If 2018 will be remembered for anything, it will be for well-executed blockbusters: From “Black Panther” and “Crazy Rich Asians” to “Mission: Impossible – Fallout” and “Halloween,” audiences were treated to exceptionally smart, technically proficient, visually rich exercises in action, romance, horror and other genres whose mass appeal usually makes them immune to questions of sophistication and aesthetic taste.
A top-10 list could easily include all those titles, with “Bohemian Rhapsody” and “A Star is Born” thrown in for good measure, not to mention pure pleasure. Similarly, in a year when four documentaries shattered the $10 million dollar ceiling, one could create a top 10 of nonfiction films alone: To “RBG,” “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?,” “Three Identical Strangers” and “Free Solo,” just add “Dark Money,” “Shirkers,” “Minding the Gap,” “Bisbee ’17,” “Saving Brinton” and “American Animals,” and boom — you have some of the very best movies of the year.
And the little indies that could — there were so many to love: winsome comedies “Juliet, Naked,” “Hearts Beat Loud” and “Private Life”; psychological drama “Borg vs. McEnroe”; revisionist Westerns “Damsel” and “The Sisters Brothers”; “The Death of Stalin” and “Cold War,” one a flawlessly executed Soviet-era satire, the other a flawlessly executed Soviet-era love story.
1. “Roma”
Alfonso Cuarón’s portrait of his youth in 1970s Mexico City manages to be intimate and epic, minutely observed and monumental, tender and exacting. Focusing on the nanny who cared for him and his family during his parents’ divorce, this exquisitely filmed chronicle — photographed in silvery black and white — feels less like storytelling than poetry, shot through with shrewd social observation that never swamps the film’s deep emotional core.