![]() And though the strikes forced Sony to delay fall titles like “Kraven the Hunter” and the next “Ghostbusters” movie to 2024, Sony actually moved “Dumb Money” up to a plumb September spot, with a long-tail release plan to follow. ![]() ![]() “Dumb Money” stars Paul Dano, Pete Davidson, Vincent D’Onofrio, America Ferrera, Nick Offerman, Anthony Ramos, Sebastian Stan, Shailene Woodley, and Seth Rogen. The film, based on Ben Mezrich’s book “The Antisocial Network,” even has the real life “Winklevi” twins involved as executive producers. Craig Gillespie’s film looks like a mix of his own “I, Tonya” and Adam McKay’s “The Big Short,” rife with agitated Wall Street suits, a whole lot of “Holy f**king s**t” line readings, and even on-screen asterisks explaining thorny financial terms. “Dumb Money” (September 15, in limited theaters September 22, in moderate theaters September 29, in wide theaters)Īt one point destined to be one of about a half dozen projects all about GameStop and the “meme stock” phenomenon driven by a Reddit forum, Sony’s “Dumb Money” wants to be the zany, truer-than-fiction underdog story about the stock shorting mayhem that ensued. Rita Wilson and Tom Hanks produce the film, which brings back fan favorites Andrea Martin, Lainie Kazan, and of course, *NSYNC’s Joey Fatone. There might not be nuptials this time around but love is always in the air, much like baklava and Bundt cakes. Vardalos directs again, picking up after the 2016 sequel, in which teen daughter Paris (Elena Kampouris) has a romance of her own. “My Big Fat Greek Wedding 3” (September 8, in theaters)įinally, after 20 years, the Portokalos family is heading to Greece! The third “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” film (who knew Nia Vardalos’ 2002 indie hit would spawn its very own cinematic universe?) marks the return of Toula (Vardalos) and Ian (John Corbett) as they honor Toula’s late father Gus (Michael Constantine) by traveling to his Mediterranean hometown. This story was last updated on September 8. We’re also thrilled to provide some exclusive new looks at some of our picks, including exclusive new stills from “Poor Things,” “Next Goal Wins,” “Rustin,” “Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget,” and more, which you can check out below.ĭavid Ehrlich, Eric Kohn, Christian Blauvelt, Ryan Lattanzio, Anne Thompson, Alison Foreman, Brian Welk, Samantha Bergeson, Christian Zilko, Susannah Gruder, and Ben Croll contributed to this article. For now, however, these are the films we are most excited to see in the coming months. Whether that includes changing release dates, the method of a film’s release, or adding in some of those anticipated titles that lock in an official date in 2023, this preview remains particularly fluid. ![]() That means that everything (and anything!) might shift, and as plans continue to change, this list will be updated. (And look out for our fall festival preview, coming next week.) As the fall festivals kick off in the coming weeks, we expect a fresh round of new films to be excited about that just might sneak in their own autumn release plans after bowing across the circuit. Per usual, this list only includes films that have confirmed release dates from September through December, though a few of IndieWire’s most-anticipated 2023 films have yet to announce their release plans. ‘Silver Dollar Road’ Review: Raoul Peck’s Documentary of Black Land Loss Is Too in the Weeds There are also rom-coms, musicals, chocolate factories, and even an iconic re-release to tickle all palates, plus two (!!) new Paul Mescal joints. Jeff Nichols is back, as is Godfrey Reggio and the juicy stars of “Chicken Run.” Festival faves like Christos Nikou, Kristoffer Borgli, and Chloe Domont make a play for further dominance. We’re talking new films from Martin Scorsese, Pablo Larraín, Sofia Coppola, Todd Haynes, Emerald Fennell, David Fincher, Jonathan Glazer, Taika Waititi, Justine Triet, Wes Anderson, and Yorgos Lanthimos. With both the WGA and SAG-AFRA strikes still winding on, everything from production to promotion has been disrupted for many new features, and the entire calendar remains in flux.Īnd yet, even with those very valid concerns in place, the next three months at the multiplex (and beyond) offer a bounty of exciting new films. As has become standard in recent years, our annual fall and winter film preview comes with something of an asterisk: it’s (another!) unpredictable time for movies, right down to when we might even expect to see them.
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