5 Movies To Look Forward To In 2006 (And 5 More To Dread)
5 Movies To Look Forward To In 2006 (And 5 More To Dread)
By Oggy Bleacher
Movies to Look Forward To:
1. And There Will Be Blood (2006) – P.T. Anderson’s next film is an adaptation of Upton Sinclair’s 1927 novel, “Oil!” Whether he just writes the screenplay or also directs it,
2. Dangerous Parking (2006) - The compelling novel by the late Stuart Browne is adapted by Dir. Peter Howitt (Laws of Attraction). The story of filmmaker Noah Arkwright’s battle with his own deadly appetites is at once hilarious and sobering. The book, Browne’s only novel, is akin to Hunter Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Expect the same combination of uncontrolled drug abuse and eccentric people who simply live more interesting lives than the rest of us. The novel is pure cinema and worth hunting down. If well executed, the movie should be supremely entertaining.
3. V for Vendetta (2006) -Who could get tired of the existential Wachowski brothers? Their latest movie credits James McTeigue (1st Assistant Director on The Matrix trilogy) as Director, but Andy and Larry W. won’t be too far from the wheel so expect the same mind-blowing FX and attention to detail. Set in the near future of a totalitarian
4. The Da Vinci Code (2006) – Ron Howard guns for his second Oscar with this adaptation of the immensely popular Dan Brown novel investigating the mystery behind Leonardo Da Vinci’s artwork. Add a screenplay by Akiva Goldsmith (A Beautiful Mind), Tom Hanks as the lead with support from Audrey Tautou and Sir Ian McKellan and you have pure gold. Will Ron Howard get in the way of the story with pointless camera work, or will his camera work amplify the complicated historical puzzle? I’m betting on the latter. Don’t spoil the movie by reading the book first. This should be fantastic.
5. Mister Lonely (2006) – Harmony Korine wrote the arresting Kids (1995) when he was 22 years old. He wrote Gummo two years later. Julien Donkey-Boy arrived in 1999. Then he got back together with Dir. Larry Clark for Ken Park (2002). Korine focuses on images and characters that have predictably repelled mainstream audiences: Cat-killers, miscarriages, pedophiles, white trash drunks, skateboarders and gutter punks are involved in head-scratching insanity in Korine’s universe. Nevertheless, Korine is leading a wave of new filmmakers like Todd Solondz (Happiness) and Vincent Gallo (
Honorable mention:
300 (2006) - Frank Miller (
Movies to Dread:
1. Clerks II (2006) – When I first learned that Kevin Smith’s Clerks (1994) would have a sequel, I screamed involuntarily. Now I feel compelled to warn the world. Clerks Uno is the first cancer cell that replicated into the tumor colony also known as Mallrats (1995), Chasing Amy (1997), Dogma (1999), and (gag) Jersey Girl (2004). To return to his uninspired origins when the world hasn’t yet recovered from Jersey Girl, is just cruel. Give us more time, Kevin! Please! Miramax seems to think the title of this film will be “The Passion of the Clerks.” That would have been mildly amusing about two years ago. It was mildly amusing when
2. Flags of Our Fathers (2006) – Clint Eastwood directs the latest attempt to take an audience and strangle them to tears with “HONOR!, STRENGTH!, and COURAGE!” Hasn’t Eastwood learned anything from “against all odds” re-runs like Cinderella Man (2005) and Seabiscuit (2003)? A movie about the men who famously raised the flag at
3. Revolver (2005) - It’s official: Madonna is the new Yoko Ono. The Immaterial Girl somehow convinced husband Guy Ritchie to plug Kabbalah in his latest film Revolver (aka Return to
4. M:i:III (2006) Philip Seymour Hoffman either has a kid in private school, big gambling debts, or he has been possessed by the demon spirit of film-whore Kevin Bacon.
5. Rambo IV (2006) – It’s true. John Rambo didn’t retire after destroying the Russian army in
Dis-Honorable Mention:
The Pink Panther (2006) – Everyone loves Steve Martin, but the final word was written on the bumbling Inspector Jacques Clouseau by Peter Sellers in 1978. Ten years ago Martin might have pulled this role off with some energy. Today he is 61 years old and his physical comedy is completely predictable. I can already hear his irritating fake French accent. Skip this and rent the original.