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  Home arrow Features arrow Cover Stories arrow Summer Film Preview

 
Summer Film Preview | Print |  E-mail
Written by staff writers   
Friday, 30 May 2008

The Strangers (May 30)
director: Bryan Bertino
stars: Liv Tyler, Gemma Ward, Scott Speedman

The first trailer for “The Strangers” premiered last fall—exactly when the movie was supposed to arrive in theaters. Rogue Pictures waffled on a release date for “The Strangers” for a long time before finally settling on the May 30 debut, and while that’s usually a bad sign, the trailer is so chock full of cover-your-eyes creepiness that horror fans have buzzed about the movie for months. About a young couple (Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman) trapped in their suburban home by three masked intruders, “The Strangers” is the first feature from writer/director Bryan Bertino. It looks new and shiny but feels positively old-school, with an atmosphere more similar to “Last House on the Left” than “Saw.” There are precious few details about the plot circulating and plenty of speculation about whether “The Strangers” is a retread of “Them,” a 2006 French film with a similar plot. But if the trailer is any indication, “The Strangers” may bring in some chills amidst the summer heat. —LC

The Foot Fist Way (May 30)
director: Jody Hill
stars: Danny McBride, Jody Hill, Ben Best

So far, this film’s claim to fame is that when Will Ferrell and Adam McKay received advance copies, they loved it so much that they have supposedly watched it more than 20 times and commonly quote from it in daily conversation. But even if you’re not a fan of Ferrell or McKay, it’s worth checking out the refreshingly hilarious trailer. McBride plays a mustached Tai Kwon Do instructor with an inflated sense of his own competence. As his marriage unravels, his ferocity intensifies, and so do the laughs—in the trailer, at least. Whether this movie will prove to be the next great “Napoleon Dynamite” or the next terrible “Blades of Glory” remains to be seen. —MK

The Incredible Hulk (June 13)
director: Louis Leterrier
stars: Edward Norton, Liv Tyler, Tim Roth, William Hurt

The new Edward Norton-powered Hulk movie looks good, make no mistake, but we just have to take this moment to say, frak you all for not liking Ang Lee’s 2003 “Hulk.” That was a beautiful movie that injected the veiny green superhero with actual emotion, while at the same time delivering lots of tank smashing, helicopter smashing, building smashing, monster smashing and even monster-poodle smashing. But was it enough for you people? No, you said it was too slow and not enough smashing, so the new movie is positioned as something of a reboot, with a new cast and more smashing. We’ll see if it’s a step forward or not. —DK

Get Smart (June 20)
director: Peter Segal
stars: Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway

Would you believe this is the third attempt to revive the mid-’60s Cold War spy spoof? Previous attempts to bring Agent Maxwell Smart, his sexy and more capable partner Agent 99 and the other secret agents from CONTROL and KAOS back to the big and small screen didn’t fare well (see the mid-’90s revival of “Get Smart,” starring Andy Dick). But this latest attempt, starring Steve Carell as the bumbling secret agent, seems poised to perfectly capture the blend of slight satire, smart wordplay and silly sight gags of the original series. Carell’s voice, mannerisms and delivery are all remarkably similar to those of Don Adams, the original Maxwell Smart, but based on the trailer, it looks like Carell is putting his own spin on Smart while paying homage to the character Adams helped create. Backed by an awesome supporting cast (including Terrance Stamp and Alan Arkin), “Get Smart” also has the benefit of a blessing from Mel Brooks, co-creator of the original TV series. There’s always the chance “Get Smart” will, to paraphrase Maxwell Smart, miss being good by that much, but the odds are good it will be smarter than the average classic TV remake. —LC

Wall-E (June 27)
director: Andrew Stanton
stars: Ben Burtt, Sigourney Weaver, Fred Willard

A delightfully winsome combination of R2-D2, E.T. and “Short Circuit’s” slapstick automaton Number 5, Wall-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class) has spent hundreds of lonely years dutifully picking up the mess left by humans after they abandoned their polluted home world for the reaches of space. When a slick new female machine named EVE drops from the sky and shows him what he’s been missing, he follows her back into the void to face his makers and invite them home. Another in the yet unbroken success streak from the powerhouse dream-weavers at Pixar Studios, this one’s as sure a bet as you’re likely to find for newfangled, old-fashioned, family-style, summertime fun. —TB

