January 04, 2018 03:00 AM
UPDATED 2 MINUTES AGO
CALL ME BY YOUR NAME. 3 stars. Handsome production set in 1983 Italy, where a professor (Michael Stuhlbarg) is hosting a handsome student (Armie Hammer) who becomes involved with the professor's son (Timothee Chalamet). Sensitively told, coming-of-age story that is well-acted by Chalamet and Hammer. Written by James Ivory, it recalls some of the quintessential Merchant Ivory movies of the 1990s, though it's directed by Luca Guadagnino. 2 hrs. 11 R (sex) – Gary Thompson
COCO. 3 stars. In Mexico a fatherless boy crosses into the colorful land of the dead to learn more about his family, and to pursue his forbidden dream of being a musician. Steeped in the customs and rituals of the Day of the Dead celebration, which provide Pixar animators an opportunity to work with a new range of colors and visual ideas. The music is first-rate as well, even if the story sometimes sputters. Not in a class with Pixar's best animation, but way better than Cars 3. Featuring the voice of Benjamin Bratt. 1 hr. 40 PG – Gary Thompson
DARKEST HOUR. 3 stars. Gary Oldman has great fun as Winston Churchill in "Darkest Hour," and it's great fun to watch him play Britain's wartime prime minister, contending with political opposition while rallying his people and his king (Ben Mendelsohn) to the cause of opposing Germany, in the face of the dire events at Dunkirk. Joe Wright's showboating direction is a match for the heightened pitch of the performances, which include good work by Stephen Dillane, Kristen Scott Thomas and Lily James. 2 hrs. 5 PG-13 (language) – Gary Thompson
THE DISASTER ARTIST. 3 stars. Funny, factual account of the making of 2003's The Room, reputed to be the worst movie ever made. James Franco stars as Tommy WIseau, the movie's mysterious, incompetent but passionate director/star, who wrote, financed and distributed his own movie, now a fixture on the midnight screening circuit. Stick around through the end credits, when the scenes from the two movies are shown back to back. WIth Dave Franco, Ari Graynor, Seth Rogen. 1 hr. 44. R (language) – Gary Thompson
DOWNSIZING. 2.5 stars. At a time when most movies have a deficit of good ideas, Alexander Payne's imaginative new sci-fi comedy has a surplus of them. Matt Damon and Kristen Wiig are a Midwestern couple who shrink down to six inches to inhabit a tiny community where their meager savings make them rich. Some clever scenes, and rich supporting roles for Christoph Waltz and Hong Chau, but the movies multiple commentaries on inequality, materialism, immigration, and environmentalism make for a crowded narrative. 2 hrs. 15 PG-13 (language) – Gary Thompson
THE FLORIDA PROJECT. 3 stars. Engaging slice-of-life look at residents of an Orlando motel, the adults living paycheck-to-paycheck, their free-range kids having an improbably wonderful time on the ragged fringe of the Magic Kingdom. Written and directed by Sean Baker. With Willem Dafoe, Brooklyn Prince. 1 hr. 45. R (language) – Gary Thompson
I, TONYA. 3 stars. Margot Robbie produces and stars in this biography, told with elements of black comedy, of notorious figure skater Tonya Harding (Robbie), implicated in the conspiracy to injure competitive rival Nancy Kerrigan. The movie tells you things you probably didn't know about the scandal, and manages to build empathy for Harding, who saw skating as a refuge form a life of poverty and abuse. Allison Janney and Sebastian Stan are Harding's abusive mother and husband, Bobby Canavale a cynical tabloid TV reporter. 1 hr. 59 R (violence) – Gary Thompson
JUMANJI: WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE. 3 stars. A complete reboot of the 1995 original. The magical board game is now a magical video game, where archetypal teens (jock, nerd, popular girl) find themselves inhabiting in-game avatars that are the opposite of the real-world personalities. The hulking football player becomes pint-sized Kevin Hart, the nerd becomes Dwayne Johnson, the pretty girl becomes Jack Black, and the actors have more fun that you might expect playing teens stuck . Co-starring Karen Gillen and Nick Jonas. Directed by Jake Kasdan. 2 hrs. 2 PG-13 (language) – Gary Thompson
JUSTICE LEAGUE. 2 stars. This dour, downbeat corner of the DC Universe finds Batman (Ben Affleck) and Wonder Woman (Gail Gadot) recruiting superheroes Aquaman (Jason Momoa), Flash (Ezra Miller) and Cyborg (Ray Fisher) to combat an invading alien army and an interstellar bad guy (Ciaran Hinds). Directed with a heavy hand by Zack Snyder. With Amy Adams, Diane Lane. 1 hr. 59 PG-13 (violence) – Gary Thompson
LADY BIRD. 4 stars. Funny, touching coming-of-age story about a Sacramento high school senior (Saoirse Ronan) who quarrels with her mother (Laurie Metcalf) about her determination to leave California for a more sophisticated life at an Eastern college. Written and directed with great affection, wisdom and skill by Greta Gerwig. With Tracy Letts, Lucas Hedges, Beanie Feldstein. 1 hr. 33 R (language, sexuality) – Gary Thompson
THE SHAPE OF WATER. 3 stars. Adult fable from Guillermo del Toro, set Cold War Baltimore in 1962, about a lonely woman (Sally Hawkins) working on the cleaning staff in a government lab who falls in love for the amphibious creature (Doug Jones) brought there for study. Richard Jenkins and Olivia Spenser have charming roles as the woman's friends and co-conspirator in a plot to save the creature. Michael Shannon – surprise – is the heavy. Full of strange ideas and twists, unified by first-rate visual presentation that somehow maintains the movie's tone of enchantment. 2 hrs. 5 R (nudity) – Gary Thompson
STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI. 3 stars. Rian Johnson's competent, crowd-pleasing addition to the franchise, expanding on J.J. Abrams's reboot. Rey (Daisy Ridley) tries to recruit Luke (Mark Hamill) to join the beleaguered resistance led by his sister Leia (Carrie Fisher), threatened by Kylo Ren (Adam Driver). A blend of the old and the new – Finn (John Boyega) is off on a renegade mission of his own, introducing new characters like Rose (Kelly Marie Tran). 2 hrs. 35 PG-13 (violence) – Gary Thompson
THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING MISSOURI. 3.5 stars. From writer-director Martin McDonagh, a timely if scabrous story about a small-town woman (Frances McDormand) taunting the cops (Woody Harrelson, Sam Rockwell) who have failed to solve her daughter's murder. Contains the brutal violence, savage humor and surprising moments of warmth that comprise McDonagh's unique voice, and good performances as well – from McDormand and Rockwell in difficult and complex roles, playing difficult and complex people. With Peter Dinklage, Lucas Hedges and John Hawkes. 1 hr. 55 R (violence, language) – Gary Thompson
WONDER. 2.5 stars. Sturdy if sometimes sappy adaptation of the R.J. Palacio YA novel about a boy (Jacom Tremblay) with facial deformities enduring his first days at middle school. Cast includes Julia Roberts, Owen Wilson and Mandy Patinkin. 1 hr. 43 PG – Gary Thompson