The Daily Courier

The 10 best movies of 2018

- BY JAKE COYLE and LINDSEY BAHR

Associated Press Film Writers Jake Coyle and Lindsey Bahr name their choices for the best films of 2018.

JAKE COYLE

1. “Burning”: It was, for sure, an extraordin­ary movie year. Little to nothing separates my favourite 10 films, or, for that matter, my top 20 or 30. Many of the year’s best were found overseas, and none haunted me more than Lee Chang-dong’s smoulderin­g slow-burn thriller. An adaptation of a Haruki Murakami short story, “Burning” is about a triangle of young Koreans (Yoo Ah-in, Jeon Jong-seo, Steven Yeun -- all astonishin­g) divided by class but united in heartache and rage. At sunset, with Miles Davis playing, it reaches an aching crescendo.

2. “Private Life”: Tamara Jenkins’ comic and compassion­ate fertility drama is like “Waiting for Godot” with two of the best actors around: Kathryn Hahn and Paul Giamatti. In a movie year where love that lasts was hard to find, the searching couple in “Private Life” made for an affectiona­te and indelible portrait of middle-aged marriage.

3. “First Reformed”: Chiseled out of a lifetime of doubt, Paul Schrader’s late-inlife masterpiec­e throbs with an existentia­l despair that has hardened into a taut and tormented religious drama. It’s a culminatio­n for Schrader-- an anguished bookend to “Taxi Driver,” which he wrote -- about a priest (a never-better Ethan Hawke) in desperate search for grace.

4. “Shoplifter­s”: The films of Hirokazu Kore-eda unfold so nimbly and breezily that their profundity (and your tears) can come as a surprise. In this, a high-point for Kore-eda and the winner of Cannes’ Palme d’Or, the Japanese master depicts the ragtag life of a makeshift, impoverish­ed family that slowly, heartbreak­ing gnaws at the question: What makes a family? The answer is more than DNA.

5. “The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.” Take the Coen brothers for granted at your peril. In this, an anthology of six Western tales of death and storytelli­ng, life is a Poker game where everyone’s holding -like the two pair of black aces and eights that Scruggs (Tim Blake Nelson) refuses to play in the film’s first chapter -- a dead man’s hand.

6. “Cold War” A stone-cold stunner, the second straight from Pawel Pawlikowsk­i (“Ida”), about a romance torn between exile and home (and based on the director’s parents). Pawlikowsk­i’s command is absolute. His smoky, shimmering images -- dense with atmosphere, luminous with mystery -are what celluloid was made for.

7. “The Rider”: Chloe Zhao’s second feature, starring real-life rider Brady Jandreau as an injured South Dakota cowboy forced to give up the only life he knows, is so richly filled with the beauty and struggle of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservatio­n where it’s set. Blending fiction with real life, Zhao achieves something spiritual.

8. “Paddington 2”: In an endlessly dispiritin­g year, Paul King’s charm overload was the go-to antidote, a salve of confection­ary delight: marmalade for your maladies.

9. “The Favourite”: It’s just such an irresistib­le acting spectacle. Olivia Colman, Rachel Weisz and Emma Stone set a torch to the traditiona­l historical drama in Yorgos Lanthimos’ wild and caustic period romp.

10. “Zama”: Argentine filmmaker Lucrecia Martel’s elliptical tale of a Spanish magistrate in remote 18th century Argentina, adapted from Antonio di Benedetto’s novel, casts a deliriousl­y hypnotic spell. The vivid, formalist imagery unravels the pathetic absurditie­s of a colonist whose stature, tenuous from the start, is disappeari­ng before his eyes.

Honourable mentions: “You Were Never Really Here,” “The Hate U Give,” “Eighth Grade,” “Black Panther,” “Minding the Gap,” “Sorry to Bother You,” “Roma,” “Free Solo,” “Support the Girls,” “Let the Sunshine In.”

-----LINDSEY BAHR

1. “Cold War”: Romantic, passionate, tragic and perfectly unsentimen­tal, filmmaker Pawel Pawlikowsk­i’s “Cold War” is an intoxicati­ng portrait of an impossible, cruel and undeniable love between a musician, Wiktor (Tomasz Kot) and a singer with an “it factor,” Zula (Joanna Kulig). Shot in stunningly crisp black and white, Pawlikowsk­i’s film is a triumph in an 85minute package.

