBlade Runner 2049â
âBlade Runner 2049â features Ryan Gosling, Jared Leto and Harrison Ford.
Director: Denis Villeneuve.
Cast: Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford, Ana de Armas, Robin Wright, Jared Leto
Initially met with mixed reviews, Ridley Scottâs 1982 âBlade Runner,â adapted from Philip K. Dickâs 1968 novel âDo Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?â has become a stone-cold sci-fi classic. A visually stunning, emotionally haunting rendering of an all-too-plausible dystopian future, the neo-noir tale of a cop (Ford) who hunts down renegade androids has cast a vast influence over the pop culture landscape, from movies like âThe Fifth Elementâ and âThe Matrixâ to TV series like âBattlestar Galacticaâ and âWestworld.â
While the idea of a follow-up has been kicking around for nearly 20 years, many doubted the magic of the original could ever be recaptured, assuming any attempt at a sequel would be just a pale replica (or replicant) of the original. But as the pieces have come together â with Ford stepping back into his iconic role as Rick Deckard and Villeneuve, who directed the moody, cerebral sci-fi hit âArrival,â at the helm â anticipation has steadily mounted.
Set three decades after the events of original film, âBlade Runner 2049â centers on a young LAPD blade runner (Gosling) who uncovers a secret that leads him on a quest to find Deckard, who has been missing for 30 years. If you consider yourself a sci-fi fan and that doesnât get you excited, you should probably submit yourself to a Voight-Kampff test to make sure youâre really human.
âDunkirkâ
Christopher Nolanâs âDunkirkâ stars Tom Hardy, Cillian Murphy and Mark Rylance.
Director: Christopher Nolan.
Cast: Tom Hardy, Mark Rylance, Kenneth Branagh, Cillian Murphy, Harry Styles, Fionn Whitehead
First off, itâs the source of our favorite stupid movie rumor of all time, which had Nolan spending $5 million of Warner Bros.â money to buy a vintage Nazi warplane, outfit it with an Imax camera and then spectacularly crash it for a scene in this upcoming World War II epic.
Itâs crazy, right? Nolan would never destroy ⌠an Imax camera.
History buffs can also rest easy as Warner Bros. assures us that no priceless airplanes were harmed during the making of this film â though many were in fact used to tell the true story of the massive, miraculous evacuation of Allied soldiers from the beaches of Dunkirk, France, in the early days of the war.
Itâs Nolanâs first foray into history and, as youâd expect from the guy who made âInterstellar,â âInceptionâ and âThe Dark Knightâ trilogy, itâs going to be ambitious, extravagant and, yes, set to a bombastic, eardrum-rattling score by composer Hans Zimmer.
There are no half-measures with Nolan, which, given the subject matter, will be entirely appropriate this time around. The 1940 Dunkirk rescue turned what Winston Churchill called a âcolossal military disasterâ into a âmiracle of deliverance.â Shooting with both Imax and 65-millimeter film cameras, expect Nolanâs âDunkirkâ to capture every inch of the rescueâs horror and triumph.
âGirls Tripâ
Director: Malcolm D. Lee.
Cast: Queen Latifah, Jada Pinkett Smith, Regina Hall, Tiffany Haddish
Imagine going on a road trip with your group of lifelong friends to a major music festival. Thereâs a good chance that drinking, dancing and laughter will happen. This is the premise of the latest comedy from Lee (âThe Best Manâ franchise, âBarbershop: The Next Cutâ).
It follows Hall, Queen Latifah, Pinkett Smith and âThe Carmichael Showâsâ Haddish as they trek to New Orleans for the annual Essence Festival. Summer always yields a box-office surprise or two, rays of sunlight that have nothing to do with superheroes or sequels or CGI. And the team behind âGirls Tripâ â including Will Packer, producer of the âRide Alongâ and âThink Like a Manâ franchises â would like nothing more than to be that surprise.
âThe Dark Towerâ
Director: Nikolaj Arcel.
Cast: Idris Elba, Matthew McConaughey, Tom Taylor
Stephen King fans have a big summer ahead. Elba stars as Roland Deschain, a lone gunslinger-knight on a quest to save his world by reaching the titular spire that stands at the nexus of time and space. McConaughey goes evil as the Man in Black, a power-hungry sorcerer with his own nefarious designs on harnessing the towerâs potential.
Hollywood has been attempting to adapt Kingâs ambitious eight-novel series for a decade now; over the years the bestselling science-fiction horror-western property has been developed by the likes of J.J. Abrams and Ron Howard.
This summer weâll see if Sony Pictures and MRC have done the near-impossible with Danish director Nikolaj Arcel (the Oscar-nominated âA Royal Affairâ) at the helm: Adapting Kingâs celebrated genre-blending magnum opus into a feature film that not only brings the books to life but also whets appetites for a planned 2018 TV spinoff series set to explore the sagaâs backstory.
âSpider-Man: Homecomingâ
Director: Jon Watts
Cast: Tom Holland, Zendaya, Michael Keaton, Marisa Tomei, Donald Glover, Robert Downey Jr.
There are lots of reasons fans were thrilled by 2016âs âCaptain America: Civil War,â but high on that list was: âHoly cow, is that Spider-Man? And heâs a teenager? And he sounds like heâs from Queens!â
With that extended cameo, Marvelâs head honcho, Kevin Fiege, erased the Andrew Garfield-led âSpider-Manâ movies from memory and set the table for a new version of the old webslinger, one who had goofy boy-genius bursting from his red-and-blue seams.
âHomecomingâ finds Peter Parker in high school navigating the whims and whimsies of an adolescent life â bullies, homework, girls, supervillains â while dealing with the extracurricular responsibilities that come with being âAvengersâ-adjacent.
A Spider-Man film that aims to mate teen angst with John Hughes-ian bounce? Yeah, thatâll play.
