Movies

Best films of 2019 so far


The Favourite

A New Year’s Day release date in the UK for Yorgos Lanthimos’s period romp kicked the year off in fine style; Olivia Colman’s Oscar win two months later was the crowning glory.

What we said: “A reminder that the idea of royalty as polite and picturesquely sentimental is something that came in with Queen Victoria: The Favourite is more punk than that. It’s a rousingly nasty, bleary, hungover punchup.” Read the full review

An Impossible Love

A daughter’s life is shaped by her father’s arrogance and her mother’s humility in Catherine Corsini’s delicate drama.

What we said: “A mother-daughter story with the erotic intensity of a love story and the pathos of a coming-of-ager – though darker, messier and more unresolved than is traditional.” Read the full review

Colette

Keira Knightley and Dominic West in Colette.



Invigorating and sexy … Keira Knightley and Dominic West in Colette. Photograph: Lifestyle pictures/Alamy Stock Photo/Alamy Stock Photo

Keira Knightley and Dominic West have a riot in this gender-bending and surprisingly funny story of the author and the husband who tried to steal her glory – as well as her girlfriend.

What we said: “A Star Is Born for the belle époque: an early-years biopic of French literary phenomenon Colette that is invigorating, mercenary and sexy.” Read the full review

Monsters and Men

Reinaldo Marcus Green’s tough drama follows the fortunes of three young African American men who find their loyalties divided and their futures in peril.

What we said: “There is humanity and complexity in this welcome movie, as well as muscular power and unreconciled anger.” Read the full review

Hale County This Morning, This Evening

Executive-produced by Laura Poitras, this documentary by RaMell Ross is a revelatory study of African American lives.

What we said: “It feels as if Ross has created a sustained kind of euphoria, a 76-minute epiphany of love for his community.” Read the full review

Destroyer

Raw … Nicole Kidman in Destroyer.



Horribly compelling … Nicole Kidman in Destroyer. Photograph: Sabrina Lantos/Allstar/Lionsgate

Nicole Kidman alters her appearance – and leaves her comfort zone – considerably for this gritty, twisty crime drama about an LA detective brutalised by an undercover mission.

What we said: “Kidman’s performance is superb: smart, committed, utterly absorbing. There is a horribly compelling contrast between Erin’s present state and her fresh-faced appearance in flashback. Kidman brings something particularly disquieting to the role, turning into a bleached, gaunt mask with eye sockets raw and red, possibly from long-dried tears.” Read the full review

Vice

Adam McKay follows The Big Short with a larky quasi-biopic of former VP Dick Cheney strewn with red herrings, ripe cameos and risky politics.

What we said: “A big, enjoyable, intelligent central performance in which Christian Bale has the sense to do more with less.” Read the full review

Burning

Lee Chang-dong’s Cannes hit is a superbly shot mystery thriller about obsessive love, taken from a short story by Haruki Murakami.

What we said: “A psychological drama set in the modern consumerist Korea of the callous Gangnam-style rich and poor young people who often go invisibly to ground, pursued by credit-card debt.” Read the full review

Can You Ever Forgive Me?

Melissa McCarthy and Richard E Grant.



Authentic … Melissa McCarthy and Richard E Grant. Photograph: Mary Cybulski/AP

Melissa McCarthy and Richard E Grant excel as a belligerent literary memorabilia forger and her waspish sidekick in this brilliant black comedy.

What we said: “There is something very authentic in some of this film’s incidental details. Lee grabs her TV, turns it on so it’s showing fuzzy white noise and then flips it on its back so she can use it as a lightbox to trace Noël Coward’s signature on one of her phoney typewritten screeds. That has the clumsy absurdity of real life.” Read the full review

All Is True

Kenneth Branagh is a late-stage Shakespeare and Judi Dench his long-suffering wife in Ben Elton’s witty, melancholic study of regret and homecoming.

What we said: “I liked the long scenes of winter drear, as William and Anne huddle together in a corner of a dark room, flickeringly lit by firelight like a cave.” Read the full review

América

A 93-year-old Mexican woman is the startled star of this irresistible documentary about her relationship with three doting grandsons.

