The Hamilton Spectator

The 20 best movies of 2018 so far

- RAFER GUZMAN

Even if 2018 ended right now, it would have been a very good year for the movies.

For starters, the amazing Disney machine continues to put out intelligen­t, high-quality blockbuste­rs. Granted, Disney-Lucasfilm stumbled with its ill-considered Han Solo prequel “Solo: A Star Wars Story,” which took its lumps at the box office, but Disney-Marvel triumphed with the groundbrea­king “Black Panther” and the emotionall­y resonant “Avengers: Infinity War.” Culturally speaking, Disney’s stock is up.

The past six months have also been a great time for independen­t and small-budget movies, notably the art-house horror film “Hereditary,” the Brooklynba­sed drama “Hearts Beat Loud” and Steven Soderbergh’s iPhone-made thriller “Unsane.” A new documentar­y on Fred Rogers, “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” already seems like an Oscar front-runner, followed, perhaps, by “RBG,” a film as slight and endearing as its subject, Ruth Bader Ginsburg. And speaking of Oscars, we’ve already seen at least one award-worthy performanc­e, from Ethan Hawke as a troubled pastor, in Paul Schrader’s enigmatic drama “First Reformed.”

Where Hollywood still falters is in its attempts to female-ize existing properties. Case in point: “Ocean’s 8,” which has done well at the box office but still feels like the new “Ghostbuste­rs.” The better female-led movies have been original material, such as “Annihilati­on,” about a squad of women soldiers venturing into a quarantine­d zone, and “Tomb Raider,” a reboot of the Angelina Jolie franchise featuring an impressive Alicia Vikander in the lead. With the prestige-season months of November and December still far ahead of us, there will be plenty more to see. For now, here’s a look back at the best of 2018:

1. “Hereditary” (4 stars)

Ari Aster’s polarizing horror film, starring Toni Collette and Alex Wolffas a mother and son living under a curse, earned a dismal D+ CinemaScor­e from audiences but it has also become a critical smash and a sleeper hit at the box-office. Here’s one opinion: It’s a flat-out masterpiec­e. But you’ll never know unless you go.

2. “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” (4 stars)

The latest documentar­y from Morgan Neville (the Oscar-winning “20 Feet from Stardom”) looks back at the late Fred Rogers, host of the longrunnin­g PBS television show “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od.” What made Rogers special, Neville argues, was that his show was more than entertainm­ent or even education — it was nourishmen­t. It’s a hugely moving experience watching Rogers, a committed champion for children, come back to life on screen.

3. “Black Panther” (3.5 stars)

Is it possible that superhero movies are actually becoming important? First there was “Wonder Woman,” a blow for gender equality, and now comes “Black Panther,” the first major superhero film with a black lead (Chadwick Boseman as T’Challa) and a largely black cast. Like “The Dark Knight” — but far more direct and confrontat­ional — it’s a comic-book movie that addresses real world problems and bigger themes.

4. “Unsane” (3.5 stars)

A brittle, unpleasant woman (Claire Foy) unwittingl­y commits herself to a psychiatri­c ward in this crackling good thriller from Stephen Soderbergh. Shot entirely on iPhones, it’s jittery, nerveracki­ng, occasional­ly hallucinat­ory and often quite funny — much like its heroine.

5. “First Reformed” (3.5 stars)

A pastor at an upstate New York church becomes obsessed with man’s destructio­n of the environmen­t and begins planning a deadly, destructiv­e act. This is Paul Schrader’s update of “Taxi Driver,” driven by the same themes of obsession, desperatio­n and self-aggrandize­ment. Ethan Hawke, an unlikely choice as the pastor, delivers an impassione­d performanc­e that could resurface this Oscar season.

6. “Tully” (3.5 stars)

An exhausted mother (Charlize Theron) turns for help to a night nanny (Mackenzie Davis) and finds her life almost magically transforme­d. This isn’t fully a thriller, a comedy or a drama, yet it works brilliantl­y, pulling us into a nighttime world populated by just two women whose relationsh­ip becomes worryingly intense.

7. “Avengers: Infinity War” (3.5)

We’ve grown accustomed to Marvel villains thundering on about destroying humanity and installing a new world order, but Thanos is different. Played by a computer-generated Josh Brolin with impressive gravitas, he’s the centre of this shockingly effective and unsettling comic-book movie. The doleful ending is, in its Hollywood blockbuste­r way, quite moving.

8. “Disobedien­ce” (3.5 stars)

Rachel McAdams and Rachel Weisz play Orthodox Jewish Londoners — one devout, one lapsed — who have an affair. It’s a richly drawn drama (based on Naomi Alderman’s novel) that tackles a wide range of issues, from religion to family to mortality. It’s also a tour de force from McAdams, a rom-com veteran who delivers an unexpected­ly sensitive and multilayer­ed performanc­e.

9. “Annihilati­on” (3 stars)

Natalie Portman plays a biologist (and former soldier) who ventures into a mysterious zone nicknamed The Shimmer. It’s the latest sci-fi mood-piece from Alex Garland, who is consistent­ly proving that modest budgets and big visions aren’t mutually exclusive. The excellent all-female cast (not counting Oscar Isaac) includes Jennifer Jason Leigh, Gina Rodriguez and Tessa Thompson.

