The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FILM FEAST: WHAT TO SEE AT THE MOVIES THISSEASON

And none of them is about Santa Claus.

- By Michael O'Sullivan

There are holiday movies, and then there are holiday movies.

The second category includes exclusivel­y seasonal fare: “A Bad Moms Christmas” (now in theaters); the Nativity-themed animation “The Star” (Nov. 17); and “The Man Who Invented Christmas” (Nov. 22), a story about Charles Dickens and the writing of “A Christmas Carol.” But those films have, by definition, a short shelf life, with sell-by dates of Jan. 2.

“Holiday,” in the first and loosest sense of the word, suggests a break from routine. Although looking forward to a great new movie brings a sense of anticipati­on akin to an unopened present, it’s a gift that, if chosen carefully, will keep on giving regardless of the season. With that in mind, here are 14 upcoming films to put on your wish list. Some of them we’ve already taken a peek at, and others we can’t wait to unwrap.

Opening dates are subject to change.

‘Justice League’

Cast: Ben Affleck, Gal Gadot, Jason Momoa, Ezra Miller, Ray Fisher, Henry Cavill, Ciarán Hinds

Despite “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” ending in the apparent death of Clark Kent — let’s not forget that dirt levitating off his coffin, suggesting a resurrecti­on of some kind — it’s virtually certain that the Man of Steel (Cavill) will show up in the new sequel, and we don’t just mean in that dream sequence fromthe trailer. With luck, Gadot’s Wonder Woman will bring a little of the mojo that made her recent movie a mega hit. Returning director Zach Snyder and his collaborat­ors have indicated that the new adventure — which features Hinds as the main villain, Steppenwol­f — will be a lot more fun than “BvS,” as Batman, played by Affleck, teams up with Won- der Woman to recruit the Flash (Miller), Aquaman (Momoa) and Cyborg (Fisher) as allies. (Nov. 17, PG-13)

‘Mudbound’

Cast: Carey Mulligan, Jason Clarke, Garrett Hedlund, Jason Mitchell, Mary J. Blige, Rob Morgan

Based on Hillary Jordan’s 2008 novel — winner of the Bellwether Prize for fiction — this 1940s-set drama by filmmaker Dee Rees (“Pariah”) retains the book’s technique of rotating narration between six characters: three members of a poor white farm- ing family in rural Mississipp­i (Mulligan, Clarke and Hedlund) and three members of a family of black sharecropp­ers (Mitchell, Blige and Morgan). Set before, during and after one man from each family (Hedlund and Mitchell) is shipped off to fight in World War II, the epic tale — which will also be available on Netflix — explores the theme of racism, with heartbreak­ing potency. (Nov. 17, R)

‘Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri’

Cast: Frances McDormand, Woody Harrelson, Sam Rockwell

McDormand delivers a tour

de force as the mother of a murdered teenage girl who channels her grief and guilt into anger directed at the small-town police chief (Harrelson) who has yet to make an arrest in her daughter’s case. By turns serious and darkly funny, filmmaker Martin McDonagh’s drama — which also features a complex performanc­e by Rockwell in the role of a violent, racist cop — feels significan­tly more substantia­l than the English director’s previous work, which includes “In Bruges” and “Seven Psychopath­s.” (Nov. 17, R)

‘Coco’

Cast: Anthony Gonzalez, Benjamin Bratt, Gael García Bernal

The voice-over in the trailer for “Coco,” an animated adventure set in the Land of the Dead of Mexican folklore, intones: “No living person has ever visited their world — until now.” Um. Maybe the folks at Disney/Pixar forgot a little animated feature from2014 called “The Book of Life,” which features a Mexican hero traveling to — you guessed it — the Land of the Dead. Setting accusation­s of plagiarism aside for the moment, Pixar’s new film is about a little boy (Gonzalez) who accidental­ly

gets stuckin the under world. “Coco,” which was visually inspired by the art of Mexican print maker José Guadalupe Posada, won’t be the last word on the Day of the Dead theme. A sequel to “The Book of Life” is already in the planning stages. (Nov. 22, PG)

‘Roman J. Israel, Esq.’

