New titles abound! The last hot list of January sees five new movies make the list, led by the blockbuster Stephen King adaptation It. In music, former Fifth Harmony member Camila Cabello's first solo outing makes its debut at #1. A new novel from the dynamic team of Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child is the top new fiction title, while a slew of new political books make it in non-fiction.
Movies
- It (Blu-ray | 4K)
- The Foreigner (Blu-ray)
- American Made (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Happy Death Day (Blu-ray)
- The Snowman (Blu-ray)
- The Mountain Between Us (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Despicable Me 3 (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Home Again (Blu-ray)
- Dunkirk (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Kingsman: The Golden Circle (Blu-ray | 4K)
CD
- Camila Cabello, Camila
- The Greatest Showman Soundtrack
- Ed Sheeran, Divide
- Post Malone, Stoney
- Taylor Swift, Reputation
- G-Eazy, The Beautiful & Damned
- Kendrick Lamar, DAMN.
- Eminem, Revival
- Lil Uzi Vert, Luv Is Rage 2
- Bruno Mars, 24K Magic
Fiction
- The Woman in the Window, A.J. Finn
- City of Endless Night, Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
- Iron Gold, Pierce Brown
- Origin, Dan Brown
- Little Fires Everywhere, Celeste Ng
- The Rooster Bar, John Grisham
- The Wife Between Us, Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen
- Sing, Unburied, Sing, Jesmyn Ward
- Munich, Robert Harris
- The People vs. Alex Cross, James Patterson
Non-Fiction
- Fire and Fury, Michael Wolff
- Astrophysics for People in a Hurry, Neil deGrasse Tyson
- Leonardo da Vinci, Walter Isaacson
- Together We Rise, Various Authors
- Trumpocracy, David Frum
- The Last Black Unicorn, Tiffany Haddish
- Grant, Ron Chernow
- When They Call You a Terrorist, Patrisse Kahn-Cullors and asha bandele
- Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance
- Killers of the Flower Moon, David Grann
Written by Jon Williams
This time of year is traditionally awards season in
Hollywood, when the best films of the past year are recognized. The season
culminates with the most coveted awards, the Academy Awards, which will be
handed out this year at the 90 th annual ceremony, to be held March 4
in Hollywood. The nominees were named earlier this week, with the prestigious
Best Picture category being populated by nine outstanding films.
The movie with the most nominations is The
Shape of Water with a whopping thirteen, including Best Actress ( Sally
Hawkins), Best Supporting Actress ( Octavia
Spencer), and Best Supporting Actor ( Richard
Jenkins). Guillermo
del Toro is up for Best Director, an award he won at this year’s Golden
Globes, as well as Best Original Screenplay along with co-writer Vanessa
Taylor. Behind The Shape of Water is Dunkirk
with eight nominations. Most of them are in the so-called “technical”
categories, although Christopher
Nolan did score a Best Director nominations.
One of the most decorated films of awards season so far is Three
Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. It will play a major part on Oscar
night as it has seven nominations, including Best Actress ( Frances
McDormand) and two Best Supporting Actors ( Woody
Harrelson and Sam
Rockwell). Three Billboards was already named Best Picture (Drama) at the
Golden Globes, where McDormand and Rockwell also took home their awards. With a
SAG Award for Best Performance by a Cast under its belt as well, Three Billboards may have a big showing
at the Academy Awards.
Following Three
Billboards are two films with six nominations each. Gary
Oldman has earned much acclaim for his portrayal of British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill in Darkest
Hour, winning Best Actor at the Golden Globes and SAG Awards.
Incredibly, if he won, it would be his first Academy Award; however, he faces
stiff competition. Daniel
Day-Lewis has won Best Actor three previous times, and is up for it again
this year for his performance (in what he says is his last role) in Phantom
Thread. Among that film’s six nominations are nods for Best Director ( Paul
Thomas Anderson) and Best Supporting Actress ( Lesley
Manville).
Another film with a number of awards already this season is Lady
Bird, which has five Oscar nominations. It won the Golden Globe for
Best Picture (Musical or Comedy), and Saoirse
Ronan won that same night for Best Actress, which she is up for at the
Academy Awards as well. Among its other nominations are Best Director for Greta
Gerwig—after many felt she was unjustly ignored for a Golden Globe
nomination—and Best Supporting Actress for Laurie
Metcalf.
Get
Out is something of a surprise with its four nominations, if only
because it at least nominally belongs to the horror genre, which rarely sees
any awards season recognition. But the performance by breakout star Daniel
Kaluuya demanded attention, which his Best Actor nomination delivers. The
movie was also nominated for Best Director (in his directorial debut) and Best
Original Screenplay for Jordan
Peele, who is primarily known for his comedy work in television.