âIâm Dying Up Here,â Showtime
As HBOâs âVinylâ was to classic rock, this newcomer is to the 1970s comedy boom around L.A.âs Sunset Strip. Created by Dave Flebotte (âMasters of Sex,â âDesperate Housewivesâ) and executive produced by â80s stand-up veteran Jim Carrey, âIâm Dying Up Hereâ examines the moment when comedy began to shift from setups and punchlines and into something more idiosyncratic and personal along the lines of Richard Pryor and Andy Kaufman, whose presence can still be felt on the comedy scene today.
The show is loosely based on the 2010 book by William Knoedelseder that explored the rambunctious history of the Comedy Store, âIâm Dying Up Here.â It occupies the same world where careers were born by being invited to sit next to Johnny Carson after a set on âThe Tonight Show,â but unlike its vanquished HBO sibling the series doesnât fixate on stand-ins for the famous names.
Instead it centers on a group of young comedians that includes real-life Comedy Store regulars Andrew Santino, Erik Griffin and Al Madrigal along with Ari Graynor (âWhip Itâ), Clark Duke (âGreekâ) and Oscar winner Melissa Leo, whose performance as the owner of the Goldieâs gives the show a strong foundation. Focusing on the often dark and desperate quest for fame and the weird addictive alchemy that results when a well-crafted joke lands, the series should resonate thanks to the recent resurgence of interest in comedy.
âWonder Womanâ
Watch the trailer for âWonder Woman.â
Director: Patty Jenkins
Cast: Gal Gadot, Chris Pine, Robin Wright
In the oversaturated market of bros in capes, itâs high time a woman punched her mighty fist through the countless waves of male-centric superhero movies. All the worldâs waiting for the âWonder Womanâ movie, not only because this will be the first female-led superhero movie since 1984âs âSupergirl,â but also because the character Diana Prince (a.k.a. Wonder Woman, played here by Gadot) is fire.
The daughter of a god, Wonder Woman is a warrior who carries her sword in the back of a ball gown and deflects bullets with her bracelets. More importantly, the character considers it her sacred duty to defend the world. Sheâs driven by love and justice, so while Batman is sulking in his cave, Diana is out in the trenches getting things done.
In the film, Diana will leave her idyllic homeland (populated by fierce actresses like Wright and Connie Nielsen) to help the Allies in World War I. Yes, thatâs right, itâs a superhero period piece.
The icing on the cake? The film is directed by Jenkins from the 2003 gut-kick of a film âMonster.â Itâs a collection of great talent both in front of and behind the camera, so fingers crossed for âWonder Woman,â because itâs about damn time.
âTwin Peaks,â Showtime
The last time âTwin Peaksâ was on the air, George H.W. Bush was president and bingeing was something you did with food, not television.
But grab a slice of cherry pie and a cup of coffee, because after a quarter-century hiatus, the beloved cult series returns on May 21.
The original series, set in the small town of Twin Peaks, Wash., followed Special Agent Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan) as he investigated the brutal murder of homecoming queen Laura Palmer. Premiering in 1990, the series became an unexpected cultural sensation, with viewers hooked on the central mystery, oddball characters (e.g. the Log Lady) and off-kilter humor. Following a sharp ratings decline, the series was canceled after two seasons on ABC, leaving the fate of Agent Cooper hanging in the balance.
Despite its short life span, âTwin Peaksâ continues to influence the look and feel of other TV shows, from âThe Killingâ to âWayward Pinesâ to the upcoming âArchieâ adaptation, âRiverdale.â
Details about the much-anticipated revival are as elusive as the Loch Ness Monster, but here is what we do know:
The series will consist of 18 episodes, kicking off with a two-hour premiere, and is entirely directed by David Lynch, whose last film, âInland Empire,â came out more than a decade ago. Lynch also wrote the series, along with co-creator Mark Frost.
Lynch has rounded up several key members of the original cast â most notably, MacLachlan, who will reprise his role. Also on board are Sherilyn Fenn as Audrey Horne, Madchen Amick as Shelly Johnson and Kimmy Robertson as Lucy Moran.
The ensemble also will include a number of Lynch veterans who are technically new to the âTwin Peaksâ universe: Laura Dern, Naomi Watts and Robert Forster.
âVeepâ and âGames of Thrones,â HBO
Nasty women with high political aspirations will rule in 2017, or at least on some of HBOâs most popular returning series.
Two very different shows â the fantastical drama âGame of Thronesâ and the political satire âVeepâ â left us with opposite scenarios in 2016: a women occupying the highest governing seat in the land and one taking leave of that seat.
Now, the question as to how those women deal with that power, or the loss of it, makes Season 6 of âVeepâ and 7 for âGame of Thronesâ two of the most anticipated returning shows of the new year.
In âVeep,â Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) became POTUS after the elected president resigned, but it was short-lived. Last season, she came up for reelection, and lost, to another woman.
The big question is how the incompetent, narcissistic and ill-informed Meyer will deal with her post-election loss spiral and transitioning back to life outside the White House. Either way, itâll surely mirror the reality of the real-life election of 2016 â and we need something to laugh about at this point.
Itâs been a long, hard and disgustingly muddy road for the women of Westeros, but in the seventh season, theyâre finally poised to seize power from the men whoâve demeaned, abused and locked them up.
Cersei Lannister (Lena Headey) is on the throne in Kingâs Landing. Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke) is poised to challenge her, as is Sansa Stark (Sophie Turner), whoâs amassing another army. All are fierce and ready to rule. There will be dragons. The new year is already looking up.
âThe Fate of the Furiousâ
Vin Diesel and crew are back for the previously titled âFurious 8,â now being released as âThe Fate of the Furious.â
Director: F. Gary Gray.
Cast: Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, Dwayne Johnson, Charlize Theron, Tyrese Gibson, Chris Bridges, Jason Statham, Helen Mirren
The last 16 years have been one epic globe-trotting roller coaster for Dominic Toretto (Diesel) and his motley gang of streetwise racers-turned-international operatives. Such is life when you live a quarter-mile at a time.
