By Chris Kavan - 09/18/14 at 09:44 AM CT
After a rocky start to the month, September looks to ramp things up, if not be quality, then by sheer volume. No less than four new movies are opening - not to count the limited release movies from last week (like The Drop), that are likely to expand wide. But bunching up so many movies is a gamble, especially when you have clashing genres. Luckily, there is quite a bit of variety going into the weekend, still, we are going to see some definite winners and losers, and here are your contenders:
A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES When in doubt, cast Liam Neeson. It's almost a given that anything he stars in is going to crack the $50 million mark. In fact, since Taken launched him as the go-to elder statesman badass, only one of his action films (The Next Three Days) has failed to crack that mark (and I don't know if you can really count that since he wasn't truly the "lead" in that one anyway). Non-Stop? $91.7 million. Taken 2? $139.85 million. The Grey? $51.58 million. Heck, even his voice is enough to inspire - The Lego Movie grossed over $257 million (okay, so Neeson probably didn't have a lot to do with that one...). Anyway, the point is action movie + Liam Neeson = at least $50 million. Even if A Walk Amongst the Tombstones doesn't seem to offer much in the originality department, I have no reason to think this won't wind up in the same ballpark - even if he does seem like the only truly recognizable name in the cast. On his name alone, the movie should coast to a nice opening - maybe even giving The Maze Runner a run for its money.
THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU So far, we have a solid action film and a movie targeting young adults - now we're moving on to a well-rounded comedy. The ensemble cast for This is Where I Leave You looks fantastic: Jason Bateman, Tina Fey, Adam Driver, Jane Fonda, Connie Britton, Rose Byrne, Corey Stoll, Kathryn Hahn, Dax Shepard and Timothy Olyphant - a great mix of some outstanding comedians - both new and seasoned - along with some great personalities. Even if the plot seems a bit trite (siblings forced to live together once more following their father's will) - the fact it's this good of cast might make the viewing worth it. Once again, there hasn't been a decent comedy since Let's Be Cops hit five weeks ago - so if moviegoers are aching for a smile, this could propel the film to a nice return.
THE GUEST It's a good thing The Guest is opening a couple days early - because I believe it's going to be the odd man out over the weekend. Mumblegore veteran Adam Winegard (You're Next) directs this story about a son who dies on the battlefield only to have a fellow solider "friend" show up at his house - followed by a series of mysterious deaths. Dan Stevens (looking like he's channeling a bit of Ryan Gosling) is the soldier friend who causes not end of trouble for the Peterson family. Also, I see Lance Reddick is on board, so it can't be all bad, All in all - it actually looks interesting, but I think it's going to be overlooked as Walk Among the Tombstones is likely to take most of its audience away. This is the kind of movie I will look for on Netflix - just to check it out. Winegard has been pretty good in what I've seen - it will be interesting to see what his take is here.
The month is going to certainly rev up with all the new offerings. With a bunch of different genres competing for audience attention, we'll see what people are really starved for. Hopefully we'll finally have a big weekend to combat the rather dull September we've seen so far.