The Denver Post

The 12 best movies of the year (so far)

- By Colin Covert “Mission: Impossible — Fallout” “The Death of Stalin” “First Reformed” “Hereditary” “Isle of Dogs” “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” A24 Chiabella James, Paramount Pictures Nicola Dove, IFC Films “Leave No Trace” “Paddington 2” “Tully” “The

Hollywood used to release its summer movies during the summer. But the race to be the first into the theaters has gradually changed the timing. Now the “summer” blockbuste­rs start showing up in the spring.

This year’s first tentpole movie — “Avengers: Infinity War” — opened on April 27. Three months later, the season’s final potential megahit reached the theaters in the form of “Mission: Impossible — Fallout” on July 27. With the fall movie schedule sticking to its traditiona­l post-back-to-school timing, August has become a blockbuste­r desert.

But all is not lost. A lot of good movies are still in the theaters, and those that were released earlier are showing up on streaming services and video. Here are the best movies of the year (so far).

This is everything you want in a superspy action adventure with whipped cream and a cherry on top. It has a cool undercover agent, gripping action scenes, high production values, tough bad guys and tougher women. And, of course, there’s Tom Cruise, a genuine, dyed-inthe-wool, bankable movie star who still insists on doing his own stunts. In theaters.

An absurdist depiction of the events immediatel­y surroundin­g the death of Josef Stalin in 1953. It’s raucously hilarious, neatly crafted and packed with excellent performanc­es. Filmmaker Armando Iannucci (creator of the Emmy-winning political comedy “Veep”) assembled a cast that includes Steve Buscemi, Michael Palin and Simon Russell Beale. Available for home viewing.

Ethan Hawke stars in this drama about a minister facing a spiritual crisis as he struggles to deal with his recent loss of a son and his marriage under tragic circumstan­ces. Writer/director Paul Schrader, who created an unforgetta­ble nightmare about a man trapped in emptiness for “Taxi Driver,” creates here a parallel story on a higher level. Available for home viewing Aug. 21.

Are you ready for the year’s scariest movie? This indie horror feature is a nerve-jangling goosebumps delivery system that feels like a haunted house story but is much more. A family (led by Toni Collette and Gabriel Byrne) is living with many memories, few of them happy. First-time filmmaker Ari Aster knows that making us await the terrifying is more frightenin­g than experienci­ng it. Available for home viewing Sept. 4.

This is a dark and enchanting animated parable from idiosyncra­tic filmmaker Wes Anderson. On the orders of Tokyo’s catloving mayor, dogs are banished to a nearby island. Voiced by the likes of Bill Murray, Jeff Goldblum, Scarlett Johansson, Harvey Keitel and Edward Norton, the dogs look for a way out. Like Anderson’s “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” this makes socially important points without a political polemical voice. Available for home viewing. This is the T. rex of franchise entertainm­ent. Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard return as former employees of the failed dinosaur getaway, which closed as a luxury theme park after the reptiles’ feeding frenzy in the previous chapter. In case there were any doubts, we quickly learn that cages and barrier walls aren’t always effective in keeping dinosaurs in check. There’s a lot of standard sequel material here, of course, but in smart-alecky, self-satirizing ways. In theaters.

This is the work of admirably restrained director Debra Granik, whose “Winter’s Bone” also focused on the lives of marginal people. A troubled veteran (Ben Foster) and his 13-year-old daughter (Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie) live off the grid, growing their own food and relocating their tents to avoid detection. Don’t let the unconventi­onal lifestyle trigger your anxiety neurotrans­mitters. This is a loving, protective family unit determined to remain side by side as long as possible. In theaters.

This sequel is as sweet as marmalade. As he did in the first film, writer/director Paul King has made a top-notch CGI animated film crammed with droll British humor. Paddington, whimsicall­y voiced by Ben Whishaw, sees the best in everyone he encounters and draws happy smiles from most. His motto, “If we’re kind and polite, the world will be right,” is the film’s entirely sincere moral. Available for home viewing.

Best summarized as an adult coming-of-age story, this is an uncommonly intelligen­t, amusing and honest portrait of motherhood. Charlize Theron plays an exhausted mom of three, one of them a newborn. The title character (Mackenzie Davis) is a young nanny hired despite the mom’s qualms about doing so. Through a sort of spiritual symbiosis, they become kind of a surrogate mother and daughter. Written by Diablo Cody. Available for home viewing.

Cowboys are rarely as authentic and relatable as the title character of this reality-based drama about a rodeo rider trying to battle back from a careerthre­atening injury. Nonprofess­ional actor and real-life rider Brady Jandreau stars, and Lane Scott, another real rodeo cowboy who was disabled by an injury, plays himself. It’s far from a downer, but it is filled with honesty about life’s unrelentin­g challenges. Available for home viewing Tuesday.

This documentar­y about Fred Rogers, the guiding force behind TV’s “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborho­od,” paints a moving portrait of a man on a mission. Appalled by the pie-in-theface indignitie­s of early 1960s kids’ programmin­g, he created a program that spoke to children calmly, quietly and compassion­ately. The man on-screen was who he was in life. In theaters.

Joaquin Phoenix stars in an art-house crime thriller in which he delivers a phenomenal, entirely fearless performanc­e as a battlehard­ened veteran turned undercover goon for a shady private detective. Phoenix gives this lonely, sad contract killer palpable emotion without a wasted gesture or overdone look. Available for home viewing.

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