The seasonal differences of the movie calendar have eroded a little bit with time. Neither of the last two Oscar juggernauts ā āOppenheimer,ā āEverything Everywhere All at Onceā ā opened in the fall, the traditional launching pad of Academy Awards hopefuls.
And just the same, f all tends to be nearly as stuffed as summer is with sequels, horror thrillers and would-be blockbusters. Still, some of the old rules still apply. A large percentage of 2024's best movies are set to unspool in the coming months.
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So with that in mind, here are some of the most anticipated films of this fall, from large to small and everything in between.
āMy Old Assā
A psychedelic trip makes for an unusual meeting in the latest from director Megan Park (āThe Falloutā). After sipping some mushroom-infused tea, 18-year-old Elliott (Maisy Stella) finds herself joined by her future self, played by Aubrey Plaza, on a camping trip on the lakes of Muskoka, outside Toronto. (Sept. 13, in theaters)
āWill & Harperā
When former āSaturday Night Liveā writer Harper Steele came out as trans, she sent an email to friends and family. An old friend and āSNLā colleague, Will Ferrell, responded with the suggestion that they travel the country together. The result is this tender and contemplative documentary, by āBarb and Star Go to Del Marā director Josh Greenbaum, about their 16-day road trip. (Sept. 13; on Netflix Sept. 27)
āSpeak No Evilā
Christian Tafdrupās 2022 Danish horror film was potent enough that it led to this Blumhouse remake just two years later. James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis and Aisling Franciosi star in a thriller about how much can go wrong on a idyllic countryside vacation. (Sept. 13, in theaters)
āA Different Man'
Sebastian Stan stars as Edward, an actor with neurofibromatosis who, after experimental surgery, is cured of his facial disfigurement. But the changes for Edward, who lives next to a friendly playwright (Renate Reinsve of āThe Worst Person in the Worldā), turn out to be a mixed blessing. With a compelling co-starring turn by actor Adam Pearson, who has neurofibromatosis. (Sept. 20, in theaters)
āHis Three Daughtersā
Writer-director Azazel Jacobsā latest stars Carrie Coon, Natasha Lyonne and Elizabeth Olsen as sisters who gather in the New York apartment of their dying father. A highlight of the season, āHis Three Daughtersā is one of the most memorable tales of siblinghood, and of a death in the family, in recent memory. (Sept. 20 on Netflix)
'The Substance'
A hit out of the Cannes Film Festival, Coralie Fargeatās body-horror parable stars Demi Moore as a TV star whoās deemed too old by male producers. A mysterious service, though, offers her the ability to change into a younger twin (Margaret Qualley) ā so long as she doesnāt remain so for too long. āThe Substanceā seems sure to go down as a classic satire of Hollywood ageism and youth obsession. (Sept. 20, in theaters)
āWolfsā
Brad Pitt and George Clooney play rival fixers who discover theyāve been hired for the same job in Jon Wattsā comic caper. Presumably more charming actors werenāt available, so Watts had to suffice with Clooney and Pitt. (Sept. 20, in theaters; Apple TV+ on Sept. 27)
'Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story'
Ian BonhĆ“te and Peter Ettedguiās documentary seeks to capture the full arc of Reeveās life, from the massive stardom that followed 1978ās āSupermanā to his resiliency following an accident that left him paralyzed from the neck down in 1995. (Sept. 21, in theaters)
āThe Wild Robotā
This DreamWorks Animation release, adapted from Peter Brownās popular book series, follows a robot (voiced by Lupita Nyongāo) who crash lands in a forested wildness where it, seeking a task, raises a runt goose (Kit Connor) until it's able to fly. (Sept. 27, in theaters)
'Megalopolis'
Francis Ford Coppolaās first film in 13 years stars Adam Driver as Caesar, a visionary with dreams of a utopian New York. Giancarlo Esposito, Aubrey Plaza, Laurence Fishburne and Shia LeBeouf co-star in this wildly ambitious epic that has already earned a wide spectrum of reaction. (Sept. 27, in theaters)
