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Best movies of 2016 so far: ‘Zootopia,’ ‘The Witch,’ ‘Sing Street’

- BY MICHAEL PHILLIPS CHICAGO TRIBUNE

I’m here for the defense as well as the prosecutio­n. The charge: So far, by and large, 2016 at the movies has failed.

The movie year has failed to produce anything as culturally urgent as ESPN’s “O.J.: Made in America.”

It has failed to produce a confession­al as sleek and imposing as the Beyonce video cycle (it came with a new album) called “Lemonade” — “I Will Survive” by another name, visually imagined by a variety of talents, in a dazzling variety of moods, keys and relational scenarios.

The rise of the recap- ping culture, review-adjacent but not quite criticism, was made for “Game of Thrones,” not “Batman v Superman.”

When “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” can sell $872 million in tickets worldwide and still be considered an economic disappoint­ment, never mind a dispiritin­g pain, we have temporaril­y lost our way.

On the other hand, your honor, we did see franchise items that knew what they were doing and did what they did with confidence and a little class: “Captain America: Civil War,” for example, or director Jon Favreau’s live-action/ motion- capture hybrid “The Jungle Book,” a movie people loved largely because they didn’t hate it.

Let me explain. With some f ilms, you’re just pleased and a little bit surprised to locate any semblance of personalit­y and wit underneath the corporate studio directive. I suppose the brash “Deadpool” was like that, too. Ryan Reynolds: finally, a movie star, I guess.

Speaking of brash, I’d say the same, this time as a high compliment, of “Zootopia,” which was and is truly, actually and completely a really good film. I finally caught up with Disney’s animated feature the other day. In an election cycle as divisive, fearmonger­ing and hostile as the current one, “Zootopia’s” depiction of a multi-species society perpetuall­y on the verge of giving in to its baser instincts rang a bell heard ‘round the world; it made more than a billion dollars. The script was laden with messages and liberal temperance lectures, but they worked. They worked in story terms and emotional terms, and told its tale with buoyant invention, a tale of small-town daughter of a carrot farmer — a rabbit, female, patronized right and left but undeterred — who becomes Zootopia’s first rabbit cop and cracks an insidious political conspiracy with the aid of her fox pal. A few other highlights: “The Witch.” A transfixin­g fever dream asking the question: What’s a girl to do if she’s utterly at odds with every social, sexual and religious dictate in 1630 New England? Robert Eggers’ feature debut threw a lot of people with its stern fable of an outcast family coping, unsuccessf­ully, with a supernatur­al force. The ending, particular­ly, led to Z-minus CinemaScor­e exit polls. My condolence­s to those who didn’t like it.

“Sing Street.” John Carney’s fetching remembranc­e of being a put-upon teenage music geek in Catholic ’80s Dublin gave coming- of- age movies a temporaril­y good name once again.

“Love & Friendship.” Whit Stillman took early Jane Austen out for a date, and it worked out for both very nicely.

“The Invitation.” Like “The Witch,” this low-budget thriller directed by Karyn Kusama kept its camera close to a clammy, claustroph­obic social situation (in this case, a dinner party at a house on an LA canyon ridge) and maximized it for unsettling atmosphere.

“Krisha.” Another dinner party movie, this one set at Thanksgivi­ng among an extended family reunion. Trey Edward Shults, writer, director and co-star, pulled bits of his own young life for a story of an unsteadily recovering alcoholic, played by Krisha Fairchild. But there’s more than raw feeling at work here; there’s real cinema, and Shults is a director with legs.

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