Dev Patel and Rooney Mara in the Tearjerker 'Lion'

The Weinstein Company usually has a contender in the Oscar race, but last year they fell short of a Best Picture nomination with Carol, despite six other nods for it. Could this be their return to form? It certainly looks like a movie that'll shamelessly tug on those heartstrings. I don't know- maybe too manipulative? I've always liked Dev Patel though, so I'm glad to see him in things all these years after Slumdog Millionaire (and I actually remember him from before that, when he was a teenager on the BBC teen drama Skins. Anyone else remember that show?) This got slightly mixed reviews at Toronto just yesterday, so we'll see how it plays. Never count out Weinstein completely.

Brie Larson in Red Band Trailer for 'Free Fire'

This looks pretty nuts, right? With the Toronto film festival underway as we speak, this movie premiered to some pretty enthusiastic responses, with most calling it a violent, bloody, fun B-movie, which has to be all this was aspiring to be anyway, based on this trailer. The fact that it's a shootout all taking place in one room looks to me like it could get old fast (no matter how short the movie actually is), but who knows. I'd just need a little more of a story there.

Matthew McConaughey Goes Bald for His New Movie 'Gold'

This kinda looks like Wolf of Wall Street meets American Hustle, am I right? Is that a new genre now? McConaughey goes bald and gains a whole bunch of weight for this one (kinda like Christian Bale did in Hustle), and the tone seems more of a comedy than a drama, as had been reported earlier (this is coming from Stephen Gaghan, the guy who made Syriana). It's coming out in late December, for any potential Oscar buzz, most likely McConaughey in Best Actor, but we'll see. It may a little too much been there, done that, as far as the story goes.

First Trailer for Ben Affleck's Gangster Movie 'Live By Night'

I don't think this looks like anything that hasn't already been said in a thousand other gangster movies before, and I wonder if that's why it's coming out January 17th. I mean, that's the month for dumpster releases if ever there is one, so if this was any good, why wouldn't it be coming out this fall? It's Ben Affleck's first post-Argo directing project, if anyone still thinks his directing career wasn't really about rebooting his own image so he can star in whatever movies he wants again...I'm not so sure about that, given his recent acting choices. 

Will Smith Meets Love, Time and Death in 'Collateral Beauty'

This movie's coming out at Christmas as ultimate counter programming to the juggernaut that is Rogue One, and it looks pretty Hallmark-y, but what a cast, huh? There must have been something there that attracted all these names. It looks like a spin on A Christmas Carol, which makes it good for the holiday release, but I don't know. You want to root for these kinds of movies, because it's what we wish studios would make more of- an original script with big name actors. But they also have to be good (or at least successful) to keep that concept alive. So here's hoping.

Jackie Chan Among 2016's Honorary Oscar Recipients

The honorees for this year's Governor's Awards have been announced, and the Academy has made some unusual, but inspired choices this time around. The most familiar name among the bunch is the legendary Jackie Chan of course, who receives the award after four decades of brilliant and innovative contributions to action cinema as a master choreographer, stuntman and filmmaker as well as global superstar. In fact, it's hard to believe that at 62, the only question might be is he too young to receive what's seen as the equivalent of a lifetime achievement award (but hey, Spike Lee got this last year at 58, so if he can get one...). The other recipients are the British film editor Anne Coates, whose work includes Lawrence of Arabia, Becket, The Elephant Man, In the Line of Fire and Out of Sight, documentarian Frederick Wiseman, whose films were never even nominated for an Oscar, and casting director Lynn Stalmaster, who's filmography dates from the late 1950's to the early 1980's, and includes films like I Want to Live!, Judgment at Nuremberg,  In the Heat of the Night, Jeremiah Johnson, Fiddler on the Roof, The Last Detail, Bound for Glory, Superman (we can thank him for discovering Christopher Reeve) and Being There. The 8th Annual Governor's Awards will take place on November 12th.

New Trailer for Isabelle Huppert in Paul Verhoeven's 'Elle'

For me, this is absolutely my most anticipated film of the year. Verhoeven at his best makes shocking, bold, fiercely original and often female empowering films, and despite the controversy amidst the raves that this movie drew at Cannes, its garnered some of the best reviews I think I've ever seen for his usually divisive films. I'm betting that Isabelle Huppert will finally land her long overdue Oscar nomination for Best Actress, since this is really her movie, through and through.

Trailer for Sweden's Animated Oscar Entry 'My Life as a Courgette'

GKids, the studio that does the noble work of distributing foreign animated films in the U.S., has officially picked up Sweden's Oscar entry for animated film this year, the French language My Life as a Courgette (or zucchini). If you're like me, who's often tired of the same looking CG animation that comes out all the time here, this one looks like a gem, and it apparently is to the people who saw it at Cannes. Just from watching this, I'm pretty sure that it will be one of the year's Oscar nominees in the category.