Emilia Clarke Finds Love with Henry Golding in 'Last Christmas'

I didn’t realize Paul Feig (The Heat, Bridesmaids) had a new movie coming out, nor that it was co-written by Emma Thompson, who came up with the story with her husband Greg Wise (!). Honestly, just the Emma Thompson part makes me more curious about it than the actual trailer, which doesn’t look that different from a typical romantic comedy (not that many of those get made anymore, but when they do they’re usually, you know, terrible). Also, Emilia Clarke’s track record in movies is pretty dismal so far, but she’s still trying.

Saoirse Ronan Stars in a New 'Little Women,' Coming This Christmas

Setting aside the need for yet another version of Little Women in the world (there was just recently a BBC series with Maya Hawke and I think they should have waited a good 40-50 years after the 1994 one to do another feature film), how do you think this one looks? It seems fine, except Florence Pugh does not look right to me as Amy. She’s a good actress (she was great in Lady Macbeth and The Little Drummer Girl), but they’re using her to play Amy at both ages, which is a no-no, in my opinion. You have to use two different actresses for Amy, because no one in their twenties is believable as a 12-year-old and Florence Pugh already looks older than her age. Eliza Scanlen (Beth) looks younger than her. I’ll be seeing this of course, as a Little Women aficionado, but I’m very attached to the Winona Ryder version, and I doubt this will top it.

Martin Scorsese Brings in the Heavyweights for 'The Irishman'

This movie has a lot of hype surrounding it, not only because it’s Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci and Harvey Keitel’s reunion with Scorsese, but it brings Al Pacino into the mix and it’s using the digital de-aging technology to make them all look young again. What do you guys think? The movie looks pretty good, but is the CG too distracting? The thing to me is that we’re all extremely familiar with how these guys looked as young men and I’m not totally sure (based this trailer) that this brings them back to exactly as they were. So it’s iffy. The movie is opening the New York Film Festival September 27th, and then coming out on Netflix sometime later this fall.

Cynthia Erivo Stars as Harriet Tubman in New Biopic

This is good casting, but the trailer makes it seem a bit too much like a basic TV movie about Harriet Tubman. Still, with a role that good, Cynthia Erivo could get an Oscar nomination anyway. The movie is premiering at Toronto in September and coming out on November 1st (and that’s a good release date, so it could be that the film is stronger overall than this trailer suggests).

Tom Hanks Plays Mr. Rogers in 'A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood'

With all the interest in Mr. Rogers inspired by the documentary Will You Be My Neighbor? (which was shockingly snubbed for the Oscar nomination last year), this movie may turn out to be a hit later this fall. It’s directed by Marielle Heller, who got nominations last year for Melissa McCarthy, Richard E. Grant and her screenplay for Can You Ever Forgive Me? I think this looks like it could be good, but Tom Hanks is still mostly Tom Hanks to me- he’s not really the kind of guy who can make himself disappear into a famous person, especially one as distinctive as Fred Rogers was. This would have called for a character actor who’s not so distinctively famous himself. That doesn’t mean he won’t be good, just not, you know, Mr. Rogers.

Tom Hooper Brings 'Cats' From Stage to Screen

Oh boy. Have you ever seen anything more horrifying than this trailer? Who really thought it was a good idea to put Cats on the big screen, and in realistically rendered human/CGI hybrid form at that? Damn, this looks bad. And coming from Tom Hooper, the guy who did Les Mis, that really gives me less than zero faith that this could possibly be good. The creepy cat people are too distracting to even pay attention to anything else that might be happening.