The 10 best films of 2018
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There were lots of movies to like in 2018, although the most ballyhooed ones, as usual, tended to show up in bunches toward the end of the year. That鈥檚 the time when awards voters with short memories can be counted on to bite into Oscar bait. The fact that some of the most heavily heralded movies were also good helped ease the glut.
I just wish the goodies were spread out a bit more evenly 鈥 or, more to the point, that awards-worthy movies that opened relatively early, like, say, 鈥淛ourney鈥檚 End鈥 or 鈥淧addington 2,鈥 had longer shelf lives in the public imagination. But that鈥檚 part of why I鈥檓 here: to bring some perspective to the year and remind you of some very good films you may have missed. I鈥檝e seen, by my count, around 300 movies in 2018, most of them far less than marvelous, but at least 40 of which, for a variety of reasons, are eminently worth noting.
Given how consequential and combative the global political landscape has become, I was surprised by how few movies, from Hollywood or elsewhere, directly addressed the disquiet. Perhaps we have arrived at a time in popular entertainment when, as opposed to the headline-grabbing gabble on the internet and the airwaves and the nightly news, audiences are seeking something less in your face.
The few mainstream 鈥減olitical鈥 movies in 2018 often fused the personal with the politics. 鈥淥n the Basis of Sex,鈥 starring Felicity Jones as the young, feminist crusader lawyer Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and 鈥淰ice,鈥 starring 海角大神 Bale as Dick Cheney, attempted to humanize their protagonists, not altogether profitably, as flesh-and-blood people and not as historical icons or effigies. (In the case of Ginsburg, the icon-making was achieved in the hit documentary 鈥淩BG.鈥)聽 聽
Without a lot of grandstanding and with varying degrees of success, such issues as homelessness and post-traumatic stress disorder (鈥淟eave No Trace鈥), teen drug addiction and the toll it takes on families (鈥淏eautiful Boy,鈥 鈥淏en is Back鈥), ecological ruination (鈥淔irst Reformed鈥), and gay conversion therapy ("Boy Erased," "The Miseducation of Cameron Post") were humanized.
Even in movies, many from outside the United States, where one might expect a more upfront and scathing treatment of social issues, the examinations were muted, as in Alfonso Cuar贸n鈥檚 鈥淩oma,鈥 which focused, without being accusatory, on the travails of a live-in domestic worker of an upper-middle-class family in Mexico City; or Hirokazu Kore-eda鈥檚 鈥淪hoplifters,鈥 which dealt with a poverty-row Japanese family linked by crime; or Nadine Labaki鈥檚 marvelous 鈥淐apernaum,鈥 about Lebanese street kids. It would be misleading to call these films indictments.聽
The portrayal of racism was the major exception to this generally muted approach to social issues. Spike Lee鈥檚 鈥淏lacKkKlansman鈥 was ostensibly a 1970s period piece about a black cop who infiltrates the Klan, but Lee doesn鈥檛 really make period films. The speechifying and agitprop in this movie close out with newsreel clips from the violent 2017 Charlottesville, Va., white nationalist rally.
Boots Riley鈥檚 鈥淪orry to Bother You鈥 tries (and fails) to be this year鈥檚 鈥淕et Out.鈥 Barry Jenkins鈥檚 鈥淚f Beale Street Could Talk鈥 draws on the outrage in James Baldwin鈥檚 1974 novel, even if it unduly poeticizes that outrage. Unlike these other films, 鈥淕reen Book,鈥 starring Viggo Mortensen and Mahershala Ali, is a mostly successful, if shameless, attempt to revive the old-school, we鈥檙e-all-brothers-under-the-skin type of movie that was popular decades ago. It plays like a racially role-reversed 鈥淒riving Miss Daisy.鈥
And then there is 鈥淏lack Panther,鈥 which locked into the Marvel zeitgeist, decried racism, opened up a whole new world for black performers (I鈥檓 not talking about Wakanda!), made a fortune, and aside from all that, managed to be pretty terrific. From a critic鈥檚 standpoint, if not a sociologist鈥檚, I鈥檓 more excited by the success of this film than, say, the commercial success of 鈥淐razy Rich Asians,鈥 which, whatever its racial composition, I found insipid and likely to lead only to 鈥淐razy Rich Asians 2.鈥
In the same vein, it was nice to read that, according to a recent study, a strong relationship exists between female-led films released in the US from 2014 to 2017 and box office gold, even though, as a critic, I wish more of those films could be more like 鈥淓ighth Grade鈥 and less like 鈥淥cean鈥檚 8鈥 (or, while I鈥檓 at it, the scabrous, smart-alecky, overrated 鈥淭he Favourite,鈥 not my favorite).聽
When 鈥淲on鈥檛 You Be My Neighbor?,鈥 Morgan Neville鈥檚 invaluable documentary about Fred Rogers, came out, I kept hearing people say, 鈥淭his is the kind of movie we need right now.鈥 Judging from its unexpectedly phenomenal success, I suspect what is going on is that audiences are craving movies that are feel-good in ways that don鈥檛 devalue one鈥檚 intelligence. There is more than nostalgia at work here. It has more to do with an authenticity of feeling and a sense that you can be a superhero without ever wearing a cape. A cardigan sweater will do just fine.
