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15 Films to See In March (what are you watching?)

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15 Films to See in March



While some may view the early months of the year as a cinematic wasteland, we'll greatly refute that this month. For the first time in years, we've extended our limit of the usual ten films to fifteen in order to recognize some features that are well worth your time -- this also goes without including a must-watch restoration: the seminal documentary Grey Gardens, which will hit limited theaters on March 6th. Check out our top fifteen below and let us know what your most looking forward to see.

Matinees to See: Merchants of Doubt (3/6), These Final Hours (3/6), Cinderella (3/13), Cymbeline (3/13), The Wrecking Crew (3/13), The Gunman (3/20), and The Riot Club (3/27)

15. La Sapienza (Eugène Green; March 20th)

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Synopsis: A brilliant architect seeks spiritual and artistic renewal during a life-changing voyage in Italy to study the work of the great 17th-century architect Francesco Borromini.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: After stopping by the major film festivals at Locarno, Toronto, New York, London, Torino, and more, La Sapienza will finally see a U.S. release later this month from Kino Lorber. Starring Dardennes regular Fabrizio Rongione (last seen in Two Days, One Night), Christelle Prot Landmann, Ludovico Succio, and Arianna Nastro, it marks Eugène Green's first film in five years. We said in our review, "Following a handful of establishing shots, conversations take place in an immaculate shot-reverse-shot fashion, each line originating from the on-screen figure without exception, who looks directly into the camera. As tension mounts or the conversation grows more intimate, the close-ups will cut a little bit quicker, as if ceding the reverberations of the last few syllables that follow the end of a sentence, and the camera gets a little closer, leaving less and less headroom. As a viewer, the effect is hypnotizing, all but forcing one to search for motives and other character intricacies: it appears that these people are looking you directly in the eyes, and breaking eye contact is difficult, although a flustered or uncertain character will occasionally grant you mercy by turning away for just a moment. It’s a brilliant way to bring these characters to life."

14. Seymour: An Introduction (Ethan Hawke; March 13th)

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Synopsis: Director Ethan Hawke explores the life and lessons of piano teacher Seymour Bernstein.

Trailer

Why You Should See It:  One of the hardest-working talents in Hollywood, Ethan Hawke's first feature in nearly a decade takes on a documentary form, tracking the life and career of pianist Seymour Bernstein. We said in our review, "More crucial to An Introduction than Bernstein’s personality, endearing as it is, is the music he plays. One need not listen to Bernstein and others waxing metaphysical about the spiritual powers of music to appreciate Brahms, Chopin, Beethoven, and Schubert as we hear them, all beautifully timed and synced courtesy of editor Anna Gustavi and mixers Timothy Cleary & Guillermo Pena-Tapia. It’s easy (and not entirely unfair) to contrast the anti-commercialist message of Bernstein and Hawke with the crowd-pleasing style and straightforward structure of the film, but those looking for an aesthetic and intellectual challenge have come to the wrong film. Those who simply wish to be uplifted and moved, much like the admiring faces of the attendees at the film’s end (count Mark Ruffalo among them), however, will be delighted."

13. While We're Young (Noah Baumbach; March 27th)

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Synopsis: A middle-aged couple's career and marriage are overturned when a disarming young couple enters their lives.

Trailer

Why You Should See ItNoah Baumbach is shaping up for quite a year. Following up his acclaimed Frances Ha, the director's While We're Young will arrive next month followed by one our favorite films of Sundance Film FestivalMistress AmericaWe were also big fans of the former, saying in our review that it's "wise, funny, fiercely intelligent and always involving. It’s not just the director’s most complete film — it’s also his best, an even stronger, more ambitious creation than his last Toronto International Film Festival entry, Frances Ha. Here, aided by his most impressive cast to date — Ben Stiller, Naomi Watts, Adam Driver, Amanda Seyfried, Charles Grodin, and Adam “Ad Rock” Horowitz (!) — Baumbach has pulled off something truly impressive. He has made a heartfelt comedy that is as humorous as it is emotionally relatable."