'Joker: Folie Ć Deux'
Five years after their rabble-rousing Oscar nominated DC Comics blockbuster, director Todd Phillips and Joaquin Phoenix are back for more antihero fun. This time, itās a musical, and Lady Gaga is playing Harley Quinn. (Oct. 4, in theaters)
'The Outrun'
Saoirse Ronan stars in Nora Fingscheidtās adaptation of Amy Liptrotās memoir of addiction. Ronan plays a young woman just out of rehab and returning home to the Orkney Islands in Scotland. (Oct. 4, in theaters)
'The Apprentice'
Opening just weeks before the U.S. election is Ali Abbasiās portrait of a young Donald Trump (Sebastian Stan) under the tutelage of Roy Cohn (Jeremy Strong). The film, which the Trump reelection campaign has called āpure malicious defamation,ā is made with some of the ā80s aesthetics of its setting. (Oct. 11, in theaters)
āPiece by Pieceā
Whatās cooler than a documentary about your life? What about a documentary made with Lego? In this film, directed by Morgan Neville (āWonāt You Be My Neighbor?ā), Pharrell Williams tells his life story brick by brick. (Oct. 11, in theaters)
āSaturday Nightā
While all eyes will be on āSaturday Night Liveā on the small screen this fall, the sketch comedy show will also have an origin story in theaters. Director Jason Reitman (āJuno,ā āUp in the Airā) directs this mid-ā70s dramatization of the chaotic infancy of the NBC institution, with Gabriel LaBelle as creator Lorne Michaels. (Oct. 11, in theaters)
āWe Live in Timeā
Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield star in this human-scaled drama, directed by John Crowley (āBrooklyn,ā āThe Goldfinchā) about a relationship charted not always chronologically, through romance, sickness and parenthood. Tissues are recommended. (Oct. 11, in theaters)
āAnoraā
Sean Baker (āThe Florida Project,ā āRed Rocketā) has long been one of most vital American independent directors. But he takes a step further with āAnora,ā the Palme dāOr winner at this yearās Cannes Film Festival. It stars Mikey Madison as a Brooklyn sex worker whose Vegas marriage to the son of a Russian oligarch prompts a farcical effort by his familyās henchmen to have it annulled. (Oct. 18, in theaters)
āNickel Boysā
RaMell Rossā feature directorial debut, selected as the opening night film at the New York Film Festival, adapts Colson Whiteheadās 2019 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about two Black teens (Ethan Harisse, Brandon Wilson) who become wards of juvenile reform school in 1960s Florida. Ross previously directed the Oscar-nominated documentary āHale County This Morning, This Evening.ā (Oct. 25, in theaters)
'Venom: The Last Dance'
Tom Hardy is back as the most volatile split-personality superhuman: Eddie Brock and his symbiote Venom ā arguably the most captivating double act in comic book movies. In this, the third in the series following 2018ās āVenomā and 2021ās āVenom: Let There Be Carnage,ā both are on the run. (Oct. 25, in theaters)
'Dahomey'
Writer-director Mati Diop (āAtlanticsā) creates testimonials for a few dozen African artworks taken from the West African kingdom of Dahomey during Franceās colonial rule in this, the winner of the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival. Diop dramatizes the artworksā stories through what sheās called āmagical documentary.ā (Oct. 25, theaters)
'Memoir of a Snail'
Adam Elliotās stop-motion drama, some 10 years in the making, follows the life of Grace Puddle (voiced by Sarah Snook), who begins collecting snails after her motherās death. After her father dies, too, she and her twin brother (Kodi Smit-McPhee) are separated. (Oct. 25, theaters)
āBlitzā
Director Steve McQueen (ā12 Years a Slaveā) returns to World War II for this drama set in a London under siege from Nazi bombs. Saoirse Ronan plays a single mother trying to protect her young son (Elliott Heffernan). (Nov. 1, theaters)
'Conclave'
A new Pope is needed. Enter Ralph Fiennes. In director Edward Bergerās follow-up to āAll Quiet on the Western Front,ā Fiennes stars as Cardinal Lawrence, one of the Vatican figures who gather for a conclave to choose a new pontiff. When Lawrence uncovers a secret that others would rather stay hidden, the conclave teeters toward going up in smoke. (Nov. 1, theaters)