And now for my 10 best list, ranked in roughly descending order:
At Eternity鈥檚 Gate: I wasn鈥檛 exactly craving yet another movie about Vincent van Gogh, but director Julian Schnabel, himself a renowned artist, delivers one of the most powerful renderings of the creative act and its ravages that I鈥檝e ever seen, topped by a career-best performance from Willem Dafoe.
What Will People Say: Iram Haq鈥檚 ferocious drama is about a 16-year-old girl (the extraordinary Maria Mozhdah) living with her tight-knit immigrant Pakistani family in Norway until her Westernized ways impel her father to remove her to Pakistan. It鈥檚 one of the strongest movies ever made about the cultural and generational divide within immigrant communities.聽
Amazing Grace: Finally finished after years of legal wrangling, this documentary of Aretha Franklin鈥檚 1972 gospel concert at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles 鈥 the basis of her mega-selling record album 鈥 is an ecstatic musical feast. It will reopen in early 2019.
Burning: Korean director Lee Chang-dong鈥檚 allusive, creepy, melancholy mystery movie 鈥 it鈥檚 really a movie about the mystery of character 鈥 stayed with me in the same way that Alfred Hitchcock鈥檚 鈥淰ertigo鈥 does.
Paddington 2: This is a transcendentally cheerful movie about the marmalade-loving bear, complete with a scrumptious roster of human actors headed by the deliciously nasty Hugh Grant. He looks as if he鈥檚 having the time of his life. So will audiences.
A Quiet Place: Director John Krasinski co-stars with Emily Blunt in this film about aliens that hunt by sound and a family under siege from both inside and out. It鈥檚 one of the most beautifully crafted and acted horror films I鈥檝e ever seen.
Can You Ever Forgive Me?: Who says a leopard can鈥檛 change her spots? Melissa McCarthy plays Lee Israel, a real-life, down-on-her-luck author who becomes an expert forger, and she extends her powerhouse comic persona into darker and sadder realms than perhaps even she might ever have imagined she could inhabit.
Leave No Trace: Debra Granik鈥檚 incisive drama about a homeless veteran (Ben Foster) and his adoring 13-year-old daughter (the sensational newcomer Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie) does justice to the vast complexity of its characters鈥 lives.
The Death of Stalin: Director and co-writer Armando Iannucci鈥檚 riotous, fanatically intelligent political farce takes place in the immediate aftermath of the Soviet dictator鈥檚 demise, but don鈥檛 let that fool you. It also rings many a bell today.
Monrovia, Indiana: Our greatest documentarian, Frederick Wiseman, blessedly free of blinders and bias, offers up a meditative, richly observed portrait of small-town rural America. 聽
Other worthy films, besides those mentioned favorably in my intro, are 鈥淚sle of Dogs,鈥 鈥淭he Guilty,鈥 鈥淭he Ballad of Buster Scruggs,鈥 鈥淐old War鈥 (at least the first half), 鈥淎 Star is Born鈥 (ditto), 鈥淟ean on Pete,鈥 鈥淭hey鈥檒l Love Me When I鈥檓 Dead,鈥 鈥淭he Other Side of the Wind,鈥 鈥淭he Insult,鈥 鈥淪hirkers,鈥 鈥淓n el S茅ptimo D铆a,鈥 鈥淛uliet, Naked,鈥 鈥淥n Chesil Beach,鈥 鈥淪cience Fair,鈥 鈥淔ree Solo,鈥 鈥淭he Guardians,鈥 and, for Maggie Gyllenhaal鈥檚 performance, 鈥淭he Kindergarten Teacher.鈥