Marie Antoinette,opening October 20 Credit: Columbia Pictures

For your consideration…

Handicapping the Oscar chances of fall’s big films

Autumn is the most awesome time of the year. As if the
bracingly heady weather weren’t enough reason to love the season, fall also
means that we finally get to see the good movies. The last few months on the
calendar are traditionally jam-packed with quality, and 2006 is no exception.

OK; enough preamble, except to say that release dates are
subject to change.

All
the
King’s Men (9/22)

This remake of 1949’s Oscar victor (spawned from Robert Penn
Warren’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about a corrupt politician) stars Sean
Penn, Jude Law, Kate Winslet, and Anthony Hopkins.

Oscar chances: Oh, totally.

Jackass: Number Two (9/22)

Take a break from esoteric cinema and spend some time with
Johnny Knoxville and his sadomasochistic chums, who apparently felt there were
bones still left to be broken and crotches yet to be pummeled.

Oscar chances: If
this is the only movie submitted during awards season, then…maybe.

Factotum (9/22)

Matt Dillon channels Charles Bukowski in this adaptation of the hipster poet laureate’s
semi-autobiographical tome about writing, screwing, gambling, and drinking.

Oscar chances: Dillon getting nominated again this year
might be a sign of the apocalypse.

The
Last King of Scotland
(9/27 ltd.)

Forest Whitaker plays IdiAmin in a screen version of the novel about a fictional
relationship between the cruel tyrant and a Scottish doctor (James McAvoy, Chronicles of
Narnia
).

Oscar chances: Surprisingly, Whitaker has never gotten an Oscar nod. Maybe this’ll do it.

Shortbus (10/4 ltd.)

John Cameron Mitchell follows up Hedwig and the Angry Inch with a controversial film about love and
sex that actually features the latter in most explicit ways.

Oscar chances: Nope, not unless the Academy suddenly gets hip.

The Departed (10/6)

Martin Scorsese’sBostonization of the Hong Kong
action flick Infernal Affairs stars
Matt Damon and Leonardo DiCaprio as men on opposite
sides of the law who infiltrate each other’s respective organizations.

Oscar chances: Scorsese will win one day… but most likely for something else.

Little Children (10/6)

Kate Winslet stars as an unhappy
housewife who turns the playground upside-down when she embarks on an affair
with a stay-at-home dad in Todd Field’s (In
the Bedroom
) adaptation of the novel by Tom Perrotta
(Election).

Oscar chances:Winslet nominations are now required by law.

Marie Antoinette (10/20)

Sofia Coppola follows up Lost
in Translation
with her revisionist tale of the impetuous queen and her
court that incorporates modern details like blue Converse high-tops and Siouxsie Sioux.

Oscar chances: Sure; the visuals are no doubt stunning.

The Prestige (10/20)

Christopher Nolan takes a break between Batman movies for this costume drama about a rivalry between two
magicians, played by Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale.

Oscar chances: How the hell should I know?

Running With Scissors (10/27)

The big-screen version of AugustenBurrough’s best-selling memoir about his unbelievably
dysfunctional childhood features Annette Bening,
Brian Cox, Joseph Fiennes, and Gwyneth Paltrow.

Oscar chances: Supporting actor nominations all around.

A Good Year (11/10)

Russell Crowe stars as a London banker who inherits a rundown vineyard
in Ridley Scott’s adaptation of Peter Mayle’s novel.

Oscar chances: Maybe you remember last time Scott and Crowe teamed up. It was called Gladiator.

Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny (11/17)

Jack Black and Kyle Gass share
with us the story of their goofball metal duo’s origins as they pursue a guitar
pick with the power of rock.

Oscar chances: Um, no.

Casino Royale (11/17)

Daniel Craig blows stuff up, frolics with vamps, and finally
ends speculation as to whether he deserves to be Bond. James Bond.

Oscar chances: Not ruining a lucrative franchise is the only thing on the studio’s mind.

The Fountain (11/22)

Darren Aronofsky’s eagerly awaited
follow-up to 2000’s Requiem for a Dream stars Rachel Weisz and Hugh Jackman
in a centuries-spanning sci-fi love story…

Oscar chances: …that received a healthy round of boos at the Venice Film Festival.

Fur (11/10 ltd.)

Steven Shainberg (Secretary) directs Nicole Kidman as
Diane Arbus in a quirky fantasy focusing on three
months in the life of the doomed photographer.

