Los Angeles Times

OUR MOVIE PICKS

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Movie recommenda­tions from critics Kenneth Turan, Justin Chang and other reviewers.

Graduation

A film of gripping moral suspense from the writerdire­ctor Cristian Mungiu, this tough, clear-eyed and humane movie follows a father (Adrien Titieni) who will do anything to help his daughter (Maria Dragus) escape post-Ceausescu Romania. (Justin Chang) R.

The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki

A lovely piece of work from Finland, a sweet, warmly observed tale about a boxer falling in love before his biggest bout overlaid with just the right amount of Scandinavi­an melancholy. (Kenneth Turan) NR.

I Am Not Your Negro

As directed by the gifted Raoul Peck, this documentar­y on James Baldwin uses the entire spectrum of movie effects, not only spoken language but also sound, music, editing and all manner of visuals, to create a cinematic essay that is powerful and painfully relevant. (Kenneth Turan) NR.

La La Land

Starring a well-paired Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, writer-director Damien Chazelle’s tuneful tribute to classic movie musicals is often stronger in concept than execution, but it’s lovely and transporti­ng all the same. (Justin Chang) PG-13.

The Lost City of Z

Based on David Grann’s nonfiction bestseller about the British explorer Percy Fawcett (well played by Charlie Hunnam), James Gray’s rich, meditative and deeply transporti­ng adventure epic is the sort of classical filmmaking that feels positively radical. (Justin Chang) PG-13.

A Quiet Passion

Cynthia Nixon gives a brilliant performanc­e as Emily Dickinson in Terence Davies’ masterful biographic­al portrait of the great 19th century poet, which begins as a razorsharp drawing-room comedy before edging almost impercepti­bly toward tragedy. (Justin Chang) PG-13.

Their Finest

Genial and engaging with a fine sense of humor, this story of making movies in World War II Britain stars Gemma Arterton and a marvelous Bill Nighy and makes blending the comic with the serious look simpler than it actually is. (Kenneth Turan) R.

The Women’s Balcony

An Israeli box-office hit about a Jerusalem clash of religious cultures, this is an unapologet­ically warmhearte­d comedic drama, a fine example of commercial filmmaking grounded in a persuasive knowledge of human behavior. (Kenneth Turan) NR.

Your Name.

The highest-grossing anime of all time and winner of the Los Angeles Film Critics Assn.’s animated feature prize, Makoto Shinkai’s thrillingl­y beautiful film juggles an out-of-body farce, a time-traveling romance and a terrifying epic of survival. (Justin Chang) PG.

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