10. Sucker Punch
Starring: Emily Browning, Jon Hamm, Vanessa Hudgens
Director: Zack Snyder
Release Date: 25th March 2011
  
The  first original movie from slow-mo supremo Zack Snyder. The director of  the Dawn of the Dead, 300, Watchmen and that owl movie is taking us  inside the mind of Babydoll, a young woman committed to to a mental  institution who dreams up some pretty crazy stuff whilst inside (see 
trailer). This is supposedly set in the 1950s, so quite how her fantasy world comes off as a yet-to-be-invented 
Heavy Metal/anime  hybrid remains to be seen. What we can already see is that Snyder’s  visual flair is intact, and his female ensemble cast looks pretty kick  ass hot insane. This is Snyder’s last chance to prove he can do good  character work before he directs the Superman reboot.
  
9. X-Men: First Class
Starring: James McAvoy, Kevin Bacon, Michael Fassbender, Rose Byrne, January Jones
Director: Matthew Vaughn
Release Date: 3rd June 2011
  
The  X-Men franchise wasn’t on the boil for long. Bryan Singer’s semi-good  X-Men was the movie that kicked off the superhero boom at the turn of  the century, its sequel remains one of the best superhero movies ever  made, but the third movie was weak and spinoff Wolverine fared no  better. But wait, here comes Matthew Vaughn, the director of the  excellent Kick-Ass, to tackle an X-Men prequel. And Kevin Bacon is the  villain. Ok they started shooting without a finished script. And the 60s  set images look a bit Austin Powers. It’s hard to know how this will  turn out, but there are more positives than negatives and we have a lot  of faith in Vaughn.
  
8. Sherlock Holmes 2
Starring: Robert Downey Jr, Jude Law, Noomi Rapace, Jared Harris
Director: Guy Ritchie
Release Date: 16th December 2011
  
		
	 
Guy  Ritchie surprised a lot of people with the first Sherlock Holmes, a  movie that was outside his comfort zone but managed to retain his  sensibilities and be a fast paced, humourous adventure. In contrast to  the staid adaptations of Holmes that have gone before, Ritchie managed  to inject some real excitement into the proceedings. Unfortunately,  because the movie wasn’t based on anything Conan Doyle had written, it  deviated considerably from the structure of Holmes mysteries, and the  actual mystery itself didn’t seem so important. But the interplay  between all of the characters was great, Robert Downey Jr got to be  Robert Downey Jr (which doesn’t seem to bother people) only this time  with an English accent, and Jude Law got to shine for once in his  supporting role as Watson. Now in the sequel the less-impressive Rachel  McAdams is sidelined in favour of Noomi Rapace from The Girl with the  Dragon Tattoo, and Stephen Fry will play Holmes’ smarter-but-lazier  older brother (great casting). The big disappointment is that after all  the talk of Brad Pitt as Moriarity, the role has been given to the  not-all-that-interesting Jared Harris (whoooo?)
  
7. Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2
Starring: Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson, Ralph Fiennes, Bill Nighy, John Hurt
Director: David Yates
Release Date: 15th July 2011
  
Some  will be upset that this hasn’t been put higher on this list, but  amongst the writers here there’s a feeling the series has dragged on for  
slightly too long (8 movies now). Nonetheless expect this to  be a rousing finale to one of the most spectacular film series ever  made. Harry, Ron, and Hermione go back to Hogwarts to find and destroy  Voldemort’s final horcruxes, but when ‘Ol Snake Nose finds out about  their mission you can expect to see school totally trashed by Harry and  foe firing enough bolts at each other to keep local glaziers in work for  years. In fact their fight sequence will reportedly expand on what’s  witnessed in the book. Even though Part 1 missed out on 3D, Part 2 will  probably be converted in time.
  
6. Green Lantern
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively, Mark Strong
Director: Martin Campbell (Casino Royale, Edge Of Darkness)
Release Date: 17th June 2011
  
The  highest ranking comic book movie on our list is Green Lantern, the  first major DC hero to hit the big screen that isn’t a bat, cat, or  Kryptonian refugee. Coming to us from Casino Royale director Martin  Campbell, Green Lantern, much like Thor, promises to show us a different  side to superheroics and take us on a cosmic adventure. The story  follows a test pilot who is given a ring by a dying alien which turns  him into the Green Lantern, part of a collective who protect the galaxy  from similarly powered villains. There have been a few voices of dissent  about the casting of Ryan Reynolds – ignore them, he’s perfect for the  role of Hal Jordan. The treatment for the sequel has already been  ordered.
 
