The Scotsman

No Mr Bond, I expect you to try

After a chaotic year for the film industry, Alistair Harkness explores some of the big themes that movie- lovers should look out for in 2021

- Alistair Harkness @ aliharknes­s

Will James Bond return?

There was a grim irony in Sean Connery passing away the year James Bond became 2020’ s most famous no- show. Having first embodied 007 and defined who the character was for several generation­s of film- lovers ( this one included), Connery’s death, at age 90, came just as the resilience of modern cinema’s longest running franchise was being repeatedly tested by coronaviru­s.

That the pandemic came on top of a troubled production that had already cost No Time To Die much earlier release dates that would have put it in the clear is perhaps something its backers would rather not think about right now. As it stands, Daniel Craig’s ace- looking final outing is currently scheduled to hit cinemas on 2 April. Crucially for multiplexe­s, it will be followed by the rest of 2020’ s deferred blockbuste­rs, among them A Quiet Place II ( 23 April), Black Widow ( 7 May), Fast and Furious 9 ( 28 May), Dune ( 1 October) and West Side Story ( 10 December). Nothing, though, is set in stone, as evidenced by the number of as- yet- untitled studio films also currently on the release schedule. Ranging from the non- committal likes of Untitled Universal Event Film ( 5 March) and Untitled Disney Live Action ( 10 December) to the less crypticall­y monikered Untitled Matrix Film ( 22 December), industry bets are being hedged left, right and centre.

Can Tom Cruise save the big screen experience?

There’s a reason a masked Tom Cruise made a video of himself attending the first public screening of Tenet in London. No movie star is more dedicated to delivering big screen thrills than the Cruiser. He doesn’t do TV and he doesn’t hang off the side of planes just so you can watch the results on an iphone. Consequent­ly, nobody wants to get down to the business of going back to the movies more than Tom Cruise, not least because he’s got two new films lined up. Top Gun: Maverick – the belated sequel to the movie that made him a mega- star 35 years ago – was primed for take- off last summer before the pandemic hit; Mission: Impossible 7, meanwhile, was one of the first big blockbuste­rs to shut down production when the scale of the crisis became apparent in February. The former will now land in UK cinemas on 8 July with Mission: Impossible 7 following on 19 November. And if the latter comes anywhere close to topping 2017’ s ridiculous­ly entertaini­ng Mission: Impossible Fallout, it’ll be one blockbuste­r worth running to cinemas to see.

Glasgow Film Festival, UK- wide edition

Like every other big arts event, Glasgow Film Festival's forthcomin­g 17th edition has had to adapt to our new reality, this time with a hybrid programme of physical screenings and a curated selection of online premieres and retrospect­ives. The good news is that the festival is rolling out across the UK, with online screenings accessible to UK- based film fans and physical screenings happening across 22 cinemas, from Stornoway to London. Sundance 2020 winner Minari will open the festival on 24 February while the Parisian- set Spring Blossoms will bring proceeding­s to a close on 7 March. The full programme will be announced 14 January.

Why Frances Mcdormand and Chloé Zhao will rule 2021

Mcdormand, of course, is the double Oscar- winning star of Fargo and Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri; Zhao is the Chinese- born, US- based filmmaker whose 2017 sophomore feature, The Rider, put her on the map as as one of the best filmmakers in the world. Their new film together, Nomadland ( 19 February), is set to be one of the cultural highlights of the coming year. A rooted- inreality character study of a middleaged widower ( Mcdormand) traversing the United States in a van, it’s an example of American Neo- realist cinema at its absolute finest and should net Mcdormand her third Academy Award and

Tom Cruise doesn’t do TV and doesn’t hang off the side of planes just so you can watch the results on an iphone

put Zhao in contention to be only the second woman to win an Oscar for best director. But Zhao also makes her blockbuste­r debut too, having already wrapped Marvel’s Angelina Jolie- starring superhero movie The Eternals ( 5 November). As for Mcdormand, she’ll be seen in Wes Anderson’s much- delayed The French Dispatch ( release TBC) but, more intriguing­ly, will play Lady Macbeth opposite Denzel Washington in The Tragedy of Macbeth ( release TBC), a new film version of the Scottish play adapted and directed by her husband, Joel Coen, in what will be his first solo project without his brother Ethan. Bring it on.

Cinema gets itself a gun

In the age of streaming there’s been a lot crossover between prestige television and movies so it’s perhaps appropriat­e that The Sopranos, the show that ushered in the current era of cinematic television, should be getting a big screen prequel in the form of The Many Saints of Newark ( 12 March). Co- written by series creator David Chase and directed by series veteran Alan Taylor, the film is set against the backdrop of the 1967 Newark race- riots and zeroes in on the young Tony Soprano ( played by James Gandolfini’s son Michael Gandolfini) and his relationsh­ip with Dickie Moltisanti ( Alessandro Nivola), the oft- referenced father of one of the show’s best- loved characters, Christophe­r Moltisanti. Corey Stahl co- stars as the young Junior Soprano, while the rest of the cast is rounded out by heavy hitters such as Goodfellas star Ray Liotta, The Punisher’s Jon Bernthal and Vera Fermiga, who may or may not be playing Tony’s monstrous mother Livia. Bada Bing!

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Daniel Craig’s muchdelaye­d Bond film No Time To Die is due to be released on 2 April; Frances Mcdormand in Nomadland; A Quiet Place II; The French Dispatch
Clockwise from main: Daniel Craig’s muchdelaye­d Bond film No Time To Die is due to be released on 2 April; Frances Mcdormand in Nomadland; A Quiet Place II; The French Dispatch
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