Hancock (July 2)
director: Peter Berg
stars: Will Smith, Charlize Theron, Jason Bateman

Un-super superhero stories are not new, but this one looks like it could hit the spot, if only because Will Smith’s “Hancock” looks to be meaner, filthier and fouler than any super-powered antihero we’ve seen before. The film has been re-cut several times to get it down to a PG-13 rating, and scenes have been removed after traumatizing test audiences. But we say, bring it! —DK

The Wackness (July 3)
director: Jonathan Levine
stars: Ben Kingsley, Joshua Peck, Famke Janssen

Peck stars as a young drug dealer who trades pot to his psychiatrist (Kingsley) in exchange for therapy sessions. While the whole film centers around their friendship and Peck’s love for Kingsley’s daughter, the buzz has been building around “The Wackness” not only because it’s one of a few marijuana-driven releases this summer, but also because of a scene in which Kingsley locks lips with an Olsen twin. (It’s Mary-Kate. Not that it matters.) That’s right, Ghandi and Michelle Tanner smooching. The casting agent must have been high. —LH

Bladerunner: The Final Cut (July 3-5 at The Music Hall)
director: Ridley Scott
stars: Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young

George Lucas isn’t the only one who continues to tinker with Harrison Ford’s work several decades after calling “wrap.” Difference is, Ridley Scott’s updates actually improve the film, replacing poor corporate decision making with original artistic vision. This is a great chance to get a fistful of Harry in his prime, as a hardened street cop in an all-too-near dystopian future, on a mission to take down a renegade posse of homicidal androids. This is the way we should all remember him.—TB

Hellboy 2: The Golden Army (July 11)
director: Guillermo del Toro
stars: Ron Perlman, Selma Blair, Doug Jones, Luke Goss

Big Red is back, stony faced and stonier fisted, and he may have met his match when a pasty demon prince rises from the underworld to rain havoc and revenge on a defenseless humankind. With a proven hand plumbing the darkest reaches of the human psyche, and a joyous grip on whimsical, if frightening juvenile fantasy, Guillermo del Toro (“Pan’s Labyrinth”), beyond being one of the most talented directors at work in cinema today, simply eats nightmares and craps monsters. You couldn’t ask for a better complement to artist/writer Mike Mignola’s absurdist, often comical remix of epic mythological menaces bumping in the night, and the nearly indistinguishable forces of good that bump them back. —TB

The Dark Knight (July 18)
director: Christopher Nolan
stars: Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Aaron Eckhart

After the success of “Batman Begins,” expectations were high for “The Dark Knight” to begin with, but the death of Heath Ledger earlier this year catapulted “The Dark Knight” from a simple comic book flick sequel to a memorial for the late actor. Whether the real-life tragedy of Ledger’s death will overshadow the movie seems, at this point, irrelevant. Early clips from the movie and reports from co-stars Christian Bale and Michael Caine indicate Ledger’s performance as the Joker is an all-consuming, go-for-broke piece of acting that will stand as one of Ledger’s best roles. Ledger’s Joker is more funny-psycho than the funny-ha-ha performance delivered by Jack Nicholson in 1989’s “Batman,” and any laughs the Clown Prince of Crime elicits in “The Dark Knight” will be of the creepy, nervous variety. But even beyond Ledger, “The Dark Knight” still has a lot going for it, with Bale, Caine, Morgan Freeman and Gary Oldman all reprising their roles from “Batman Begins,” and Aaron Eckhart joining the cast as Harvey Dent, the crusading attorney fated to become Two-Face, one of Batman’s bitterest enemies. “The Dark Knight” looks spectacularly dark, too, a brutal, bombastic movie that blends the noir undertones of modern Batman comics like “The Killing Joke” and “Arkham Asylum.” It’s a sure bet “The Dark Knight” will blow away every other superhero flick at the box office this summer. —LC

The X-Files: I Want to Believe (July 25)
director: Chris Carter
stars: David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson, Billy Connolly

