So many was created about how clever 2013 was for films that it roughly feels like 2014 has gotten a brief shrift. While famed directors Martin Scorsese, Alfonso Cuaron, Sofia Coppola and Steve McQueen will take this year off, copiousness of other vital filmmakers are set to recover facilities over a subsequent 12 months. Ahead, 9 of a many buzzed-about auteur-driven films entrance in 2014. (Watch HuffPost Live horde Ricky Camilleri and RogerEbert.com censor Glenn Kenny plead these films in a video above.)


Lars Von Trier’s “Nymphomaniac”


nymphomaniac


What we need to know: Hi, Lars Von Trier finished a five-hour prolonged film about sex.

Release date: Part one is out in U.S. theaters on Mar 21; partial dual arrives on Apr 18.


Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Inherent Vice”


paul thomas anderson


What we need to know: Two years after “The Master,” Paul Thomas Anderson has reunited with Joaquin Phoenix for an instrumentation of Thomas Pynchon’s “Inherent Vice.” As Camilleri remarkable on HuffPost Live, this one feels like Anderson’s chronicle of “The Big Lebowski,” so start scheming for each vital censor to list “Inherent Vice” on their year-end lists subsequent December.

Release date: To be determined.


Wes Anderson’s “The Grand Budapest Hotel”


What we need to know: Wes Anderson earnings with another Wes Anderson movie, “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” a comedy that takes place over 3 time periods, facilities 3 opposite aspect ratios and stars Ralph Fiennes in a lead role.

Release date: Mar 7


Woody Allen’s “Magic In The Moonlight”


woody allen sorcery in a moonlight


What we need to know: Woody Allen’s annual underline is a duration square starring Emma Stone, Marcia Gay Harden and Colin Firth.

Release date: TBD.


David Fincher’s “Gone Girl”


ben affleck left girl


What we need to know: David Fincher has a thing for aeroplane novels. Two years after successfully transitioning “The Girl With a Dragon Tattoo” to a screen, Fincher is behind with this instrumentation of Gillian Flynn’s best-selling thriller. Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike star.

Release date: Oct. 3


Christopher Nolan’s “Interstellar”


What we need to know: “Interstellar” was creatively set adult as a plan for Steven Spielberg in 2006, though it arrives here in 2014 with Christopher Nolan behind a camera. The epic focuses on a organisation of scientists who transport by a wormhole into another dimension. (Nolan co-wrote a film with his hermit Jonathan.) Matthew McConaughey stars, alongside Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, Michael Caine, Casey Affleck, Wes Bentley, John Lithgow, Ellen Burstyn, David Oyelowo and Bill Irwin.

Release date: Nov. 7


Richard Linklater’s “Boyhood”


richard linklater


What we need to know: Here’s what star Ethan Hawke told HuffPost Entertainment about “Boyhood,” that Linklater started filming 12 years ago. “The initial stage we did was with a 7-year-old child … and we take this 7-year-old child bowling — and I’m sequence smoking in a bowling alley, that was authorised then. And we finished yesterday, and I’m 42 years old. we was 33 when we did my initial scene,” Hawke said. “He’s 19 now. He’s a grown man! He’s got crazy ear rings and he’s taller than me and he’s intimidating. Just behaving in a film felt like zero I’ve ever done.”

Release date: TBD.


Noah Baumbach’s “While We’re Young”


ben stiller while were young


What we need to know: Ben Stiller, Naomi Watts, Amanda Seyfried, Adam Driver and — if IMDb is to be believed — Charles Grodin (!) all co-star in Noah Baumbach’s new film, a follow-up to “Frances Ha” that could arrive in theaters in 2014. Or maybe Baumbach’s other film, a comedy he co-wrote with “Frances Ha” star and co-writer Greta Gerwig, will come out in 2014. Or maybe both films will. Sky’s a extent here for Baumbach fans.

Release date: TBD.


Darren Aronofsky’s “Noah”


What we need to know: Darren Aronofsky’s initial film given “Black Swan” is multi-million epic about Noah’s Ark. That seems odd, though we’re there.

Release date: Mar 28.


Also on HuffPost:


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  • “Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones” (Jan. 3)


    Fun fact: this is not “Paranormal Activity 5.” That film comes out in October.




  • “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit” (Jan. 17)


    Paramount changed this Jack Ryan reboot from Christmas Day to Jan. 17, though that gambit should compensate off: “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit,” starring Paramount golden child Chris Pine (the studio’s “Star Trek” films), looks like a kind of movement film that reaches sleeper blockbuster standing simply since it doesn’t have many competition.




  • “Ride Along” (Jan. 17)


    “A small male Smurf.” That’s how Ice Cube describes Kevin Hart in a “Ride Along” trailer, so lol see we during a theater.




  • “G.B.F.” (Jan. 17)


    Darren Stein’s indie gem, that debuted during a 2013 Tribeca Film Festival, combines elements of Stein’s possess “Jawbreaker” with “Mean Girls,” “Heathers” and “Clueless.” a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/26/michael-j-willett-gbf_n_3163784.html” target=”_blank”It’s a contingency see/a.