Cast: Denzel Washington, Colin Farrell, Carmen Ejogo

Writer-director Dan Gilroy’s legal drama about the existentia­l crisis that results when a pro-bono crusader for the disenfranc­hised goes to work for a fancy fifirm, making a morally compromisi­ng decision in the process, may share some themes with Gilroy’s “Nightcrawl­er.” Like that 2014 examinatio­n of journalist­ic ethics — a bravura performanc­e by an emaciated Jake Gyllenhaal — the new fifilm features Washington transforme­d for the title role of a disheveled legal savant, with a shaggy Afro, aviator-frame glasses and mismatched suits. ( Nov. 22, PG-13)

‘The Disaster Artist’

Cast: James Franco, Dave Franco, Seth Rogen, Zoey Deutch, Alison Brie

Is it possible to make a good movie about a bad one? A very, very, bad (yet hysterical­ly funny) one? Based on the 2013 book by Greg Sestero and Tom Bissell about Sestero’s experience as an actor in “The Room” — a film that has been called “the ‘Citizen Kane’ of bad movies” — “The Disaster Artist” stars James Franco as the cult film’s enigmatica­lly accented writer, director, star and producer, Tommy Wiseau. You’ll probably want to bone up on the source material — meaning Wiseau’s fifilm, if not the book — fifirst. It’s frequent midnight-movie fodder. (Dec. 1, R)

‘The Shape of Water’

Cast: Sally Hawkins, Octavia Spencer, Doug Jones, Michael Shannon, Richard Jenkins, Michael Stuhlbarg

The latest adult fairy tale from Guillermo del Toro (“Pan’s Labyrinth”) centers on the unlikely bond that develops between a mute cleaning woman (Hawkins) and an amphibious humanoid creature ( Jones) who is being kept in a secret government lab. Set in 1962, at the height of the Cold War, and referencin­g mid century monster movies and musicals, del Toro’s swooningly romantic fifilm is less thriller than love letter to old Hollywood. (Dec. 8, R)

‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi’

Cast: Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac, Carrie Fisher

The demand for early tickets to Disney’s latest installmen­t inthe “Star Wars” franchise — which centers on Rey (Ridley) as she learns to control the Force under the tutelage of Luke Skywalker (Hamill) — was so great that Fandango and other sites experience­d digital traffiffic jams last month. Now comes news, courtesy of the Wall Street Journal, that the studio is so confifiden­t in its new product that it plans to take an unpreceden­ted 65 percent cut of revenue from theaters (compared with the more typical 55 to 60 percent). Theater owners will also be contractua­lly obligated to screen the fifilm for four weeks on the largest screen. Sounds like the Empire is feeling pretty good about its new Death Star. (Dec. 15, not yet rated)

‘Downsizing’

Cast: Matt Damon, Kristen Wiig, Christoph Waltz, Jason Sudeikis

Social satirist Alexander Payne has turned his magnifying glass on the Midwest (“Nebraska”), Hawaii (“The Descendant­s”) and California wine country (“Sideways”). In “Down- sizing,” he tackles the whole planet. Written with longtime collaborat­or Jim Taylor, this futuristic fantasy imagines a world in which people can opt to miniaturiz­e themselves to the size of dolls as a solution to the Earth’s overpopula­tion crisis. As Damon’s character fifinds out when he agrees to undergo the procedure, when oneman shrinks, his problems grow, along with the size — metaphoric­ally — of his heart. (Dec. 22, not yet rated)

‘Molly’s Game’

Cast: Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Kevin Costner Writer Aaron Sorkin (“Steve Jobs,” “The West Wing”) makes his directoria­l debut in a fifilm based on Molly Bloom’s 2014memoir of her time running an undergroun­d poker club catering to such Hollywood elites as Matt Damon and Leonardo Di Caprio. Chastain, in a title role that continues the multiple-Oscar nominee’s habit of playing steely, successful women who have virtually no personal lives, “roars through the performanc­e,” as the Hollywood Reporter put it, “with a force and take-no-prisoners attitude that keeps one rapt.” (Dec. 25, not yet rated)

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BYWALT DISNEY PICTURES ?? “StarWars: The Last Jedi” begins where “The ForceAwake­ns” left off, with Rey (Daisy Ridley) having tracked down Luke Skywalker.
CONTRIBUTE­D BYWALT DISNEY PICTURES “StarWars: The Last Jedi” begins where “The ForceAwake­ns” left off, with Rey (Daisy Ridley) having tracked down Luke Skywalker.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BYWALT DISNEY PICTURES-PIXAR ANIMATION STUDIOST ?? In “Coco,” Miguel’s love ofmusic ultimately leads him to the Land of the Dead, where he teams upwith charming trickster Hector.
CONTRIBUTE­D BYWALT DISNEY PICTURES-PIXAR ANIMATION STUDIOST In “Coco,” Miguel’s love ofmusic ultimately leads him to the Land of the Dead, where he teams upwith charming trickster Hector.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY MERRICKMOR­TON, FOXSEARCHL­IGHT PICTURES ?? Woody Harrelson and FrancesMcD­ormand pair up in “Three Billboards­Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY MERRICKMOR­TON, FOXSEARCHL­IGHT PICTURES Woody Harrelson and FrancesMcD­ormand pair up in “Three Billboards­Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JUSTINA MINTZ, A24 ?? Dave Franco and James Franco star in“The Disaster Artist .”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JUSTINA MINTZ, A24 Dave Franco and James Franco star in“The Disaster Artist .”

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