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Temperatures are still in the 90s and autumn doesn't officially begin until the 23rd, but no matter: To students and studio execs, fall begins the day after Labor Day.
The fall movie season, of course, is the one in which studios release their likeliest Oscar contenders, hoping to keep powerful performances and delicate directing in the minds of Academy members just before nominations are announced early in the calendar year.
That always means mostly big-budget epics, serious dramas and literary adaptations, but this year may see a record-breaking number of the latter.
The first is "Feast of Love," opening on Sept. 28. Veteran director Robert Benton has adapted Charles Baxter's novel with an ensemble cast including Morgan Freeman, Greg Kinnear and Radha Mitchell.
"The Kite Runner," opening Nov. 2, would seem to have a ready-made audience: The book is currently No. 2 on the New York Times' paperback fiction list, while Afghan-American Khaled Hosseini's second novel is tops on the hardcover list. "No Country for Old Men," in which the Coen brothers take on acclaimed novelist Cormac McCarthy's bleak vision of the American West, opens a week later.
On Nov. 16, three more adaptations open. Neil Gaiman and erstwhile Quentin Tarantino collaborator Roger Avary translate the epic poem "Beowulf" to the screen for Robert Zemeckis, while Mike Newell directs "Love in the Time of Cholera," based on the novel by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Let's hope "Elegy," adapted from Philip Roth's short novel "The Dying Animal," treats the grand old man of American letters better than the movie version of "The Human Stain" did a few years ago.
"Atonement," opening Dec. 7, features not just a literary pedigree (the novel was written by master Ian McEwan), but a dazzling British cast, including Keira Knightley, James McAvoy, Brenda Blethyn and Vanessa Redgrave. "The Golden Compass" opens the same day; Chris Weitz directs the adaptation of the first novel in a trilogy for young adults ("His Dark Materials") by another Brit, Philip Pullman.
British history, on the other hand, will be on full display in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" on Oct. 12, a sequel to 1998's "Elizabeth." Cate Blanchett returns as the Virgin Queen, while Clive Owen is brought in to play Sir Walter Raleigh.
One of the most anticipated films of the season is based on source material few in this country will have read. Ang Lee's follow-up to "Brokeback Mountain" is a Chinese-language film based on a story by Eileen Chang. "Lust, Caution" has been rated NC-17 by the MPAA, and Mr. Lee says he will not edit his film to get an R; it opens Oct. 12.
"Sleuth" may be a remake, but it begs to be taken seriously: The Kenneth Branagh film is based not just on the 1972 film, but on the play by Anthony Shaffer, which has been adapted by Nobel Prize-winner Harold Pinter. It marks the second time, after "Alfie," that Jude Law has taken on a film role first played by Sir Michael Caine. The latter himself returns in the remake — in Sir Laurence Olivier's role from the 1972 version. Got that?











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