WEEKLY RELEASE

Birdman
It is being hailed as one of the best movies of the year, and after reading about it ad nauseum, I am intrigued. But I’m still not entirely sure, based on the descriptions and hype, what makes it so compelling, which is why I’m anxious to see it and finally find out.

I have a lot of respect for director Alejandro González Iñárritu of “Babel” and “Amores Perros” fame, and he’s made a truly auteurist (or gimmicky, depending on your point of view) move with his single-continuous-shot approach to the production. The technique is frequently compared to the most famous previous attempt at it – Alfred Hitchcock’s 1948 thriller “Rope,” which Iñárritu rather ungraciously called a terrible film in a recent Time magazine article. (It certainly wasn’t one of Hitchcock’s best, but it was by no means “terrible.”) In any case, I hope he’s done it as well if not better than the master of suspense.

The most delightful thing about the film for us Michael Keaton fans will be seeing Keaton in a leading role again. I’ve enjoyed his detours over the years in films like “Much Ado About Nothing” and “Jackie Brown”/“Out of Sight” (same character), but his appearances have been too few and far between. In the interest of full disclosure, I never thought he was the right guy to play Batman. He did a fine job, but, frankly, I thought he was better than Batman because Batman is not terribly interesting (sorry Christian Bale). The villains are what make those movies great. Keaton as the Joker – not that would’ve been something.    
DIRECTOR: Alejandro González Iñárritu | HEADLINERS: Michael Keaton, Emma Stone, Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton, Naomi Watts

Dear White People
The word is that this hilarious comedy takes on the experience of black students on a predominantly white college campus (in this case, a fictional Ivy League university) with a refreshingly honest perspective. It’s a tricky thing to maneuver all the racial perceptions and misconceptions at work in the world, but I’m looking forward to seeing how this Sundance special jury prize-winning feature manages to make it funny and fascinating.   
DIRECTOR: Justin Simien | HEADLINERS: Tyler James Williams, Tessa Thompson

Listen Up Philip
Jason Schwartzman brings his quirky hipster vibe to this indie black comedy about an unapologetically obnoxious novelist.
DIRECTOR: Alex Ross Perry | HEADLINERS: Jason Schwartzman, Elisabeth Moss, Jonathan Pryce

Young Ones
Being touted as a mash-up of the western and sci-fi genres, the visual imagery looks stunning and the concept is interesting. It’s set in the near-future during a drought so severe dishes are being washed with dirt. We’re probably supposed to interpret that figuratively. But the drama emerges from the desperation of the rural family at the center of the story and the strangers who come calling for the family’s land.
DIRECTOR: Jake Paltrow (Gwynnie’s brother) | HEADLINERS: Michael Shannon, Elle Fanning, Nicholas Hoult

Watchers of the Sky
What will be an undoubtedly depressing but hopefully inspiring documentary about the remarkable warriors who have fought to prosecute the perpetrators of genocide. Inspired by the book A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide by U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power, the film features human rights activists and lawyers such as Raphael Lemkin, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, Emmanuel Uwurukunda and Benjamin Ferencz.
DIRECTOR: Edet Belzberg

Addicted
OK, so it will clearly be a melodramatic retread of “Unfaithful” flipping the scenario of “Fatal Attraction” to show what it’s like for a married woman being hounded by her maniacal lover, but there’s always room for sheer entertainment by way of watching beautiful people (especially Boris Kodjoe) engage in elevated soap opera antics. We can’t be high-minded all the time. And apparently the sex scenes will rival anything they plan to hit us with in “Fifty Shades of Grey.”  
DIRECTOR: Bille Woodruff | HEADLINERS: Sharon Leal, Boris Kodjoe, William Levy

The Golden Era
A sweeping biopic of Chinese writer Xiao Hong, who led a short, troubled life but managed to produce several novels during turbulent times before her death at the age of 30 in 1942.
DIRECTOR: Ann Hui | HEADLINERS: Tang Wei, Feng Shaofeng

