Hollywood loves money. So does Ebenezer Scrooge. So what better way to launch the holiday season than putting the old money-grubber at the head of the line to separate moviegoers from their cash?
The latest version of Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol opened Friday and features Jim Carrey as Scrooge. Coming on Ebenezers coattails will be films with vampire romance (The Twilight Saga: New Moon), end-of-the-world stories (2012, The Road), epic science-fiction (Avatar) and a new incarnation of the worlds greatest detective (Sherlock Holmes).
Presented in 3-D, Disneys A Christmas Carol is the latest from Oscar-winning director Robert Zemeckis (Forrest Gump), who presents Dickens London with the same performance-capture technology he used on The Polar Express and Beowulf.
Carrey and co-stars Gary Oldman, Robin Wright Penn, Colin Firth and Bob Hoskins worked on a bare soundstage, their bodies covered with sensors so digital cameras could record their performances in 360 degrees. Sets, costumes and other details were filled in later by computer animation.
The process allowed actors to take on multiple roles, with Carrey playing Scrooge and the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come that teach him the meaning of the season.
While Zemeckis loves Alastair Sims 1951 A Christmas Carol, he said previous adaptations never captured the full effect of Dickens surreal images. As he made Beowulf, Zemeckis realized he now had the tools to bring A Christmas Carol to the screen the way he imagined it on the page.
It was the idea of being able to actually re-create London and not have any limitations whatsoever. Anything that existed at the time we could present, Zemeckis said. Then the idea that Jim could play Scrooge in all the different ages, and the ghosts, they could be his alter-ego, and he could play those. Everything just fell into place.
With Sherlock Holmes, Robert Downey Jr. and director Guy Ritchie also re-create old London while reinventing Arthur Conan Doyles brainy, monkish detective as an action hero, verbal quipster – and even a bit of a lover.
Downeys Holmes fights with fists, clubs, pistols and hammers, trades odd-couple banter with best buddy and roommate Watson (Jude Law), and shares romantic moments with the one woman (Rachel McAdams) who never got the better of him.
It was a nice change of pace for Downey after he leaped to the box-office A-list with last years comic-book blockbuster Iron Man.
It was such a radical departure, Downey said. A period piece. A very, very established kind of iconic image comes to mind when you think of Sherlock Holmes. Whereas Iron Man was a relatively unknown second-tier superhero ... until last year.
The film opens Dec. 25.
Another series that jumped to blockbuster status last year was Hollywoods take on author Stephenie Meyers love story between a sensitive schoolgirl (Kristen Stewart) and her immortal vampire boy toy (Robert Pattinson).
The second installment, The Twilight Saga: New Moon, which opens Nov. 20, is a lesson in teen heartache as Pattinsons Edward dumps Stewarts Bella, realizing the danger he represents to his human girlfriend.
The brooding Bella finds solace with a school chum (Taylor Lautner) and his werewolf gang and eventually pulls Edward out of a jam.
Edward breaks up with Bella for her own protection, but Bella believes its because he doesnt love her anymore, and she goes into a terrible depression, New Moon director Chris Weitz said. In the end, theres kind of a lovely turnaround whereby Bella has to go and save Edward, having been saved by him throughout their past.
Also in the fantasy realm, James Cameron is back on Dec. 18 with his first fictional film since 1997s Titanic swamped Hollywood to become king of the Oscars and the biggest modern blockbuster. Avatar also marks Camerons return to his science-fiction roots and a reunion with Aliens star Sigourney Weaver, who joins Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldana among the cast of the filmmakers 3-D epic about humans taking on the form of extraterrestrials as they explore a distant world.
What we have on the screen right now is 150 percent of what I imagined. The other 50 percent is the part I could not have imagined without having the actors there, without working with a team of artists who come up with all these amazing, outlandish designs, Cameron said. My job was really kind of herding the cats, getting the artists to kind of be cohesive about the aesthetic decision, so it was all one world, so it seemed like part of an evolutionary or ecological system.
Hollywood has dozens of other films, big and small, coming before years end. Heres the lowdown:
Chicago director Rob Marshall orchestrates his latest musical with Nine, based on the Broadway adaptation of Federico Fellinis foreign-language classic 8 1/2 .
Its the story of a filmmaker (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his many, many women: His wife (Marion Cotillard), his mistress (Penelope Cruz), his mom (Sophia Loren), his film star (Nicole Kidman), his costume designer (Judi Dench), a lover from his youth (Stacy Ferguson) and a fashion journalist (Kate Hudson).
Singing in a recording studio was a new challenge for some of the cast, including Cruz.
You feel very vulnerable, because you cant hide anything, Cruz said at this years Cannes Film Festival. But it was so much fun. After you are there and you start singing and everything starts to come together, if you can really be in the moment and enjoy it, its an amazing experience.