  • “That Awkward Moment” (Jan. 31)


    Hollywood’s subsequent good heading group (Miles Teller, Zac Efron and Michael B. Jordan) star in this R-rated comedy about adore and relations among Millennials. Fingers crossed that this one is as humorous as a R-rated trailer.




  • “The LEGO Movie” (Feb. 7)


    You competence not cruise a film about LEGOs would be awesome, though “The LEGO Movie” trailer states otherwise. Phil Lord and Chris Miller (“21 Jump Street”) approach a film, that facilities voice work from Chris Pratt, Morgan Freeman, Elizabeth Banks, Cobie Smulders and Will Arnett among others.




  • “The Monuments Men” (Feb. 7)


    George Clooney’s earlier Oscar contender was changed to 2014 to equivocate a break of year-end 2013 releases. (It still looks good notwithstanding a date change.) Matt Damon, Bill Murray and Cate Blanchett all co-star.




  • “RoboCop” (Feb. 14)


    Even if a thought of a “RoboCop” reconstitute sounds lame, cruise this: The film facilities Samuel L. Jackson, Gary Oldman, Michael Keaton and Jay Baruchel in ancillary roles.




  • “About Last Night” (Feb.14)


    A reconstitute of a 1986 dramedy with Rob Lowe and Demi Moore, this chronicle of “About Last Night” stars Kevin Hart, Regina Hall, Joy Bryant and Michael Ealy.




  • “Vampire Academy” (Feb. 14)


    “Mean Girls” executive Mark Waters earnings with “Vampire Academy,” an instrumentation of Richelle Mead’s YA array that was created for a shade by Daniel Waters (“Heathers”).




  • “Non-Stop” (Feb. 28)


    a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/16/non-stop-trailer_n_4109224.html” target=”_blank”Yes to this one/a.




  • “Welcome To Yesterday” (Feb. 28)


    “What if we finished a found footage film about time roving high propagandize kids?” “Sure.”




  • “The Grand Budapest Hotel” (March 7)


    Wes Anderson’s new film includes a common sect of Anderson regulars (Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Adrien Brody, Harvey Keitel, Edward Norton, Jeff Goldblum, Willem Dafoe, Tilda Swinton, Owen Wilson) and newcomers like Saoirse Ronan and Ralph Fiennes. “What happened, my dear Zero, is we kick a vital shit out of a sniveling small mongrel called Pinky Bandinski.” Where do we check in?




  • “300: Rise of an Empire” (March 7)


    This. Is. Sparta. Again.




  • “Veronica Mars” (March 14)


    Marshmallows unite.




  • “Bad Words” (March 14)


    Jason Bateman’s directorial debut, about an adult who exploits a loop hole to contest in spelling bee competitions with children, is an R-rated comedy in a capillary of “Bad Santa.” (Be warned, a trailer is filthy.) “Bad Words” premiered during 2013′s Toronto International Film Festival in September.




  • “Grace of Monaco” (March 14)


    Like “The Monuments Men,” “Grace of Monaco” was once deliberate a 2013 Oscar contender until a late-hour date change. “They wish a blurb film, that is to contend during a weed roots, stealing all above [...] stealing all that is cinema, all that creates life,” a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/19/olivier-dahan-grace-of-monaco_n_4127981.html” target=”_blank”director Olivier Dahan said/a after a film, that The Weinstein Company is set to recover in North America, was bumped. “Here, in this case, they finished a trailer that did not fit a movie, and afterwards they try to make a film demeanour like a trailer, this is absurd.” Watch that trailer here.




  • “Need for Speed” (March 14)


    The answer to a question: What if Aaron Paul starred in a “Fast and Furious” movie?




  • “Divergent” (March 21)


    The subsequent “Hunger Games”? Veronica Roth’s dystopian YA array stars Shailene Woodley and Theo James, and brings with it expectations that bluster to crawl a Cornucopia. (Mixed franchises, though we get a drift.)




  • “Muppets Most Wanted” (March 21)


    The Muppets are back, and this time they brought Tina Fey and Ricky Gervais.




  • “Stretch” (March 21)


    Joe Carnahan (“The Grey”) earnings with an indie thriller about “a chauffeur who takes a pursuit for a billionaire who creates his life hell.” Chris Pine, Jessica Alba, Patrick Wilson and Ray Liotta all co-star.




  • “Nymphomaniac Part 1″ (March 21)


    THIS IS THE MOST NSFW TRAILER EVER. Ahem. (“Nymphomaniac Part 2″ is out on Apr 18.)




  • “Noah” (March 28)


    Bless Paramount for giving an auteur like Darren Aronofsky millions of dollars to make a crazy Biblical epic about Noah, of Noah’s Ark fame.




  • “Breathe In” (March 28)


    Felicity Jones, who played a heartbreaker for executive Drake Doremus in “Like Crazy,” plays another one in his follow-up, “Breathe In.” The film debuted during a 2013 Sundance Film Festival and should finally premiere for ubiquitous U.S. audiences in March.




