Volume IV No. 3

A publication of the National Association of Theatre Owners

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The Saddest Music in the World
Musical comedy, set in Depression-era Winnipeg, Canada, about a beer baroness who offers a $25,000 prize to whoever can find the world’s saddest music. Based on an original screenplay by author Kazuo Ishiguro (“The Remains of the Day”). Directed by Guy Maddin (“Dracula: Pages from a Virgin’s Diary”) from a screenplay by Maddin and George Toles. With Isabella Rossellini (“Rodger Dodger”), Mark McKinney (“The Ladies Man”), Maria de Medeiros (“My Life Without Me”), Ross McMillan and David Fox (“Grey Owl”). 99 min. April 30. IFC.

 

 

Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter
... And Spring

Korean-language drama, set at a Buddhist monastery in Korea’s North Kyungsang Province, about a monk’s budding relationship with a young pupil. Written and directed by Ki-duk Kim (“The Isle”). With Ki-duk Kim, Young-soo Oh, Young-min Kim, Jae-kyung Seo, Yeo-jin Ha and Jong-ho Kim. 103 min. R: Some strong sexuality. April 2 in New York and Los Angeles. Sony Pictures Classics.

Walking Tall
Remake of the 1974 drama, based on the true story of a Tennessee sheriff who undertook a one-man quest to rid his county of corruption. Directed by Kevin Bray (“All About the Benjamins”) from a screenplay by David Klass (“Kiss the Girls,” “Desperate Measures”) and Channing Gibson (“Cradle 2 the Grave”). With Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson (“The Rundown”), Johnny Knoxville (“Men in Black 2,” “Jackass: The Movie”), Neal McDonough (“Timeline”), Ashley Scott (“S.W.A.T.”), Khleo Thomas (“Holes”), John Beasley (“The Sum of All Fears”), Barbara Tarbuck (“The Tie That Binds”) and Kristen Wilson (“Confessions of a Dangerous Mind”). April 9. MGM.

 

Without a Paddle
Comedy about a trio of friends who embark on a canoe trip in an effort to find $200,000 in hidden treasure. Directed by Steven Brill (“Little Nicky,” “Mr. Deeds”) from a screenplay by Jay Leggett, Mitch Rouse, Harris Goldberg (“Deuce Bigelow,” “The Master of Disguise”) and Tom Nursall (“I’ll Be Home For Christmas”). With Seth Green (“Party Monster,” “Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed”), Matthew Lillard (“The Perfect Score,” the “Scooby-Doo” series), Dax Shepard (“Cheaper by the Dozen”), Burt Reynolds (“Hotel”), Abraham Benrubi (“Open Range”), Antony Starr and Ethan Suplee (“The Butterfly Effect”). Scope. April 23. Paramount.

13 Going on 30
Romantic comedy about an ungainly 13-year-old whose wish to become popular and sexy comes true after she miraculously skips 17 years and discovers that she has been transformed into a beautiful, successful 30-year-old executive. Directed by Gary Winick (“The Tic Code,” “Tadpole”) from a screenplay by Cathy Yuspa & Josh Goldsmith (“What Women Want”), Rita Hsiao (“Toy Story 2”) and Niels Mueller (“Tadpole”). With Jennifer Garner (“Daredevil”), Mark Ruffalo (“In the Cut,” “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”), Judy Greer (“Adaptation,” “The Hebrew Hammer”), Samuel Ball (“Pumpkin”), Andy Serkis (the “Lord of the Rings” series) and Kathy Baker (“Cold Mountain”). Flat. April 23. Sony.

 

The United States of Leland
Drama about a vulnerable 16-year-old who is committed to a juvenile hall after he kills an autistic child out of sympathy. Written and directed by Matthew Ryan Hoge. With Ryan Gosling (“Murder by Numbers,” “The Slaughter Rule”), Kevin Spacey (“The Life of David Gale”), Chris Klein (“We Were Soldiers”), Jena Malone (“Cold Mountain”), Lena Olin (“Hollywood Homicide”), Michelle Williams (“The Station Agent”), Don Cheadle (“Manic”) and Martin Donovan (“Agent Cody Banks”). 108 min. R: Language; some drug content. April 2 limited. Paramount Classics.

 

 

The Whole Ten Yards
When the wife of dentist Nick Oseransky is kidnapped by the Hungarian mob, he turns to his hitman pal Jimmy “The Tulip” Tudesski for help. A sequel to the 2000 comedy “The Whole Nine Yards.” Returnees from part one include screenwriter Mitchell Kapner and actors Bruce Willis (“Tears of the Sun”), Matthew Perry (“Serving Sara”), Natasha Henstridge (“Ghosts of Mars”), Kevin Pollak (“The Santa Clause 2”) and Amanda Peet (“Something’s Gotta Give”). Newcomers to the franchise include director Howard Deutch (“The Replacements”) and actors Johnny Messner (“Tears of the Sun,” “Spartan”) and Frank Collison (“The Majestic,” “Hidalgo”). Also known as “The Whole Nine Yards 2.” April 9. Flat. Warner Bros.

 

 

You'll Get Over It
French-language drama, originally made for French TV, about a 16-year-old homosexual whose life unravels and transforms as he comes out of the closet. Directed by Fabrice Cazeneuve from a screenplay by Vincent Molina. With Julien Baumgartner, Julia Maraval (“Ronin”), François Comar, Jérémie Elkaïm (“Come Undone”), Patrick Bonnel and Christiane Millet (“The Adventures of Felix”). Also known as “À Cause d’un Garçon.” 90 min. April 9. Picture This.

Secret Window
Thriller about a writer stalked by a stranger – a stranger who believes the scribe stole his story and passed it off as his own. Based on the novella by Stephen King (“Dreamcatcher”). Written and directed by David Koepp (“Panic Room,” “Spider-Man”). With Johnny Depp (“Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl”), John Turturro (“Anger Management”), Maria Bello (“The Cooler”), Ving Rhames (“Dark Blue,” “Dawn of the Dead,” “Envy”) and Timothy Hutton (“Sunshine State”). March 12. Sony.

 

 

Wilbur Wants to Kill Himself
Romantic comedy-drama, set in Glasgow, Scotland, about two brothers who find their lives transformed by a harried single mother. Lone Scherfig (“Italian For Beginners”) makes his English-language directorial debut from a screenplay by Scherfig and Anders Thomas Jensen (“Open Hearts,” “The Green Butchers”). With Jamie Sives (“Mean Machine”), Adrian Rawlins (the “Harry Potter” series), Shirley Henderson (“Once Upon A Time in the Midlands,” “Intermission,” “Hypnotic”), Susan Vidler (“Trainspotting”), Robert McIntosh and Mads Mikkelsen (“Open Hearts,” “The Green Butchers”). Scope. 109 min. R: Language; some disturbing images. March 12. ThinkFilm. c

 

Springtime in a Small Town
Mandarin-language drama, set in a rural village in 1946 China, about a family stagnating in monotony and political oppression until an intriguing doctor arrives from Shanghai and changes their lives forever. A remake of Fei Mu’s 1948 drama “Spring in a Small City.” Directed by Tian Zhuangzhuang (“The Blue Kite”) from a screenplay by Ah Cheng. With Hu Jingfan, Wu Jun (“Ermo”), Xin Bai Qing, Ye Xiao Keng and Lu Si Si. Also known as “Xiao Cheng Zhi Chun.” 116 min. March 19. Palm.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"The Alamo" – "Hero"

"Home on the Range" – "Since Otar leftr"

 

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