• “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald”
Starring: Eddie Redmayne, Katherine Waterston, Dan Fogler, Jude Law, Johnny Depp.
Details about this Harry Potter prequel, which takes place a year after the action of “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” have been trickling out slowly, generating much excitement among the franchise’s eager fans. Nagini the snake (Claudia Kim) used to be a woman? Dumbledore (Law) as a young man was — there’s no other word for it — hawt? But in the buildup to this 10th installment of the cinematic saga, there has also been controversy. That has to do with the casting of Johnny Depp, who was accused of abuse by his ex-wife, Amber Heard, as the film’s titular villain. (In the new film, Redmayne’s Newt Scamander switches from the pursuit of critters to doing battle with Depp’s Voldemort-like wizard.) If nothing else, the blurring of real life and fiction may complicate a film that already promises to be darker than the “Fantastic Beasts” of 2016. J.K. Rowling’s Potter universe has always been about power and its abuses, but this new chapter, although set in the 1920s, seems likely to resonate even more strongly in today’s world. (Nov. 16, PG-13)
• “Green Book”
Starring: Mahershala Ali, Viggo Mortensen, Linda Cardellini.
Two 2017 Oscar nominees — Mortensen for “Captain Fantastic” and Ali, who won for “Moonlight” — team up in this two-hander, which tells the true story of the unlikely friendship between the black classical pianist — and Catholic University graduate — Don Shirley (Ali) and his Italian-American chauffeur, Tony Lip (Mortensen). Taking place on Shirley’s concert tour during the racially charged 1960s, the film, which won the People’s Choice Award at the recent Toronto Film Festival, takes its name from a guidebook published to aid African-American travelers navigating the Jim Crow South. As racial tensions rise in the Trump era, a period film like this — one that’s about finding common ground — feels, ironically, like a form of escapism. (Nov. 21, PG-13)
• “If Beale Street Could Talk”
Starring: Stephan James, KiKi Layne, Regina King, Brian Tyree Henry, Finn Wittrock.
Oscar winner Barry Jenkins, the writer and director of “Moonlight,” turns his hand to an adaptation of James Baldwin’s 1974 novel about a young man in New York City who is falsely accused of rape. James, last seen as Olympic runner Jesse Owens in “Race,” plays the imprisoned Fonny, with newcomer Layne as his pregnant fiancee, Tish, who struggles to prove him innocent. Although also a love story, the film’s echoes of today’s systemic racism are all too unmistakable. (Dec. TBD, R)
• “Divide and Conquer: The Story of Roger Ailes”
Starring: Roger Ailes, Glenn Beck, Alisyn Camerota.
The rise and fall of Roger Ailes, the late CEO of Fox News who was brought down by a sex scandal, is the stuff of high drama. In fact, a film based on that true story is now in the works, starring John Lithgow as Ailes and Charlize Theron and Nicole Kidman as on-air personalities Megyn Kelly and Gretchen Carlson, who brought allegations of harassment against him. While we wait for that one to get made, here’s a new documentary to tide us over: Produced by Alex Gibney and directed by Alexis Bloom, “Divide and Conquer” follows the career of the Machiavellian media consultant and political kingmaker with unsettling urgency, making for a great #MeToo primer. (Dec. 7, not yet rated)