5. Scream 4
Starring: Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Courteney Cox, Emma Roberts
Director: Wes Craven
Release Date: 15th April 2011
  
Scream  transformed the horror landscape when it came out in ’96, kicking off  the second slasher cycle (the first was after Halloween) and bringing a  truly unique tone to the genre. Brilliantly directed as it was, it was  Kevin Williamson’s script that really was a cut above. Scream 2 was  largely a success too. Then the studio stupidly booted Williamson for  the third instalment and the result was something like a Scooby Doo  episode. We’re excited about Scream 4 because Williamson is back, and  there are 10 years of horror movies (from Asian ghost movies to torture  porn) to riff off, in that clever but still frightening way. It’s going  to be interesting to see how the clearly-too-old-to-be-doing-this cast  (Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Courteney Cox) is melded with the new  generation (Emma Roberts, Hayden Panettiere etc). Will they kill off  Sidney Prescott?
  
4. The Cabin In The Woods
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Jesse Williams, Amy Acker
Director: Drew Goddard
Release Date: 15th April 2011
  
Whedonites  are legion. So having Joss Whedon produce and co-write the script is a  good thing in terms of drumming up hype. And Cabin in the Woods promises  a new take on a played out horror movie trope – the cabin in the woods.  It’s directed by Drew Goddard, who was heavily involved with Lost and  wrote Cloverfield. It stars Chris Hemsworth, the man who will be Thor.  Shooting was finished a while ago but, like Bond, it’s caught in limbo  by of MGM’s financial problems. The script is doing the rounds on the  internet if you want to get a head start.
  
3. Super 8
Starring: Kyle Chandler, Elle Fanning
Director: J.J. Abrams
Release Date: TBC 2011
  
Godammit,  Abrams. You’re doing it again. Remember how the hype for Cloverfield  was fueled by furious speculation? How the starfleet uniforms from Star  Trek were hidden from the world? Well, here’s J.J. Abrams’ Super 8.  Another project shrouded in mystery. We know it’s heavily influenced by  the films of producer Steven Spielberg, and that it involves Area 51. We  know it involves a group of kids in 1979 playing around making movies  with their Super 8 cameras who accidentally capture something sinister,  possibly alien, on film. We know one of the stars is Elle Fanning,  younger sister of Dakota.
  The Movie Preview Critic has a few predictions about what the movie  might have to offer, so it’ll be interesting to see how much he gets  right:
    (One wonders if the filmmakers even know what the movie is, since the creature was designed 
after the teaser trailer was released.)
  
2. Hugo Cabret
Starring: Asa Butterfield, Chloe Moretz, Jude Law, Sacha Baron Cohen, Ben Kingsley
Director: Martin Scorsese
Release Date: 9th December 2011
  
Hugo  Cabret is a film of firsts. It is Martin Scorsese’s first children’s  movie, it is Martin Scorsese’s first 3D movie, and it is Martin  Scorsese’s first major release in ten years not to feature Leonardo  DiCaprio. The official story of The Invention of Hugo Cabret is as  follows: “Orphan, Clock Keeper, And Thief, 12 year old Hugo lives in the  walls of a busy Paris train station, where his survival depends on  secrets and anonymity. But when his world suddenly interlocks with an  eccentric girl and the owner of a small toy booth in the train station,  Hugo’s undercover life, and his most precious secret, are put in  jeopardy. A cryptic drawing, a treasured notebook, a stolen key, a  mechanical man, and a hidden message all come together…” You can see  some of the illustrations from the book upon which the movie is based 
right here.  The movie has the potential to be magical in every sense of the word  (apart from the one that means real hocus pocus, of course), which is  why id’s so high on our list.
  
1. The Thing
Starring: Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Joel Edgerton, Eric Christian Olsen
Director: Matthijs van Heijningen Jr.
Release Date: 29th April 2011
  
Why  are we anticipating this so much? Because there’s still so much mileage  in the concept (if they are smart filmmakers), the setting and idea  haven’t really been revisited by other movies since, and seeing our  favourite horror movie ‘prequelised’ decades later has a big curiosity  appeal. The prequel has already dropped the ball on two unconventional,  but key, elements that helped make the original so unique – the all male  cast has gone (the lead is now a hot female who’s helicoptered in), and  the large cast of 12 mostly older character-actors has been replaced by  the conventional 7 younger characters. It’s asking a lot, but if The  Thing prequel turns out to be the smart, well written whodunit mystery  it should be, and it stays away from cgi for its creature fx, this will  be the cinemagoing experience we at Movie-Moron.com enjoy the most this  year. Fingers are firmly crossed.