The Denver Post

“A gun is always loaded, even when it ain’t”

- Fox Searchligh­t

“The Florida Project”

Screenwrit­ers: Sean Baker, Chris Bergoch

Filmmaker Sean Baker’s portrait of the Central Florida underclass focuses on a little girl named Moonee (Brooklynn Prince) who is living with her prostitute mother in a seedy, Orlando-area motel. When Moonee introduces a new friend to her secret hideaway — an uprooted, yet still living, tree — Moonee describes it in a way that offers a metaphor for her own survival instincts:

“Do you know why this is my favorite tree? Because it tipped over, and it’s still growing.”

“Molly’s Game” Screenwrit­er: Aaron Sorkin

The Oscar-winning writer of “The Social Network” and the creator of the Emmy-winning “The West Wing” has sometimes been criticized for writing dialogue that doesn’t sound the way people normally talk. Making his directoria­l debut with an adaptation of Molly Bloom’s 2014 memoir about running a high-stakes poker game, Aaron Sorkin fills the script with smart (and improbably sassy) zingers, including this put-down, by Bloom’s lawyer (Idris Elba), of the cover photo chosen by his client (Jessica Chastain) for her book:

“You look like the cat that ate the canary — and then told the canary’s parents about it.”

“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” Screenwrit­er: Martin McDonagh

Francis McDormand plays Mildred, the grieving — yet scabrously funny — mother of a murdered teenage girl who has installed a series of billboards accusing her town’s police chief of inaction. When the local priest (Nick Searcy) stops by to ask her to take them down, Mildred lays into him, citing the Los Angeles County penal code — which considers gang members to be complicit in crimes committed by other gang members — to implicate the padre in pedophilia.

“(This) got me thinking, Father, that whole type of situation is kinda similar to you church boys, ain’t it? You’ve got your colors. You’ve got your clubhouse. You’re, for want of a better word, a gang. And if you’re upstairs smoking a pipe and reading a Bible while one of your fellow gang members is downstairs (expletive) an altar boy, then, Father, just like the Crips, and just like the Bloods, you’re culpable. ‘Cause you joined the gang, man. And I don’t care if you never did (expletive) or never saw (expletive) or never heard (expletive). You joined the gang. You’re culpable. And when a person is culpable to altarboy- (expletive), or any kinda boy-(expletive) — I know you guys didn’t really narrow it down — then they kinda forfeit the right to come into my house and say a word about me, or my life, or my daughter, or my billboards. So why don’t you just finish your tea there, Father, and get the (expletive) out of my kitchen?”

Kumail Nanjiani

Married in real life, Kumail Nanjiani and Emily Gordon collaborat­ed on a funny-sweet screenplay about their courtship — which included Gordon being placed in a medically induced coma after she was taken seriously ill. When stand-up comic Nanjiani, playing himself, meets the parents of his sick girlfriend (Zoe Kasdan), he finds himself in the awkward position of having to simultaneo­usly reassure Mom and Dad (Holly Hunter and Ray Romano) while delivering terrible news:

“Apparently, there are good and bad comas. And the kind that they put her in — the medically induced ones — are definitely the good kind of coma. Like, you know how there are good and bad carbs? Gremlins — those can be good or bad.”

“Wind River” Screenwrit­er: Taylor Sheridan

Taylor Sheridan’s directoria­l debut — a nouveau Western centering on the investigat­ion of the murder of a Native American girl — features Jeremy Renner as a laconic and methodical agent of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service who dispenses such folksy nuggets of wisdom as:

“Being careless won’t get you anywhere faster” and “A gun is always loaded, even when it ain’t.”

“Logan” Screenwrit­ers: James Mangold, Scott Frank, Michael Green

Director James Mangold’s noirish tale of Marvel’s X-Men features poignantly brokendown versions of Professor X (Patrick Stewart) and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), who laments the burden of the mutant hero who, seemingly, can’t be killed:

“Nature made me a freak. Man made me a weapon. And God made it last too long.”

“The Hero” Screenwrit­ers: Brett Haley, Marc Basch

Aging cowboy/actor Sam Elliott plays an aging cowboy/actor struggling to find work in an industry whose enduring appeal — part escapism, part voyeurism — he sums up, succinctly:

“Movies are other people’s dreams.”

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 ??  ?? Frances McDormand in a scene from “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”
Frances McDormand in a scene from “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”
 ?? Michael Gibson, STX Entertainm­ent ?? Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba in “Molly’s Game.”
Michael Gibson, STX Entertainm­ent Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba in “Molly’s Game.”

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