The Arizona Republic

Creepy clowns, a milestone tennis match and true-life heroes fill a varied roster

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IT (FRIDAY)

Jaeden Lieberher, Bill STARS: Skarsgård, Finn Wolfhard Andy Muschietti DIRECTOR:

The first month or THE SKINNY: so filming the Stephen King adaptation was full of hanging out and riding bikes for Lieberher and his kid co-stars, with a few emotional scenes here and there as the bullied outsiders known as The Losers Club in Derry, Maine, circa 1989. But once they met Skarsgård done up as Pennywise, the preternatu­rally evil clown, Lieberher realized he was really in a horror movie. “It was pretty terrifying just being in the room with (Skarsgård) in his makeup and costume.” Just as freaky? When Lieberher’s character comes face to face with his dead younger brother, who has been turned into a malevolent creature by Pennywise. “It’s scary for my character and for me, too,” Lieberher says.

MOTHER! (SEPT. 15)

Jennifer Lawrence, Javier STARS: Bardem, Michelle Pfeiffer Darren Aronofsky DIRECTOR: Aronofsky owes his THE SKINNY: new psychologi­cal thriller to an idea that “poured out of me in this crazy fever dream” over five days. Lawrence stars as a woman who’s trying to fix up the old house she bought with her husband (Bardem) when strangers begin to inexplicab­ly show up and interrupt their quiet life. There’s a relationsh­ip drama to be had, but also a thicker allegory throughout the film. “It’s a crazy time we live in, these headlines popping up non-stop, endless notificati­ons on our smartphone­s,” Aronofsky says. “When you scratch right beneath the surface of this kind of comfortabl­e reality we have here, you suddenly see all this chaos and war and discord. But it’s very hard to figure out what to do about that . ... I decided to try to create something with that emotion.”

BATTLE OF THE SEXES (SEPT. 22)

Emma Stone, Steve Carell, STARS: Bill Pullman Jonathan Dayton, DIRECTORS: Valerie Faris

On the surface, the THE SKINNY: 1973 tennis match between Billie Jean King (Stone) and Bobby Riggs (Carell) was “this silly spectacle,” Dayton says. But he and wife Faris “liked the personal stories behind the headlines,” with King having her first relationsh­ip with a woman and

Riggs trying to salvage his marriage and restart his career. The actors went to great lengths to match their real-life figures’ physicalit­y. Carell, already a tennis player, took lessons with Riggs’ coach. Stone worked with King a couple of times, “which was incredibly intimidati­ng,” Faris says, and put on 15 pounds of muscle in four months to look like a world-class athlete. “She loves a challenge, loves the pressure, like Billie Jean. It felt like a great match personalit­y-wise.”

KINGSMAN: THE GOLDEN CIRCLE (SEPT. 22)

Taron Egerton, Channing STARS: Tatum, Colin Firth Matthew Vaughn DIRECTOR:

After Kingsman THE SKINNY: headquarte­rs blows up in the spy sequel, young English superspy Eggsy (Egerton) teams with his American counterpar­ts in Statesman to take on supervilla­in Poppy (Julianne Moore), a mastermind behind the nefarious global organizati­on The Golden Circle. But back-from-the-dead father figure Harry Hart (Firth) is uncomforta­ble with Eggsy’s Southern-accented mentor, Agent Whiskey. Pedro Pascal says there’s “real effortless­ness, charm and danger” with his secret agent, whose weapons include an electric lasso and a whip that creates sonic booms. The actor says he has been cracking whips since he was a kid obsessed with Indiana Jones.

THE LEGO NINJAGO MOVIE (SEPT. 22)

Dave Franco, Justin STARS: Theroux, Jackie Chan Charlie Bean, DIRECTORS: Paul Fisher, Bob Logan

In the latest Lego THE SKINNY: film, Lloyd (voiced by Franco) is a young dude who’s part of a secret ninja force made up of high school outcasts — and Lloyd is especially uncool at school because his dad, Lord Garmadon (Theroux), is always trying to destroy the city. Theroux says. But Garmadon also has some internal struggles, Theroux says. “He doesn’t even know why leaving your child is a bad thing . ... It’s more about the son’s journey of forgiving him and learning to accept him for who he is.”

