Set for the big screen
Vampires, werewolves, liars lead fall film cast
Here is the first of a two-part article looking at the movies coming up for the fall season.
The second part of this piece is in the article titled "The big-screen buzz on fall films."
Hollywood might be telling its own life story this fall, presenting a lineup of liars, phonies, smooth talkers, bloodsuckers and greedy old men.
Granted, there are heroes in the mix, including Robert Downey Jr. as the great detective in "Sherlock Holmes" (Dec. 25) and Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela in Clint Eastwood's post-apartheid drama "Invictus" (Dec. 11).
Beloved literature and storybook adventures come to the screen with Maurice Sendak's children's classic "Where the Wild Things Are" (Oct. 16), Disney's animated fairy tale "The Princess and the Frog" (Dec. 11), and "Lord of the Rings" filmmaker Peter Jackson's adaptation of modern favorite "The Lovely Bones" (Dec. 11).
Audiences will be reunited with absent friends, among them director James Cameron on the science fiction epic "Avatar" (Dec. 18), his first narrative film since "Titanic," as well as Woody, Buzz Lightyear and their plaything pals as 3-D versions of "Toy Story" and "Toy Story 2" hit theaters.
Still, rascals, rogues, beasts and baddies abound.
Vampires and werewolves form opposing cliques in the season's supernatural heavyweight, "The Twilight Saga: New Moon" (Nov. 20) with Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson back for the second chapter of Stephenie Meyer's vamp-schoolgirl romance.
The vampire-werewolf feud makes for a nice exploration of our own psyches, "New Moon" director Chris Weitz said.
"I suppose they're the two most relatable human monsters that we can think of. They nicely encapsulate restraint and passion," Weitz said.
"Vampires are cold-blooded, literally, and werewolves are hot-blooded."
Downey and director Guy Ritchie inject some passion into cold-blooded rationalist Holmes with their Victorian-era crime tale inspired by Arthur Conan Doyle's detective stories, featuring Jude Law as sidekick Watson.
Holmes "is a weirdo by any standards," Downey said.
"He has dedicated the entirety of his adult life to this one purpose, which is being a consulting detective and knowing things that other people don't take the time to make it their business to know.
"That said, there's something kind of Bohemian about him. He also has made no effort to cultivate friendships with anybody because that would be to the exclusion of his prime mover. So he's trippy."
Here is a look at some of the other good, bad and trippy types in store this season.
Virtual people
James Cameron's "Avatar" leads a rush of films featuring humans in phony forms, including Bruce Willis' "Surrogates" (Sept. 25), a murder thriller in a world where people live vicariously through robot replicas, and Gerard Butler's "Gamer" (Friday) in which mind control allows puppetmaster players to toy with real people in lethal games.
"Avatar" stars Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana and Cameron's "Aliens" hero Sigourney Weaver in a 3-D saga in which human explorers embody clones of an alien race to explore their planet's fantastic environment.
Cameron's ocean explorations for the documentary "Aliens of the Deep" helped spark his imagination for the life forms of "Avatar."
"I've seen some pretty amazing things at the bottom of the ocean," Cameron said.
"I've seen in some cases things that have never been seen or described by science before. So I know there are wonders out there, and I know that nature is infinitely more inventive not only than we imagined, but than we can imagine."
Living the lie
Ricky Gervais directs, co-writes and stars as the world's first fibber in "The Invention of Lying" (Oct. 2) featuring Jennifer Garner and Tina Fey in a comedy about an alternate reality where everyone tells the truth - until one man discovers the benefits of dishonesty.
Matt Damon and Steven Soderbergh, collaborators on the "Ocean's Eleven" romps, reunite for the whistleblower tale "The Informant!" which is based on Kurt Eichenwald's book about Archers Daniel Midland executive Mark Whitacre, who turned FBI mole in a price-fixing scheme at the agriculture-processing company.
The film plays as dark comedy, with Soderbergh centering on the absurdity of Whitacre's deceitful, vainglorious cooperation with his FBI handlers.
"Steven really kind of set on this idea of him being the most unreliable narrator," Damon said.
"There's information in the book that's just kind of doled out slowly, where you go, 'Wait a minute. Something's not quite right.' It's sort of the liar who keeps saying, 'OK, now I'm telling you everything.' "
Money-grubbers
"Greed is good," robber baron Gordon Gecko declared in "Wall Street."
As the world reels over the great recession resulting from that philosophy, Hollywood is selling tickets for some moralizing over the price of greed.
That slate is led by Jim Carrey in a new incarnation of Charles Dickens' great skinflint, Ebenezer Scrooge.
Crafted through the same motion-capture techniques and computer animation used on "The Polar Express" and "Beowulf," Robert Zemeckis' "A Christmas Carol" (Nov. 6) features Carrey as Scrooge and the three holiday ghosts who show him the error of his miserly ways.
Documentary firebrand Michael Moore weighs in with "Capitalism: A Love Story" (Sept. 23), expanding the humor-and-heartbreak approach of his General Motors tale "Roger & Me" for an assault on the practices of corporations and financial speculators.
Cameron Diaz and James Marsden are forced into some serious money moralizing in "The Box" (Nov. 6), which is about a couple given a contraption that will deliver $1 million with the press of a button - at the cost of a stranger's life.
Would people give in to the temptation?
"The answer has to be, I think, no. Because you might really regret it one day," Diaz said. "I would hope that I would find another way to solve my problems other than having to kill somebody."
Class acts
Hollywood's prestige season includes entries from Academy Award winners Morgan Freeman and Hilary Swank as real-life role models.
Swank stars as Amelia Earhart in director Mira Nair's "Amelia" (Oct. 23), co-starring Richard Gere and Ewan McGregor in the life story of the aviation pioneer who vanished on her around-the-world flight in 1937.
"Invictus" reunites Freeman with "Million Dollar Baby" and "Unforgiven" director Clint Eastwood for the story of Nelson Mandela's partnership with a rugby star (Matt Damon) who helped unify their country as South Africa's team makes an underdog dash through the 1995 World Cup.
Joel and Ethan Coen return to their Minnesota roots with "A Serious Man" (Oct. 2), which is about a physics professor in the late 1960s abandoned by his wife as he struggles with a lay-about brother, two problem children and blackmail and career sabotage on campus.
Jim Sheridan's "Brothers" (Dec. 4) stars Natalie Portman, Tobey Maguire and Jake Gyllenhaal in a drama about a U.S. Marine captain who returns from the dead to find that his black-sheep brother has stepped in as man of the house for his wife and kids.
Peter Jackson adapts Alice Sebold's "The Lovely Bones," featuring Rachel Weisz, Mark Wahlberg and Susan Sarandon in the saga of a murdered girl (Saoirse Ronan) watching over her grieving family - as well as her killer - from beyond the grave.
"I read the book and I cried," Jackson said.
"If you've lost somebody and somebody close to you has passed away, that book is a terrific tonic because it affirms the afterlife and it gives you hope.
"And it gives you an understanding that so long as you remember people and so long as you honor their memory, they're never going to go away."
AP entertainment writers Sandy Cohen and Ryan Pearson contributed to this report.







