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'TIS THE SEASON FOR ONSLAUGHT OF MOVIES.


Byline: Amy Dawes and Bob Strauss Daily News Staff Writers

As of press time the following list of films was complete and up to date, but don't blame us if something drops out or suddenly materializes. Studios, like the rest of us, are always second-guessing themselves.

June 14 The Cable Guy: Jim Carrey got $20 million for this, but that isn't close to the price unsuspecting subscriber Matthew Broderick pays when he accepts free premium channels from Carrey's much-too-friendly, chaos-causing installer. This is supposed to be the film that initiates the ``Ace Ventura'' superstar's darker, more serious phase. Director Ben Stiller (``Reality Bites'') assures us, somewhat worriedly, that it's still just as funny as ``Dumb and Dumber.'' (Columbia)

Moll Flanders: Robin Wright stars as author Daniel Defoe's 18th-century heroine, who's born into poverty in London but transforms her situation through courage, spirit and sheer determination. Directed by Pen Densham, with Morgan Freeman, Stockard Channing and John Lynch. (MGM MGM
 in full Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc.

U.S. corporation and film studio. It was formed when the film distributor Marcus Loew, who bought Metro Pictures in 1920, merged it with the Goldwyn production company in 1924 and with Louis B. Mayer Pictures in 1925.
)

Switchblade Sisters: Quentin Tarantino presents the re-release - as if anyone noticed it the first time - of Jack Hill's 1975 cult film about a female street gang. (Miramax)

June 21 Eraser: Arnold Schwarzenegger is back as a tough, terminatin' and substantially over-budget federal marshal who guards key criminal informants in witness protection programs. His latest assignment: Make the bad guys overlook a canary played by rather well-known former Miss America Vanessa Williams. From the director of ``The Mask,'' Chuck Russell. (Warner Bros.)

The Hunchback hunchback, abnormal outward curvature of the spine in the thoracic region. It is also known as kyphosis and humpback, and in its severe form a noticeable hump is evident on the back.  of Notre Dame: This year's big, animated Disney musical cutes cu·tes  
n.
A plural of cutis.
 up the Victor Hugo classic, courtesy of the same directing team responsible for ``Beauty and the Beast Beauty and the Beast is a traditional fairy tale (type 425C -- search for a lost husband -- in the Aarne-Thompson classification). The first published version of the fairy tale was a meandering rendition by Madame Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve, published in .'' Tom Hulce gives voice to the lonely but lovable Quasimodo, whose only pals are some tolerant gargoyles gargoyles

medieval European church waterspouts; made in form of grotesque creatures. [Architecture: NCE, 1046]

See : Ugliness
. Watch as puritans of all persuasions complain that Demi Moore makes the beautiful gypsy Esmeralda sound too sexy. With a score by (who else?) Alan Menken. (Walt Disney Pictures)

Lone Star: John Sayles (``Passion Fish'') wrote and directed this tale of a Texas border-town sheriff (Kris Kristofferson) caught in an investigation that uncovers his own long-buried secrets. With Chris Cooper, Joe Morton, Elizabeth Pena and Matthew McConaughey. (Castle Rock/Sony Pictures Classics)

Mouth to Mouth: A phone sex comedy from Spain starring Javier Bardem (``Jamon, Jamon'') and Aitana Sanchez-Gijon (``A Walk in the Clouds''). (Miramax)

Stealing Beauty: Liv Tyler stars as an American teen-ager who travels to Tuscany to explore her soul and her sexuality, encountering an assortment of characters (including Jeremy Irons and Sinead Cusack) along the way. Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. (Fox Searchlight)

June 28 Heavy: An overweight pizza chef (Pruitt Taylor Vince) is shaken out of his upstate New York Upstate New York is the region of New York State north of the core of the New York metropolitan area. It has a population of 7,121,911 out of New York State's total 18,976,457. Were it an independent state, it would be ranked 13th by population.  state-of-stupor when sweet young waitress Liv Tyler comes to work at his mother's (Shelley Winters) rural tavern. With ex-Blondie frontwoman Deborah Harry. (CFP 1. CFP - Constraint Functional Programming.
2. CFP - Communicating Functional Processes.
3. CFP - Call For Papers (for a conference).
 Distribution)