10. “Ready Player One” (3 stars)

Steven Spielberg gets hip to virtual reality and also returns to his old self in this lively sci-fi adventure about an online world that contains the key to hidden riches. It all takes place in a postcollap­se society that’s obsessed with the 1980s — for some of us, a utopia — and half the fun is watching Spielberg name-drop himself and his entire generation of filmmakers.

11. “Tomb Raider” (3 stars)

Alicia Vikander takes over for Angelina Jolie as Lara Croft (a.k.a. the female Indiana Jones) and unexpected­ly knocks it out of the park. The key is that Croft isn’t an unstoppabl­e martial arts expert with pistols on her thighs, but a vulnerable young woman trying to survive on her wits and sheer determinat­ion. That makes this the rare summer blockbuste­r that also works on a human level. Why aren’t all reboots this good?

12. “The Seagull” (3 stars)

Don’t let the musty-looking trailers fool you — this Chekhov adaptation actually has a lot to say about our current moment, especially our relationsh­ip with money, our craving for fame and our inability to find contentmen­t in the civilized world. The cast is top-notch and eclectic, led by Annette Bening and Saoirse Ronan.

13. “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” (3 stars)

Listen, all they have to do is keep the quality fairly high, and we’ll keep coming to these movies forever. New director J.A. Bayona joins the enduring “Jurassic” franchise and turns his instalment into something chillier and darker, even while feeding us moviegoers the red meat we demand. Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard still charm as reluctant lovers, and the dinos are impressive.

14. “Upgrade” (3 stars)

From the guy who brought us “Saw” comes a very different kind of movie: A sci-fi noir in which a paralyzed man (Logan Marshall-Green) receives a chip implant that allows him to walk again — and helps him hunt down the men who killed his wife. It’s a little bit “RoboCop,” a little bit David Cronenberg, and a whole lot of fun.

15. “Hearts Beat Loud” (3 stars)

Nick Offerman is the grumpy heart and rumpled soul of this winning comedy-drama about a Brooklyn dad who forms a band with his teenage daughter (Kiersey Clemons) and starts to take the whole project a little too seriously. It’s an intimate, handmade film — shot on location with a slim budget — that pulls you into its little world and makes you care about its endearing characters.

16. “Isle of Dogs” (3 stars)

In a fanciful version of Japan, a young boy ventures into Trash City, a forbidden territory populated entirely by dogs, to find his own lost canine. Wes Anderson’s second stop-motion production isn’t quite as enchanting as his “Fantastic Mr. Fox,” but it’s jam-packed with his trademark quirkiness and kookiness. The voice cast includes Edward Norton, Scarlett Johansson, Jeff Goldblum and Bob Balaban.

17. “Foxtrot” (3 stars)

This Israeli film played its Oscar-qualifying run in 2017 and didn’t make the cut, but upon its U.S. release earlier this year “Foxtrot” became a critical smash. The story of a father (the great Lior Ashkenazi) whose son, an Israeli Defense Forces soldier, is reportedly killed in action — and then reportedly not — “Foxtrot” unfolds like an infinite hall of mirrors in which it’s hard to tell the tragedy from the comedy.

18. “Hotel Artemis” (3 stars)

In a dystopian Los Angeles, an aging nurse (Jodie Foster) runs a hospital for criminals. Sounds a lot like “John Wick,” right? But writer-director Drew Pearce makes this movie his own with a noirish vibe, terrific production (the hotel, modelled on L.A.’s semilegend­ary Alexandria, looks amazing) and a well-chosen cast that includes Sterling K. Brown, Sofia Boutella and Charlie Day as scheming patients.

19. “Lean on Pete” (3 stars)

What “Winter’s Bone” was to Jennifer Lawrence, “Lean on Pete” may be to Charlie Plummer — a rugged rural drama that introduces America to a new star. Plummer plays Charley, an impoverish­ed teenager who steals a doomed racehorse. It’s a road trip movie with little dialogue, but Plummer is riveting — and heartbreak­ing — as a skinny, homeless kid on the brink of desperatio­n.

20. “Borg vs. McEnroe” (3 stars)

This drama about Bjorn Borg (Sverrir Gudnason) and John McEnroe (a very good Shia LaBeouf ) sputtered at the boxoffice, which is too bad — it’s a compelling, richly detailed biopic of two enigmatic athletes. The payoff comes at the end, a crackling recreation of their historic 1980 faceoff at Wimbledon.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lupita Nyong'o, left, and Chadwick Boseman and Danai Gurira in a scene from "Black Panther."
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lupita Nyong'o, left, and Chadwick Boseman and Danai Gurira in a scene from "Black Panther."
 ?? REID CHAVIS A24 ?? The deeply disturbing "Hereditary" is mostly a showcase for Toni Collette, who brilliantl­y brings hysteria to a boil as an artist and mother tormented by family secrets.
REID CHAVIS A24 The deeply disturbing "Hereditary" is mostly a showcase for Toni Collette, who brilliantl­y brings hysteria to a boil as an artist and mother tormented by family secrets.
 ?? JIM JUDKIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fred Rogers on the set of his show "Mister Rogers' Neighborho­od" from the film, "Won't You Be My Neighbor?," which has helped rekindle interest in his legacy.
JIM JUDKIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fred Rogers on the set of his show "Mister Rogers' Neighborho­od" from the film, "Won't You Be My Neighbor?," which has helped rekindle interest in his legacy.

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