10 must-see movies coming out in fall 2021

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      Hey, remember last fall when half the movies announced as opening had to be rescheduled when theatres shut down again? The ground seems slightly more firm for movies in fall 2021, with distributors calculating that proof of vaccination will boost consumer confidence and get people back to the megaplex.

      If No Time To Die finally opens and makes back its cost, the pandemic’s officially over, right?

      The Many Saints Of Newark

      David Chase’s long-awaited Sopranos prequel arrives almost a decade and a half after the HBO series ended its storied run. It stars James Gandolfini’s son Michael as a young Tony Soprano, and Vera Farmiga as Tony’s mother Livia, with Alessandro Nivola, Leslie Odom Jr., Jon Bernthal, Corey Stoll, and Ray Liotta in supporting roles. Will it be a genuine expansion of the show’s world, or just the latest attempt to revive a dormant IP with a proven fan base? We’ll find out in a matter of days. In theatres October 1

      Elevation Pictures

      Night Raiders

      Danis Goulet’s dystopian thriller takes place in a near-future Canada placed under martial law by “the southern nation” after a devastating invasion; Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers is a Cree woman trying to rescue her young daughter from a re-education school. It’s grown only more relevant since its Berlin premiere earlier this spring; now it almost plays like a documentary. In theatres October 8

      United Artists Releasing

      No Time To Die

      Is it possible? After a year and a half of creeping stealthily down the release schedule, can Daniel Craig’s final outing as James Bond finally be opening? We certainly hope so, if only to see whether we can detect Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s voice in the screenplay…and to see whether any Bond film can justify the reported running time of two hours and 43 minutes, which honestly sounds like plenty of time to die. In theatres October 8

      Apple TV+

      The Velvet Underground

      Yes, the Cowboy Junkies’ cover of "Sweet Jane" is beautiful. But the original rocks like nothing else on Earth. The first documentary from Todd Haynes—director of Safe, Velvet Goldmine, and Far From Heaven—looks at the rise of Andy Warhol’s favourite band and their seismic impact on musical culture over the decades. Surviving members John Cale and Mo Tucker sat for interviews and everything. Apple TV+, October 15

      Searchlight Pictures

      The French Dispatch

      Structured as a series of stories published by an American journalist working in a tiny France village, Wes Anderson’s latest film seems like a return to the elaborate perspectives of his 2014 masterwork The Grand Budapest Hotel, bringing back that film’s Tony Revolori, Adrien Brody, Tilda Swinton. Willem Dafoe, and Bill Murray. Benicio del Toro, Léa Seydoux, Timothée Chalamet, and Frances McDormand are around too. In theatres October 22

      Netflix

      The Harder They Fall

      Coproduced by Jay-Z and Pulp Fiction’s Lawrence Bender among others, this revisionist Western from English filmmaker Jeymes Samuel (who makes music as the Bullitts) casts Jonathan Majors, Idris Elba, Zazie Beetz, Regina King, Lakeith Stanfield, and Delroy Lindo as actual historical figures Nat Love, Rufus Buck, Stagecoach Mary, Trudy Smith, Cherokee Bill, and Bass Reeves—and gives them a narrative of their own. Netflix, November 3

      Disney

      Eternals

      Now that Shang-Chi And The Legend Of The Ten Rings has demonstrated audiences’ willingness to see Marvel movies in theatres, Disney is doubling down on the exclusive megaplex run for this one, which finds director Chloé Zhao tackling Jack Kirby’s complex cosmic mythology about immortal beings forced out of hiding to defend Earth from their evil counterparts. It was delayed for a full year by the pandemic, which gave Zhao time to pick up a couple of Oscars for producing and directing Nomadland—meaning expectations couldn’t be higher to see what she does with a Marvel-sized budget. In theatres November 5

      Spencer

      Kristen Stewart stars as Diana, Princess of Wales, in Pablo Larraín’s study of a few days in the cloistered life of one of the most famous women in history—a companion piece to his Jackie Kennedy movie Jackie. NOW’s Glenn Sumi called it “masterful”; those of us who missed it, and who think Stewart is one of the most empathetic performers working today—are looking forward to catching up. November 5, in theatres

      Netflix

      Passing

      Actor Rebecca Hall (Godzilla Vs. Kong, The Night House) steps behind the camera for a change, writing and directing this adaptation of Nella Larsen’s 1929 novel about the lives of two biracial women—played here by Tessa Thompson and Ruth Negga—in the early decades of the 20th century. Netflix snapped up the rights after a heady Sundance premiere earlier this year, and has been positioning it for an awards run ever since. In theatres October 27; on Net­flix November 10

      Netflix

      tick, tick…BOOM!

      This movie adaptation of Rent creator Jonathan Larson’s semi-autobiographical stage musical is written by Steven Levenson and directed by Lin-Manuel Miranda—who knows a little about life-changing success, thanks to their respective work on Dear Evan Hansen and Hamilton. It stars Andrew Garfield as the young man wondering whether he’ll ever create a Broadway sensation. Of course, we know he will…and we know he won’t live to see it. In theatres November 12; on Netflix November 19 

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