Call
Me by Your Name also scored four nominations, including Best Actor for Timothée Chalamet. It is also the only
Best Picture nominee to also be nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay, as it
was based on the
novel of the same name by Andr é
Aciman. And rounding out the nominees is the historical journalism film The
Post, which, in addition to its Best Picture nod, also garnered a
record 21st acting nomination for Meryl
Streep.
That does it for
this year’s Best Picture nominees, but there are plenty of other movies that
have the potential to make some waves at the upcoming Oscar ceremony. Among
them are Roman
J. Israel, Esq. (Best Actor nominee Denzel
Washington), I,
Tonya (Best Actress nominee Margot
Robbie and Best Supporting Actress nominee Allison
Janney), The
Big Sick (Best Original Screenplay), and the nominees for Best Animated
Film (The
Boss Baby, The
Breadwinner, Coco,
Ferdinand,
and Loving
Vincent). And for the film music buffs, don’t forget the nominees for
Best Score (Dunkirk,
Phantom
Thread, The
Shape of Water, Star
Wars: The Last Jedi, and Three
Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri) and Best Song (Mudbound,
Call
Me by Your Name, Coco,
Marshall, and The
Greatest Showman).
So that’s a quick
look at the upcoming Academy Awards. The ceremony is sure to drive a great deal
of patron interest in the winners and nominees, so use the links above or
SmartBrowse on our website to find these movies and others by these incredible
performers and directors. In the meantime, let us know your picks for the night’s
big winners!
The movie list heats up this week with three new titles storming to the top, led by the Tom Cruise adventure American Made. The music chart, on the other hand, sees no new titles make the list, but another strong week for the Greatest Showman soundtrack. Two new titles break onto the fiction list, with The Wife Between Us making it all the way to #2, while Kelly Corrigan's Tell Me More is the only new title in non-fiction.
Movies
- American Made (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Despicable Me 3 (Blu-ray | 4K)
- The Mountain Between Us (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Dunkirk (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Kingsman: The Golden Circle (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Flatliners (Blu-ray)
- The Hitman's Bodyguard (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Atomic Blonde (Blu-ray | 4K)
- The Lego Ninjago Movie (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Kidnap (Blu-ray)
CD
- The Greatest Showman Soundtrack
- Ed Sheeran, Divide
- G-Eazy, The Beautiful & Damned
- Bruno Mars, 24K Magic
- Post Malone, Stoney
- Taylor Swift, Reputation
- Eminem, Revival
- Kendrick Lamar, DAMN.
- Sam Smith, The Thrill of It All
- Lil Uzi Vert, Luv Is Rage 2
Fiction
- The Woman in the Window, A.J. Finn
- The Wife Between Us, Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen
- Origin, Dan Brown
- The Rooster Bar, John Grisham
- Little Fires Everywhere, Celeste Ng
- Sing, Unburied, Sing, Jesmyn Ward
- Blood Fury, J.R. Ward
- Robicheaux, James Lee Burke
- The People vs. Alex Cross, James Patterson
- End Game, David Baldacci
Non-Fiction
- Fire and Fury, Michael Wolff
- Astrophysics for People in a Hurry, Neil deGrasse Tyson
- Leonardo da Vinci, Walter Isaacson
- The Last Black Unicorn, Tiffany Haddish
- Grant, Ron Chernow
- Andrew Jackson and the Miracle of New Orleans, Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger
- Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance
- Killers of the Flower Moon, David Grann
- Tell Me More, Kelly Corrigan
- When Breath Becomes Air, Paul Kalanithi
Written by Jon Williams
Recently it was announced that the streaming service Hulu
had picked up rights to a new six-episode adaptation of Joseph Heller’s classic
Catch-22, starring and directed by George
Clooney. First published in 1961, the novel is considered one of the most
significant and influential literary works of the 20 th century.
About a group of United States airmen during World War II and their darkly
humorous attempts to maintain their sanity (or prove their insanity), the novel
was previously adapted into a 1970 feature
film starring Alan Arkin as the main character, Yossarian, along with other
such notable names as Art Garfunkel, Martin Sheen, Bob Newhart, Jon Voight, and
Orson Welles.
Hulu, of course, has gained much acclaim lately for another
series adaptation of a classic novel. Earlier this month, The Handmaid’s Tale won a Golden Globe for Best Drama Series, and
Elisabeth Moss took home the award for Best Actress in a Drama Series, and it
fared even better at last fall’s Emmy Awards, where it won those same two
awards and six more. The show is based on Canadian author Margaret Atwood’s
dystopian 1985 novel
about a near-future society where declining birth rates have led to fertile
women being indentured to powerful men as “handmaids” for procreation. Like Catch-22, The Handmaid’s Tale was previously adapted into a movie,
released in 1990 and starring Natasha Richardson, Robert Duvall, and Faye
Dunaway. The show’s second season will debut in April.
