Justin Kurzel’s 1980s set true crime thriller The Order casts Jude Law as an FBI agent infiltrating a group of white supremacists. It’s received a Venice Film Festival bow prior to the planned December 6th theatrical release. Nicholas Hoult, Tye Sheridan, Jurnee Smollett, and Marc Maron costar.
Two-time nominee Law (for The Talented Mr. Ripley and Cold Mountain) hasn’t been in the awards conversation for over two decades. He’s getting some fine notices for his work here as is the film itself. However, the 78% RT score certainly contains some so-so reviews. I wouldn’t expect this to enter the chat for prognosticators. My Oscar Prediction posts will continue…
Based on the video game franchise that’s been going strong for nearly a decade, Assassin’sCreed hits theaters over the long Christmas weekend. The action adventure pic, with its reported budget of at least $130 million, will hope to bring in gamers who’ve been plying its many iterations over the past few years. Michael Fassbender headlines with a supporting cast that includes Marion Cotillard, Jeremy Irons, Brendan Gleeson and Charlotte Rampling. Justin Kurzel, who directed Fassbender in last year’s Macbeth, is behind the camera.
20th Century Fox is hoping that weak numbers from video adaptations (Warcraft is a recent example) doesn’t apply here. Audiences looking for some action do have more choices over the holiday frame as RogueOne will be in its second weekend (and very likely still atop the charts) and Passengers with Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt also debuts. Still, Creed should have enough of a built-in following for it to reach high teens to low 20s over the four-day portion of the weekend and high 20s from its Wednesday bow.
Assassin’sCreed opening weekend prediction: $19.8 million (Friday to Monday), $28.1 million (Wednesday to Monday)
The 2015 Oscar race, still in its infancy, got a dose of Shakespeare today at the Cannes Film Festival when Macbeth premiered. The adaptation comes from director Justin Kurzel and features Michael Fassbender as the title character with Marion Cotillard as Lady Macbeth. Both performers have immediately vaulted to the top of the list for Best Actor and Actress. The film itself has received early raves and could be a contender for the big race. If so, it’d be the first screen treatment by the author to be recognized since 1968’s Romeo & Juliet.
This would mark Fassbender’s second nomination after being in the Supporting Actor mix in 2012 for 12 Years a Slave. For Cotillard, it would mark her second Actress nod in two years as she made the cut last year for Two Days, One Night. She won the award in 2007 for La Vie en Rose. It is only May and yet we may already know two of the nominees in those categories – Fassbender and Eddie Redmayne in The Danish Girl for Actor and Cotillard and Cate Blanchett for Carol in the Actress race.
Per usual, the Cannes fest has given us another Academy hopeful in the form of Macbeth.