This month marks the 20th anniversary of four notable films.
The first to arrive in that glorious month of September 2005 was Tim Burton’s CORPSE BRIDE.
It was a fantasy-musical that followed a groom-to-be that falls into the underworld and becomes engaged to a dead bride. Co-directed by Mike Johnson, CORPSE BRIDE was a return to stop-motion animation for Burton, and also re-united Burton with his regulars: Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham-Carter, and Christopher Lee. With mixed-to-good reviews, CORPSE BRIDE would be a moderate hit, and earn an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature.
Next up would be the action thriller A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE.
Directed by David Cronenberg, VIOLENCE was an adaptation of the 1997 graphic novel, and had Viggo Mortensen playing a mob assassin in hiding. Co-starring Ed Harris, William Hurt, and Maria Bello, VIOLENCE was quickly regarded as one of Cronenberg’s best films and one of the best films of the year, and earned two Oscar nominations: Best Adapted Screenplay and Supporting Actor for Hurt.
The drama would continue with the biopic drama, CAPOTE.
The late great Phillip Seymour Hoffman would play famed writer Truman Capote during his efforts to write and publish one of his most famous works, In Cold Blood. Directed by Bennett Miller, CAPOTE would earn five Oscar nominations: Best Picture, Director, Supporting Actress (Catherine Keener), Adapted Screenplay, with Hoffman winning for Best Actor.
The drama would ease up a little towards the end of the month with Joss Whedon’s SERENITY.
A space-western, SERENITY was the finale to Whedon’s cancelled-yet extremely popular TV series, FIREFLY, and followed his collection of smugglers and outlaws evading the law while protecting one of their own. The cast of FIREFLY returned (Nathon Fillion, Alan Tudyk, Adam Baldwin, Summer Glau, Sean Maher, Morena Baccarin, Ron Glass, and Jewel Staite), and they were joined by the always-excellent Chiwetel Ejiofor. Reviews were good and the film would win the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation.
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September of 2005 was in that period of time before things really started to change. Only two years before, THE LORD OF THE RINGS had kickstarted a new era of big-budget, high-profile franchises, and studios were gearing up for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. But the MCU was still three years away, and although HARRY POTTER was in the middle of its run in 2005, theatres were not jammed with franchises. This left the door wide-open for smaller films to come in and make an impact.
September of 2005 had an excellent collection of films that hit every cinematic note; action, drama, sci-fi, animation, horror, and Oscar-winners and nominees. It was a month full of options, and a far-cry from today’s slim-pickings at the theatre. This month stands as a snapshot of the good-ol-days.
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