The Nutty Professor: Eddie Murphy's career has come down to this: remaking a Jerry Lewis comedy disguised as a fat guy. Directed by Tom Shadyac, who let ``Ace Ventura, Pet Detective'' loose on the world, it's about how klutzy genius Professor Klump makes a slimming-down, suaving-up potion po·tion
n.
A liquid medicinal dose or drink.



potion

a large dose of liquid medicine.
 that turns him into romantic savant sa·vant  
n.
1. A learned person; a scholar.

2. An idiot savant.



[French, learned, savant, from Old French, present participle of savoir, to know
 Buddy Love. Let's see if this formula turns Murphy back into a comic force to be reckoned with. (Universal)

Purple Noon: The long-threatened re-release of the 1960 French thriller may finally happen this month. Alain Delon stars as novelist Patricia Highsmith's duplicitous charmer, Tom Ripley. (Miramax)

Rendezvous in Paris: Three elegantly crafted vignettes set in romantic Paris comprise a comic, sophisticated look at the follies and treacheries of love. From director Eric Rohmer. (Artificial Eye)

Striptease: Less is more Moore when Demi Moore takes a job as a stripper in a sleazy Miami club to get the money to win a child custody battle. Make sense? You be the judge. Moore got a $12 million payday for taking the role. Directed by Andrew Bergman (``Honeymoon in Vegas'') based on a novel by popular mystery writer Carl Hiaasen. (Castle Rock/Columbia)

July 3 The Grass Harp: Based on Truman Capote's poetic novel about an 11-year-old boy (Edward Furlong) who's sent to live with his eccentric aunts in a small Southern town in the 1940s, this gentle comedy features a plum role for Walter Matthau as the local judge who discovers in the twilight of his life that his heart can still be filled with passion. Directed by Matthau's son, Charlie. With Sissy Spacek, Piper Laurie, Mary Steenburgen, Jack Lemmon, Nell Carter and Roddy McDowall. (Fine Line)

Independence Day: An alien invasion on a global scale is the high concept in this special effects-laden summer spectacular from filmmakers Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin (``Stargate''). Will Smith, Bill Pullman and Jeff Goldblum lead the cast. (20th Century Fox)

Phenomenon: John Travolta plays a regular guy struck by a sudden, inexplicable flash of genius The Flash of Genius Doctrine or Flash of Genius Test was a test for patentability used by the United States Federal Courts for over a decade. The doctrine was formalized in Cuno Engineering Corp. v. Automatic Devices Corp. (314 U.S.  in this warm and cuddly comic drama directed by the emerging expert at such things, ``While You Were Sleeping's'' Jon Turteltaub. Kyra Sedgwick, Forest Whitaker and Robert Duvall are among the awed acquaintances. (Touchstone Pictures)

July 5 The Visitors: The most popular film in French history is a comedy about a 12th-century knight (``The Professional's'' Jean Reno) who, sent by a witch to our modern world, does brave battle with all manner of threatening appliances. (Miramax)

July 10 Harriet the Spy: Louise Fitzhugh's beloved 1964 children's book comes to the screen with Michelle Trachtenberg (Nickelodeon's ``Adventures of Pete & Pete'') as Harriet, the sixth-grader who spies on her friends and neighbors as part of her training to become a famous writer. With Rosie O'Donnell. (Paramount)

July 12 Courage Under Fire: In this Gulf War drama, tank commander Denzel Washington seeks redemption for his involvement in a tragic incident of friendly fire by investigating the conflicting reports surrounding the death of Medavac pilot Meg Ryan, who's killed during a separate rescue mission. Directed by Ed Zwick (``Glory''). With Scott Glenn as a Washington Post reporter. (Twentieth Century Fox)