ZOMG, SO EXCITED! It’s been six years since X-Fileophiles have been tossed a bone, and while the plot is still somewhat secret, we do know that the film is a stand-alone in the franchise. So, no black oil, no bees. Instead, we get Mulder and Scully, crazy Scotsman Connolly, a couple of dead girls and a whole lot of snow. Here’s hoping it’s as great as the trailer. Although, “I Want to Believe” is a lame title. It should have stayed a tagline. I like “Mulder and Scully Go to White Castle” better. —LH

Midnight Meat Train (August 1)
director: Ryuhei Kitamara
stars: Bradley Cooper, Leslie Bibb, Brooke Shields

Upon hearing the title, one might think this is a film involving Amtrak and Ron Jeremy. Actually, it’s based on a story by Clive Barker, about a photographer (Cooper) seeking to capture the seedy underbelly of New York. When a gallery owner (Shields) pushes Cooper to take even grittier photographs, he becomes obsessed with the work of Mahogany (Vinnie “I’m the Juggernaut, bitch” Jones), a serial killer who gruesomely butchers people on the subway. Scary stuff! Of course, it’s like Nick Cave says: If you’re gonna dine with the cannibals, sooner or later you’re gonna get eaten. —LH

Choke (August 1)
director: Clark Gregg
stars: Sam Rockwell, Anjelica Houston, Kelly Macdonald

Based on Chuck Palahniuk’s outstanding novel of the same name, “Choke” is the disturbing story of Victor (Rockwell), a sex-addicted medical school dropout who pretends to choke on food in fancy restaurants so other diners can “rescue” him. In turn, he weasels his way into their lives. Houston plays Victor’s mother, a resident of a mental institution, who has recently revealed to Victor the alarming truth of his father’s identity. Rounding out the fabulous cast is Macdonald, as Houston’s doctor. Remember, this is Palahniuk—expect twists and seriously deviant behavior throughout. Bring it. —LH

Pineapple Express (August 8)
director: Steve Gordon Green
stars: Seth Rogen, James Franco

The Judd Apatow-driven brain-trust responsible for “Superbad” reunites for an unexpected hard left turn into action/adventure, as a pair of patented slacker potheads mistakenly witness a gangland execution while toking a particularly burly bit of leaf, and run flailing through the streets to escape the criminals’ wrath. Turns out, it’s not paranoia if they are actually out to get you. —TB

Hell Ride (August 8)
director: Larry Bishop
stars: Michael Madsen, Larry Bishop, Dennis Hopper

Written, directed and staring biker-movie veteran Larry Bishop, co-starring Michael Madsen and Dennis Hopper and produced by Quentin Tarrantino, “Hell Ride” has all the makings of a solid B-movie. Bishop stars as Pistolero, a bad-ass biker whose girlfriend is killed by a rival biker gang, the 666ers. Pistolero and his buddies The Gent (Madsen) and Comanche (Eric Balfour) lead a bloody campaign of vengeance against the 666ers, who are led by Scratch (Hopper), a sadistic psycho capable of anything. “Hell Ride” looks like a lost companion piece to Tarrantino’s “Grindhouse,” and even if “Hell Ride” is only half as fun as “Grindhouse,” it’ll still be a blast. “Hell Ride” premiered at Sundance earlier this year, and initial reviews were mixed, with some embracing the film’s neo-cheesiness and others, including genre site FEARnet.com’s Scott Weinberg, declaring “Hell Ride” a stinker. “Hell Ride” is chock-full of ultra-violence and the three Bs—beer, bikers and boobs—and so it seems it will be a little out of place amidst all the family-friendly blockbusters. Whether “Hell Ride” turns out to be so bad it’s good or so bad it’s terrible, it at least seems like a summertime movie road-trip worth taking. —LC

Tropic Thunder (August 15)
director: Ben Stiller
stars: Ben Stiller, Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr.

Although a comedy about making a war movie sounds like a horrible idea, we want to believe that Ben Stiller can make another funny movie—something weird and twitchy and funny and smart, because that’s what we like about him, and we’re willing to give him yet another chance. Mostly, though, we will go to this movie to see Robert Downey Jr. in blackface. —DK

Star Wars: The Clone Wars (August 15)
director: Dave Filoni

In 2003, the Cartoon Network aired a brilliant animated “Star Wars” series called “The Clone Wars,” produced and directed by  “Samurai Jack’s” legendary Genndy Tartakovsky. It was better “Star Wars” than “Star Wars,” with action, humor, pathos, mystery and a concision that approached poetry, and it was very successful. It was so successful, in fact, that it inspired a movie of the same name ... but did Lucas bring Tartakovsky back for the new project? Well, no. Is it the same style of animation? Well ... no. Is it from the same writers, then? Nope. If there’s one thing we can count on from a new George Lucas project, it’s that he’ll screw it up. —DK