But after emotionally eulogizing their beloved late co-star Paul Walker in 2015âs seventh âFast and Furiousâ installment, the high-octane saga of this multicultural new-millennium familia drifts into soapy high-action drama with a shocking twist: Just as the crew is settling into new normal lives, along vrooms a villainous Theron to seduce Dom away from his honeymoon and over to the dark side.
Shaking up Hollywoodâs most adaptable and cannily evolving action franchise by pitting Diesel against his brawny brethren, led by Johnson, director Gray (âStraight Outta Comptonâ) takes the helm and adds Theron, Mirren and Scott Eastwood.
Will Domâs crew ride, or will they die to bring their brooding leader back while battling an anarchist bent on igniting global chaos? How many Coronas will be spilled as unexpected betrayals and alliances rock Universalâs hit franchise?
âAlien Covenantâ
Director: Ridley Scott.
Cast: Michael Fassbender, Katherine Waterston, Billy Crudup, Danny McBride
It hasnât always been easy being a fan of the âAlienâ franchise. Launched in 1979 with Scottâs sci fi-horror masterpiece, the series has soldiered on for four decades through various follow-ups and Predator-battling spinoffs that have occasionally hit the bullâs-eye (James Cameronâs âAliensâ comes to mind) but often proving disappointing.
The most recent installment, 2012âs prequel âPrometheus,â grossed more than $400 million worldwide, but critics and audiences were divided on the film, with some finding it ponderous and confusing. (In space no one can hear you scream, but on the Internet everyone can hear your bellyaching.)
Now, to the delight of longtime fans, Scott appears to be bringing the series back to its horrifying roots. In âAlien: Covenant,â the crew of a colony ship, en route to a distant planet, finds what they at first think is an undiscovered paradise, only to realize that it is inhabited â surprise! â by the titular monstrous xenomorphs.
At 79, Scott still makes movies with the hard-charging intensity of someone a third his age, and the idea of him going back to the spine-chilling core of one of his greatest films â well, itâs enough to make your heart nearly burst out of your chest.
âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â Hulu
Margaret Atwoodâs never-out-of-print novel of a near-future American dystopia becomes a miniseries. Though written in 1986, its imagining of a right-wing theocratic totalitarian patriarchy feels germane to a moment in which reproductive rights are under attack and when â here and abroad â the religious beliefs of some are used to circumscribe the civil liberties and, indeed, the humanity of others.
Elisabeth Moss plays Offred, a âhandmaidâ whose job is to bear children for a ruling-class couple who canât. (Pollution and STDs have wreaked havoc on reproduction.) It is also, in a timely way, a text on the normalization of weirdness: âThis may not seem ordinary to you now,â the bookâs Offred is told of her new duty, âbut after a time it will. It will become ordinary.â
Already filmed once in 1990 by Volker SchlĂśndorff with a screenplay by Harold Pinter, the miniseries promises suspenseful action in its trailer (âMy name is Offred, and I intend to surviveâ is the key line). And though the novel is subtler than a brief synopsis makes it sound, it wouldnât be hard to turn it into a sort of feminist âLoganâs Run.â But Moss is an actress who cuts facets into a role like a master jeweler, and any opportunity to watch her work is worth taking. Also in the cast: Samira Wiley, Joseph Fiennes, Yvonne Strahovski, Max Minghella, Ann Dowd, Madeline Brewer, O.T. Fagbenle and âGilmore Girlâ Alexis Bledel, far from Stars Hollow.
âGuardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2â
Director: James Gunn
Cast: Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Kurt Russell
Does anyone remember laughter? When âGuardiansâ first premiered in 2014, it did something unthinkable. It made the world emotionally bond with a film starring a walking tree and a talking raccoon. How? Because it brought the fun.
This year, everyone could use a bit of intergalactic mischievousness delivered with a wink and a smile from Chris Pratt.
So how will director James Gunn top the shenanigans he unfurled the first time? By going full tilt with even more alien battles and crazy creatures. And the cherry on top? A âTango and Cashâ reunion: Both Kurt Russell and Sylvester Stallone are in âGuardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.â
While the details are presumably being guarded in a secret vault under Kevin Feigeâs desk, the good news is the original gang is indeed getting back together for the sequel. Peter Quill (Pratt), Gamora (Zoe Saldana), Drax (Dave Bautista), Rocket (voiced by Bradley Cooper) and Baby Groot (voiced by Vin Diesel) are all reuniting to commit whatever space high jinks Gunn has planned. Plus, if the face of Baby Groot doesnât make you smile, nothing will.
âLowridersâ
Director: Ricardo de Montreuil
Cast: Eva Longoria, Theo Rossi, Melissa Benoist
While countless movies are filmed in Los Angeles, few of them truly capture the non-Hollywood side of the city. But âLowriders,â filmed on the Eastside in the El Sereno neighborhood, is a quintessentially L.A. story set in the car culture and street-art scene. It follows a young graffiti artist as he straddles two seemingly opposing worlds to please members of his family.
From director Ricardo de Montreuil, known for Spanish-language films âMĂĄncoraâ and âLa mujer de mi hermano,â the film, which opened the Los Angeles Film Festival last year, stars Eva Longoria, Melissa Benoist, DemiĂĄn Bichir, Tony Revolori and Gabriel Chavarria.
âT2: Trainspottingâ reunites Danny Boyleâs band of Scottish ruffians 20 years later
It wasnât long after âTrainspottingâ came out in 1996 that the movie began to epitomize an era.
Directed by Danny Boyle and written by John Hodge (from a book by Irvine Welsh), the film captured the growing consumerism, heroin-chic and Cool Britannia of the time. There were numerous memorable scenes (upside-down babies, heinous bar bathrooms), kinetic edits, indelible monologues (Choose Life! Colonized by Wankers!) and that raw uptempo soundtrack. As it followed the exploits of Renton, Sick Boy and other on-the-margin types in Edinburgh, Scotland, âTrainspottingâ took on landmark status.
The film, of course, also launched the careers of Ewan McGregor and Jonny Lee Miller -- not to mention Boyle, years ahead of âSlumdog Millionaire,â â127 Hoursâ and his reputation for slick sizzle.