12. Buzzard (Joel Potrykus; March 6th)

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Synopsis: Paranoia forces small-time scam artist Marty to flee his hometown and hide out in a dangerous Detroit. With nothing but a pocket full of bogus checks, his Power Glove, and a bad temper, the horror metal slacker lashes out.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Finding acclaim during its festival run the past year, we said in our review, "one of the most exciting pictures in contemporary American cinema. Starting with an oft-kiltered shot of its main character’s hand breaking a Nintendo Power Glove, Buzzard is a truly uncomfortable sit featuring an asshole who pushes everyone’s boundaries. But unlike the similarly designed The Comedy, Potrykus’s film explores essential class issues at the heart of this film. While set in a social milieu of Grand Rapids in an unspecified time around the late ’80s or early ’90s, Buzzard is a film obsessed with the post-recession, post-NSA era."

11. Man From Reno (Dave Boyle; March 27th)

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Synopsis: A Japanese author and small town sheriff team up to solve a murder mystery in San Francisco.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: A difficult genre to effectively nail in today's age, the neo-noir proves to be alive and well with Dave Boyle's Man From Reno. Full of perfectly cast characters (including Steven Seagal's daughter Ayako Fujitani in the lead role), the low-budget drama feels greatly authentic in its tone and execution. While comparisons to films from the Coens and even Chinatown are warranted, Boyle's take is fresh enough to create an original, gripping mystery.


10. Amour Fou (Jessica Hausner; March 18th)

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Synopsis: Young poet Heinrich wishes to conquer the inevitability of death through love, yet is unable to convince his skeptical cousin Marie to join him in a suicide pact.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Our favorite film from last year's Cannes Film Festival will be arriving this month. We said in our review, "The Austrian director’s sixth film is ecstatically original: a work of film-history-philosophy with a digital-cinema palette of acutely crafted compositions. Amour Fou seamlessly blends together the paintings of Vermeer, the acting of Bresson, and the psychological undercurrents of a Dostoevsky novel. It is an intensely thrilling work that manages to combine a passionately dispassionate love story of the highest order with a larger socio-historical examination of a new era of freedom, and the tragedy beset by those trapped in its enclosed world."

9. Run All Night (Jaume Collet-Serra; March 13th)

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Synopsis: An aging hitman is forced to take on his brutal former boss to protect his estranged son and his family.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: On the action-thriller front, there have been few more accomplished collaborations than those between Liam Neeson and Jaume Collet-Serra. Using the action star's skills to the best of his abilities, Collet-Serra's films often get disregarded as yet another Taken rip-off, but with expert direction in the B-movie field that outpaces any of Neeson's recent crop of films, this is easily our most-anticipated (or even perhaps the only worthwhile) wide release of the month.

8. Faults (Riley Stearns; March 6th)

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Synopsis: Claire is under the grip of a mysterious new cult called Faults. Desperate to be reunited with their daughter, Claire's parents recruit one of the world's foremost experts on mind control.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Led by Mary Elizabeth Winstead, one of last year's biggest hits at SXSW was Faults and for good reason. We said in our review, "Don’t expect much bombast or thrilling sequences, as Stearns crafts a slow-forming film, establishing atmosphere and tension. Despite happening in nearly one location, the production feels like it never constrains itself unnecessarily. In many ways, the hotel room becomes a character itself and is smartly explored throughout. There’s a fine line the film has to walk between showing its hand too early, but also keeping you in the loop. Despite a few tonal missteps, Faults manages to find success in giving us a thoroughly chilling examination on the dangers of cults."

7. Jauja (Lisandro Alonso; March 20th)

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Synopsis: A father and daughter travel from Denmark to a desert.

