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15 Movies Worth the Haul to the Multiplex in October 2017

15 Movies Worth the Haul to the Multiplex in October 2017

Cinephiles should prepare for an intensely busy month of quality moviegoing this month.

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Blade Runner 2049 (Oct. 6)

Harrison Ford’s android-hunting cop Deckard is dragged out of hiding by Ryan Gosling’s young detective in order to help solve a case involving the fate of the human race in this Denis Villeneuve-helmed sequel to Ridley Scott’s influential 1982 sci-fi film.

The Florida Project (Oct. 6)

Having hit it big with 2015’s Tangerine(which he shot on three iPhones), director Sean Baker returns to the big screen with this indie (starring Willem Dafoe) about a six-year-old girl living in an extended-stay motel near Walt Disney World.
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Brawl in Cell Block 99 (Oct. 6)

When a drug deal goes bad, a former boxer (Vince Vaughn) finds himself in prison, where things don’t get any easier for him—to say the least—in this ultra-violent brawler from Bone Tomahawk director S. Craig Zahler.

Una (Oct. 6)

Rooney Mara and Ben Mendelsohn square off in this critically well-received drama about a young woman who decides to strike up a relationship with the older man who seduced her 15 years earlier.
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Marshall (Oct. 13)

Having already played African-American trailblazers Jackie Robinson (42) and James Brown (Get On Up), Chadwick Boseman now takes on the role of Thurgood Marshall—the first African-American Supreme Court justice—in this drama about one of the legal pioneer’s first cases.

The Meyerowitz Stories (Oct. 13)

On the eve of a career retrospective for their artist father (Dustin Hoffman), three adults—played by Ben Stiller, Elizabeth Marvel, and Adam Sandler in a role that’s already earning him Oscar buzz—reunite in New York in this Netflix drama from Noah Baumbach (The Squid and the Whale).
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Geostorm (Oct. 20)

The only thing worse than a storm is a GEOSTORM, an epic environmental calamity caused by futuristic weather-controlling satellites that can only be stopped by Gerard Butler. Dean Devlin, producer of Independence DayGodzilla, and The Patriot, makes his directorial debut with this disaster film.

The Killing of a Sacred Deer (Oct. 27)

Colin Farrell reteams with The Lobsterdirector Yorgos Lanthimos for this dark, disturbing drama about a young boy (Barry Keoghan) whose arrival in the life of a successful surgeon (Farrell) and his wife (Nicole Kidman) spells doom for everyone.
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Leatherface (Oct. 20)

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre’s iconic villain gets his own origin story in this prequel starring Stephen Dorff and directed by Julie Maury and Alexandre Bustillo, the duo responsible for 2007’s unforgettable Inside.

The Snowman (Oct. 20)

Based on the novel by Joe Nesbø, this thriller from director Thomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In) concerns a detective (Michael Fassbender) and his new partner (Rebecca Ferguson) trying to stop a serial killer known as “The Snowman.”
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Only the Brave (Oct. 20)

The courageous team of firefighters that fought Arizona’s Yarnell Hill Fire—which claimed 19 of their members—is lionized by this drama starring Josh Brolin, Miles Teller, Taylor Kitsch, Jennifer Connelly, and Jeff Bridges.

Jigsaw (Oct. 27)

The Saw franchise refuses to stay dead with this eighth installment, which focuses on a string of murders modeled after the work of Tobin Bell’s notorious Jigsaw.
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Thank You for Your Service (Oct. 27)

The lingering effects of wartime battle on combatants is tackled by this PTSD-fixated drama starring Miles Teller, Haley Bennett, Beulah Koale, and Amy Schumer.

Suburbicon (Oct. 27)

George Clooney directs this reworked Coen Brothers-authored story about a man (Matt Damon) whose peaceful suburban existence is turned upside-down—in all sorts of criminal ways—after a home invasion.
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The Square (Oct. 27)

Art world pretensions are deliriously skewered by this latest social satire from director Ruben Östlund (Force Majeure), which won the Palm d’Or at this year’s Cannes Film Festival

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