Argentinian director Lucrecia Martel’s first film in a decade, an enigmatic drama about an 18th-century Spanish colonial official whiling away his life on the imperial frontier. Yep, being a film buff in 2018 is a full-time gig. A heartfelt Mexican drama leads our critics’ pick of the top films released in America this year – adding to tales about off-grid survival, toxic relationships, confused schoolkids and game-changing superheroesMexican director Alfonso Cuarón digs deep into his memories growing up in 1970s Mexico city in a wonderfully absorbing family chronicle. Brilliantly observed IVF comedy by The Savages’ Tamara Jenkins, with Paul Giamatti and Kathryn Hahn as the fortysomething New Yorkers doing their utmost to become parents. Intelligent, elegant study of a divorced single woman (Juliette Binoche) in midlife emotional crisis, directed by Claire Denis and inspired by Roland Barthes. Cole’s go-for-broke performance as this out-of-control man—all crazy-eyed desolation and battering-ram physicality—is the stuff that turns actors into stars.Indie directors Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead’s first two features, 2012’s A superior slice of children’s entertainment, Paul King’s sequel to 2015’s Leon Vitali delivered a star-making turn as Lord Bullingdon in Stanley Kubrick’s 1975 period-piece A bountiful anthology of Western tales from Joel and Ethan Coen, Before passing away in 2016 at the age of 76, Iranian master Abbas Kiarostami completed work on this, his final film, an experimental documentary that serves as a melancholy meditation on mortality and the moving image. Japanese auteur Hirokazu Kore-eda’s latest study of unlikely family units, in the shape of a clan of petty criminals who look after a little girl who has seemingly been abandoned on the streets. Their concurrent efforts to find a way forward (romantically and otherwise) unfold with fractured grace and beauty, as Harbaugh plumbs profound depths via evocative compositional framing and a seductive editorial design. Sprawdź najlepsze nowości filmowe w kinach według użytkowników Filmwebu. This insane real-life scenario is brought to bleakly satiric life by Yorgos Lanthimos’s fascination with hermetically sealed social units is again explored in Tom Cruise risks life and limb—literally, in many instances—for his sixth go-round as Ethan Hunt in In 1917, the sheriff of Bisbee, Arizona—a remote mountain-nestled enclave then known for its wealth of copper—rounded up the town’s striking German and Mexican miners and, with the aid of a 2,000-man posse, took them out to the desert and left them there, never to be seen or thought about again. Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma Composite: Netflix. Rupert Everett stars and makes an impressive directorial debut. Quietly impressive drama from Valeska Grisebach about a group of German workers building a power station in rural Bulgaria who stoke tensions with local villagers.
Massively successful Marvel superhero epic, with Chadwick Boseman playing the African monarch whose hidden kingdom is threatened by outsiders craving power-bestowing minerals. The Best Movies of 2018. The second masterwork in a row from Leviathan director Andrey Zvyagintsev, a bleak, unnerving tale of a toxic disintegrating marriage and a child that disappears from home. Wes Anderson’s detailed, loving homage to Japanese pop culture, about a boy who goes looking for his dog after all canines have been exiled to a small island. Awards-friendly period drama with Saoirse Ronan as the 16th-century monarch in a life-and-death struggle with her cousin Elizabeth I (Margot Robbie). Coming out at an exponential clip! You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io Low-key rodeo drama from director Chloé Zhao, using non-professional actors and real-life locations to give her film an unmistakable atmosphere of authenticity.