By Sarah Sluis
While the presidential debates this evening will likely dampen box-office returns, a few good popcorn options will entertain the under-eighteens and, at least for New York City, those escaping the forecasted rain.
Eagle Eye, 3,510 theatres
Oh, Shia LaBeouf. Just a few years ago, he played a dorky younger brother on Disney sitcom "Even Stevens." After a turn in summer tentpole Transformers (soon-to-be-titled Transformers 1), a drunken driving charge, and a supporting role in mega-franchise Indiana Jones IV, he's starring in yet another action-thriller, Eagle Eye. FJI reviewer Daniel Eagan called it "a B-movie with higher pretensions," and he just might be spot-on. Executive produced by Stephen Spielberg, the film appears to be a Minority Report-light. As a vehicle for Shia LaBoeuf, it couldn't be more interesting. He has worked on three Spielberg (executive produced or directed) films to date: Transformers, Indiana Jones IV, and Eagle Eye. With no upcoming projects, save the Transformers sequel and a rumored thriller, he will likely be able to leverage any favorable reception to this film into better roles and higher salaries.
Miracle at St. Anna, 1,185 theatres
A Glory for WWII, Spike Lee's epic effort to show the experience of black soldiers on the Italian front apparently suffers from his need to say and do too much. David Edelstein from New York Magazine notes that "Lee's canvas is impressively vast. The shock is in how coarsely he fills it in," while A.O. Scott calls out the genre shifts (apparently it starts out as a film noir?), the "platoon picture" speeches, and the flashbacks-within-flashbacks as evidence of the film's overwrought nature.
Nights in Rodanthe, 2,704 theatres
Nicholas Sparks is quite the hot commodity, with two additional Sparks adaptations recently announced, albeit with younger stars. For fans of Message in a Bottle, Nights in Rodanthe awaits you at the cineplexes, if you're too impatient for it to show up on cable. Watch Richard Gere and Diane Lane swoon into their fated love in this "PG-13 romance porn."
Also releasing this week:
- Tim Robbins and Rachel McAdams star in The Lucky Ones (425 theatres), an Iraqi veteran road trip picture.
- A dropout med student turns into a member of the marijuana-growing community in Humboldt County (10 theatres).
- A firefighter turns his attention to saving his marriage in Christian-themed Fireproof (839 theatres).
- Black comedy Choke (434 theatres), based on a novel by Chuck Palahnuik, centers on a sex addict who also works as a tour guide for a faux-colonial town.
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