What we said: “The film has real artistry in the way it is put together. It has the potency of a sympathetically fabricated kind of realist fiction, a guided-reality effect that is completely absorbing. The coda leaves you with an irresistibly sweet sadness.” Read the full review

If Beale Street Could Talk

Barry Jenkins’s follow-up to Moonlight is a lush and highly emotional adaptation of the James Baldwin novel about childhood love and police brutality in 1970s New York.

What we said: “Here is a film almost woozy with its own beauty and dignity, a film going transcendently high in the face of a racist world going low. It is a tribute of quiet passion extended to those lives fractured by injustice, and seems to serenely offer up their hard-won heroism to ward off bigotry’s corrosive evil.” Read the full review

The Lego Movie 2

The sequel to the wildly acclaimed first Lego film offers a sophisticated and nuanced adventure for the micro heroes.

What we said: “There’s hilarious voice-work artistry, ceaselessly inventive pop-culture riffs, eyeball-popping graphics and a 107-minute nonstop gag-storm of a screenplay from Phil Lord and Christopher Miller.” Read the full review

Capernaum

Passion and compassion … Capernaum.



Passion and compassion … Capernaum. Photograph: Lifestyle pictures/Alamy Stock Photo/Alamy Stock Photo

Nadine Labaki’s powerful drama tell the story of a Beirut child who sues his parents for giving birth to him then ends up on the street caring for a stranger’s baby.

What we said: “There is passion and compassion here, and Labaki’s film brings home what poverty and desperation mean, and what love and humanity mean.” Read the full review

Hannah

Charlotte Rampling brings an intelligent intensity to the role of a woman whose ageing husband has been jailed in this near-wordless drama.

What we said: “The film itself has what you could call Resting Charlotte Rampling Face: austerely intelligent, unsmilingly beautiful, intimidating, cold in a way that speaks of sadness protectively walled up in dignity and courtesy. It is an expression that could too easily be mistaken for simple contempt or self-disgust.” Read the full review

Border

Transgression and taboo … Border.



Transgression and taboo … Border. Photograph: Henrik Petit/Meta Spark and Kärnfilm

Ali Abbasi’s dark drama focuses on transgression and taboo as two troubled people living on the edge of society develop a strange friendship.

What we said: “It’s a satirical reflection on the minority experience, perhaps also inspired by the director’s own feelings about being an Iranian who has studied and now lives and works in Denmark.” Read the full review

Everybody Knows

Iranian director Asghar Farhadi casts husband-and-wife Javier Bardem and Penélope Cruz as a couple picking at an unhealed wound.

What we said: “This is a movie about a devastating external blow to a family, delivered with almost supernatural accuracy, a blow that exposes all sorts of cracks and weaknesses and fault-lines, and does so with such pitiless efficiency that it is almost as if these secrets and lies are a kind of sin, which has called forth an inevitable punishment. It is an idea to which Farhadi has been drawn before: the unburied secret, the unhealed wound, the imminent return of the repressed.” Read the full review

The Kindergarten Teacher

Maggie Gyllenhaal excels as a teacher and wannabe poet who exploits a child prodigy in this gripping psychological drama.

What we said: “It is a story of horribly intimate transgression, and also a deadpan provocation, somewhere between realism and fantasy satire. It reminded me of Jonathan Glazer’s 2004 drama Birth, which found a similar way to test audience expectations of permissible behaviour.” Read the full review

Girl

Victor Polster in Girl.



Sustained intensity … Victor Polster in Girl. Photograph: Menuet

Victor Polster is outstanding as a 15-year-old trans girl auditioning for ballet school in Lukas Dhont’s intense, emotional drama.

What we said: “Opinions may divide about the climax of the film, whether it creates an unnecessarily problematised narrative, despite the note of realist optimism on which it finishes. The sheer sustained intensity of the drama and performances carry it through.” Read the full review

Us

Jordan Peele’s follow-up to Get Out is a superb doppelganger chiller that skewers the American dream.

What we said: “Though this doesn’t quite have the same lethal narrative discipline of Peele’s debut masterpiece Get Out, with its drum-tight clarity and control, what it certainly does have is a magnificent lead performance from Nyong’o, who brings to it a basilisk stare of horror.” Read the full review

Pet Sematary

Previously filmed in 1989, this remake of the creepy Stephen King novel with Jason Clarke and John Lithgow is an impressively nasty scare story.