Oscar chances: A
Kidman movie at the end of the year? Of course.

The Nativity Story (12/1)

Keisha Castle-Hughes, Oscar nominee for Whale Rider, plays Mary in Catherine Hardwicke’s (Thirteen) live-action version of your
neighbor’s front lawn at Christmastime.

Oscar chances: Probably not, but Castle-Hughes is such a charmer. And she is playing Jesus’
mom, for Christ’s sake.

Apocalypto (12/8)

Mel Gibson’s 15th-century Mexican action-adventure was
already a hard sell, and then he had to go and open his big drunken trap.

Oscar chances: It
looks amazing, but Gibson won’t be winning any popularity contests anytime
soon.

American Hardcore (12/8)

The hardcore punk scene birthed by
disaffected Reagan-era youth is memorialized in this documentary stuffed with
gritty footage of its groundbreaking practitioners.

Oscar chances: An Oscar wouldn’t be very punk rock at
all, now would it?

The Good German (12/8)

Steven Soderbergh directs George
Clooney (yes, again), Tobey Maguire, and CateBlanchett in this achromatic murder-mystery set in
post-WWII Berlin.

Oscar chances: Duh.

The Good Shepherd (12/22)

Robert DeNiro’s first directorial
effort since 1993’s A Bronx Tale stars Matt Damon, Angelina Jolie, and DeNiro himself in a spy flick that takes place during the
Cold War.

Oscar chances: Ooh, Scorsese would be so mad.

Rocky Balboa (12/22)

At 60, Sylvester Stallone writes, directs, and stars in what
has to be the final chapter in the Rocky series…

Oscar chances: …but everyone loves an underdog. Stranger things have happened, right?

Perfume (12/27
ltd.)

Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run) resurfaces with his adaptation of Patrick Suskind’s famous novel about a man whose quest for the
perfect scent turns deadly.

Oscar chances: Depends if Germany
submits this dark story or some fluffy Oscar bait.

September 22

All the King’s Men |
Confetti |Factotum |Feast |Flyboys | Jackass: Number Two | Jet Li’s Fearless |
Once in a Lifetime

September 27

The
Last King of Scotland
(ltd.)

September 29

Children of Men |
Fallen Idol | A Guide To Recognizing Your Saints
(ltd.) | House of Sand | Open Season |
School for Scoundrels

October 4

Shortbus (ltd.)

October 6

49 Up | Breaking and
Entering
(ltd.) | The
Departed | Little Children | Employee of the Month | Keeping Mum | The Science
of Sleep
| The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning

October 13

Al Franken’s God Spoke
| Driving Lessons
(ltd.) |The Grudge
2 | Infamous
(ltd.) | Man of the Year
| The Marine | Tideland
(ltd.) | The War Tapes

October 20

Fast Food Nation (ltd.) | Flags of Our Fathers | Flicka | Marie Antoinette | The Prestige

October 27

Babel (ltd.) | Catch A
Fire
(ltd.) | Lucky You | The Motel | Running With Scissors | Saw
III
| Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas in
3-D

November 3

Borat | Flushed Away | Riding Alone for Thousands
of Miles | The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause | Viva Pedro! | Volver
(ltd.) |
Wondrous Oblivion

November 10

Fuck (ltd.) | Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus (ltd.) | A
Good Year
| Stranger Than Fiction

November 17

13 Tzameti
| Casino Royale | Come Early Morning
(ltd.) | For Your Consideration (ltd.) | Happy Feet | The Hoax (ltd.) | The Return | Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny

November 22

Bobby | Deck the Halls
| Dรฉjร  Vu | The Fountain | The History Boys
(ltd.) | Let’s Go To Prison

December 1

The Nativity Story |
Van Wilder Deux: Rise of the Taj

December 8

American Hardcore | Apocalypto | The Good German | The
Holiday | Unaccompanied Minors

December 15

Blood Diamond | Home
of the Brave | The Painted Veil
(ltd.) | The Pursuit of Happyness
| Venus
(ltd.)

December 20

Charlotte‘s Web

December 21

Dreamgirls

December 22

The Good Shepherd |
Hurricane on the Bayou | Night at the Museum | Notes on a Scandal
(ltd.) | Pride (ltd.) | Rocky Balboa | We Are Marshall

December 25

Black Christmas

December 29

Miss
Potter
(ltd.) | Pan’s Labyrinth (ltd.)