So why, two decades later, are Boyle and Hodge returning with a sequel, âT2: Trainspotting,â out March 17? Isnât it like that awkward high-school reunion, everyone looking a little different, no one truly wanting to be here? The Times talked with Hodge and Boyle to get answers.
JOHN HODGE, WRITER
You had a script years ago, based on Welshâs 2002 sequel, âPorno.â How did that become this?
Hodge: I did write a script about 10 years ago. It wasnât very good. See, there are two âTrainspottingsâ â thereâs Irvineâs book and thereâs our movie. At first, they were just slightly different. But over the years, that difference expands. And the new script might have been too close to the novel. It didnât seem to flow from our âTrainspotting.â Some of it, I think, was the porn industry â in 2002, you could still make money from it. It felt like time had overtaken the novel.
What made you decide to try again?
I think the biggest reason was that Danny reached out to the four actors and said, in principal, âIf John writes a script, would you do it?â And they all said yes â they all had to say yes. And then the pressure was on.
How do you make that gang grow up when the whole point of the first movie is that they donât want to grow up? How did you deal with that?
I donât want to give away too much but I think that was the challenge and the appeal. What are these guys like 20 years on? Like all of us, we change a lot over 20 years, but bits of us remain the same. I think the fact that so much time had passed also liberates the movie. If it was just five years later, weâd just expect more of the same â theyâre just going to rob a casino in Monaco. Now, people expect things to be different, for a lot of life to be lived.
The world has changed a lot too â that consumer culture at hyper-speed has gotten even faster. And, of course, technology has entered the picture. I think we saw an opportunity there â to show how consumer culture has been inflated and employment is less secure and corporations even more powerful. This movie has become more topical since 1996. Itâs become more topical since we started writing it.
The teaser trailer for Danny Boyleâs âTrainspotting 2,â starring Ewan McGregor and Jonny Lee Miller.
DANNY BOYLE, DIRECTOR
Did you ever think youâd be making any sequel, let alone to âTrainspottingâ?
I canât say I did. Even when we were talking about it. But one of the big reasons is Iâd just run into people and hear the way they talk about characters. They still remember their names. When does that happen? I canât remember Jennifer Lawrenceâs characterâs name in âPassengers,â and I saw that yesterday.
That active filmmaking style you used then was so unique. Now itâs commonplace. How do you match that? Or do you not even try?
Thatâs the tension. If the soundtrack and the style donât live up to what you had then, it will disappoint people. But itâs also 20 years later, and the boys are not running around like they used to.
John said this all began when you reached out to the four actors. Was that a tough call to make â âHey, remember this thing that made your careers? Come and try to top that.â
[Laughs] Actually, I think they were all fine in theory. In practice, I knew if the script didnât deal with them equally, like the first one, they wouldnât do it. So then we had to come up with a movie that did that and also wasnâtâŚbad. Then thereâs the prism of aging, which is terrifying for a lot of us but really terrifying for actors. You remember them frozen in time and suddenly theyâre in the present.
Which is also part of the appeal â we get to not only imagine how characters turned out but also actually see that in front of us.
When we first started making this film, I thought the subject was time. And that the reason we didnât make it 10 years ago is because the actors didnât look like theyâd aged enough. Or I wasnât old enough. [Boyle recently turned 60.] And I realized after making this film it isnât about time â itâs about masculinity, about disappointed masculinity. When we made the first film, everyone said it was about drugs, and I said it was about friendship. But I realize now it was really about boyhood. And this is about manhood.
Itâs funny you use the word âboyhood.â I canât help feeling thereâs something Richard Linklater-ish about this. Like âBoyhoodâ or even the âBeforeâ films, we get to check in to see how characters have â or havenât â matured.
Movies have this weird Hollywoodizing effect, this glamorizing effect, even gritty films like âTrainspotting.â It makes people desirable by freezing them. And if youâre lucky, as we were, you get a chance to unfreeze them â sometimes literally, even, by dropping pieces of the first movie in. You get the past and present simultaneously. And thatâs a rare, powerful thing.
Twitter: @ZeitchikLAT
âBeauty and the Beastâ
Emma Watson, Dan Stevens and Luke Evans star in the live-action movie âBeauty and the Beast.â
Director: Bill Condon
Cast: Emma Watson, Ewan McGregor, Dan Stevens, Ian McKellen, Luke Evans, Josh Gad
Letâs be real. A live-action âBeauty and the Beastâ with full-on musical soliloquies is a bold idea. But the thought of Emma Watson as Belle running up a hill belting out, âI want adventure in the great wild somewhere,â hits right in that sweet nostalgia spot, hard.
There is absolutely no way a live-action film about singing household objects and a young woman falling in love with what appears to be the human form of Black Phillip from âThe Witchâ should work, and yet weâre curious. Deadly curious.
The chances of finding one member of this office sitting front row full-on cry-singing through âBonjourâ one minute and then uncomfortably squinting at Dan Stevensâ interpretation of the Beast is very high. Why? Because the cast reads like it came straight out of the Internetâs dream journal.
Watson and Stevens play the leads while Ewan McGregor was cast as the candlestick, Lumiere; Ian McKellen is the clock, Cogsworth; and Emma Thompson is the teakettle, Mrs. Potts. Early standouts Luke Evans as the egomaniacal villain Gaston and his lackey Le Fou, played by Josh Gad, already have been creating plenty of buzz after the two started singing from their Instagram accounts.
It feels like Disney has been ramping up to this feature film for years, first with the song-free live adaptation of âCinderellaâ in 2015 followed by Jon Favreauâs âJungle Book,â which trotted out a few familiar tunes from the animated classic. But this âBeauty and the Beastâ adaptation feels less like another artistâs interpretation and more like an homage to the past.
There are a lot of emotional chips riding on this flick. Nail it, and the fans will love you forever. Fail, and theyâll accuse you of destroying their childhood, yet again.
