‘Do Not Worry Darling’
Director Olivia Wilde, who made a splash with “Booksmart,” returns with a “Stepford Spouses”-ish tale about a ’50s community that’s not what it seems. Florence Pugh and Wilde’s capture Harry Styles play the leads. (Sept. 23)
‘Bros’
Comic Billy Eichner co-wrote and stars in this romantic funny. He’s searching for Mr. Right Now. (Sept. 30)
‘Tár’
Todd Field hasn’t written and directed a motion picture because “Little Children” in 2006 and his only other movie is “In the Bed room.” We’ll see if he’s still batting 1.000 with his third, a drama about a popular author (Cate Blanchett). (Oct. 7)
‘Till’
As in Mamie Till-Mobley, who made certain the dreadful 1955 lynching of her child Emmett was a turning point in the struggle for civil rights. (Oct. 14)
‘The Great Nurse’
Charles Graeber’s true-crime book about a homicidal nurse was captivating. Tobias Lindholm (“A War”) is a fantastic choice to direct. And Jessica Chastain and Eddie Redmayne both bring Oscar-winning star energy. (Oct. 19)
‘Ticket to Paradise’
Julia Roberts and George Clooney are feuding exes (their “Ocean’s Eleven” specialty), forced together for the sake of their daughter, whom they believe is about to make the exact same type of romantic error they did. (Oct. 21)
‘The Banshees of Inisherin’
Obviously, it’s not a sequel to the wildly amusing “In Bruges” however it re-teams writer/director Martin McDonagh (“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”) with stars Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson, so it’s about as close as we can get. (Oct. 21)
‘Devotion’
“Leading Weapon: Maverick” beefcake Glen Powell sticks with representing pilots in a fact-based drama about a pair of Korean War heroes. “Lovecraft Nation” star Jonathan Majors plays the other. (Oct. 28)
‘Amsterdam’
David O. Russell’s caper movie is embeded in the ’30s and stars– take a breath– Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, Chris Rock, Taylor Swift, John David Washington, Rami Malek and a lot more. (Nov. 4)
‘Armageddon Time’
The leads in the family drama are Anne Hathaway and Jeremy Strong (“Succession”), however the essential figure is writer-director James Gray, whose searing dramas include “The Immigrant” and “We Own the Night.” (Nov. 11)
‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’
The saga continues, this time with ladies (Angela Bassett, Letitia Wright, Lupita Nyong’o and Danai Gurira) taking the lead. (Nov. 11)
‘She Stated’
New york city Times reporters (Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan) try to encourage females to go on the record as they prepare the stories that assisted reduce movie mogul/rapist Harvey Weinstein. (Nov. 18)
‘The Fabelmans’
Every Steven Spielberg movie is about Steven Spielberg. However his most clearly autobiographical movie takes a seriocomic take a look at the youth that turned him into a filmmaker. (Nov. 23)