Trailer

Why You Should See It:  One of the 40 best films we've already seen this yearLisandro Alonso's Jauja provides yet another enticing leading role for Viggo Mortensen. We said in our Cannes review, that it's a "strange, beguiling, and excitedly didactic new film," one that is "pure Alonso, even as it shows him transforming into something else." I can back up the claim having seen it this week, proving to be one of the most beautiful and perplexing films I've seen in some time.

6. Spring (Justin Benson and Aaron Scott Moorhead; March 20th)

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Synopsis: A young man in a personal tailspin flees the US to Italy, where he sparks up a romance with a woman harboring a dark, primordial secret.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: If you're looking for a genre mix like none other this month, this is our highest recommendation. We said in our review, "A horror romance from Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson, its Italy-set journey of an American lost and alone proves equally suspenseful, grotesque, funny, and beautiful. The best part, however, is it’s smart and sensitive way of allowing the dark fantasy to enhance its love story rather than overshadow. Because at the end of the day, what’s onscreen isn’t necessarily out to scare us—although it will. Instead it shows love’s power to literally reinvent ourselves into that which we didn’t even realize we wanted to be."

5. Welcome to New York (Abel Ferrara; March 27th)

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Synopsis: Mr. Devereaux is a powerful man. A man who handles billions of dollars every day. A man who controls the economic fate of nations. A man driven by a frenzied and unbridled sexual hunger. A man who dreamed of saving the world and who cannot save himself. A terrified man. A lost man.

Trailer

Why You Should See ItAbel Ferrara's Welcome to New York, one of our top 50 films of the half-decade thus far, will finally be arriving to the United States this month, but unfortunately not in the best of shape. The loose retelling of the Dominique Strauss-Kahn affair clocked in at 125 minutes when we reviewed it at Cannes Film Festival, but now 17 minutes of it has been excised and retooled to get to a version that's 108 minutes. While the director is "totally disgusted" with IFC Films when it comes to the change, perhaps they'll smarten up within the next few weeks and if they do, this would be closer to the top of the list.

4. Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner; March 18th)

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Synopsis: A jaded Japanese woman discovers a hidden copy of Fargo on VHS, believing it to be a treasure map indicating the location of a large case of money.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: One of the better directed films I've seen in some time, David Zellner's Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter is a tightly controlled, beautifully-shot oddity of a drama. The Brothers Bloom and Pacific Rim star Rinko Kikuchi gives a deeply felt performance in this ultimately tragic story. Premiering at Sundance Film Festival well over a year ago, it'll finally hit theaters this month. #TeamBunzo, indeed.

3. The Salt of the Earth (Wim Wenders and Juliano Ribeiro Salgado; March 27th)

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Synopsis: A globe-spanning look at the career of photographer Sebastião Salgado.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Currently in his fifth decade of making films, Wim Wenders remains incredible prolific. His latest feature follows Sebastião Salgado, the famous Brazilian social documentary photographer and photojournalist who travels the globe to capture stark, stunning portraits of life. Co-directed by the subject’s son, Juliano Ribeiro Salgado, we said in our review, "The Salt of the Earth is a thoughtful, reverential examination of one artist by another, both equally deserving of such admiration. While some may find its pacing too slow, or its imagery too bleak, this film is a must for fans of either Salgado or Wenders."

2. It Follows (David Robert Mitchell; March 13th)

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Synopsis: After a seemingly innocent sexual encounter, a teenager finds herself plagued by strange visions and the inescapable sense that someone, something, is following her.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: After premiering to much acclaim at Cannes, It Follows stopped by Toronto and Sundance, and now it'll finally hit U.S. theaters this month. Coming from writer-director David Robert Mitchell, who came on our radar after The Myth of the American Sleepover, it's sure to be one of the top break-out films this year. We said in our review, “A teenage girl, captured through a static wide shot, runs through a quaint Detroit suburb, her body dwarfed by its trees and middle-class homes. The sense that something is not as it seems becomes realized quite quickly. This prologue, while one of the most formally well-executed sequences in the film, sets up a certain expectation, and luckily It Follows isn’t so much interested in that now-tired the-evil-that-lurks-under-the-surface-of-small-towns brand, but rather its invasion onto the iconography of it.”