âFeud,â FX
Ryan Murphy has probably done more than anyone in Hollywood to bring the anthology series into vogue.
In 2017, he will build on the success of âAmerican Horror Storyâ and âThe People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Storyâ with âFeud.â
The first season will dramatize the notorious, if somewhat misunderstood, rivalry between screen legends Joan Crawford and Bette Davis. Based partially on the script âBest Actressâ by Jaffe Cohen and Michael Zam, the eight-episode âFeudâ will go behind the scenes of âWhat Ever Happened to Baby Jane?,â the 1962 film that both women hoped would revive their flagging careers but which ultimately became a camp classic. Davis earned an Oscar nomination for her performance, much to Crawfordâs irritation.
Future seasons of the planned anthology will explore other epic personal grudges.
âFeudâ is poised to burnish Murphyâs reputation as a latter-day George Cukor, a storyteller known for showcasing female performers. The series will reunite him with several favorites, including Jessica Lange, who will follow in Faye Dunawayâs footsteps by portraying Crawford (though it remains to be seen if sheâll reach the over-the-top heights of âMommie Dearest.â)
Murphy regulars Sarah Paulson and Kathy Bates will play two other classic stars, Geraldine Page and Joan Blondell. New to the Murphy oeuvre is Susan Sarandon, who, in a bit of note-perfect casting, will appear as Davis.
Much like âThe People v. O.J. Simpson,â which used the most sensational murder trial of the â90s to examine still-relevant themes of police corruption, gender, race and celebrity, âFeudâ likely will go beyond the catfights and expose enduring truths about women, aging and Hollywood.
âLoganâ
Watch the trailer for âLoganâ starring Hugh Jackman as Wolverine.
Director: James Mangold.
Cast: Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, Boyd Holbrook
The âX-Menâ movie universe has been, since its 2000 inception, one of great change. In the process of charting the evolution of Marvelâs merry mutants, directors like Bryan Singer, Brett Ratner and Matthew Vaughan have come and gone (and in the case of Singer, come back). Characters who seemed perfectly cast â like Stewart as Professor Charles Xavier and Ian McKellen as his friend/nemesis Magneto â have been recast (enter James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender, respectively).
But the one constant has been Jackmanâs Wolverine â the mutant with a spotty memory and unbreakable claws. For 17 years, Jackman has held down the center of the X-Men world, until now. After âLogan,â Jackman will hang up his claws.
So itâs fitting that âLoganâ â Wolverineâs real name â looks to be something of an âUnforgivenâ with superpowers. A one-last-ride story that finds an aging Logan looking after a young mutant (Dafne Keen) who might be his clone.
This will be the third standalone Wolverine movie, after 2009âs not-at-all-good âX-Men Origins: Wolverineâ and 2013âs much better swords-and-samurais adventure âThe Wolverine.â Maybe the third time is, indeed, the charm.
âBig Little Lies,â HBO
If you thought the âReal Housewivesâ of Bravo took drama and passive aggression to new, petty heights, think again. HBOâs upcoming limited series âBig Little Liesâ takes the histrionics to a murderous level.
The seven-episode series follows three mothers of grade-schoolers in an elite community. The dark underbelly of parenthood comes into focus as those seemingly âperfect lives unravel to the point of murder,â according to the official release. The series, which is based on Liane Moriartyâs bestselling novel, stars Reese Witherspoon, Nicole Kidman and Shailene Woodley â uh, âTrue Detectiveâ who?
Like the book, the miniseries will have its share of humor amid all the dark drama. The trailer for the series includes a snarky jab from Witherspoonâs character to another mother about, well, another mother. âSheâs not a nanny, sheâs a mom. Sheâs just young, like you used to be.â But unlike the book, the TV adaptation will be set in wealthy Monterey, Calif., not an Australian suburb. All seven episodes are directed by Jean-Marc VallĂŠe (âWild,â âDallas Buyers Clubâ) from scripts by David E. Kelley. Witherspoon, Kidman and Kelley, who have been shopping the project since fall 2014, will also serve as executive producers. Rounding out the cast are Alexander Skarsgard, Laura Dern, Adam Scott, Zoe Kravitz, James Tupper and Jeffrey Nordling.
âGet Outâ
The trailer for âGet Out,â written and directed by Jordan Peele.
Director: Jordan Peele
Cast: Daniel Kaluuya, Allison Williams, Catherine Keener, Bradley Whitford, Keith Stanfield
Comedy star Jordan Peele (âKey and Peele,â âKeanuâ) makes the leap to horror â and goes behind the camera â with this Blumhouse thriller with a frighteningly resonant premise: Chris (Daniel Kaluuya), an African American man, and his white girlfriend, Rose (Allison Williams) pay a weekend visit to her family in the suburbs, where he discovers insidious shenanigans targeting the black residents of her very idyllic, very Caucasian hometown.
The first-time helmer Peele (who also wrote the screenplay) updates the simmering suburban paranoia of âThe Stepford Wivesâ into a 21st century nightmare in which micro-aggressions are murder on more than just your nerves â and all too familiar in todayâs still-divided America. Catherine Keener and Bradley Whitford costar as the parents whose discomfort over their daughterâs new romance might just belie something more sinister, while up-and-comer Keith Stanfield (âSelma,â âStraight Outta Comptonâ) makes an appearance as a fellow visitor with a smile on his face and panic in his eyes.
Peeleâs genre debut comes loaded with social commentary and opens during Black History Month â and judging from the reaction to its sharply entertaining first trailer, could spark a new subgenre of close-to-home horror thrusting interracial and class tensions into the pop culture conversation.
âDetroiters,â Comedy Central
Sam Duvet and Tim Cramblin are admen, but with none of the style, savvy or skills of Don Draper and Roger Sterling. The old friends and Detroit locals, played by real-life old friends and Detroit locals Sam Richardson (âVeepâ) and Tim Robinson (âSaturday Night Liveâ), are advertising execs of the low-budget variety â full of small ideas and big aspirations.