Kingpin: Outrageous comedy about a former bowling champion turned small-time small·time or small-time  
adj. Informal
Insignificant or unimportant; minor: a smalltime actor.



small
 hustler who travels cross-country with a Dutch Amish rube who he believes will take him back to the big time. From the creators of ``Dumb & Dumber.'' With Woody Harrelson, Randy Quaid. (MGM/UA)

Maybe ... Maybe Not: German box-office hit about a gorgeous, ostensibly straight man, Axel (Til Schweiger), who moves in with two gay roommates after his girlfriend kicks him out. Soon everyone's starting to wonder if Axel is maybe ... maybe not. Directed by Sonke Wortmann. (LIVE Entertainment/Orion Classics)

Multiplicity: Michael Keaton plays such a busy guy that the only practical solution to fulfilling all his work and family commitments is to get himself cloned. Initially pleased by the extra attention, his wife Andie MacDowell quickly discovers that there's a limit to the number of husbands one can cope with. Director Harold Ramis did wonders last time out with a similar gimmicky comedy, ``Groundhog Day.'' (Columbia)

July 17 Kazaam: This month's basketball movie, oddly enough, is not about unlikely coaches. It's the much more believable story of a troubled kid who discovers a 3,000-year-old genie played by Shaquille O'Neal. (Walt Disney Pictures)

July 19 Celestial Clockwork: A runaway Venezuelan bride pursues her dream of becoming an opera star. Needless to say, she encounters a lot of weirdos. (October Films)

The Frighteners: A record-breaking 400 computer-enhanced visual effects grace this supernatural comedy-thriller by the acclaimed director of ``Heavenly Creatures,'' Peter Jackson. Michael J. Fox plays a shady exorcist ex·or·cism  
n.
1. The act, practice, or ceremony of exorcising.

2. A formula used in exorcising.



exor·cist n.
; he's actually in league with the spirits people pay him to scare off. But when a serial killer's ghost sets up shop, Fox and his otherworldly buddies have to really get down to business. (Universal)

Trainspotting: Danny Boyle, the acclaimed Scottish director of last year's ``Shallow Grave,'' has gotten even more praise for this sick/funny study of Edinburgh drug addicts. (Miramax)

July 24 A Time to Kill: John Grisham's first novel comes to the screen in director Joel Schumacher's super-heated courtroom drama about two white Southern lawyers (Matthew McConaughey and Sandra Bullock) fighting to defend a black man (Samuel L. Jackson “Samuel Jackson” redirects here. For the senator from Indiana, see Samuel D. Jackson.

Samuel Leroy Jackson (born December 21, 1948) is an American Academy Award-nominated and BAFTA-winning actor.
) accused of murder after he takes revenge on the racist thugs who assaulted his 9-year-old daughter. (Warner Bros.)

July 26 The Adventures of Pinocchio: A live-action version of the classic fairy tale, abetted by computer imagery and the Jim Henson Creature Shop. ``Home Improvement's'' Jonathan Taylor Thomas Jonathan Taylor Thomas (born September 8, 1981) is an American child actor and former teen idol, perhaps best remembered for his roles of middle child Randy Taylor on the sitcom Home Improvement and the voice of the young Simba in Disney's The Lion King.  plays the puppet who becomes a boy and Martin Landau is his creator/dad, Gepetto. Directed by ``Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle'' perpetrator A term commonly used by law enforcement officers to designate a person who actually commits a crime.  Steve Barron. (New Line Cinema)

Foxfire fox·fire  
n.
A phosphorescent glow, especially that produced by certain fungi found on rotting wood.
: A teen-age bonding drama with a strong feminist slant. Based on a Joyce Carol Oates Noun 1. Joyce Carol Oates - United States writer (born in 1938)
Oates
 novel. (Rysher Entertainment)

House Arrest: To prevent their parents from divorcing, a couple of kids lock 'em in the basement until they learn to get along. When the other neighborhood children get wind of this, they decide to imprison im·pris·on  
tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons
To put in or as if in prison; confine.



[Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en-
 all their folks in the same way. Jamie Lee Curtis Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism.  and Kevin Pollak star in this comedy by people who obviously saw ``Wild in the Streets'' too many times. (MGM/UA)

Joe's Apartment: Sex, bugs and rock 'n' roll rock 'n' roll: see rock music.  are the bare necessities in this story of an Iowa rube (Jerry O'Connell) who moves into a seedy New York apartment and meets the other tenants - 50,000 singing, dancing cockroaches cockroaches

insects which may carry Salmonella spp. in their gut and play a part in the spread of the disease.
. Based on the award-winning MTV MTV
 in full Music Television

U.S. cable television network, established in 1980 to present videos of musicians and singers performing new rock music. MTV won a wide following among rock-music fans worldwide and greatly affected the popular-music business.
 live-action/animated short created by John Payson, who directs the feature film. (Warner Bros.)

High School High: Although some of the ``Naked Gun'' guys are behind this comedy, it still sounds alarmingly like one of those inspiring white-teachers-saves-inner-city-youth groanfests. Still, the white teacher in question is played by Jon Lovitz, so let's hope this is the vicious satire the genre deserves. (TriStar)

Infinity: Matthew Broderick and Patricia Arquette star in this romantic drama about the early life of renowned physicist and popular author Richard Feynman, who was torn between love and destiny when his wife Arline was diagnosed with a contagious and potentially fatal illness. Broderick also directed this movie, which co-stars James LeGros and Peter Reigert. (First Look Pictures)

Manny Manny may refer to:

In nobility:
  • Baron Manny, a title in the Peerage of England
  • Walter de Manny, 1st Baron Manny (died 1372), soldier of fortune and founder of the Charterhouse
People with the given name Manny:
  • Manny (given name)
 & Lo: Two sisters, 16 and 11, run away from separate foster homes, hit the road together and eventually kidnap a shop clerk (Mary Kay Place Mary Kay Place (b. September 23 1947, Port Arthur, Texas) is an American actress, singer, director and screen writer. Early Career
After graduating from the University of Tulsa with a Speech Degree, Place moved to Hollywood with aspirations of becoming an actress and
), who turns out to be a pretty good surrogate mom. (Sony Pictures Classics)

A Very Brady Sequel: The success of last year's ``The Brady Bunch Movie'' prompted a return to '70s middle America with Carol (Shelley Long), Mike (Gary Cole) and those irrepressible kids. In the sequel, Carol's long-lost adventurer husband reappears. Will she flip her shag shag

see cormorant.
? Arlene Sanford directs. (Paramount)

July (date not set) Bye-Bye: Algerian immigrants have a tough time in the French city of Marseilles. (Turbulent Arts)

The Low Life: An emotionless e·mo·tion·less  
adj.
Devoid of emotion; impassive.



e·motion·less·ness n.

Adj. 1.
 would-be writer (Rory Cochrane) is dragged out of his shell after moving to L.A., hitting career frustrations and reluctantly relating to reluctantly acknowledged fellow losers. (Cabin Fever Entertainment)

Plump Fiction: Inevitable, wasn't it? Tommy Davidson and Paul Dinello headline this spoof of Quentin Tarantino movies, with Julie Brown as the zaftig gun moll who justifies the title. (Rhino Films)

Stonewall stone·wall  
v. stone·walled, stone·wall·ing, stone·walls

v.intr.
1. Informal
a.
: A fictionalized account of a pivotal moment in the modern gay rights movement, ``Stonewall'' explores events leading up to the drag queen-led riots in 1969 outside the Stonewall Inn in New York's Greenwich Village. Directed by the late Nigel Finch for the BBC BBC
 in full British Broadcasting Corp.

Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927.
. (Strand Releasing)

Aug. 2 Chain Reaction: ``The Fugitive'' director Andrew Davis returns to action thrillers in this high-tech espionage story about a machinist (Keanu Reeves) who helps a team of research scientists discover a cheap, pollution-free energy source. After the team's leader is assassinated, Reeves and Rachel Weisz, who plays a physicist, go on the run. With Morgan Freeman and Fred Ward. (Twentieth Century Fox)

The Crow: City of Angels: In this sequel to the 1994 hit ``The Crow,'' Vincent Perez (``Queen Margot'') follows the late Brandon Lee in the role of the rock star who emerges from his own grave with the mysterious powers of The Crow. Set against the macabre festivities fes·tiv·i·ty  
n. pl. fes·tiv·i·ties
1. A joyous feast, holiday, or celebration; a festival.

2. The pleasure, joy, and gaiety of a festival or celebration.

3.
 of the Day of the Dead. Music video veteran Tim Pope directs. With Mia Kirshner and Iggy Pop. (Miramax)

Emma: Like, this girl goes around trying to arrange all her best buds' love lives for them, as if she had any experience of her own. This obvious ``Clueless'' rip-off by that movie writer du jour Jane Austen (``Sense and Sensibility'') stars Gwyneth Paltrow (``Seven,'' ``The Pallbearer'') and is set, for some reason, in Regency England - which had nice clothes, too, but nothing you'd really wear or anything. (Miramax)

Matilda: In this kind of pee-wee ``Carrie,'' Mara Wilson plays a brilliant little girl with extra mental powers who gets back at all the stupid grown-ups in her life. These include her idiotic parents, played by Danny DeVito and Rhea Perlman. DeVito also directed this adaptation of the somewhat bent children's book by Roald Dahl (``James and the Giant Peach''). (TriStar)

Aug. 7 She's the One: Filmmaker Ed Burns (``The Brothers McMullen'') sticks to what works for him in this romantic comedy about two brothers (Burns, Mike McGlone) trying to sort out their conflicts about the women in their lives. With Cameron Diaz, Jennifer Aniston and Carla Gugino. (Fox Searchlight)

Aug. 9 Basquiat: Artist Julian Schnabel directs this biofilm Biofilm

An adhesive substance, the glycocalyx, and the bacterial community which it envelops at the interface of a liquid and a surface. When a liquid is in contact with an inert surface, any bacteria within the liquid are attracted to the surface and adhere
 about artist Jean Michel Basquiat (Jeffrey Wright), who died in 1988 at the age of 27. The killer supporting cast includes Dennis Hopper, Gary Oldman, Christopher Walken and David Bowie as Andy Warhol. (Miramax)

The Confessional: Inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's ``I Confess,'' this debut film from award-winning Canadian stage director Robert Lepage weaves together two story lines from different time periods to probe the shadowy past of a family in Quebec City. With Kristin Scott Thomas Kristin Scott Thomas OBE (born 24 May 1960) is an Academy Award-nominated English actress. Biography
Kristin Scott Thomas was born in Redruth, Cornwall. Her father was a pilot for the Royal Navy and died in a flying accident in 1964, and she is the older sister of the
 (``Four Weddings and a Funeral'') and Lothaire Bluteau (``Jesus of Montreal''). (Artificial Eye)

Jack: Back in manchild (as opposed to man-in-dresses) mode, Robin Williams plays a 10-year-old boy who ages at four times the normal rate, which makes him quite the object of interest to his fifth-grade classmates - and some of their mothers. Francis Ford Coppola Noun 1. Francis Ford Coppola - United States filmmaker (born in 1939)
Coppola
 directed what sounds like a really ``Big'' project. Diane Lane, Jennifer Lopez and Fran Drescher co-star. (Buena Vista/Hollywood Pictures)

John Carpenter's Escape From L.A.: Don't start jamming the freeways - John Carpenter hasn't discovered the perfect antidote to the Rotting Orange. He's merely created a sequel to his ``Escape From New York,'' with Kurt Russell an outlaw roaming the 21st-century wasteland after the Big One turns Los Angeles into an island ruled by gangs. With Stacy Keach, Steve Buscemi, Valerie Golino. (Paramount).