1. World of Tomorrow (Don Hertzfeldt; March 31st)

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Synopsis: A little girl is taken on a mind-bending tour of her distant future.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: Out of the many films we saw at Sundance Film Festival this year, perhaps the best was the latest short work from Don Hertzfeldt. Running under 17 minutes, Don Hertzfeldt's animation World of Tomorrow is an exceedingly brilliant odyssey into the outer reaches of a future universe that channels our inner anxieties of loneliness. Bursting with creativity and hilarity, it's a profoundly affecting piece of work that demands to be seen when it arrives on demand later this month. Yes, placing a short film at the top of this list might be a cheat, but this Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner is a must-see.

All Films

• Bad Asses on the Bayou (Gold.) - 3/6
• Chappie (Sony) - 3/6
• Grey Gardens (2015 re-release) (Jan.) - 3/6
• Hayride 2 (Free) - 3/6
• An Honest Liar (Abr.) - 3/6
• The Mafia Only Kills in Summer (Distrib.) - 3/6
• Merchants of Doubt (SPC) - 3/6
• The Mind of Mark DeFriest (CDF) - 3/6
• Road Hard (FB) - 3/6
• The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (FoxS) - 3/6
• These Final Hours (WGUSA) - 3/6
• Unfinished Business (Fox) - 3/6
• Cinderella (2015) (BV) - 3/13
• Eva (Wein.) - 3/13
• Home Sweet Hell (VE) - 3/13
• It Follows (RTWC) - 3/13
• Run All Night (WB) - 3/13
• Seymour: An Introduction (IFC) - 3/13
• The Tales of Hoffman (2015 re-issue) (Rialto) - 3/13
• The Wrecking Crew (Magn.) - 3/13
• Kumiko, The Treasure Hunter (Ampl.) - 3/18
• Danny Collins (BST) - 3/20
• The Divergent Series: Insurgent (LG/S) - 3/20
• Do You Believe? (PFR) - 3/20
• The Gunman (ORF) - 3/20
• Love and Lost (Shi Gu) (CL) - 3/20
• Spring (2015) (Drft.) - 3/20
• WARx2 (WARX2) - 3/20
• Zombeavers (Free) - 3/20
• Cupcakes (Strand) - 3/27
• Get Hard (WB) - 3/27
• A Girl Like Her (PSR) - 3/27
• Home (2015) (Fox) - 3/27
• Man From Reno (FPE) - 3/27
• The Riot Club (IFC) - 3/27
• The Salt of the Earth (SPC) - 3/27
• Serena (Magn.) - 3/27
• While We're Young (A24) - 3/27
• White God (Magn.) - 3/27


What are you seeing this month?
 

Magwik

Banned
So far I'm in for Chappie, Run All Nighr, and Unfinished Business. Trying to find a 4th to check out
 

pbsapeer

Banned
Insurgent!
Quite enjoyed divergent and thought it was quite well done.
Hopefully this'll be just as good. The Mrs loved the books but I don't like reading!
 

Blader

Member
There's probably a couple I'll check out later in the year, but the only one I'm actually looking forward to now is Alex Gibney's new scientology doc, Going Clear.
 
Expendable, what are you hearing about '71?

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It's a master class in structure, a meticulously built period piece, a powerful anti-war film, and rarest of all, a thriller whose tension and suspense feel genuinely earned.
'71 rarely stops for breath; the threat of sudden violence hangs over every mundane conversation, and Demange expertly sustains the tension, allowing anxiety to build, briefly ebb, and then build again, over and over.
A supremely effective nail-biter, but its greatest value is a sense of you-are-there commotion, envisioning a time and place with a screen ferocity that leaves lasting marks.
 

obin_gam

Member
Cant relate to a single one of the movies in the op :/ All of them looks so so uninteresting it's kinda funny actually.
 