Cramblin Advertising was once respected for its weighty accounts with Delta and Budweiser, but since the low-achieving Tim took it over from his father (who went insane), the firm now specializes in late-night TV ads for local hot tub kings, childrenâs furniture outlets and shady accident attorneys.
The two strive to regain the agencyâs past glory by landing their first big account with Chrysler, but somehow their campaign ideas (âJesus Chrysler, What a Car!â) keep missing the mark. The 10-episode weekly series follows the duoâs quest to land a big one, even if the two awkward buddies with âLoserâ practically printed across their out-of-date Gap polo shirts have no idea how to get there.
Co-created and written by Richardson and Robinson, âDetroitersâ also features guest spots by Keegan-Michael Key, Michael Che, Steve Higgins and Malcolm Jamal-Warner, among others. The showâs executive producer, Jason Sudeikis, also costars here as the hard-to-please Chrysler VP. The absurdly funny chemistry between him, Richardson and Robertson, and the showâs clever references to the Motor Cityâs culture and scenery, make the series a unique and wonderfully quirky ride through advertisingâs not-so-sexy underbelly.
âJohn Wick: Chapter Twoâ
Keanu Reeves returns as the lead character in âJohn Wick: Chapter 2.â
Director: Chad Stahelski
Cast: Keanu Reeves, Ian McShane, Laurence Fishburne, Ruby Rose
No one expected much from the first âJohn Wick.â Looking at the cast list and synopsis, it seemed as if it couldâve been the kind of action-thriller that airs at 11 Sunday night on some basic-cable network: Keanu Reeves plays the shadowy title figure, who kicks off a revenge spree after Russian thugs kill his dog.
And, yes, that is pretty much what âJohn Wickâ is. It is also the kind of grindhouse, exploitation fun that Hollywood doesnât make any more, executed with style and verve by directors Chad Stahelski and David Leitch â themselves stuntmen, fight choreographers and second-unit directors making the leap to the big chair. âJohn Wickâ made $86 million worldwide off an estimated $20-million budget. With that kind of math, you get a sequel.
This time around, it doesnât seem that a puppy needs to die in order to prompt Wick â again played by Reeves like a world-weary Neo, able to work ballistic miracles with a gun in his hand â to commit mayhem. And anyone who grew up on the action cinema of the â80s and â90s is already in line for popcorn.
The CW sends Archie, Betty, Veronica and the gang back to âRiverdaleâ in a new twist on the classic comic
On paper, the concept sounds a bit mad: What if the freckled-faced teens of the wholesome âArchieâ comics were wrapped up in a seedy murder mystery? And yet the CWâs âRiverdale,â which premieres Jan. 26, is arguably one of the most anticipated new series of 2017.
Ever since âRiverdaleâsâ pilot debut at San Diego Comic-Con last summer, fans have been buzzing about this âTwin Peaksâ meets âDawsonâs Creekâ drama.
Gone are the cartoonish glances and cross-hatched sideburns, the new Archie â as embodied by K.J. Apa â is ripped.
In fact, everyone in Riverdale â âThe town with pep!â â has changed. Betty Cooper (Lili Reinhart) pops Adderall, Veronica Lodgeâs (Camila Mendes) family is in ruins, Ms. Grundy (Sarah Habel) is no longer a senior citizen but a âLolitaâ-sunglasses-wearing cougar and. oh yeah, Archieâs dad is Luke Perry.
We always try to tell a story that works both as an âArchieâ story and as a noir, David Lynch-ian kind of story.
— Â Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
The plot picks up after the suspicious death of a Riverdale High student and teeters between teen drama and murder mystery for the rest of the season. âWe always try to tell a story that works both as an âArchieâ story and as a noir, David Lynch-ian kind of story,â said Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, series creator and executive producer.
Aguirre-Sacasaâs eclectic work history laid the groundwork for the unique series. As a playwright, he wrote the book for Duncan Sheikâs musical adaptation of âAmerican Psycho.â Heâs also worked on several TV series including âBig Love,â âLookingâ and âGleeâ and, after 11 years writing comic books, he was named the chief creative officer for âArchieâ Comics.
Despite âRiverdaleâsâ new moody aesthetic of fog-filled streets (even Popâs Chokâlit Shoppe is shrouded in mist), Aguirre-Sacasa insists that the central themes of the series will always return to those of the âArchieâ comics he grew up reading.
âOur show is not that different from the core of âArchieâ from the 1940s or the 1950s. Archie, in the comics, was a good kid who always tried to do his best, frequently screwed up, made things worse before he made them better, and then learned a lesson. The Archie on our show is actually like that as well. He is basically a good kid but heâs in much more adult situations than he ever was in the comic book. Heâs wrestling with that, but his essence is still the same.â
The same holds true for Betty and Veronica, he said, noting that the former is still the âperfect girl next doorâ who gets good grades and wants to be a cheerleader. âWhat weâre exploring is, what is the cost of being perfect?â
Executive producer Greg Berlanti, who oversees the CW comic book adaptations of âArrowâ and âThe Flash,â can trace his âArchieâ influences all they way back to his days working on âDawsonâs Creek.â
âThis is one of the few instances where Iâm working on something where it is actually [one of] the roots of the comic-book love triangle,â Berlanti said. âThe original Dawson-Joey-Pacey was Betty-Archie-Veronica.â
But no matter how timeless the central themes may be â and despite the addition of the first openly gay character from the âArchieâ comics in Kevin Keller (Casey Cott) â the producers felt that the source material still needed an update for modern audiences.
âA lot of these comic books were written in a time where the bulk of people reading them and writing them were white,â Berlanti said. âThatâs not the world we live in anymore. We were cognizant about changing the ethnicity and updating the characters to make sure we didnât want to look at a poster of âRiverdaleâ with just all white people on it.â
Veronica Lodge is now played by Latino actress Mendes and local Riverdale band Josie and the Pussycats is an all-black trio led by Ashleigh Murray, and yes they will play pep rallies that go full tilt âFriday Night Lights.â
The relationship between Betty and Veronica has also received tweaking. While the central love triangle remains intact, âRiverdaleâ has turned the trope slightly askew, refocusing more on the friendship between the two women and not their desire for Archie.
