Get a Job is a comedy with a very topical content. It's about a group of friends who have recently graduated and are now on the hunt for their first real job. It is a film about growing up, about the difficult transition into the world of adults and responsible persons. The film stars Miles Teller, Anna Kendrick, Brandon T. Jackson, Nicholas Braun, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Marcia Gay Harden, Alison Brie and Bryan Cranston.
At the end of the year, the cinemas will also be colored by music, because in the last breath of November, the film about James Brown, "Get on Up", is coming. Chadwick Boseman lent voice and stature to the soul and funk legend, while Brown's musical opus lent the title to the biographical drama. Under the direction of Tate Taylor ("The Help"), the film takes us through the entire life span of the "godfather of soul music".
Watch the first trailer for the movie Ghost in the Shell - the Hollywood adaptation of the cult manga that started in 1989 and was later adapted into anime films - which has already cost Hollywood a lot of money. The producers of the film chose Scarlett Johansson as the main actress. As a result, anime fans raised their voices and accused Hollywood of whitewashing Asian culture, even when it borrows stories from a purely Asian setting. Maybe the first, very cryptic trailer will put them at ease a bit.
The adaptation of the film Ghostbusters (Ghostbusters) got its first trailer. In a reboot of the popular film franchise and more than 30 years after the original, the four outcasts are back. This time, the women will lead the way, with Kristen Wiig, Melissa McCarthy, Kate McKinnon and Leslie Jones stepping into the shoes of Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis and Ernie Hudson.
Gifted is a poignant drama from Marc Webb (500 Days of Summer) with Chris Evans as a single father raising his deceased sister's gifted daughter and fighting for her custody and a normal upbringing, while his mother wants to take advantage of the young girl's brilliant mind.
Gods of Egypt is an American fantasy film about Egyptian deities. And as always, there's trouble in paradise. The main blame goes to Gerard Butler, who this time turned into a villain, as he plays the role of Set, the ancient Egyptian god of war and darkness (a warrior with an animal head), who takes over the throne of the Egyptian empire by force. Watch the trailer for the film, directed by Alex Proyas, in which Butler is sidelined by Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, who is well known to all Game of Thrones fans.
Everything Matthew McConaughey touches turns to gold. Logically, he was given a role in the movie Gold, in which he plays a man on the verge of despair, who wants to get rich against all odds and succeeds in doing so after he stumbles upon a gold mine. But trouble quickly arises in paradise after everyone wants a piece of his fortune. Stephen Gaghan (Siriana) directed the film, which is full of star names.
Gone Girl, directed by David Fincher, tells an intriguing mystery story that unfolds under pressure from the police and a growing media frenzy. The film is coming to our cinemas in October, until then, check out the trailer.
Goosebumps is a horror film for children and a fantasy adventure comedy for adults. It is based on the eponymous collection of Goosebumps books intended to scare teenagers, which was aborted in 1992 by the American writer RL Stine. The author of the film adaptation is the director Rob Letterman (Monsters vs. Aliens), who invited Jack Black and some upcoming big teenage names like Dylan Minnette and Odeya Rush to participate. The film will also be shown in 3D.
Guardians of the Galaxy is returning to the big screen, and the first trailer for Marvel's highly anticipated sequel to the most unusual superheroes is here. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 is coming to cinemas in the spring of 2017.
Hail Coen Brothers! After the brilliant Llewyn Davis film from 2013, which attracted mainly a niche audience, the famous director couple, which can only be matched in the film world by the Wachowski family bond (once brother, now brother-sister), returns with the film treat Hail, Caesar, in which there are more Hollywood stars than there are stars in the sky. Contrary to expectations, the story is not set in the century BC, but in the golden 50s of Hollywood, and revolves around a real-life "fixer", a private detective who cleans up behind film studios and solves a series of problems in order to protect the reputation of actors and prevented scandals. This time his mission is George Clooney.
No, Hardcore Henry is not a video game, it's a first person movie that will get your adrenaline pumping. We have already experienced some video game adaptations (Doom, Prince of Persia, etc.), but Hardcore Henry does not borrow the script or the main characters from video games, but the first-person way of looking, typical especially for shooting games, where we follow the action from a first-person perspective. Similar to a toymaker, the viewer follows the action through the eyes of the protagonist, in this case the actor Sharlto Copley. The film was directed by Ilya Naishuller.