The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

10 movies you should see this holiday season

- By Michael O'Sullivan

The holidays just got real. And no, we’re not talking about Santa Claus.

In a season when cinemas are typically larded with escapist goodies like “Aquaman,” “Dr. Seuss’s The Grinch,” “Ralph Breaks the Internet” and “Mary Poppins Returns,” this year is notable for the way our cultural divisions have invaded the silver screen.

And this is also the time of year when Hollywood’s weightiest, most issue-oriented dramas vie for Oscar’s attention.

So why celebrate the serious season over the silly? Because these movies grapple with race, war, power, politics, gender and sexuality not with empty rhetoric, but in deeply emotional and even entertaini­ng ways.

(Opening dates and ratings are subject to change.)

‘Boy Erased’

Starring: Lucas Hedges, Nicole Kidman, Russell Crowe, Joel Edgerton, Troye Sivan.

Based on the 2016 memoir of Garrard Conley, whose parents sent him to a gay conversion therapy program as a teenager, the film “Boy Erased” tells the story of Jared, a stand-in for Conley played by Lucas Hedges of “Manchester by the Sea.” Crowe embodies the boy’s minister father with trademark bluster, but Kidman earns cheers as Jared’s ultimately heroic mother. Actor Joel Edgerton wrote and directed this follow-up to his assured debut, the thriller “The Gift,” while also playing the “exgay” director of the Love in Action ministry. (Today, R)

‘A Private War’

Starring: Rosamund Pike, Jamie Dornan, Tom Hollander, Stanley Tucci.

The late war correspond­ent Marie Colvin was a rare breed: a woman covering war zones for the Sunday Times of London, alongside mostly male colleagues. In this film, Pike sports Colvin’s signature eye patch, a badge of courage the reporter earned in 2001 after she was injured covering the Tamil Tiger rebel group in Sri Lanka. As much as the movie focuses on the atrocities of war in such places as Iraq, Afghanista­n, Libya and Syria, “A Private War” is also about the psychologi­cal and emotional toll of Colvin’s job and, arguably, her addiction to its dangers. (Nov. 16, R)

‘The Front Runner’

Starring: Hugh Jackman, Vera Farmiga, J.K. Simmons, Sara Paxton, Alfred Molina.

Set in the spring of 1987, over the course of the three short weeks in which the presidenti­al campaign of Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., imploded over allegation­s of infidelity, this wonky yet gripping political drama has many parallels to the present day. In some ways, it’s almost quaint to see Jackman as the idealistic politician who still holds an expectatio­n of privacy and to watch reporters hesitate about whether it’s ethical to pry into the personal lives of public figures. Yes, those were simpler times. This story, set at the dawn of a new media age presages the 24-hour news cycle and our voracious, Twitter-fueled appetite for fresh dirt. (Nov. 16, R)

‘Widows’

Starring: Viola Davis, Elizabeth Debicki, Michelle Rodriguez, Cynthia Erivo, Colin Farrell, Daniel Kaluuya, Robert Duvall, Liam Neeson.

Call it a grittier “Oceans Eight.” When three crooks are killed in a robbery, their desperate widows (Davis, Debicki and Rodriguez) are left in debt — and without a social safety net. They decide to carry out a heist. Directed by Steve McQueen (“12 Years a Slave”), who wrote the screenplay with Gillian Flynn (“Gone Girl”), “Widows” doesn’t settle for the superficia­l tropes of most heist flicks, instead grounding what might otherwise have been a lightweigh­t crime caper in themes of class, race, sex and politics. (Nov. 16, R)

‘Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d’

Starring: Eddie Redmayne, Katherine Waterston, Dan Fogler, Jude Law, Johnny Depp.

Details about this Harry Potter prequel, which takes place a year after the action of “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” have been trickling out slowly, generating much excitement among the franchise’s eager fans. But in the buildup to this 10th installmen­t of the cinematic saga, there has also been controvers­y. That has to do with the casting of Johnny Depp, who was accused of abuse by his ex-wife, Amber Heard, as the film’s titular villain. If nothing else, the blurring of real life and fiction may complicate a film that already promises to be darker than the “Fantastic Beasts” of 2016. J.K. Rowling’s Potter universe has

always been about power and its abuses, but this new chapter, although set in the 1920s, seems likely to resonate even more strongly in today’s world. (Nov. 16, PG-13)

‘Green Book’

Starring: Mahershala Ali, Viggo Mortensen, Linda Cardellini.