Hamlet 2 (August 22)
director: Andrew Fleming
stars: Steve Coogan, Catherine Keener, David Arquette

Starring the criminally underused British comedian Coogan, “Hamlet 2” tells the story of a failed actor turned failed high school drama teacher who writes a sequel to “Hamlet” for his students to perform. The production involves Jesus, light sabers and a time machine. When the school objects to the content of his play, a First Amendment battle begins. And somewhere in all of it, Elisabeth Shue plays herself playing a nurse. It looks like it could be pretty brilliant. And anything involving Coogan and a musical number called “Rock Me, Sexy Jesus” is worth a chance. —LH

Death Race (August 22)
director: Paul W.S. Anderson
stars: Jason Statham, Joan Allen

Paul W.S. Anderson’s previous directing credits include 1995’s “Mortal Kombat,” 2002’s “Resident Evil” and 2004’s “Alien Vs. Predator.” With that kind of resume, it’s somewhat of a marvel to think he’s still able to find work. An update of 1975’s “Death Race 2000,” Anderson’s latest project takes place in 2020 on Terminal Island in New York. In it, action star Jason Statham is pitted against a bunch of violent convicts in a deadly arena car race. The film seems destined to disappoint fans of the original, but maybe, just maybe, Anderson will prove us wrong. —MK

Vicky Cristina Barcelona (August 29)
director: Woody Allen
stars: Javier Bardem, Patricia Clarkson, Penelope Cruz, Scarlett Johansson

The Wood-man’s latest effort is a romantic comedy about two young Americans who spend a summer in Spain and meet an artist and his beautiful but insane ex-wife. But really, who cares about the plot of the movie when you have independent film icons Bardem and Clarkson together in one film? And then there’s the delicious rumor that the movie features a love scene involving Cruz and Johansson. Why must August be so far away?!!! —LH
 

MAY                  

May 30
• Bigger, Stronger, Faster—Dir: Christopher Bell. Stars: Mark Bell, Mike Bell
• Savage Grace—Dir: Tom Kalin. Stars: Julianne Moore, Stephen Dillane
• Sex and the City—Dir: Michael Patrick King. Stars: Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall
• Stuck—Dir: Stuart Gordon. Stars: Stephen Rea, Russell Hornsby
• The Foot Fist Way—Dir: Jody Hill. Stars: Danny McBride, Jody Hill
• The Strangers—Dir: Bryan Bertino. Stars: Liv Tyler, Gemma Ward
• The Unknown Woman—Dir: Giuseppe Tornatore. Stars: Ksenia Rappoport, Michele Placido
• Wonders Are Many: The Making of Doctor Atomic—Dir: Jon Else. Stars: Peter Sellars, John Adams

JUNE                 

June 4
• The Wedding Director—Dir: Marco Bellocchio. Stars: Sergio Castellitto, Donatella Finocchiaro
• Operation Filmmaker—Dir: Nina Davenport. Stars: Muthana Mohmed, Live Schreiber

June 6
• You Don’t Mess With the Zohan—Dir: Dennis Dugan. Stars: Adam Sandler, Rob Schneider
• When Did You Last See Your Father?—Dir: Anand Tucker. Stars: Jim Broadbent, Colin Firth
• To the Limit—Dir: Pepe Danquart. Stars: Alexander Huber, Thomas Huber
• The Promotion—Dir: Steve Conrad. Stars: Seann William Scott, John C Reilly
• The Go-Getter—Dir: Martin Hynes. Stars: Lou Taylor Pucci, Zooey Deschanel
• Take Out—Dir: Shih-Ching Tsou, Sean Baker. Stars: Charles Jang, Jeng-Hua Yua
• Mother of Tears—Dir: Dario Argento. Stars: Asia Argento, Daria Nicolodi
• Mongol—Dir: Sergei Bodrov. Stars: Tadanobu Asano, Sun Honglei
• Miss Conception—Dir: Eric Styles. Stars: Heather Graham, Tom Ellis
• Kung Fu Panda—Dir: John Wayne Stevenson, Mark R. Osborne. Stars: Jack Black, Seth Rogen
• Mister Foe—Dir: David MacKenzie. Stars: Jamie Bell, Sophia Myles