This week's releases of interest - October 10

Jeremy Renner in "Kill the Messenger"

Jeremy Renner in "Kill the Messenger"

Kill the Messenger
http://www.focusfeatures.com/kill_the_messenger 

I’m anxious to see this one just because this guy’s story fascinates me. The film is based on the crusade of a real reporter, Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News, to reveal a connection between the crack/cocaine epidemic and the CIA. Somehow I missed all this in the mid- to late 1990s, but apparently the point of the movie is to show why many of us missed it: a government and media campaign to discredit the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. As Entertainment Weekly writer Joe McGovern suggested in his review, someone should get to work on a documentary about this guy, but the fictionalized account will have to do for now.
DIRECTOR: Michael Cuesta | HEADLINERS: Jeremy Renner and Rosemarie DeWitt

The Blue Room
http://www.ifcfilms.com/films/blue-room

Mathieu Amalric has been busy. Last year, he appeared in Roman Polanski’s “Venus in Fur,” he is the narrator of a the recent French release “Bird People” (which I am also looking forward to seeing), and now he turns up in this French thriller as a man accused of what appears to be a very bloody crime. One minute he’s enjoying a passionate, illicit tryst with a beautiful woman (they are both married to other people), and the next he’s facing some harsh questioning in a police station. It all sounds very Hitchcockian, which is why it is on this list. Amalric also took on directing and co-writing duties on this one.
DIRECTOR: Mathieu Amalric | HEADLINERS: Mathieu Amalric, Léa Drucker & Stéphanie Cleau

The Supreme Price
http://www.joannalipper.com/filmmaker/supreme-price

This documentary reveals the story of Hafsat Abiola, the daughter of two democracy and human rights political activists in Nigeria. Her father, M.K.O. Abiola, was elected president of Nigeria in 1993, but the election was nullified by the country’s military dictatorship; her mother, Kudirat Abiola, took over the cause and rose in the political ranks only to be assassinated. The fact that these individuals were fighting for human rights, and women’s rights in particular, in a polygamist society (M.K.O. had four wives and several mistresses) adds an interesting dynamic.
DIRECTOR: Joanna Lipper 

Keep On Keepin’ On
http://keeponkeepinon.com/

This documentary produced by Quincy Jones and Paula Dupre’ Pesmen is about the bond that developed between a blind piano prodigy named Justin Kauflin and the legendary jazz musician Clark Terry.
DIRECTOR: Al Hicks

Nas: Time Is Illmatic
http://timeisillmatic.com/

Here’s another documentary based in the music industry. This one from director One9 is all about the making of Nas’ 1994 hip-hop classic, “Illmatic.” I can’t say that I was in on the ground level with “Illmatic” when it was released 20 years ago, but I love hip hop and love learning more about its history and its history-makers, like Nas.
DIRECTOR: One9

St. Vincent
http://trailers.apple.com/trailers/weinstein/stvincent/

Who doesn’t love Bill Murray? But I suspect this comedy about a grumpy old ne’er-do-well’s redeeming qualities being brought out by an adorable kid will not be a huge feather in the actor’s well-worn, sarcastic player hat. But it might not be a small feather, either. I mean, who doesn’t love Bill Murray? Even though he plays one often and seemingly effortlessly, he's no slouch. That Melissa McCarthy, who plays the adorable kid's mom, isn't so bad either.
DIRECTOR: Theodore Melfi | HEADLINERS: Bill Murray, Melissa McCarthy, Naomi Watts & Jaeden Lieberher

Haider
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3390572/

As a huge Shakespeare buff, I’m always excited to see new adaptations of the Bard’s work. This one from director Vishal Bhardwaj puts an Indian spin on “Hamlet,” but with a special emphasis on the Gertrude character, named Ghazala in the film. Bhardwaj also has directed adaptations of “Macbeth” and “Othello” – “Maqbool” and “Omkara” – which were received pretty well by critics.
DIRECTOR: Vishal Bhardwaj | HEADLINERS: Tabu and Shahid Kapoor