Looper (dir. Rian
Johnson)
For anyone who saw Rian Johnson’s debut feature film Brick, a neo-noir thriller that drew
heavily from the hard-boiled fiction of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, Looper is bound to cause excitement.
Casting Joseph Gordon-Levitt once more as his leading man, Johnson’s third film
takes place in a futuristic gangland where time travel has been invented – but made
illegal.
As a result, time travel is available only on the black
market which the mob then use when they want to get rid of someone by sending
them back 30 years into the past where a hired gun, or ‘looper’, like Joe is
waiting. It seems like the perfect crime until one day the mob decide to close
the loop, sending Joe’s future self (Bruce Willis) back to the past to be
assassinated, forcing Joe on the run as he chases down his future self.
Johnson has written as well as directed this film which has
the appearance of a well-crafted science fiction film that draws on the
characters and language of pulp fiction and film noir. Emily Blunt and Jeff
Daniels are set to support the two leading men in what looks to be one of the
most original and anticipated films of the year.
Looper opens in the UK on 28 September.
On the Road (dir.
Walter Salles)
An adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s celebrated novel On the Road has been in the pipelines now
for over three decades since Francis Ford Coppola, who executive produces, first
displayed interest in 1979. Since then the project has undergone several
changes in directors and screenwriters before finally settling on Walter Salles
and Jose Rivéra, the team that brought us the road-trip memoir of Che Guevara
in The Motorcycle Diaries.
Kerouac’s semi-autobiographical book is one which depicts
the time he spent around the likes of Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and,
primarily, Neal Cassady, who provides the inspiration behind the Dean Moriarty
character (Garrett Hedlund). The film follows aspiring writer Sal Paradise (Sam
Riley) and charming ex-con Dean Moriarty as they hit the road in a search for unquenchable
freedom. Their journey takes them on an adventure which captures the zeitgeist
of the 1950s beat generation to which Kerouac belonged and deals with themes of
abandoned women and absent fathers which are crucial to the book.
Kristen Stewart, Viggo Mortensen, Kirsten Dunst and Steve
Buscemi add to the cast providing the array of love interests and free spirited
characters which Sal and Dean encounter on their way through the cityscapes of
San Francisco, New York and New Orleans. The film promises an energetic jazz
soundtrack consisting of Ella Fitzgerald and Slim Gaillard alongside an
original score from Academy Award-winning composer Gustavo Santaolalla (Brokeback Mountain).
On the Road opens in the UK on 12 October.
Skyfall (dir. Sam
Mendes)
Although details of the forthcoming James Bond movie Skyfall have been kept pretty much under
wraps, one thing we know for sure is that it will see Daniel Craig return as
Her Majesty’s secret servant - although there have been no reports of any scene
involving Craig and Queen Elizabeth II parachuting out of a helicopter into any Olympic
stadiums!
First-time Bond director Sam Mendes (American Beauty) is at the helm of the project promising to
continue the theme of a psychologically damaged 007 for the film which
coincides with the 50th anniversary of the prestigious franchise,
born out of Ian Fleming’s novels. That said, at the Skyfall press conference Mendes, who has worked with Craig before
on the film Road to Perdition, was quick
to dismiss any notion that the film would shy away from action sequences in order
to concentrate on Bond’s psyche, insisting there will be ‘a lot of action and
much more.’ Mendes being an accomplished stage-director as well as film, you
can be assured that he will be able to deal with both elements to of the film
with dexterity.
Judi Dench will reprise her role as M for an impressive
seventh time alongside a celebrated cast including Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Me) as the film’s
villain, and Ralph Fiennes (Harry Potter,
Coriolanus) whose character, like much of the film, is shrouded in mystery.
Locations for the film include London, Shanghai, Istanbul and Scotland so you
can be sure that Skyfall will contain
the spectacle which we have all come to know and love over the past 50 years
and 23 films.
Skyfall opens in the UK on 26 October.
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