The indie movies and original stories we’re looking forward to in 2023 - Polygon
Even with Dune: Part Two postponed to 2024, fall 2023 is full of major movie releases, from franchise projects like the Marvel Cinematic Universe installment The Marvels to a new Hunger Games movie, a new Godzilla movie, and the long-awaited Chicken Run sequel Dawn of the Nugget. But as usual, the biggest films of fall are largely tied to existing IP or familiar stories, whether it's series installments (Saw X, The Nun II, new Equalizer and Expendables movies), biopics and other based-on-real-life movies (Priscilla, Ferrari, Napoleon), or book adaptations (The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, Poor Things, the film adaptation of the Broadway adaptation of Alice Walker's The Color Purple). Film buffs frequently look at this kind of lineup and grouse, "Where are the original stories?"
Fortunately, there are quite a few of those coming to theaters or streaming this fall as well! Here's a quick roundup of the movies we're most looking forward to over the next several months that aren't remakes, reboots, sequels, spinoffs, adaptations, franchise films, or any other form of brand extension. If you're looking for unusual or standout stories this fall, here's our best guess on where you're going to find them.
Outlaw Johnny Black
In select theaters Sept. 15
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Genre: Spoof comedy
Director: Michael Jai White
Cast: Michael Jai White, Byron Minns, Anika Noni Rose
If you're like me, you've been waiting for another movie in the vein of Black Dynamite for nearly 15 years now. Michael Jai White is here to help.
The star and co-writer of that excellent Blaxploitation spoof returns to spoof comedies with this Western sendup, where he plays an outlaw on the run who pretends to be a preacher in a small town under the heel of a vicious capitalist. Oh, and he's also trying to avenge his father. And he's also in love, but the preacher he's pretending to be is in love with someone else. Just like Black Dynamite, Outlaw Johnny Black is packed to the brim with outrageous bits that test the borders of good taste, but never fail to make you laugh your head off. Just make sure Johnny Black doesn't shoot it first. —PV
No One Will Save You
On Hulu Sept. 22
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Genre: Sci-fi horror
Director: Brian Duffield
Cast: Kaitlyn Dever
Booksmart co-star Kaitlyn Dever stars as an anxious shut-in menaced by aliens in a science fiction take on a home-invasion thriller. This one has some clear Signs DNA in its genetic makeup, with a little bit of 10 Cloverfield Lane on the side, minus the gaslighting shut-in partner. Mostly, though, it just looks like a breathless chiller, as Dever's character tries to use blankets and her bed to fend off a force that's a bit more powerful than nails and cloth. —TR
The Kill Room
In theaters Sept. 29
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Genre: Crime comedy
Director: Nicol Paone
Cast: Joe Manganiello, Uma Thurman, Samuel L. Jackson
Uma Thurman and Samuel L. Jackson reunite for the third time (and the first in a non-Quentin Tarantino movie) in this quirky movie from Friendsgiving director Nicol Paone.
Joe Manganiello (Magic Mike) stars as a quiet hitman convinced by his chatty boss (Jackson) to start painting as part of a money-laundering scheme with a struggling art dealer (Thurman). Going by the pseudonym The Bagman, he produces unconventional paintings that become a sudden sensation in the art world, bringing him plenty of attention — not all of it wanted.
Thurman's daughter Maya Hawke also features as a young artist looking for a breakthrough, and Our Flag Means Death's Matthew Maher shows up as the drug dealer that connects the parties together. It's a bit like The Producers by way of the Coen brothers, with a strong cast and a fun story. —PV
The Creator
In theaters Sept. 29
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Genre: Sci-fi action thriller
Director: Gareth Edwards
Cast: John David Washington, Madeleine Yuna Voyles, Gemma Chan
We also covered The Creator under our "biggest new movies of fall" banner, but we'd feel negligent if we didn't include it on our list of our most anticipated original movies as well, given how we're all salivating to see it. Gareth Edwards, director of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, returns with a Terminator-esque tale about humanity's war against an AI, and the hunt for a potential weapon against it, which turns out to be a second AI in the form of a child. The first trailer highlights a production design that reminds us all a bit of Denis Villeneuve's Dune in its starkness, beauty, and attention to fine detail. —TR
57 Seconds
In theaters and on digital Sept. 29
Genre: Sci-fi thriller
Director: Rusty Cundieff
Cast: Josh Hutcherson, Morgan Freeman, Greg Germann
Josh Hutcherson plays a tech journalist who discovers a device that can send a user back in time — you guessed it — by 57 seconds. Naturally, things go wrong. It's an intriguing premise, but what really grabs our eye is that it was co-written by Macon Blair, star of Blue Ruin and director of I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore. —PV
Freelance
In theaters Oct. 6
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Genre: Action comedy
Director: Pierre Morel
Cast: John Cena, Alison Brie, Christian Slater
John Cena seems to be everywhere these days. The DC Universe! Jackie Chan movies! Fortnite and Rocket League! Subway ads! Turning up as a mermaid in Barbie!
Directed by Taken's Pierre Morel, Freelance sees Cena playing a former special forces soldier who takes on a security gig for a journalist (Alison Brie) who's set to interview a dangerous dictator (Narcos' Juan Pablo Raba). It seems to be in line with the tone of the fun Channing Tatum/Sandra Bullock vehicle The Lost City, which sounds like a good time to me. —PV
Showdown at the Grand
In theaters and on demand Nov. 3
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Genre: Action comedy
Director: Orson Oblowitz
Cast: Terrence Howard, Dolph Lundgren, John Savage
You put Dolph Lundgren in a movie, and I'm there. Terrence Howard wearing a big hat is just a bonus.
Howard plays a movie theater owner whose business is threatened by corporate developers, presumably the same people who are always trying to pave over kids' clubhouses in dance movies. He enlists the help of an action movie star (Lundgren), because the show must go on. That's a great premise with a promising cast from writer-director Orson Oblowitz, a former cinematographer. —PV
The Holdovers
In limited theaters Nov. 3, wide Nov. 10
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Genre: Dramedy
Director: Alexander Payne
Cast: Paul Giamatti, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Dominic Sessa
A low-key movie from low-key Oscar winner Alexander Payne (Sideways), The Holdovers follows an unpopular teacher (Paul Giamatti) who is tasked with looking after the students who can't go home during the winter holiday. It's the first collaboration for Payne and Giamatti since Sideways, and promises a significant role for the extremely talented Da'Vine Joy Randolph (Dolemite Is My Name), who plays the school's head cook. —PV
Dream Scenario
In theaters Nov. 10