By Chris Kavan - 01/06/15 at 07:11 AM CT
Regular columnist Harley Lond sends his apologies, but due personal issues he is unable to preview this week's column. Thus I will step in for this week, wishing Harley the best, who should be back next week with the regular column. As it is, this week certainly provides a lot more to get excited about than the previous few weeks which, due to the holidays, looked rather weak on the new releases side of things. There's a lot of variety - from Oscar contenders to thrillers to horror - and things should only heat up from here (hopefully literally as well - I hate subzero temperatures).
THIS WEEK'S THEATRICAL RELEASES:
The best bet for this week has to be Richard Linklater's Boyhood. The films, which was 12 years in the making, follows the life of Mason (Ellar Coltrane) from ages 5 to 18 and co-stars Patricia Arquette and Patricia Arquette. Just the fact this film got made - as it follows the actual life of Coltrane as he grows - is a testament unto itself. Everyone stuck with it - actors, crew - and it looks like this bet paid off as Boyhood has gotten superb reviews and its awards chances are excellent going in to Oscar season.
No Good Deed While on he surface this appears to be a standard home intrusion thriller, it manages to stand out thanks to casting the excellent Idris Elba and Taraji P. Henson - both who have proven in the past they have the acting chops to elevate something like a rote thriller into acceptable territory. While this one might miss out on the awards, it looks like a good way to spend a night.
Get On Up Chadwick Boseman previously had an outstanding turn in the Jackie Robinson biopic 42, here he takes on another larger-than-life persona James Brown. The supporting cast here looks excellent as well - Viola Davis, Lennie James, Dan Aykroyd, Craig Robinson, Octavia Spencer and Jill Scott as lend their talents. It may not have had the same impact as Ray or Walk the Line, but I have to think with the people involved, this is still going to be one to watch.
The Guest If you would rather have some straight-up action, Adam Wingard has you covered with The Guest. After the death of their son in action, a fellow solider shows up claiming he was his friend but death seems to follow him. I'm sure this follows a pretty standard route - and, really, the cast is made up of mostly relative unknowns (Ethan Embry and Lance Reddick show up), so this is one that lives and dies based on the action. Probably good enough when nothing better presents itself.
THE BEST OF THE REST:
If you want to see former Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe in something quite a bit different than the boy wizard series, check out Alexandre Aja Horns

ONLY FOR THE BRAVE:
Now, I know Nicolas Cage has had his ups and downs in the world of cinema, but I dare you to find anyone who can defend Left Behind

Next week we'll return with our regularly-scheduled update - hopefully this effort can tide you over until then.