  • “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (April 4)


    Summer starts early in 2014 interjection to a Marvel recover of “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” in April. This one looks great, right down to Robert Redford as a untrustworthy S.H.I.E.L.D. boss.




  • “Dom Hemingway” (April 4)


    Jude Law plays a pretension impression in this raucous, aroused and foul-mouthed British comedy about a low-life rapist uninformed out of prison. HuffPost Entertainment saw a really early screening of this one and can news that Law has never been better.




  • “Under The Skin”


    In this creepy, David Lynch-ian thriller, Scarlett Johansson plays an alien. “Under a Skin” is weird, and judging from a early festival reviews, brilliant.




  • “Draft Day” (April 11)


    It’s like “Moneyball,” though with football and Kevin Costner.




  • “Sabotage” (April 11)


    Arnold Schwarzenegger is back, and this time it’s in a film that indeed looks flattering good #alldisrespecttothelaststand #andescapeplan




  • “St. Vincent De Van Nuys” (April 11)


    Try to fake this film doesn’t sound great: “A immature child whose relatives only divorced finds an doubtful crony and coach in a misanthropic, bawdy, hedonistic, fight maestro who lives subsequent door.” The misanthrope is played by Bill Murray. Melissa McCarthy, Chris O’Dowd and Naomi Watts all co-star.




  • “Only Lovers Left Alive” (April 11)


    Jim Jarmusch finished a vampire film with Tom Hiddleston and Tilda Swinton. Ticket purchased.




  • “Transcendence” (April 18)


    Wally Pfister, a cinematographer behind Christopher Nolan’s Batman films and “Inception,” finished his really possess Christopher Nolan movie. “Transcendence” stars Johnny Depp as a scientist who winds adult with his essence eliminated into a computer. Rebecca Hall, Kate Mara, Paul Bettany and Morgan Freeman all co-star.




  • “The Other Woman” (April 25)


    Your new favorite comedy stars Leslie Mann, Cameron Diaz and Kate Upton as 3 women perplexing to get behind during a male who cheated on them all (Mann plays his wife).




  • “Locke” (April 25)


    Tom Hardy gets his possess “Drive” from writer-director Steven Knight: “A man’s life unravels during a 90-minutes competition opposite time.” Yep, in.




  • “The Amazing Spider-Man 2″ (May 2)


    Your accessible area Spider-Man kicks off a summer blockbuster deteriorate in impression with “The Amazing Spider-Man 2.” Expect mixed villains, some-more intrigue between Spidey (Andrew Garfield) and Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone) and lots of fondle sales.




  • “Neighbors” (May 9)


    Seth Rogen is now aged adequate to play a married man who lives subsequent doorway to a shrill companionship (here embodied by Zac Efron). The trailer for “Neighbors” includes a “Se7en” reference, so we’re there.




  • “Chef” (May 9)


    Jon Favreau (“Iron Man”) wrote, destined and stars in “Chef,” a new comedy about a downtrodden chef. Favreau, famous for “Iron Man” and “Swingers,” enlisted some of his A-list pals for a film, including Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Dustin Hoffman and Sofia Vergara.




  • “Godzilla” (May 16)


    Roar.




  • “Million Dollar Arm” (May 16)


    Here’s what “Jerry Maguire” would demeanour like if Jon Hamm was a star.




  • “Blended” (May 23)


    Your yearly Adam Sandler comedy.




  • “X-Men: Days of Future Past” (May 23)


    The “X-Men: Days of Future Past” expel is so big, Jennifer Lawrence has, like, ninth billing.




  • “Maleficent” (May 30)


    Angelina Jolie plays a immorality black in this new take on Disney’s “Sleeping Beauty.”




  • “A Million Ways To Die In The West” (May 30)


    Seth MacFarlane’s follow-up to “Ted” doesn’t star a articulate teddy bear, though does underline MacFarlane, Charlize Theron, Amanda Seyfried and Liam Neeson.




  • “Edge of Tomorrow” (June 6)


    Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt star in this sci-fi thriller from executive Doug Liman.




  • “The Fault in Our Stars” (June 6)


    Shailene Woodley stars in her second YA instrumentation of 2014 with “The Fault in Our Stars,” formed on John Green’s dear novel.




  • “22 Jump Street” (June 13)


    Still funny.




  • “How To Train Your Dragon 2″ (June 13)


    Your kids are going to adore this one.




  • “Jersey Boys” (June 20)


    Clint Eastwood leads this instrumentation of a strike Broadway low-pitched about Frankie Valli and a Four Seasons.




  • “The Purge 2″ (June 20)


    Frank Grillo stars in this supplement to “The Purge,” final summer’s low-budget fear thriller.




  • “Transformers: Age of Extinction” (June 27)


    Huge missed event here by not pursuit a fourth “Transformers” film “Trans4mers.”




  • “Tammy” (July 2)


    Co-written by Melissa McCarthy and her husband, Ben Falcone, and destined by Falcone, “Tammy” is McCarthy’s latest summer comedy. The film focuses on a pretension impression (McCarthy) who loses her pursuit and her father and goes on a highway outing with her grandmother. Susan Sarandon, Allison Janney, Kathy Bates and some-more co-star.








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