June 11
• Encounters at the End of the World—Dir: Werner Herzog. Stars: Werner Herzog

June 13
• The Happening—Dir: M Night Shyamalan. Stars: Mark Wahlberg, Zooey Deschanel
• Quid Pro Quo—Dir: Carlos Brooks. Stars: Vera Farmiga, Nick Stahl
• My Winnipeg—Dir: Guy Maddin. Stars: Ann Savage, Louis Negin
• Incredible Hulk—Dir: Louis Leterrier. Stars: Edward Norton, Liv Tyler
• Chris & Don: A Love Story—Dir: Guido Santi, Tina Mascara. Stars: Don Bachardy, Katherine Bucknell

June 19
• Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging—Dir: Gurinder Chadha. Stars: Georgia Groome, Aaron Johnson

June 20
• The Love Guru—Dir: Marco Schnabel. Stars: Mike Myers, Jessica Alba
• Get Smart—Dir: Peter Segal. Stars: Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway
• Brick Lane—Dir: Sarah Gavron. Stars: Tannishta Chatterjee, Satish Kaushik

June 27
• Wanted—Dir: Timur Bekmambetov. Stars: James McAvoy, Angelina Jolie
• Wall-E—Dir: Andrew Stanton. Stars: Jeff Garlin, Fred Willard
• Trumbo—Dir: Peter Askin. Stars: Joan Allen, Michael Douglas
• The Last Mistress—Dir: Catherine Breillat. Stars: Asia Argento, Fu’ad Ait Aattou
• Finding Amanda—Dir: Peter Tolan. Stars: Matthew Broderick, MauraTierney
• Elsa and Fred—Dir: Marcos Carnevale. Stars: Manuel Alexandre, China Zorrilla

JULY                  

July 2
• Kit Kittredge: An American Girl—Dir: Patricia Rozema. Stars: Abigail Breslin, Stanley Tucci
• Hancock—Dir: Peter Berg. Stars: Will Smith, Jason Bateman

July 3
• The Wackness—Dir: Jonathan Levine. Stars: Ben Kingsley, Josh Peck
July 4
• Diminished Capacity—Dir: Terry Kinney. Stars: Matthew Broderick, Virginia Madsen

July 11
• Meet Dave—Dir: Brian Robbins. Stars: Eddie Murphy, Gabrielle Union
• Journey to the Center of the Earth 3D—Dir: Eric Brevig. Stars: Brendan Fraser, Josh Hutcherson
• Hellboy 2: The Golden Army—Dir: Guillermo del Toro. Stars: Ron Perlman, Selma Blair
• August—Dir: Austin Chick. Stars: Josh Hartnett, Naomie Harris

July 18
• The Dark Knight—Dir: Christopher Nolan. Stars: Christian Bale, Heath Ledger
• Space Chimps—Dir: Kirk de Micco. Stars: Jeff Daniels, Andy Samberg
• Mamma Mia!—Dir: Phyllida Lloyd. Stars: Meryl Streep, Pierce Brosnan
• Mad Detective—Dir: Johnnie To, Wai Ka-fai. Stars: Lau Ching-wan, Andy On
• Lou Reed’s Berlin—Dir: Julian Schnabel. Stars: Lou Reed, Emmanuelle Seigner
• Hounddog—Dir: Deborah Kampmeier. Stars: Dakota Fanning, Robin Wright-Penn
• A Man Named Pearl—Dir: Scott Galloway, Brent Pierson

July 23
• Boy A—Dir: John Crowley. Stars: Andrew Garfield, Peter Mullan

July 25
• The X-Files: I Want to Believe—Dir: Chris C. Carter. Stars: David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson
• The Longshots—Dir: Fred Durst. Stars: Ice Cube, Keke Palmer
• Step Brothers—Dir: Adam McKay. Stars: Will Ferrell, John C Reilly
• Brideshead Revisited—Dir: Julian Jarrold. Stars: Emma Thompson, Michael Gambon
• American Teen—Dir: Nanette Burstein. Stars: Hannah Bailey, Colin Clemens