HBO has a knack for bringing books to life—their Big
Little Lies series, based on the novel
by Liane Moriarty was a big winner in the miniseries category at this year’s
Golden Globes, not to mention the runaway success of Game
of Thrones, based on George R.R. Martin’s Song
of Ice and Fire, among other examples. Their latest attempt will come this
spring, with Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit
451. Referring to the temperature at which paper burns, the story deals
with “firemen” who are tasked with burning any books they find, and one who
goes rogue in hopes of reviving the wisdom of the past. A 1966 adaptation
was directed by the legendary Francois Truffaut.
Since its initial publication in the late 1860s, Louisa May
Alcott’s Little
Women has always been a popular target for adaptation, with several movies
and TV miniseries to its name already. This year, those totals will both go
up by one, as the March sisters are coming to both the big and small screens.
The film version, starring Lea Thompson as Marmee, the girls’ mother, does not
have a firm release date yet. The three-part miniseries, on the other hand, is
expected to air on PBS and the BBC during the Christmas season. Starring Emily
Watson and Angela Lansbury, it will follow in a tradition of PBS/BBC period
dramas, and as such, is highly anticipated.
Last year, Moonlight
won Academy Awards for Best Motion Picture and Best Screenplay. This year, the
writer and director of that film, Barry Jenkins, is bringing to the screen James
Baldwin’s 1974 novel If Beale Street
Could Talk. It’s the gripping story of a man unjustly accused of a horrific
crime just after he and his fiancée learn she is pregnant, and their fight to
prove his innocence. Despite being more than forty years old, it’s a tale with
a great deal of resonance today. Another recent film based on a work by
Baldwin, the 2016 documentary I
Am Not Your Negro, has garnered much acclaim.
Of course, all of these adaptations are still a ways off.
Much closer on the horizon is Disney’s movie version of A Wrinkle in Time, directed by Ava DuVernay. Author Madeleine L’Engle’s
1962 novel
won the prestigious Newbery Medal for children’s literature, among other
awards, and has been a beloved classic ever since. It follows the young Meg
Murry as she searches for her father, a brilliant scientist who has discovered
a method of traveling through both space and time. The movie, which hits
theaters on March 9, is sure to reignite interest in L’Engle’s book, as well as
further titles in the series, such as A
Wind in the Door and A
Swiftly Tilting Planet.
Be sure you have these classic novels on your shelves for
patrons as their adaptations come out, as they will surely be in demand even
more than usual. Use the links above, or SmartBrowse on our website for other
adaptations, more works by the authors, and plenty of other related materials.
Two new movies sneak onto the back half of this week's movie list. There's not much change on the music chart, while the fiction list sees the most movement, with new titles led by the thriller by A.J. Finn, The Woman in the Window. In non-fiction, the only one new addition is the much-discussed new book on the Trump presidency by Michael Wolff.
Movies
- Dunkirk (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Kingsman: The Golden Circle (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Atomic Blonde (Blu-ray | 4K)
- The Hitman's Bodyguard (Blu-ray | 4K)
- American Assassin (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Kidnap (Blu-ray)
- Girls Trip (Blu-ray)
- Logan Lucky (Blu-ray | 4K)
- Flatliners (Blu-ray)
- The Lego Ninjago Movie (Blu-ray | 4K)
CD
- The Greatest Showman Soundtrack
- Ed Sheeran, Divide
- Taylor Swift, Reputation
- G-Eazy, The Beautiful & Damned
- Kendrick Lamar, DAMN.
- Eminem, Revival
- Imagine Dragons, Evolve
- Post Malone, Stoney
- Khalid, American Teen
- Lil Uzi Vert, Luv Is Rage 2
Fiction
- The Woman in the Window, A.J. Finn
- Origin, Dan Brown
- The Rooster Bar, John Grisham
- Little Fires Everywhere, Celeste Ng
- Sing, Unburied, Sing, Jesmyn Ward
- Robicheaux, James Lee Burke
- Unbound, Stuart Woods
- The People vs. Alex Cross, James Patterson
- The Midnight Line, Lee Child
- Year One, Nora Roberts
Non-Fiction
- Fire and Fury, Michael Wolff
- Astrophysics for People in a Hurry, Neil deGrasse Tyson
- Leonardo da Vinci, Walter Isaacson
- Grant, Ron Chernow
- Let Trump Be Trump, Corey R. Lewandowski and David N. Bossie
- Andrew Jackson and the Miracle of New Orleans, Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger
- The Last Black Unicorn, Tiffany Haddish
- Killers of the Flower Moon, David Grann
- Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance
- Killing England, Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard
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