Ho! Ho! Ho! Santa’s Dropped a Bagful of Movies Into Cineplexes for the Holidays
By: Ellis Nassour

The only thing missing this holiday season in cineplexes is a movie musical. It’s no secret that the force has been with Disney with smashed box office records for the Star Wars reboot. There’re lots of alternatives. Choices are varied and, since it’s year-end and the studios are releasing product to qualify for Oscar, Golden Globe, and the multitude of other award nominations, there’s some of the best and unique films of the year available in animation for family outings, the blacklist scandal of the Commie 50s, high drama, comedy, corruption, romance (all kinds), scandal, sci-fi blockbusters, Shakespeare, thrill-seeking daredevil thieves vs the FBI, even a shoot-‘em-up western.
It’s also a year of outstanding performances. Among those lighting up screens are: Christian Bale, Drew Barrymore, Angela Bassett, Cate Blanchett, Michael Caine, Steve Carrell, Toni Collette, Bradley Cooper, Marion Cotillard, Daniel Craig, Bryan Cranston, Robert De Niro, Leonardo Di Caprio, Will Farrell, Michael Fassbender, Tina Fey, Harrison Ford, Ryan Gosling, Tom Hardy, Chris Hemsworth, Samuel L. Jackson, Brian d’Arcy James, Michael Keaton, Harvey Keitel, Diane Lane, Jennifer Lawrence, Rachel MacAdams, Rooney Mara, Dame Helen Mirren, Lupita Nyong’o, Brad Pitt, Amy Poehler, Eddie Redmayne, Saoirse Ronan (Greta Gerwig’s competition for silver screen sweetheart ), Mark Ruffalo, Kurt Russell, Liev Schreiber, Dame Maggie Smith, Will Smith, Sylvester Stallone, Channing Tatum, and Alicia Vikander,
Some favs are back in holiday season films, too: Alec Baldwin, Jim Broadbent, Albert Brooks, Bruce Dern, Carrie Fisher, Jane Fonda, Mark Hamill, Jennifer Hudson, Diane Ladd, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Phylicia Rashad, Isabella Rossellini, Tim Roth, John Slattery, Wesley Snipes, Max von Sydow, Rachel Weisz, and Dianne Wiest.
Welcome to newcomers John Boyega, Nick Cannon, Madalina Diana Ghena (the splashiest of the group), Michael B. Jordan, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Teyonah Parris, and Daisy Ridley.

JOY | Extended Look | 20th Century FOX – YouTube
Youth Official Trailer #1 (2015) – Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel Drama Movie HD
Spotlight 2015 Official Trailer + Trailer Review – Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams : Beyond The Trailer – YouTube YouTube
The unique film of the year is Paolo Sorrentino’s Youth (Fox Searchlight/Pathé), with one of Michael Caine’s most outstanding performances as composer escaping his music, and certainly Harvey Keitel’s best yet as a once-famous director attempting a comeback. And, if that’s not enough, there’s Golden Globe-nominated Jane Fonda as a one-time screen bombshell – now a brusque cross between a blonde Jane Russell and Bette Davis as Baby Jane.
In the lead-up to the Oscars, among awards season’s major contenders, all GG-nominated are: Adam McKay’s The Big Short (Paramount/Regency), headlined by GG-nominees Christian Bale and Steve Carell, which tackles the shady world of high finance which predicated the 2000s mortgage meltdown that decimated so many; Todd Haynes’ Carol, from Patricia Highsmith’s novel, igniting the flames of forbidden love in 50s America courtesy of GG- nominees Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara; David O. Russell’s Joy [Fox 2000/Twentieth-Century Fox], reunites GG-nominee Jennifer Lawrence, Bradley Cooper, and Robert Di Niro in the tangled web of generational comedy/drama; and director/co-writer’s Tom McCarthy’s Spotlight (Open Road/Participant Media) is a tense newsroom potboiler ala All the President’s Men, with Mark Ruffalo and Michael Keaton as Bernstein and Woodward, the story of the Boston Globe shaking the Catholic Church to its core over the massive cover-up of pedophile priests.
You know what you’re getting from Quentin Tarantino (GG-nominated, screenplay), but in The Hateful Eight (The Weinstein Company) he raises the blood, guts, and violence quota to a new level – creating wonder at how the film received only an R rating. You can’t fault the actors – Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, and GG-nominee Jennifer Jason Leigh among them; Robert Richardson’s outdoor cinematography; or the tantalizing score by legendary (GG-nominated) Ennio Morricone, but all that violence just for the sake of it is vapid – especially considering the killing of innocent people when another way was the lesser toll option. Then, there’re the holes in the plot [especially that big one in the floor – how does he even know that spot exists]. In this insane age, do we really need a film with such a drastic overload of gun violence?
László Nemes’ Son of Saul (Sony Pictures Classics) (GG-nominated, Foreign Film, Hungary), dealing with man’s inhumanity to man, is the most terrifying film of the year with a harrowing performance by Géza Rohrig. Set amidst the horrors of the Auschwitz concentration camp, it’s far from a “holiday” movie and yet it’s a must-see not only from the point of what some will do to survive; but also from a historical perspective. Much of the film is shot in close-up, but the surround sound tells you what you, thankfully, can’t see. What you see is shattering.
It’s not every holiday season you get a Christmas horror film, but there’s one this year, Krampus (Universal/Legendary), which is pretty edge-of-your seat and delivers the goods. The tense opening credits by no means prepare you for the hell that’s to come. Buy the bucket of popcorn!
Move over Hunger Games and make way for what may be the unique film of ’16 (March): Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster (Alchemy/Protagonist), Cannes Jury Prize, a bizarre love and marriage story set in a dystopian near future at a creepy hotel deep in a forest. Headlining is Golden Globe winner Colin Farrell, with co-stars Léa Seydoux (Spectre, Saint Laurent, Grand Budapest Hotel), Oscar nominee John C. Reilly, and Oscar winner Rachel Weisz. It’s anybody’s guess how audiences will respond.