RusselUp

Member
Curious to watch Seymour. But do think I'm in it for While We're Young - the trailer was pretty solid in my opinion. And World of Tomorrow sounds fascinating. Waiting to hear reviews on Cinderella.
 

big ander

Member
Kumiko, It Follows, World of Tomorrow, While We're Young, Buzzard are on my list. Jauja and Run All Night and Faults if I get around to them.

I wonder if World of Tomorrow will actually screen at all. I could see a specialty place here pairing it with all of It's Such A Beautiful Day. That'd be ideal. i'll probably end up seeing it on vimeo.
Cant relate to a single one of the movies in the op :/ All of them looks so so uninteresting it's kinda funny actually.
"can't relate" is such an odd phrasing here. like you can't really tell ifyou relate to something without seeing it. I get "nothing interests me" I guess
 

Ridley327

Member
I feel like Expendable is trolling at this point by expanding it out to 15 films, as if to say "here are five additional films you're never getting to see outside of NY and LA!" to us common folk.

Thankfully, It Follows is hitting VOD the day it releases, so that's one nefarious plot foiled! I'm catching What We Do in the Shadows tonight, so that's probably going to be half of the films I'm driving out to Atlanta for this year.
 
Chappie couldn't make the Top 15, or the matinee list?

Damn, it must really be hot garbage.

Yeah, we quite disliked it.

Kumiko, It Follows, World of Tomorrow, While We're Young, Buzzard are on my list. Jauja and Run All Night and Faults if I get around to them.

I wonder if World of Tomorrow will actually screen at all. I could see a specialty place here pairing it with all of It's Such A Beautiful Day. That'd be ideal. i'll probably end up seeing it on vimeo.

Yeah, I think it's only festivals. It'll be on Vimeo this month though.

I feel like Expendable is trolling at this point by expanding it out to 15 films, as if to say "here are five additional films you're never getting to see outside of NY and LA!" to us common folk.

Thankfully, It Follows is hitting VOD the day it releases, so that's one nefarious plot foiled! I'm catching What We Do in the Shadows tonight, so that's probably going to be half of the films I'm driving out to Atlanta for this year.

No trolling intended, simply picking out what looks the best to me. Actually, I don't believe It Follows is right away. Buzzard, Faults, Welcome to New York, World of Tomorrow, and I believe Spring are through.
 

obin_gam

Member
What are your favorite films of the last few years? Perhaps I can throw out a recommendation related to that.

Well except for the usual blockbuster rumps I like "weird" films, that is - films where you feel something's not entirely right but you cant put your finger on it. Like Dogtooth and Borgman, or Foxcatcher and Nightcrawler from last year.
 
Well except for the usual blockbuster rumps I like "weird" films, that is - films where you feel something's not entirely right but you cant put your finger on it. Like Dogtooth and Borgman, or Foxcatcher and Nightcrawler from last year.

Nice. I'd imagine Kumiko would be up your alley (it's a bit slow-paced though) and definitely Faults. I haven't seen Spring yet, but that looks like it could be one too.
 

BioHazard

Member
LOVED (everyone should check out): Kumiko, It Follows, Buzzard, Jauja (probably going to be terribly divisive), and Spring

Dying to See: Salt of the Earth, World of Tomorrow, new Neeson, fucking FINALLY Welcome to NY even though it's the cut Ferrara didn't approve, Man from Reno, Faults, Amour Fou

Meh: While We're Young (nowhere near Frances Ha levels), La Sapienza

Any chance the film does VOD too? Pretty much guaranteed it won't show in my theaters.

Yep, March 27 I believe.

Well except for the usual blockbuster rumps I like "weird" films, that is - films where you feel something's not entirely right but you cant put your finger on it. Like Dogtooth and Borgman, or Foxcatcher and Nightcrawler from last year.

