![]() From there, at least judging from its trailer, there are more tonal similarities to Children of Men than The Terminator. Traveling into the “dark heart of AI-occupied territory,” however, David discovers the weapon he’s hunting is but a small child (or at least a cyborg in kid’s clothing), triggering some latent paternal instinct. John David Washington plays an ex-special forces agent in a world of robots-versus-humans warfare tasked with a mission to assassinate the elusive mastermind behind advanced artificial-intelligence tech that could either obliterate mankind or finally enable lasting peace. ![]() In this dystopian sci-fi thriller from Welsh Rogue One director Gareth Edwards, AI is the enemy. ( In select theaters September 15 and wide release October 6.) - Chris Lee The Creator Think: Moneyball for shitposting stonks bros. He grew an initial $53,000 investment into a $48 million fortune by relentlessly cheerleading junk stock from GameStop across social media and Reddit threads - inspiring a grassroots amateur-investor revolution that wrested power away from hedge-fund managers to stranglehold the options-trading market. In this Big Short–esque, Craig Gillespie–directed financial biodrama - the highest-profile project in an onslaught of GameStop-related limited series, documentaries, TV movies, docuseries, and feature films headed to the screen - Paul Dano portrays Keith Gill, the securities broker who brought Wall Street to its knees in 2021. ( In theaters September 15.) - Nate Jones Dumb Money Michelle Yeoh, Tina Fey, and Branagh’s Belfast boys Jamie Dornan and Jude Hill are among the suspects - or, perhaps, the victims. Kenneth Branagh’s latest Hercule Poirot mystery adapts one of Agatha Christie’s lesser-known works, 1969’s Hallowe’en Party, and ports the action (a murder at a séance) from a small English village to Venice. ( In theaters September 8.) - Rachel Handler A Haunting in Venice John Corbett, a man who truly knows his lane, is back again as another much-beloved love interest of the early aughts. In this one, Vardalos and her clan head to Greece for a family reunion in honor of her late father, Gus, played by Michael Constantine, who died in 2021. “A lot has happened since my big fat Greek wedding,” says Nia Vardalos in the trailer for the third installment in what is now officially a cinematic franchise. So we’ll let Vulture’s esteemed movies writers guide you from here. ![]() There’s too much weird and great and silly stuff coming to squeeze into one paragraph. And Harmony Korine will surely bamboozle us all with Aggro Dr1ft, a film shot all in infrared(?) and at least partly preoccupied with demonic crime lords and swords(?). Did you know we’re now up to ten Saw movies? Ten! A24, meanwhile, has made its first musical: Dicks: The Musical, which until recently we’d been calling F**king Identical Twins. Strap in for awards season, in other words, though this fall is packing more than just statue bait. theaters in the weeks and months to come alongside the likes of Killers of the Flower Moon, Dune 2, and Ridley Scott’s take on Napoleon. Stars will glide in on gondolas and unveil some of this year’s most promising titles, including new movies from some of our favorite directors - Sofia Coppola ( Priscilla), David Fincher ( The Killer), Michael Mann ( Ferrari), and Pablo Larraín ( El Conde) among them. Around here, the Venice Film Festival marks the start of the fall movie season.
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