What we said: “The story keeps efficiently turning the screw, and the misspelling itself has a power of its own. It conveys an oppressive state of wrongness: it is the non-cemetery where the dead refuse to accept their status. The final image is an exhilaratingly nauseous lurch.” Read the full review

Happy As Lazzaro

Alice Rohrwacher’s enigmatic drama is an unsettling and moving satire about the unquestioning toil of peasants’ lives.

What we said: “Happy As Lazzaro is a weightless enigma, an unfathomable promise of happiness, gently tugging you upwards, like a balloon on the end of a string.” Read the full review

The Sisters Brothers

Jacques Audiard’s English-language debut is an all-American delight, starring Joaquin Phoenix and John C Reilly perfect as sad, squabbling siblings.

What we said: “This is a portrait of male sadness and claustrophobic and empty male ambition: the title is not merely jokey; these are men without women who have become emotionally stagnant and terribly lonely.” Read the full review

Dragged Across Concrete

Gritty thriller … Vince Vaughn and Mel Gibson in Dragged Across Concrete.



Gritty thriller … Vince Vaughn and Mel Gibson in Dragged Across Concrete. Photograph: David Bukach

Mel Gibson and Vince Vaughn are a pair of out-of-control cops careering towards in oblivion in S Craig Zahler’s often brilliant crime flick.

What we said: “Dragged Across Concrete doesn’t drag. This is a long film, but there is something so horribly compelling about its unhurried slouch towards the precipice.” Read the full review

Avengers: Endgame

The climactic movie in the Avengers series is an irresistible blend of action and comedy, guaranteeing a sugar rush of delirious enjoyment.

What we said: “Avengers: Endgame is entirely preposterous and, yes, the central plot device here does not deliver the shock of the new. But the sheer enjoyment and fun, the pure exotic spectacle, are irresistible, as is its insouciant way of combining the serious and the comic. Without the comedy, the drama would not be palatable.” Read the full review

Ash Is Purest White

Tao Zhao stars in Ash is Purest White.



Gripping parable … Tao Zhao stars in Ash is Purest White. Photograph: Xstream Pictures

Jia Zhangke’s latest offering is a frequently glorious drama about how one woman’s journey from self-sacrificial moll to avenging criminal echoes her country’s embrace of capitalism.

What we said: “A gripping parable for the vanity of human wishes, and an impassioned portrait of national malaise.” Read the full review

Eighth Grade

An affecting lead performance anchors this outstanding debut from comic Bo Burnham about a vulnerable young teen.

What we said: “There is something anaesthetised or at least tonally ambiguous in this gripping drama about a teenage girl in the US about to enter high school. Elsie Fisher is absolutely outstanding in the role of Kayla Day, like an undiscovered Fanning sister: her smart, observant performance gives the audience instant access to her vulnerabilities, hurt feelings and quiet determination.” Read the full review

Irene’s Ghost

Iain Cunningham’s profound documentary about the strange fate of his late mother.

What we said: “I won’t say exactly what happened to her, but the tragedy of it is that today she’d have had every chance of recovery. The film is a love letter to Irene, yet the emotional balance finally tips to Cunningham’s dad – ending with an unexpectedly tender moment between the two men.” Read the full review

Long Shot

Shenanigans … Seth Rogen and Charlize Theron in Long Shot.



Shenanigans … Seth Rogen and Charlize Theron in Long Shot. Photograph: Murray Close/AP

Charlize Theron’s restrained politician falls for Seth Rogen’s outlandish journalist in a crowdpleasing comedy.

What we said: “It’s Rogen’s wheelhouse, and he’s dependably hilarious whether exploding into a bombastic yet awkward speech, getting up to stoner shenanigans, or pratfalling down a flight of stairs. What’s pleasantly surprising is how well he’s matched by Theron.” Read the full review

High Life

Robert Pattinson’s astronaut on an odyssey to a distant black hole faces parenting challenges – and existential panic – in Claire Denis’s space drama.

What we said: “As with so many of Denis’s films, the point is to contrive an overwhelmingly powerful mood and moment, an almost physiological sensation, this one incubated in the vast, cold reaches of space. It throbbed and itched with me long after the film was over.” Read the full review

Madeline’s Madeline

Molly Parker plays a theatre director throwing the spotlight on her young star’s mental-health issues in this intense drama.