It is possible that you may LOVE Jauja. Great sense of eeriness and dread in a terrifying landscape.


Also, regarding '71:

Highly recommended. The sequence earlier on with the convoy going into the little town is so TENSE, goddamn. Worth it for that alone, the rest is great too.
 

linsivvi

Member
Kumiko and It Follows are the ones I will see.

La Sapienza perhaps but it's going to be a busy month for films.
 

Toothless

Member
Surprised Cinderella didn't make the main list. I'll be checking that out and Chappie for sure. Might get to Run All Night and While We're Young as well.
 
Yes, go see '71 and It Follows if you haven't. Intense stuff.

Thinking of going to see Kumiko and White God.

From anus bleeding to film festival darling, Don Hertzfeldt done well for himself. Good for him!
 

Akahige

Member
I want to see It Follows since I liked the lead in The Guest and the plot intrigues me, I might see Chappie.
 

BioHazard

Member
I'm going to see Chappie tomorrow and What We Do in the Shadows this weekend. I might see Amira & Sam next week and I will definitely see It Follows in a couple of weeks. Also tempted to go see Wyrmwood, because it looks like dumb fun.

I have to wait until April to see Spring and Kumiko.

All great films (haven't seen Chappie yet) Even Wyrmwood, I was very surprised by it
 
Surprised Cinderella didn't make the main list. I'll be checking that out and Chappie for sure. Might get to Run All Night and While We're Young as well.

I've kind of reached my limit with Disney re-imaginings, but I've heard it's actually decent. The 15 I picked I imagine will be better though.
 
is it just me or has anyone else noticed (at least in North America) a drastic change in the tone of the advertisements for Chappie? The first ones made it seem like something out of E.T. NOw its full on action war movie.
 

big ander

Member
is it just me or has anyone else noticed (at least in North America) a drastic change in the tone of the advertisements for Chappie? The first ones made it seem like something out of E.T. NOw its full on action war movie.

not just you. All the billboards and posters changed from the toy blocks+gold chain one to the bland "humanity's last hope isn't even human" or whatevershite, and the ads are very dour.
 
is it just me or has anyone else noticed (at least in North America) a drastic change in the tone of the advertisements for Chappie? The first ones made it seem like something out of E.T. NOw its full on action war movie.
Reminds me of American vs Japanese game box arts.

Kirby_Air_Ride_2_1379.jpg
 
So Chappie sucks? Is it even being screened for critics? Or are reviews embargoed?

And I recently found out DISASTERPEACE did the soundtrack for It Follows, which blew my mind, so that's a must-see.

Finally... How the HECK do I see the new Hertzfeldt theatrically?
 

RS4-

Member
So I have a choice between Chappie or Unfinished Business tonight, I want to see both.

Which one GAF. WHICH?!
 
For those wondering about '71, that movie is damn good. I was able to watch it recently and it's tense, violent and definitely heart pounding. It's not like Die Hard, but more like Escape From New York, but without the weirdness and some slower scenes.
 
Hot tub time machine 2
Haven't heard anything good about it, even from fans of the original. Oh wait, already came out last month to zero fanfare. Yikes, that sucks.

What We Do In The Shadows was the best comedy of 2014 (in my country), so hope more people check that out.
 
So Chappie sucks? Is it even being screened for critics? Or are reviews embargoed?

And I recently found out DISASTERPEACE did the soundtrack for It Follows, which blew my mind, so that's a must-see.

Finally... How the HECK do I see the new Hertzfeldt theatrically?

It'll be at SXSW and maybe some other festivals. Might only have a chance on VOD.

So I have a choice between Chappie or Unfinished Business tonight, I want to see both.

Which one GAF. WHICH?!

You really have only those choices? Yikes. I mean, I heard they are both a pile of average. I'd probably go with Chappie.
 
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