Two 2017 Oscar nominees — Mortensen for “Captain Fantastic” and Ali, who won for “Moonlight” — team up in this two-hander, which tells the true story of the unlikely friendship between the black classical pianist Don Shirley (Ali) and his Italian-American chauffeur, Tony Lip (Mortensen). Taking place on Shirley’s concert tour during the racially charged 1960s, the film, which won the People’s Choice Award at the recent Toronto Film Festival, takes its name from a guidebook published to aid African-American travelers navigating the Jim Crow South. (Nov. 21, PG-13)

‘If Beale Street Could Talk’

Starring: Stephan James, KiKi Layne, Regina King, Brian Tyree Henry, Finn Wittrock.

Oscar winner Barry Jenkins, the writer and director of “Moonlight,” turns his hand to an adaptation of James Baldwin’s 1974 novel about a young man in New York City who is falsely accused of rape. James, last seen as Olympic runner Jesse Owens in “Race,” plays the imprisoned Fonny, with newcomer Layne as his pregnant fiancee, Tish, who struggles to prove him innocent. Although also a love story, the film’s echoes of today’s systemic racism are all too unmistakab­le. (Dec. TBD, R)

‘Mary Queen of Scots’

Starring: Margot Robbie, Saoirse Ronan, David Tennant.

Rivals in the race for the best-actress Oscar only a few short months ago, Robbie (“I, Tonya”) and Ronan (“Lady Bird”) take on the roles of rival monarchs — and first cousins once removed — Mary Queen of Scots and Queen Elizabeth I of England, who saw Mary as a threat, putting her under house arrest (and ultimately beheading her). These are storied roles, which have been filled by the likes of Vanessa Redgrave and Glenda Jackson. Can it be anything but fun to watch two members of Hollywood royalty tear into this meaty drama of political maneuverin­g? (Dec. 14, not yet rated)

‘Welcome to Marwen’

Starring: Steve Carell, Leslie Mann, Gwendoline Christie, Janelle Monáe, Eiza González, Merritt Wever, Diane Kruger.

Based on the acclaimed documentar­y “Marwencol,” director Robert Zemeckis’ film stars Steve Carell as Mark Hogancamp, an artist who created a miniature world filled with dolls as World War II characters in an effort to recover psychologi­cally from the trauma of having been beaten by a group of men outside a bar in 2000. (Carell and other members of the cast do double duty as both human characters and their animated alter egos). This is a film that could turn traditiona­l notions of gender and gender expression on their heads: It not only features several strong female characters, but there is also a hidden subtext, glossed over in the film’s trailers but prominent in the 2010 documentar­y, of a gender-based hate crime. (Dec. 21, PG-13)

‘On the Basis of Sex’

Starring: Felicity Jones, Armie Hammer, Kathy Bates, Sam Waterston, Justin Theroux.

On the heels of this year’s acclaimed “RBG” — a surprise, if modest, hit by documentar­y standards — “On the Basis of Sex” dramatizes the inspiratio­nal true story of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg ( Jones), who, as an ACLU lawyer, argued more than 300 cases on gender discrimina­tion, including six before the Supreme Court. (Dec. 25, PG-13)

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JAAP BUITENDIJK ?? Eddie Redmayne stars as Newt Scamander in “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d,” opening Nov. 16.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JAAP BUITENDIJK Eddie Redmayne stars as Newt Scamander in “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d,” opening Nov. 16.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JONATHAN WENK, FOCUS FEATURES ?? “On the Basis of Sex.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JONATHAN WENK, FOCUS FEATURES “On the Basis of Sex.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PATTI PERRET, UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? “Green Book.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PATTI PERRET, UNIVERSAL PICTURES “Green Book.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? “Welcome to Marwen.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY UNIVERSAL PICTURES “Welcome to Marwen.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PAUL CONROY, AVIRON PICTURES ?? “A Private War.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PAUL CONROY, AVIRON PICTURES “A Private War.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JAAP BUITENDIJK, WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JAAP BUITENDIJK, WARNER BROS. PICTURES “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY FOCUS FEATURES ?? “Boy Erased.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY FOCUS FEATURES “Boy Erased.”

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