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Fall Movie Preview Spectacular! Part 2 – The Films Of October

Our massive guide to the dozens of exciting films arriving this Fall continues with We Got This Covered's official Fall Movie Preview Spectacular! Part 2. This time, we examine October, with trailers, analysis, and more!

Taken 2

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Release Date: October 5th

Directed by Olivier Megaton; Starring Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen, and Rade Šerbedžija

 

Sequels to action films as relatively straightforward as 2008’s Taken tend to be cheap cash-ins and narrative retreads of old ground, but Taken 2 appears to be something different. Something clever, ambitious, and altogether intriguing. I really like the core concept, that Liam Neeson’s rampage from the first film comes back to bite him in the ass as Šerbedžija’s character seeks revenge for fallen comrades.

Action heroes so rarely need to confront the death tolls they inflict, so it’s a refreshing change of pace. The trailer also shows Maggie Grace getting in on the action this time around, along with plenty of requisite Neeson badassary. It’s one of the better, clearer pieces of marketing I’ve seen this year, one that definitely gets me pumped for a sequel I never necessarily thought I’d need. 

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Frankenweenie

Release Date: October 5th

Directed by Tim Burton; Starring Charlie Tahan, Frank Welker, Winona Ryder, Catherine O’Hara, Martin Short, and Martin Landau

 

With the exception of Sweeney Todd, Tim Burton hasn’t been on top of his game in a decade, and while I hope for the best, I don’t know if Frankenweenie will be his resurgence. This stop-motion film is based on Burton’s classic 1984 live-action short about a boy who resurrects his dead dog, and while the short is one of the highlights of Burton’s entire career, he’s a very different filmmaker now than he was back then.

Will he be able to recapture the charm and emotional depth he nailed so many years ago? Is there any point in trying? Can the story work stretched out to feature-length format? I simply don’t know, and the trailers have been far too bland to give any sort of indication as to the film’s actual direction. I very much like that Burton is shooting in black-and-white, and stop-motion obviously fits the story well, but unless Burton has something radically fresh and insightful to say with the material, the remake may not be worth the effort.

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