'Emilia PĆ©rez'
Itās not every day we get a musical about a Mexican drug lord who transitions into a woman. Even more surprising is that French director Jacques Audiard pulls it off. Zoe SaldaƱa, Karla SofĆa GascĆ³n and Selena Gomez star in one of the more audacious movies of the year. (Nov. 1 in theaters; on Netflix Nov. 13th)
āHereā
Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks have a long and fruitful history together dating back to āForrest Gumpā and āCast Away.ā Less good was 2022ās āPinocchio,ā so hopefully the pair are back on track in āHere.ā Appearing to be filmed in one take, Zemeckisā latest chronicles a single spot of land through history. After a home is built on it, Hanks and Robin Wright move in and raise a family. (Nov. 1, in theaters)
'A Real Pain'
Jesse Eisenberg wrote, directed and stars in this buddy dramedy about two cousins (the other is played by Kieran Culkin) who travel to Poland to honor their grandmother. The two are near opposites played to type: Eisenberg is a sensitive neurotic, Culkin a charismatic idler. Together, they create a funny, poignant two-hander. (Nov. 1, in theaters)
āBirdā
British filmmaker Andrea Arnold has dabbled in TV and documentary in recent years, which makes āBirdā her first film since 2016ās āAmerican Honey.ā Here, she returns to a working-class English backdrop for a gritty story laced with fable. A 12-year-old girl (Nykia Adams) who lives with her father (Barry Keoghan) is visited by a peculiar stranger (Franz Rogowski). (Nov. 8, in theaters)
āHereticā
The distance Hugh Grant has traveled from rom-com protagonist seems likely to reach a new peak in this A24 horror thriller from āA Quiet Placeā co-writers Scott Beck and Bryan Woods. Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East play a pair of proselytizing Mormon missionaries who knock on the wrong door. (Nov. 15, in theaters)
'All We Imagine as Light'
Payal Kapadiaās ode to female friendship, a prize-winner at Cannes, is about two Mumbai nurses (Kani Kusruti, Divya Prabha) striving for love and happiness while working and commuting long hours in the Indian metropolis. (Nov. 15, in theaters)
'Gladiator II'
Twenty-four years after āGladiator,ā Ridley Scott is back with more swords, sandals and ā¦ a rhino. Yes, that horned mammal makes its way into the Colosseum this time, but itās far from the only new addition. Paul Mescal, Denzel Washington and Pedro Pascal star in this sequel, set several decades following the events of the original movie. (Nov. 22, in theaters)
'Wicked'
Before āWickedā was a Broadway smash, it was a 1995 book and nearly a movie. The big-screen was, perhaps, always the most fitting medium for a āWizard of the Ozā riff. In this Jon M. Chu-directed film, Cynthia Erivo plays the woman whoāll become the Wicked Witch of the West, while Ariana Grande plays Glinda. This āWickedā will be split in two, with part two arriving in late 2025. (Nov. 22, in theaters)
āThe Piano Lessonā
Washington has set himself the task of bringing August Wilson's plays to the big screen. In this adaptation of Wilson's Pulitzer Prize-winner, he produces while son Malcolm Washington directs, and son John David Washington stars. Led by a powerhouse performance by Danielle Deadwyler, āThe Piano Lessonā depicts a Pittsburgh family in 1936 reckoning with a family heirloom, a piano, which doubles as a metaphor for the legacy of slavery. (Nov. 22, on Netflix)
āMoana 2ā
A little āMoanaā confusion would be understandable. There's a separate live-action āMoanaā in development and this film was originally planned as a series. But āMoana 2ā ultimately, came together as a big-screen sequel to the 2016 original. Lin-Manuel Miranda isn't returning on the music front, but most everyone else is, including voice actors AuliŹ»i Cravalho and Dwayne Johnson. The film, set about three years after the original, finds Moana heading back on an ocean adventure, this time with her sister (voiced by Khaleesi Lambert-Tsuda) aboard, as well as several others. (Nov. 27, in theaters)