AUGUST             

August 1
• Transsiberian—Dir: Brad Anderson. Stars: Woody Harrelson, Emily Mortimer
• The Rocker—Dir: Peter Cattaneo. Stars: Christina Applegate, Rainn Wilson
• The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor. Stars: Brendan Fraser, Jet Li
• Swing Vote—Dir: Joshua Michael Stern. Stars: Kevin Costner, Dennis Hopper
• Sixty Six—Dir: Paul Weiland. Stars: Eddie Marsan, Helena Bonham Carter
• In Search of a Midnight Kiss—Dir: Alex Holdridge. Stars: Scoot McNairy, Brian McGuire
• Frozen River—Dir: Courtney Hunt. Stars: Melissa Leo, Misty Upham
• Midnight Meat Train—Dir: Ryuhei Kitamara. Stars: Bradley Cooper, Leslie Bibb
• Choke—Dir: Clark Gregg. Stars: Sam Rockwell, Anjelica Houston

August 8
• Towelhead—Dir: Alan Ball. Stars: Summer Bishil, Aaron Eckhart
• The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2—Dir: Sanaa Hamri. Stars: America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn
• The Pineapple Express—Dir: David Gordon Green. Stars: James Franco, Seth Rogen
• The Perfect Game—Dir: William Dear. Stars: Cheech Marin, Danna Garcia
• Hell Ride—Dir: Larry Bishop. Stars: Michael Madsen, Larry Bishop
• Bottle Shock—Dir: Randall M. Miller. Stars: Freddy Rodriguez, Chris Pine
August 15
• Wild Child—Dir: Nick Moore. Stars: Emma Roberts, Natasha Richardson
• Tropic Thunder—Dir: Ben Stiller. Stars: Ben Stiller, Jack Black
• The International—Dir: Tom Tykwer. Stars: Clive Owen, Naomi Watts
• The Girl Cut in Two—Dir: Claude Chabrol. Stars: Ludivine Sagnier, Francois Berleand
• Star Wars: The Clone Wars—Dir: Dave Filoni. Stars: Anthony Daniels, Matthew Wood
• Mirrors—Dir: Alexandre Aja. Stars: Kiefer Sutherland, Paula Patton
• Henry Poole Is Here—Dir: Mark Pellington. Stars: Luke Wilson, Adriana Barraza

August 22
• The House Bunny—Dir: Fred Wolf. Stars: Anna Faris, Katharine McPhee
• The Fifth Commandment—Dir: Jesse V Johnson. Stars: Rick Yune, Keith David
• I Served the King of England—Dir: Jiri Menzel. Stars: Julia Jentsch, Oldrich Kaiser
• Hamlet 2—Dir: Andrew Fleming. Stars: Steve Coogan, Catherine Keener
• Fly Me to the Moon—Dir: Ben Stassen. Stars: Edwin E Aldrin Jr., Christopher Lloyd
• Death Race—Dir: Paul W.S. Anderson. Stars: Jason Statham, Joan Allen
• Crossing Over—Dir: Wayne Kramer. Stars: Harrison Ford, Ashley Judd
• Accidental Husband—Dir: Griffin Dunne. Stars: Uma Thurman, Colin Firth

August 29
• Vicky Cristina Barcelona—Dir: Woody Allen. Stars: Javier Bardem, Scarlett Johansson
• Traitor—Dir: Jeffrey Nachmanoff. Stars: Don Cheadle, Guy Pearce
• Sukiyati Western Django—Dir: Takashi Miike. Stars: Hideaki Ito, Masanobu Ando
• House of the Sleeping Beauties—Dir: Hiroto Yokoyama. Stars: Yoshio Harada, Yuka Oonishi
• Goal! 2—Dir: Jaume Collet-Serra. Stars: Kuno Becker, David Beckham
• College—Dir: Deb Hagan. Stars: Camille Mana, Andrew Caldwell
• Ballast—Dir: Lance Hammer. Stars: Michael J Smith Sr., JimMyron Ross
• Babylon A.D.—Dir: Mathiew Kassovitz. Stars: Vincent Cassel, Vin Diesel
• Action!—Dir: Brian Leddy. Stars: Dave Sheridan, Gabriel Macht

 
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