Los Angeles Times

OUR MOVIE PICKS

-

Movie recommenda­tions from critics Kenneth Turan and Justin Chang.

Baby Driver

Edgar Wright’s exuberant, one-of-a-kind vehicular-action-thriller-musical-romance stars Ansel Elgort as a tinnitus-afflicted, music-loving getaway driver alongside a superb supporting cast that includes Kevin Spacey, Lily James, Jamie Foxx, Jon Hamm and Eiza Gonzalez. (Justin Chang) R.

The Big Sick

Kumail Nanjiani and Zoe Kazan are terrific as a young couple navigating the challenges of interracia­l romance and Muslim immigrant identity in director Michael Showalter’s delightful, serious-minded comedy, which also features powerhouse supporting turns from Holly Hunter and Ray Romano. (J.C.) R.

Brigsby Bear

Kyle Mooney gives a terrific performanc­e as a young man obsessed with an educationa­l TV show in director Dave McCary’s sweetly disarming comedy, which expands into a winning tribute to the joys of amateur filmmaking and the therapeuti­c power of art. (J.C.) PG-13.

Columbus

John Cho and Haley Lu Richardson play two strangers who go on a walking-and-talking tour of the modernist architectu­re in Columbus, Ind., in this serenely intelligen­t, gorgeously contemplat­ive first feature from writer-director Kogonada. (J.C.) NR.

Detroit

In re-creating one of the most horrific episodes from the 1967 Detroit race riot, director Kathryn Bigelow and screenwrit­er Mark Boal have made a tense, excruciati­ng and entirely necessary portrait of individual and systemic racism that reverberat­es all too powerfully in the present. (J.C.) R.

Dunkirk

As emotional as it is tension-filled, Christophe­r Nol-an’s immersive World War II drama is being ballyhooed as a departure for the bravura filmmaker, but in truth it succeeds so masterfull­y is that it is anything but. (Kenneth Turan) PG-13.

Girls Trip

Regina Hall, Jada Pinkett Smith, Queen Latifah and a revelatory Tiffany Haddish play four women renewing the bonds of friendship on a weekend getaway in this hilariousl­y raunchy and sensationa­lly assured new comedy from director Malcolm D. Lee (“The Best Man”). (J.C.) R.

Good Time

Robert Pattinson gives a revelatory performanc­e as a scuzzy small-time crook going nowhere very fast in this moody, relentless and impeccably observed New York thriller directed by Josh and Benny Safdie. (Justin Chang) R.

Step

Heartening and unashamedl­y emotional, this certified crowd-pleasing documentar­y tells the story of the hard-knock lives and expansive dreams of members of the step dance squad at a Baltimore charter school. (K.T.) PG.

War for the Planet of the Apes

An eerie quiet descends over this grim and masterful third “Planet of the Apes” prequel, directed with bleak beauty by Matt Reeves (“Dawn of the Planet of the Apes”) and crowned by another superb performanc­e-capture turn from Andy Serkis as the soulful chimpanzee Caesar. (J.C.) PG-13.

Wind River

Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen star in the most accomplish­ed violent thriller in recent memory, a tense tale of murder on a Native American reservatio­n made with authentici­ty, plausibili­ty and wall-to-wall filmmaking skill by writerdire­ctor Taylor Sheridan. (K.T.) R.

Wonder Woman

With forthright emotion, spirited humor and a surprising­ly purposeful sense of spectacle, director Patty Jenkins and her superb star, Gal Gadot, have made a thrilling new superhero saga that might just save the typically nonthrilli­ng DC Extended Universe. (J.C.) PG-13.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States