Those who got a thrill last spring when the SEALS took out Osama bin Laden will have more of the same covert ass-kicking to look forward to in theaters as we enter 2012 (check out Safe House, Safe, This Means War, and Act of Valor, among others). Unfortunately, operations don’t always run as smoothly in the movies as they do in real life. In fact you’ll find some of the secret agents — in Haywire, for example — pondering a job change. There’s a lot of this kind of second-guessing going on in the films coming up, from the Manhattan couple relocating to a commune in Wanderlust to John Carter’s trip to Mars.
JANUARY
There’s nothing like a civil war to spoil a relationship. In Angelina Jolie’s IN THE LAND OF BLOOD AND HONEY (January 6) a Serbian soldier meets an old Bosnian friend in a POW camp. Awkward.
 
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 Related:
Reivew: Resident Evil: Afterlife, Review: Tyler Perry's Madea's Big Happy Family, Review: Carancho, More 
- Reivew: Resident Evil: Afterlife
 Within the first 15 minutes of  Resident Evil: Afterlife , an army of Milla Jovovich clones have ripped 500 bad guys to shreds and Tokyo has been reduced to a smoking crater. The action gets only more gonzo from there.  
- Review: Tyler Perry's Madea's Big Happy Family
  It's that time of year again, when the daffodils spring up and Tyler Perry puts on a dress and becomes Madea.   
- Review: Carancho
  Pablo Trapero's soggy, misguided, derivative melodrama was, somehow, Argentina's Official Selection as Best Foreign Language Film for the Academy Awards.   
- Review: Something Borrowed
 In Luke Greenfield's adaptation of Emily Giffin's novel, Rachel (Ginnifer Goodwin) works hard, never complains, has brains but no self-esteem.  
- Review: L'amour Fou
  Pierre Thoretton's lugubrious portrait of the late Yves Saint Laurent (he died in 2008) begins with a 2002 press conference in which the iconic designer announced his retirement from the world of fashion.   
- Buñuel continues to delight, confound, and shock
 Openly, contentedly delighted with how our own dreams can appall us, and how close movies are to that appalling dreaminess, Luis Buñuel — the subject of an extensive survey at the HFA this month — may have been the greatest filmmaker of the medium's first century.  
- Bay State not the bluest
 Mr. Faraone’s sidebar to the recent feature “ ‘Tea’ is for Terrorism” states that “Massachusetts is the most socialist, hippie liberal moon-bat enclave in the country.”  
- Review: Mother And Child
 Elizabeth is a city-hopping attorney with plenty of career drive and no attachments — she treats her lovers with black-widow disdain.  
- Review: Letters To Juliet
 After tugging at our heartstrings in  Dear John , Amanda Seyfried once again takes on the role of a do-gooder infatuated with letter writing.  
- Review: Bluebeard
 Every good fairy tale taps into carnal dread, and  Bluebeard  is no exception.  
- Review: Shrek Forever After
 For his fourth outing, Shrek has entered a midlife crisis.  
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