It’s that time of year again. Movie fans can feast on a wide array of offerings driven by socially relevant themes rather than the usual special effects.
This year, the awards season contenders are seriously politically-charged. Here are 11 movies you may want to make time for between epic meals and holiday shopping:
“The Danish Girl”: Fresh off an Oscar win for his transformational performance as Stephen Hawking, British actor Eddie Redmayne is playing another real life, inspirational figure — Lili Elbe — one of the first people to ever undergo successful gender reassignment surgery. This movie arrives amid renewed debate over how the trans community is represented on film, with some critics complaining that a cisgender actor was awarded the role of Elbe, instead of an actual trans performer. Director Tom Hooper has admitted to The Guardian that “in the industry at the moment there is a problem: there is a huge pool of talent of trans actors, and access to parts is limited.” Still, the award and commercial prospects for this drama appear promising. Opening November 27.
“Where to Invade Next”: He’s baaaaaack. Polarizing documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, known for his controversial works “Bowling for Columbine” and “Fahrenheit 9/11,” has returned for his first new film in six years. If you haven’t heard much buzz about this film, it may have been intentional. Moore has said he shot the film with a smaller crew than normal, in relative secrecy. “We’ve been very diligent about keeping this under cover,” Moore said in a self-released Periscope video in July. The film, which is reportedly something of a travelogue, shows Moore taking a closer look at the idiosyncrasies of American foreign policy, “We’re living in a time post 9/11 and everything that’s going on in this country, and this constant need to have to have an enemy,” Moore said in July. This should be a real conversation piece. Opening December 23.
“Spotlight”: This likely Oscar favorite is both a tribute to old-fashioned investigative journalism and a reminder of how pervasive the Catholic Church’s child molestation scandal was. An all-star cast led by Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo play the dogged Boston Globe reporters (whose investigative unit gives the film its title) that exposed the systematic cover-up of abuse in the early 2000s. Phil Saviano, a real life victim of abuse and whistleblower who is portrayed in the film, told MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell on Nov. 11, “I love the fact that this movie was so well put together. All the details are accurate. The actors are superb. It’s getting fantastic reviews. So in many ways it’s a dream come true.” It’s a bittersweet story for fans of print journalism, but it is, at the very least, a stirring portrait of the shoe leather reporting at its best. Now playing.
RELATED: Will Smith’s ‘Concussion’ could give the NFL headaches
“Truth”: The story that ultimately sidetracked CBS news anchor Dan Rather’s career, gets revisited in this drama starring Cate Blanchett and Robert Redford. The film portrays the behind-the-scenes battle over a 2004 report, which was later called into question, that suggested then-President George W. Bush had shirked his duties as a National Guardsmen. Was Rather and his team of producers at fault for pushing a story on air before it was fully verified, or were they simply the fall guys for their corporate overlords? That’s what “Truth” seeks to uncover. Redford, who is no stranger to playing iconic journalists — he played Bob Woodward famously in “All the President’s Men” — called playing Rather “tricky.” “My job was to be careful not to caricature him but to find the essence of him,” Redford told Matt Lauer on NBC’s “TODAY” in October. Now playing.