It opens Dec. 25.
Also in the mood for love:
Did You Hear About the Morgans? – A Manhattan couple (Sarah Jessica Parker and Hugh Grant) in a rocky marriage find new twists in their relationship after they see a murder and are hustled into witness protection. (Opens Dec. 11.)
Its Complicated – A messy love triangle develops among a bakery and restaurant owner (Meryl Streep), her ex-hubby (Alec Baldwin) and an architect (Steve Martin) in the latest from director Nancy Meyers (Somethings Gotta Give). (Opens Dec. 25.)
Meryl Streep also joins George Clooney and Bill Murray among the voice cast of Wes Andersons animated comedy Fantastic Mr. Fox, the tale of a wily fox waging war with human farmers. It opens Nov. 25.
Anderson gave his voice actors a taste of rustic life by taking them to a real farm to record the vocals.
It was like going to camp, Clooney said at Octobers London Film Festival, where Fantastic Mr. Fox was the opening-night movie. We were out in the middle of nowhere on peoples farms, doing sound effects and rolling around in the fields.
Also among the menagerie:
Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel – The follow-up to the family hit about critter crooners Alvin, Simon and Theodore has the threesome finding their hearts and singing talents tested in a battle of the bands against a trio of female chipmunks. (Opens Dec. 25.)
The Princess and the Frog – Disney animation goes old-school as the studio releases its first hand-drawn cartoon in five years with this update of The Frog Prince fairy tale, set on the jazzy Louisiana bayou. (Opens Dec. 11.)
The Mayan calendar predicted an end of days in 2012.
Director Roland Emmerich makes good on that prophecy with his latest doomsday story 2012, featuring John Cusack, Amanda Peet, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Thandie Newton and Danny Glover in a tale of a world devastated by cataclysm and struggling with a terrible quandary: Who do you choose when you can save only a fraction of humanity?
Its like a Noahs Ark story in a way, Cusack said. It mirrors a few of the ethical dilemmas that are posed by asking the question of who gets to go and who doesnt.
The film opens Friday.
Also on the apocalypse front:
The Road – Author Cormac McCarthys starkly poetic vision of doom comes to the screen in this adaptation starring Viggo Mortensen as a father on a desperate road trip across the wreckage of America, seeking some hope of a future for his young son. (Opens Nov. 25.)
Clint Eastwood taps Million Dollar Baby and Unforgiven co-star Morgan Freeman to play Nelson Mandela in Invictus, a post-apartheid drama about the South African president rallying black and white behind his countrys rugby team during an underdog run in the 1995 World Cup. It opens Dec. 11.
Matt Damon, who co-stars as the captain of South Africas rugby squad, said Freeman was the only choice to play Mandela.
Someone would have been keelhauled if he hadnt played that role, Damon said.
Also from the wide world of sports:
The Blind Side – Just in time for his rookie season with the Baltimore Ravens comes this real-life drama about Michael Oher (Quinton Aaron), a black youth surviving on his own who gets a shot at a better life after hes adopted by a white couple (Sandra Bullock and Tim McGraw). (Opens Nov. 20.)
The Lord of the Rings mastermind Peter Jackson turns to the homefront while keeping a foot in otherworldly realms with The Lovely Bones, an adaptation of Alice Sebolds novel about a slain girl (Saoirse Ronan) watching over her family from heaven. It opens Jan. 15.
The cast includes Rachel Weisz, Mark Wahlberg, Susan Sarandon and Stanley Tucci.
Jackson said he cried when he read the novel.
If the things that I was imagining that made me cry could be put onscreen, I thought this would be really amazing, Jackson said. Because I think the book is an incredible book, but its very personal. And I think what you get out of that book depends a lot on what experience youve had in your life and what experience of death that youve had, and losing loved ones.
Also in a family way:
Up in the Air – Happily living life without connections, a corporate hatchet man (George Clooney) travels the country aiming for a 10 million-mile frequent-flyer milestone only to discover that family bonds might be the greater value, after all. (Opens Dec. 25.)
Old Dogs – A divorced guy (Robin Williams) enlists his womanizing best buddy and business partner (John Travolta) to help care for the twin kids he never knew he had. (Opens Nov. 25.)
Brothers – Jim Sheridan directs this reversal-of-roles drama about siblings (Tobey Maguire and Jake Gyllenhaal), one a Marine presumed dead in Afghanistan, the other a black sheep who becomes man of the house for his brothers wife (Natalie Portman). (Opens Dec. 4.)
Everybodys Fine – Robert De Niro co-stars with Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale and Sam Rockwell in the story of a widower who sets off to reconnect with his grown kids in this remake of the Italian original from Giuseppe Tornatore. (Opens Dec. 4.)
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