LEAD STORY
Forecast 2003 TIME Europe Editor ERIC POOLEY begins the assessment

Geo Politics War, Terror, China and the World

Business & Finance Can we learn to love CEOs again?

Technology The machine can be our friend

Culture & Society Modern life is rubbish: let's escape

Table of Contents
The complete list of stories from the Dec. 16 issue of TIME magazine

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RINGSIDE: Dominic Monaghan (Merry), Wood, Billy Boyd (Pippin), and Astin on location in New Zealand

The Sequel Syndrome
The Matrix will return — twice — in another year of franchises. But even as the studios play it safe, you will, if you look very hard, find some superb movies

Posted Sunday, Dec. 8, 2002; 2.02 p.m. GMT
Who looks for innovation, even revelation, in a movie sequel? Fans of The Matrix , that's who. The 1999 original, which embedded theology and mathematical theory inside its gravity-defying martial-arts action, played like the first thrilling chapter in a classic saga. So there's plenty of want-see for the Wachowski brothers' two sequels due out in 2003. We hear that The Matrix Reloaded (May) and The Matrix Revolutions (November) are one very long movie with two acts and a six-month intermission. See you in the queue.

As for the glut of other sequels — X-Men, Charlie's Angels, Legally Blonde, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, Spy Kids, Meet the Parents, The Fast and the Furious (minus Vin Diesel) and The Terminator (with Arnold Schwarzenegger but without director James Cameron) — think of them as annuities for cautious movie stars.

But nobody in Hollywood said that movies had to move you. It's enough if they move the merchandise, and franchises did just that in 2002. When the year's box office shakes out, the top seven earners will probably include four sequels (Star Wars, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings and Austin Powers), a comic-book movie (Spider Man), an alien-invasion thriller (Signs) and one wild card: My Big Fat Greek Wedding, made for $5 million and with $200 million already in the till.

Quality rarely makes a bundle, but for 2003 we'll bank on four comedies with pedigree talent behind them. Intolerable Cruelty is the new Coen Bros. comedy, with George Clooney as a golddigger who plans to make a killing off rich lady Catherine Zeta-Jones. Richard Curtis (Notting Hill, Bridget Jones's Diary, Blackadder) has an ensemble comedy called Love Actually. The world's densest comic book, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, comes to the screen with Sean Connery and a host of other sexy geezers. And the Pixar brains (Toy Story, Monsters Inc.) have a fish story called Finding Nemo.

If we find four good movies in 2003, we'll consider it a good catch.

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Prem. Content
Lure of the Rings [Dec. 2, 2002]
In the bold second film from Tolkien's trilogy, the forces of good are tested
Spidey Swings   [May 6, 2002]
It's the first episode of what could be the next great movie series. But it's too high on angst, too low on energy


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S O C I E T Y
Islam In Europe An inside look at how Europe's Muslims adapt to secular society — and vice-versa

T H E A T E R
Boney's Part A stage extravaganza, a TV mini-series and a clutch of films put Napoleon in the spotlight again
E U R O P E
Outta Here A faltering economy and Schröder's policies have companies fleeing Germany

P O L I T I C S
Wages Of Spin Cherie Blair didn't know she was doing business with a con man, but it's Tony and New Labour who may pay the price


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FROM THE DEC. 16, 2002 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, DEC. 8, 2002

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