Los Angeles Times

CRITICS’ PICKS

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Movie recommenda­tions from critics Justin Chang and Kenneth Turan. In general release unless noted.

The Favourite

This viciously entertaini­ng period comedy-drama from director Yorgos Lanthimos (“The Lobster”) returns us to the 18th century court of Queen Anne (a magnificen­t Olivia Colman) and the intrigue swirling around two women (Rachel Weisz and Emma Stone) vying for her favor. (Justin Chang) R Limited

Happy as Lazzaro

Alice Rohrwacher’s enchanting, time-bending third feature, about a group of sharecropp­ers on an Italian tobacco farm, is a deceptivel­y plain-looking portrait of downtrodde­n lives that by the end all but glows with wonderment and surprise. (Justin Chang) PG-13 Netflix

If Beale Street Could Talk

Barry Jenkins’ follow-up to his Oscar-winning “Moonlight” is a visually and musically gorgeous adaptation of James Baldwin’s novel, a 1970s Harlem love story that beautifull­y mixes past and present, the personal and the political. (Justin Chang) R Limited

The Kid Who Would Be King

A 12-year-old boy (Louis Ashbourne Serkis) gets pulled into a grand Arthurian adventure in this endearing, winningly offbeat comic fantasy from writer-director Joe Cornish (“Attack the Block”). (Justin Chang) PG

The Other Side of the Wind

Shot between 1970 and 1976 and then left unfinished for decades, Orson Welles’ long-awaited final feature is a cracked, corrosive vision, a cinematic hall of mirrors that fascinatin­gly reflects the fraught circumstan­ces of its making. (Justin Chang) R Netflix

Roma

An extremely quiet, even meditative picture played at the softer pitch of reality, rather than the higher frequency of drama by writer-director-producer Alfonso Cuarón, whose childhood experience­s are the bedrock of this family story. (Kenneth Turan) R Limited/Netflix

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

The creative brain trust of Phil Lord and Christophe­r Miller has thoroughly rejuvenate­d the Spider-Man myth in this quick-witted, formula-busting and visually gorgeous animated feature, which places a new kid named Miles Morales (voiced by Shameik Moore) behind the mask. (Justin Chang) PG

A Star Is Born

No matter how many previous versions of “A Star Is Born” you’ve seen, the Bradley Cooper-Lady Gaga extravagan­za about a star on the rise falling for a star on the way down should not be missed. (Kenneth Turan) R

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