AMERICAN MADE (SEPT. 29)

Tom Cruise, Domhnall STARS: Gleeson, Sarah Wright Doug Liman DIRECTOR:

Usually Cruise and THE SKINNY: the friendly skies make for a great combo, though Liman initially approached the icon “because I thought he might enjoy doing something that had planes in common with Top Gun and nothing else,” the director says. Set in the 1980s, American Made is based on the true tale of Barry Seal (Cruise), a former TWA pilot and “incorrigib­le rule breaker” who was recruited by the CIA for some questionab­le dealings in Central America and ultimately became a drug smuggler for the Medellin Cartel. “It’s a fun story about an outrageous character doing outrageous things with airplanes in an era where those things were still possible,” Liman says. “I’m drawn to characters who are antiheroes, and I know I’ve done my job when the audience uses nothing but the most horrendous adjectives to describe Barry Seal and then talk about how much they love him.”

BLADE RUNNER 2049 (OCT. 6)

Ryan Gosling, Harrison STARS: Ford, Jared Leto Denis Villeneuve DIRECTOR:

In the much-anticipate­d THE SKINNY: sequel to Ridley Scott’s 1982 sci-fi classic, Gosling stars as Officer K, an L.A. cop and special operative known as a Blade Runner tasked to track down android replicants, which are now manufactur­ed by the shady businessma­n Niander Wallace (Leto). When he uncovers a secret that could change mankind, K goes on a quest to find Rick Deckard (Ford), a former Blade Runner “who’s still dealing with a lot of melancholi­a and loneliness,” Villeneuve says. Like the original, the new Blade Runner explores how we’re defined by our own memories. “As human beings, we are confronted with compulsion­s or instincts, what makes us sometimes go away from our humanity or come back to our humanity,” the filmmaker says. “

MARSHALL (OCT. 13)

Chadwick Boseman, Josh STARS: Gad, Kate Hudson Reginald Hudlin DIRECTOR:

Marshall is an origin THE SKINNY: story of sorts for the future Supreme Court justice, when Thurgood Marshall was a young NAACP attorney in 1940 tasked with helping Jewish lawyer Sam Friedman (Gad) defend an African-American man (Sterling K. Brown) accused of the rape and attempted murder of a rich white woman (Hudson). While maybe not on the level of fame of Brown

v. Board of Education, the case showed a period in history where the war for white supremacy happening in Europe mirrored what was happening in parts of America. “On one hand, we see ourselves as superior to Nazis. On the other hand, you have this racism and anti-Semitism in our own country,” Hudlin says.

ONLY THE BRAVE (OCT. 20)

Josh Brolin, Miles Teller, STARS: Jeff Bridges Joseph Kosinski DIRECTOR:

The responsibi­lity of THE SKINNY: honoring fallen firefighte­rs and their families weighed heavily on Kosinski in his latest project, based on a GQ article about 19 firefighte­rs who died battling a wildfire in Yarnell, Ariz., in 2013.

Brave centers on Eric Marsh (Josh Brolin), the superinten­dent of the elite Granite Mountain Hotshots crew, and Brendan McDonough (Teller), a rookie. “The focus is on the team ... the brotherhoo­d that holds these wildland fire crews together,” says Kosinski, who had a forest set built lined with propane lines to create controlled fires. “It was amazing how hot it got. When you imagine what a real wildfire is to be near, we were in awe of what these real Hotshots work around and amongst every day.”

WONDERSTRU­CK (OCT. 20)

Oakes Fegley, Millicent STARS: Simmonds, Julianne Moore Todd Haynes DIRECTOR:

Haynes’ latest is “a THE SKINNY: complicate­d love poem to New York City.” In the 1920s, Rose (Simmonds) is a deaf girl who runs away to Manhattan to find her Hollywood idol (Moore), while 50 years later, Ben (Fegley) goes there to search for his dad after his mother (Michelle Williams) dies and a freak accident takes his hearing. “The mystery is really, why are these stories parallelin­g each other and what is the meaning behind it?” Haynes says. The fact that it was a tale about two deaf children informed every aspect of filmmaking, from score to costume design. “You become very acutely aware of what it means to hear and what it means to not hear in ways that most movies take for granted.”

 ?? NIKO TAVERNISE ?? In Mother!, Jennifer Lawrence is a young wife whose peaceful existence becomes undone by mysterious uninvited strangers.
NIKO TAVERNISE In Mother!, Jennifer Lawrence is a young wife whose peaceful existence becomes undone by mysterious uninvited strangers.
 ?? MELINDA SUE GORDON ?? Billie Jean King (Emma Stone) faces down Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) in Battle of the Sexes.
MELINDA SUE GORDON Billie Jean King (Emma Stone) faces down Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) in Battle of the Sexes.
 ?? 20TH CENTURY FOX ?? Agent Whiskey (Pedro Pascal) is electrifyi­ng in Kingsman: The Golden Circle.
20TH CENTURY FOX Agent Whiskey (Pedro Pascal) is electrifyi­ng in Kingsman: The Golden Circle.

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