What we said: “The movie’s tone and its narrative arc are intriguingly elusive. At various times, it resembles Roman Polanski’s Repulsion, Charlie Kaufman’s Synecdoche, New York and Alan Parker’s Fame. It’s an immersive and exotic experience.” Read the full review

Amazing Grace

Long-suppressed Aretha Franklin documentary, shot by Sydney Pollack during recording sessions in a Los Angeles church.

What we said: “I felt wrung out at the end of this film. How incredible must it have been for those who were there in person.” Read the full review

Birds of Passage

Ciro Guerra-directed drama about marijuana trafficking in Colombia and the culture of the indigenous people involved.

What we said: “There is also an extraordinary scene depicting a ‘second wake’ in Aníbal’s property: a ceremony involving the exhumation of a dead body in a coffin and the solemn removal of body parts while alcohol is sprayed around like holy water. Are these ceremonies accurately reported? I don’t know. But the film shows cultural expressions being intensified and warped by the new energies of the drug trade.” Read the full review

Bacurau

Fever dream … Bacurau.



Fever dream … Bacurau. Photograph: Photo Cinemascópio

A horror-style western about a Brazilian outback town under siege from a mysterious threat.

What we said: “It is a really strange film, beginning in a kind of ethno-anthropology and documentary style, becoming a poisoned-herd parable or fever dream and then a Jacobean-style bloodbath. It is an utterly distinctive film-making, executed with ruthless clarity and force.” Read the full review

Aladdin

Guy Ritchie’s adaptation was widely anticipated to be awful; in fact it came out lively, colourful and funny, with only judicious tweaks to the original.

What we said: “It has felt like Will Smith’s mojo really is trapped inside a lamp, after what seems like a decade of miserable and self-important ‘serious’ roles which reached their nadir with After Earth and Collateral Beauty. Smith seizes his chance to let it out again and do what he does best. His Genie is less cartoonishly manic than Williams’s; more human, you could say. But he’s still the life of the party: part-Queer Eye makeover guru, part-Siri in human form, part-romcom best buddy – with perhaps a touch of Hitch, the professional matchmaker Smith played in 2005.” Read the full review

Booksmart

Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut is a funny, filthy, female-fronted competitor to Superbad that boasts its own distinctive style.

What we said: “Booksmart is inclusive and progressive without feeling forced and announces Wilde, an actor who hasn’t always found her groove on screen, as a major director. Her film reaches the audience-friendly highs of a studio comedy while retaining an indie sensibility, both in its visuals and its tone, and coupled with the script’s rooted awareness of the moment we’re now in, it feels fresh, a film that will be rewatched and quoted, held on a pedestal by those who understand its necessity.” Read the full review

John McEnroe: In the Realm of Perfection

The tempestuous tennis star wages war against the world in documentary-maker Julien Faraut’s philosophical portrait.

What we said: “McEnroe makes a fascinating focal point. Faraut seeks to elevate him as a singularly tortured creative, an auteur in sports socks. His face set in that teenage De Niro scowl, he offers no celebration, not even a fist pump; coaches will recoil at his tendency to stop after each shot, as if anticipating the worst. There are electrifying moments where he stares down the lens mid-match with that signature mix of aggression and derision.” Read the full review

Sunset

Son of Saul director László Nemes deftly conjures the death throes of the Austro-Hungarian empire in an atmospheric mystery drama.

What we said: “It’s a very mysterious and even bizarre film in many ways, shot in what is becoming Nemes’ signature style: long takes, a persistent closeup on the lead character’s face, and a shallow focus that allows the surrounding reality to intrude only intermittently. The dialogue is often spoken in a subdued murmur, as if each speaker is in possession of a secret.” Read the full review

Freedom Fields

Naziha Arebi’s visually arresting documentary focuses on the courage of the country’s fledgling national women’s football team.

What we said: “Where Hollywood opted for facile gender-flipping in its recent Ocean’s 11 remake, it could have been more adventurous in search of meaningful Time’s Up-era material. This superbly made, stirring documentary introduces us to what you might call Fadwa’s XI – the fledgling Libyan women’s football team. And there’s something of the heist about the clandestine training sessions they are forced to organise in the face of Islamists trying to brandish the red card.” Read the full review



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