Fled: Action-adventure about two prison escapees (Laurence Fishburne and Stephen Baldwin) racing to find a hidden stash stash Drug slang noun A place where illicit drugs are hidden  of cash and an incriminating in·crim·i·nate  
tr.v. in·crim·i·nat·ed, in·crim·i·nat·ing, in·crim·i·nates
1. To accuse of a crime or other wrongful act.

2.
 computer disk that could either bring down the Cuban Mafia or get them killed. (MGM)

Girls Town: A raw, improvised, hard-hitting look at the traumas that bind together and empower three inner-city high school girls High School Girls (女子高生 Joshi Kōsei  (Lili Taylor, Anna Grace and Bruklin Harris). Directed by Jim McKay, this very low-budget film won a Special Jury Prize at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival. (October Films)

Tin Cup: It's ``Bull Durham'' on the links as that movie's writer-director Ron Shelton reunites with Kevin Costner for this story of an unlucky golf hustler trying to qualify for the U.S. Open, even while falling in love with the lady psychologist (Rene Russo) to whom he's giving lessons. (Warner Bros)

Aug. 14 Alaska:: Two teens and a helpful polar bear cub (!) trudge across the tundra to rescue their downed, bush pilot father. Charlton Heston appears. (Columbia)

Aug. 16 The Big Squeeze: A wronged housewife (Lara Flynn Boyle Lara Flynn Boyle (born March 24, 1970 in Davenport, Iowa) is an American actress who was raised in Chicago, Illinois and Wisconsin. Although she is of mostly Irish descent, Boyle also has an Italian-American great-grandfather. ) enlists a down-and-out hustler (Peter Dobson) to help her squeeze some insurance money from her ex-baseball player husband in this comedy caper set in the colorful Latino neighborhood of Highland Park. Directed and written by Marcus DeLeon. (First Look Pictures)

Bound: A gangster's moll (Jennifer Tilly) and an ex-con (``Showgirl'' Gina Gershon) form a lesbian attachment, then steal mob cash from Tilly's boyfriend (Joe Pantoliano). Things get weird after that. (Gramercy)

Tales From the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood: Title says it all, doesn't it? The second cheap horror movie spun off of the TV series derived from the '50s comic books, it's about a brothel staffed by vampires. The cast is perfect for the sleazy concept: snarky snark·y  
adj. snark·i·er, snark·i·est Slang
Irritable or short-tempered; irascible.



[From dialectal snark, to nag, from snark, snork, to snore, snort
 Dennis Miller, model Angie Everhart, pneumatic pinup pin·up  
n.
1.
a. A picture, especially of a sexually attractive person, that is displayed on a wall.

b. A person considered a suitable model for such a picture.

2.
 Erika Eleniak and, for that touch of class, Corey Feldman. (Universal)

Carpool: Tom Arnold is an inept robber who carjacks poor schlub schlub also shlub  
n. Slang
A person regarded as clumsy, stupid, or unattractive.



[Yiddish, from Polish
 David Paymer, instigating a low comedy pursuit. Rhea Perlman is the obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 meter maid determined to bag the escaping criminal. (Warner Bros.)

The Fan: In a deranged de·range  
tr.v. de·ranged, de·rang·ing, de·rang·es
1. To disturb the order or arrangement of.

2. To upset the normal condition or functioning of.

3. To disturb mentally; make insane.
 attempt to remind people of ``The King of Comedy,'' Robert De Niro Noun 1. Robert De Niro - United States film actor who frequently plays tough characters (born 1943)
De Niro
 once again plays a criminally unbalanced celebrity stalker. This time, the object of his obsession is an egocentric egocentric /ego·cen·tric/ (-sen´trik) self-centered; preoccupied with one's own interests and needs; lacking concern for others.

e·go·cen·tric
adj.
 baseball player (Wesley Snipes Snipes (Diminutive for Snipers) is a text-mode networked computer game that was created in 1983 by SuperSet software. Snipes is officially credited as being the original inspiration for Novell NetWare. ), who'd better get out of a career slump before De Niro puts him in one permanently. (TriStar)