âIâm not interested in stories about girls fighting with each other,â says executive producer Sarah Schechter. âThat, to me, feels really antiquated and itâs certainly not helpful. It doesnât feel real to the depth of my relationship with other women as a woman. We were never interested in making them frenemies. Theyâre both complicated women.â
Not all characters were destined for a total overhaul. Archie is still very much a red-head, a fact that Apa is reminded of every two weeks when his hair is bleached down and re-dyed, âThe first time I did it, I was sitting in the salon for about 10 hours.â Apa says. âI remember staring at myself and thinking, âIâm going to be bald by the time we finish this.ââ
Even though the actor hails from New Zealand, Apa believes âRiverdaleâ has global appeal, with the great unifier being, once again, surviving high school. â[Archieâs] figuring out, through trial and error, his relationships with people, with Betty and Veronica, with girls, with his career choice. Is it music or his football? And he just wants to find his passion and he wants to follow it. I think people can relate to that, a lot of people went through the same thing in high school. I know I did,â he says.
But the show is not aimed just at teens, with the adult population sprinkled with faces that will be familiar to parents including Madchen Amick (âTwin Peaksâ) as Bettyâs harridan mom, Skeet Ulrich (âScreamâ) as leader of Riverdaleâs criminal element and Molly Ringwald as Archieâs mother.
âI think thereâs a reason why âRiverdaleâ plays really well to adults, because we were all teenagers, and I think we all still feel a little bit of that: âWho are we and how do we define ourselves and whatâs important to us?â Itâs an ongoing process,â explains Schechter. âA part of you is a teenager forever.â
Jude Law may play the âYoung Popeâ but curiosity is his religion
Jude Law knows what youâre thinking.
An HBO series called âThe Young Pope,â starring one of Hollywoodâs most dashing leading men in the title role?
âEveryone was expecting, with me in the part and the name, oh, itâs going to be choir boys and prostitutes at the Vatican,â said Law, relaxing in his hotel suite on a bright afternoon in November. Instead, the most scandalous thing about Lawâs character, a youthful but arch-conservative American pontiff, born Lenny Belardo, is his penchant for chain-smoking and guzzling Cherry Coke Zero.
Written and directed by Paolo Sorrentino, the 10-episode limited series defies easy categorization, even if its seemingly straightforward title has already inspired a popular Twitter meme. Dreamlike and methodically paced, âThe Young Popeâ is more interested in Big Questions of belief and the allure of tyranny than behind-the-scenes intrigue.
Though it is (relatively) light on the nudity and beheadings, the series is classic HBO â filmed on location in Italy, with sumptuous production values and A-list talent (Diane Keaton co-stars as Sister Mary, one of Lennyâs closest confidantes).
âThe Young Popeâ is Lawâs first foray into series television in nearly two decades. While itâs become increasingly fashionable for movie stars of his stature to dabble in the small screen, the actor, 44, claims heâs agnostic about the medium and was more drawn to the opportunity to work with Sorrentino.
âThere was a humanity, a wit, an ability to take quite personal stories and somehow elevate them to being global,â said Law of Sorrentino films including âYouthâ and the Oscar-winning âThe Great Beauty.â
Dressed in harem-style sweatpants and a cashmere hoodie, Law comes off as a bit of an aesthete; even his leisure wear makes a statement. He trusted himself in the hands of Sorrentino, a filmmaker with a flair for surreal imagery â âThe Young Popeâ opens with a dream sequence of a naked baby crawling on a pile of dollsâ that can seem puzzling to the actors trying to bring it to life.
âItâs a directorâs medium and youâre there to be a color on the palette,â he said. âIf you trust them enough, you know that it will make sense in its entirety.â
In turn, Sorrentino says he was looking for a performer who could capture the âjuxtaposition between childishness and virility, innocence and powerâ that characterizes Lenny, who is elected by cardinals who foolishly expect him to be their âtelegenic puppet.â
Instead Lenny wields his power mercilessly, ushering in a new era of conservatism and dogmatism at the Vatican. He dresses down an elderly nun for greeting him with a kiss and takes the name Pius XIII, a callback to a more traditional era in the church.
Though he was not raised in a particular religion, Law takes an a la carte approach to belief, âgathering what I see as personally affecting from all faiths.â
âAnd like every other teenager, I dabbled with a bit of Buddhism,â he added.
To prepare for âThe Young Pope,â the actor read papal diaries and church histories and was even granted a tour of parts of the Vatican. He was impressed by the presence of seemingly mundane facilities â a bank, a laundry, a pharmacy where âhemorrhoid cream sells very well,â he says with a laugh.
But ultimately it was more useful to focus on Lennyâs humanity rather than the institution he represents. He and Sorrentino, who describes Law as âan additional screenwriter,â spent a great deal of time discussing Lennyâs childhood and its effect on his faith.
Abandoned by his hippie parents, Lenny was raised by nuns in an orphanage, never feeling loved and believing that God would fill the void. Sister Mary is a kind of surrogate stage mother to Lenny â the Mama Rose to his Gypsy, Law jokes. (Keaton, he says, referred to him as âyour eminenceâ throughout the production.) The actorâs parents were both adopted and, while they grew up in much different circumstances than Lenny, âI had an emotional attachment to what it is like to be an orphan,â he said.
Lenny is the opposite of the current Pope Francis, whose modesty and inclusive tone have endeared him to many. And this is quite by design, said Sorrentino, who was interested in exploring how the church might respond to Francis in the future. âIn the Vatican too, like in other states, an alternation between progressiveness and conservatism is plausible.â
Lenny immediately orders a ban on photographs and merchandise bearing his image â not out of humility but because he wants to make himself as âunreachable as a rock star,â as mysterious as Daft Punk, Banksy or Stanley Kubrick. He delivers his first address at night, under the cover of darkness, so that no one can see his face.