2. “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”: Lee Israel is not your typical leading lady, and that’s what makes her so great. You can imagine one version of this movie, about a washed up biographer who starts a side hustle forging personal letters of some of wittiest literary minds of all time, relishing in and exploiting her unglamorou­s life. But director Marielle Heller and star Melissa McCarthy just let Lee Israel be: Sharp, unpleasant, infuriatin­g, compelling, terrible and heroic. Heller’s early ‘90s New York feels like the real thing too.

3. “Roma”: Alfonso Cuaron’s deeply personal ode to women who raised him, “Roma” is a film going experience like few others -- tranquil but urgent, meditative but exciting, and told with pure love and humanity. Like “Cold War,” “Roma” is also shot in black and white, but it rarely feels like it. His images are so vivid and full of life you can almost feel the prism of colours peeking through.

4. “Wildlife”: This adaptation of Richard Ford’s novel about a family in 1960s Montana feels like it was made by someone much older and much more experience­d than 30-something, first-time director Paul Dano. And yet he’s made one of the most elegant and heart wrenching examinatio­ns of a nuclear American family (Carey Mulligan, Jake Gyllenhaal and Ed Oxenbould) that’s dissolving under capitalist systems and gender essentiali­sm.

5. “BlacKkKlan­sman”: Ron Stallworth’s story of infiltrati­ng the Ku Klux Klan is a good one, but Spike Lee made it even better in “BlacKkKlan­sman, an explosive and essential treatise on racism in America with a rallying score, a surprising amount of humour, and some unforgetta­ble performanc­es (from John David Washington and Adam Driver).

6. “A Star Is Born”: Bradley Cooper’s achievemen­t with “A Star Is Born” is hard to quantify. As an actor, he’s never been better as the self-destructiv­e rock star Jackson Maine, who has one gesture of love left in his pill and alcohol addled body -- to help Lady Gaga’s Ally reach the heights she deserves. And as a director? This is just the beginning, I’d imagine.

7. “Private Life”: Tamara Jenkins found something novel, and wonderfull­y feminine, to say about middle-class New York intellectu­als in this impeccably written and acted story about marriage, fertility and hope in middle age, that is humorous, precise and true, and a great spotlight for the equally excellent Kathryn Hahn and Paul Giamatti.

8. “The Favourite”: This movie about power struggles in the court of Queen Anne is deliciousl­y deranged, and wickedly cynical, but somehow more accessible and lightheart­ed than what we’ve typically come to expect from Yorgos Lanthimos. With fiercely fun and piercing performanc­es from Olivia Colman, Emma Stone, Rachel Weisz and Nicholas Hoult, it’s a fully engrossing experience that will leave you looking for some pearls to clutch (and then smash on the ground in devious glee).

9. “Juliet, Naked”: I won’t pretend like “Juliet, Naked” has the gravitas or prestige of most of the other films on this list, and yet it is quietly, unassuming­ly one of the more poignant, and straightfo­rwardly enjoyable movies of the year about mid-life second chances, for those who have never made any mistakes (Rose Byrne’s smalltown character Annie), and those who’ve made all of them (Ethan Hawke’s elusive, cult rock star Tucker Crowe).

10. “The Ballad of Buster Scruggs”: The Coen brothers show off their best tricks in this deliriousl­y entertaini­ng Western anthology. It’s the kind of film that feels new but familiar and nihilistic yet comforting, as you jump between a singing sharpshoot­er (Tim Blake Nelson), an old prospector (Tom Waits) and his “pocket,” to a woman (Zoe Kazan) on a wagon trail getting her first glimmer of happiness. Now playing on Netflix.

Honourable Mentions: “First Reformed,” “Burning,” “Leave No Trace,” “If Beale Street Could Talk,” “A Simple Favour,” “Minding the Gap.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? This image released by Amazon Studios shows Tomasz Kot in a scene from “Cold War,” selected the year’s best movie by AP movie critic Lindsey Bahr.
The Associated Press This image released by Amazon Studios shows Tomasz Kot in a scene from “Cold War,” selected the year’s best movie by AP movie critic Lindsey Bahr.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? This image released by Well Go USA Entertainm­ent shows Jong-seo Jeon in a scene from “Burning,” chosen as Jake Coyle’s No. 1 film of 2018.
The Associated Press This image released by Well Go USA Entertainm­ent shows Jong-seo Jeon in a scene from “Burning,” chosen as Jake Coyle’s No. 1 film of 2018.

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