Kansas City: Robert Altman does for his hometown what he once did to Nashville - maybe. In this Depression-era crime saga, Jennifer Jason Leigh kidnaps a junkie socialite (Miranda Richardson), which gets her in much dutch with Harry Belafonte's dangerous gangster. Whether this turns out to be one of the great director's masterpieces or another of his misfires, with a cast like that it should at least be worth a look. (Fine Line)

Walking and Talking: Another Gen X romantic comedy, this one focusing on childhood friends Anne Heche and Catherine Keener's man troubles in big, bad New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
. (Miramax)

Aug. 23 Island of Dr. Moreau: Yet another remake of the H.G. Wells story about a mad scientist who turns animals into people, sort of. Reportedly, Val Kilmer behaved like such an animal on the set he made co-star Marlon Brando seem reasonable for a change. Directed by John Frankenheimer. (New Line Cinema)

The Relic: A horrific monster comes to life at a natural history museum, resulting in a string of gruesome murders. Penelope Ann Miller and Tom Sizemore play scientists fighting to keep the creature at bay. Directed by Peter Hyams. (Paramount)

Solo: Sci-fi thriller with Mario Van Peebles as a simulated man made of poly-plastics and fluids who's capable of carrying out the government's most dangerous operations. He's the ultimate assassin - until he learns to be human. (Triumph/Columbia)

The Spitfire Grill: The top crowd-pleaser at this year's Sundance Film Festival, this independently produced heartwarmer charts the struggle of an ex-convict (Alison Elliott) to find acceptance in a small, suspicious Maine town. With Ellen Burstyn and Marcia Gay Harden Marcia Gay Harden (born August 14, 1959) is an Academy Award-winning American actress. Biography
Early life
Harden, one of five children, was born in La Jolla, California, daughter of Beverly (née Bushfield), a housewife, and Thaddeus Harold Harden, a Texas
. (Columbia)

Aug. 30 First Kid: Sinbad plays the Secret Service agent in charge of the president's bratty brat·ty  
adj. brat·ti·er, brat·ti·est
Characteristic of or being a brat; ill-mannered.



bratti·ness n.
 son. This country, obviously, is in a lot of trouble. (Caravan Pictures)

The Stupids: Based on the children's books about a family named, well, Stupid. Studio propaganda claims that the characters aren't as dumb as might be assumed - but then spoils the effect by admitting the film stars Tom Arnold. (New Line Cinema)

Supercop: In one of Jackie Chan's more impressive stunt spectacles, his Hong Kong cop teams with a mainland Chinese policewoman to bust up an international criminal gang. Chan dangles from a helicopter that crashes onto a speeding train - and that's just the beginning of one action set piece. (Miramax)

The Trigger Effect: When a massive power failure leads to social unrest, suburban couple Elisabeth Shue (``Leaving Las Vegas'') and Kyle MacLachlan (``Twin Peaks'') leave their suddenly unsafe home in search of elusive security. The directing debut of David Koepp, who's written scripts for ``Jurassic Park'' and ``Mission: Impossible,'' among many others. (Gramercy)

August (date not set) Brothers of Sleep: This German production, based on a super popular European novel, tells the tale of an immensely talented musical prodigy's struggle to overcome prejudice in his isolated Alpine village. (Sony Pictures Classics)

Cyclo: The new film, set in modern-day Vietnam, by ``The Scent of Green Papaya's'' Tran Anh Hung. A young pedicab operator encounters some bad luck that drives him into a spiral of crime. (CFP Distribution)

Flirt: Independent filmmaker Hal Hartley (``Amateur,'' ``The Unbelievable Truth'') studies the fine art of dodging commitment as it's practiced in three different cities: New York, Berlin and Tokyo. Parker Posey and Karen Sillas are among the tantalizers. (Cinepix)

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: Tank commander Denzel Washington, right, confronts L ou Diamond Phillips in ``Courage Under Fire,'' to be released July 12.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:L.A. LIFE
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jun 9, 1996
Words:3383
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