Asked whether he sympathizes with Lennyâs basic assumption â that an air of mystery can be beneficial to an artist â Law replies with an enthusiastic âhell yes.â
Some of my greatest regrets are not being guided as a young actor. No one tells you you donât have to do the photos. You look back and you think ⌠why did I let all that stuff in?
— Jude Law
âSome of my greatest regrets are not being guided as a young actor. No one tells you you donât have to do the photos. You look back and you think ⌠why did I let all that stuff in? But also why did I give all that stuff away?â
At times, âthat stuffâ has also been taken from Law, whose personal life has been the subject of almost relentless tabloid scrutiny since âThe Talented Mr. Ripleyâ catapulted him to fame 17 years ago, most notably in the hacking of his voicemail by reporters at the News of the World.
And yet despite all this, Law is refreshingly unguarded, meeting in his hotel room without a publicist present. Gracious and polite, he pauses frequently to consider the questions heâs asked in a way that seems thoughtful rather than circumspect.
Although he calls the media scrutiny âdeeply exhausting,â heâs never considered walking away from acting â at least not seriously. âSince people have been hunting and eating and cohabiting, weâve also told each other stories. Itâs a beautiful aspect of our communities. Why stop that?â
Law says heâs guided by a creative restlessness rather than any overarching career plan. He recalls the excitement of seeing John Gielgud in Peter Greenawayâs âProsperoâs Books.â âHere was this 80-something-year-old man performing naked and still putting himself out there. I just thought, what a career. Still doing stuff that probably scares the life out of you.â
While Sorrentino is currently writing a potential second season of âThe Young Pope,â Law is coy about his possible return. For now, heâs focused on other projects, including a stage version of Luchino Viscontiâs âObsession,â directed by Tony-winning Ivo van Hove, at the Barbican in London this spring.
âIâm curious,â he says. âThatâs my religion.â
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âZ: The Beginning of Everything,â Amazon
A âbio seriesâ focused on Zelda Sayre, later Fitzgerald, of the F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Fitzgeralds â the Fitzgerald many have found the more compelling of the two.
Adapted by the team of Nicole Yorkin and Dawn Prestwich (âThe Killingâ) from Therese Anne Fowlerâs historical novel, the series is unusually convincing both for an American period piece and for a biopic, that most treacherous of dramatic forms.
Christina Ricci, the former Wednesday Addams, may not be the first actress youâd imagine to play the belle of 1918 Montgomery, Ala. â physically, she doesnât resemble Zelda at all â but she has spirit to burn, a fierce intelligence and in her mid-30s is both completely credible as a rule-bending, skinny-dipping, cigarette-smoking, party-loving teenager and not too young to play the character through the rest of her short, fabulous, finally circumscribed life.
The series promises to take the couple from their meeting in Montgomery to the New York high life into which Scottâs early success catapulted them â to expatriate Paris and on into a world that eventually had no use for them; for now, the first season is all young love, first novel and heady days. With Christina Bennett Lind as Zeldaâs childhood pal Tallulah Bankhead; David Strathairn, always a bonus, as the exasperated Judge Sayre; and David Hoflin as the eventual author of âThis Side of Paradise,â âThe Great Gatsby,â âTender Is the Nightâ and âThe Last Tycoon,â which also is being adapted as an Amazon series.
âI Am Not Your Negroâ
In times of social and political uncertainty, one man often is referenced by cable news pundits, community advocates and college students: writer and activist James Baldwin. Seen as a literary solace for many, Baldwin authored seminal works, including the much-cited âThe Fire Next Time,â âGiovanniâs Roomâ and âNotes of a Native Son.â
Like blueprints on how to navigate and de-center white supremacy, racism and prejudice, Baldwinâs words, to some, pave the way to the future. Director Raoul Peckâs critically acclaimed documentary âI Am Not Your Negroâ follows in this same vein.
The film relies solely on the words of Baldwinâs unfinished novel, âRemember This House,â an attempt to tell the story of race in modern America through the lives and assassinations of three of his friends: Martin Luther King Jr., Medgar Evers and Malcolm X. Voiced by Samuel L. Jackson, it has no talking heads, instead using archival footage, sound and smart editing to drive its point.
â24: Legacy,â Fox
Can Foxâs iconic â24â survive a 25th hour?
Thatâs one of the most intriguing questions facing viewers at the start of the new year when Fox reboots â24â with â24: Legacy,â which puts a whole new spin on the premise of a thriller playing out in real time.
The â24â brand has been off the air since the 2014 finale of the limited series â24: Live Another Day.â
Back is the explosive opening title, the âevents unfold in real timeâ introduction, the on-screen running clock and the breakneck pace.
Not back is Kiefer Sutherland, the heart and soul of the series with his portrayal of Jack Bauer, the world-weary spy who had to save the world several times from enemy forces. (Sutherland is now trying to run the country as a lower-level Cabinet member who is unexpectedly promoted to president of the United States in ABCâs âDesignated Survivor,â which is in the midst of its first season.)
This version of â24â, which debuts Feb. 5 following the Super Bowl, stars Corey Hawkins, best known for playing Heath on âThe Walking Deadâ and Dr. Dre in the film âStraight Outta Compton.â Hawkins plays Eric Carter, an Army Ranger and the leader of a raid on a Middle Eastern terrorist cell. Now, the survivors of that cell are out to track Carter and his fellow warriors in an effort to secure a weapon stolen during the raid that will unleash an attack on America.
Fox is taking a huge risk with â24: Legacy,â replacing a veteran star like Sutherland with a relatively unknown African American actor. No other characters from the original series â at least in the first few episodes â are present (they couldnât even bring back Chloe?). Though there will be a few familiar faces, including Miranda Otto and Benjamin Bratt, the supporting cast is largely new â and culturally diverse.
Still, many of the elements that helped make â24â a hit â car and foot chases; double- and triple-crosses â are front and center.
It will be interesting to see whether the showâs devoted fans will keep it ticking beyond this season.