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Movie guide: 'Halloween,' 'Beautiful Boy,' 'The Oath' opening this weekend

Movies in theaters the week of Oct. 19

Four stars: superior. Three stars: good. Two stars: average. One star: poor. D (drug use), L (language), N (nudity), S (sexual situations, references), V (violence). Ratings by Film Critic Dann Gire, unless otherwise noted.

New this week

“Beautiful Boy” — Timothée Chalamet's profound performance as a young man grappling with addiction helps elevate this fact-based melodrama, a harrowing and frustrating tale of how a child of privilege became hostage to drugs. Steve Carell, however, is not as convincing as his desperate dad. Reviewed by Ann Hornaday, Washington Post. (R) D, L, S. 112 minutes.

“Brampton's Own” — A failed minor league baseball player returns to his hometown and encounters into his ex. (NR) 90 minutes. Not reviewed.

“Change in the Air” — A mysterious young woman (former Highland Park resident Rachel Brosnahan) shakes up a small town. (PG) 94 minutes. Not reviewed.

“Free Solo” — The often breathtaking adventure documentary chronicles the exploits of champion climber Alex Honnold, who sets out to be the first person ever to solo climb El Capitan, a sheer, 3,000-foot-high rock face in Yosemite National Park. And he plans to do it without a harness. Reviewed by Ann Hornaday, Washington Post. (PG-13) L. 100 minutes.   ½

“Halloween” — Forty years after John Carpenter's seminal horror tale “Halloween” scared audiences in 1978, Jamie Lee Curtis reprises her role as the sole surviving babysitter of crazed killer Michael Myers' original massacre. Michael is once again on the loose, and Laurie must protect her daughter and granddaughter. (R) D, L, N, V. 109 minutes.

“High Voltage” — A band's lead singer develops strange powers after she is struck by lightning, killed and revived. (R) L, N, S, V. 91 minutes. Not reviewed.

“Nigerian Prince” — A Nigerian-American teen, sent to Nigeria against his will, works to return to the U.S. (NR) 104 minutes. Not reviewed.

“The Oath” — Ike Barinholtz's made-for-liberals blistering political satire imagines a dystopian near future in which civilians have been enjoined to publicly declare their loyalty to a thin-skinned, conservative commander in chief. Things come to a boil — and violence — over one family's Thanksgiving dinner. Reviewed by Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post. (R) D, L, V. 93 minutes.   ½

Picks

“Crazy Rich Asians” — An economics professor from China (Henry Golding) brings his girlfriend (Constance Wu) to Singapore for a friend's wedding and to meet his parents. She's shocked to find out they're multimillionaires. The hotly anticipated rom-com, featuring an all-Asian cast, does not disappoint. Reviewed by Ann Hornaday, Washington Post. (PG-13) L. 121 minutes.  

“First Man”The sounds of silence make lots of noise in director Damien Chazelle's surprising, anti-epic, historical drama “First Man,” a tightly coiled study of the first human to set foot on the moon. Ryan Gosling gives an understated performance as quiet, stoic astronaut Neil Armstrong. With Claire Foy and Jason Clarke. (PG-13) L. 141 minutes.    ½

“The Hate U Give” — After witnessing the shooting death of her friend during a routine traffic stop, a teen (the remarkable Amandla Stenberg) is pushed and pulled in multiple directions over the course of this powerful, timely and deeply moving tale. Impeccably directed by George Tillman Jr., the drama defies expectation at every turn. Reviewed by Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post. (PG-13) D, L, V. 132 minutes.   

“Mission: Impossible — Fallout” — Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) and the Impossible Missions Force must recover three stolen plutonium cores that an arms dealer and a terrorist group intend to use to target the world's holiest of places. Cruise blows way past James Bond for sheer athleticism and astonishing stunts in this tightly wound thriller. (PG-13) L, V. 147 minutes.    ½

“The Nun” — This fifth installment of “The Conjuring” series tells the origin story of demon nun Valek. This time, our protagonist is Sister Irene (Taissa Farmiga), a novitiate who is dispatched by the Vatican, along with Father Burke (Demian Bichir), to a remote Romanian abbey where a young nun has just hung herself. Reviewed by Jake Coyle, Associated Press. (R) V. 96 minutes.   

“The Old Man & The Gun” — Robert Redford picked the perfect character for what he says is his last acting role — that of charming real-life bank robber and frequent prison escapee Forrest Tucker. Sissy Spacek co-stars as his love interest and Casey Affleck plays the Texas police sergeant piecing Tucker's crimes together. Reviewed by Jocelyn Noveck, Associated Press. (PG-13) L. 93 minutes.   

“The Sisters Brothers” — John C. Reilly and Joaquin Phoenix play the title brothers, accomplished hit men following a target during the heights of the Gold Rush. Jacques Audiard's Western is spiked with violence, but there's a sweetness as well. Reviewed by Ann Hornaday. (R) L, S, V. 121 minutes.   

“A Star is Born” — In his moving directing debut, actor Bradley Cooper remakes a stodgy Hollywood classic, giving it gritty, relevant new life. Cooper stars as a hard-drinking musician who discovers and falls for a young singer (a transporting Lady Gaga) whose career soars as his implodes. (R) D, L, N, S. 135 minutes.   

“22 July” — Paul Greengrass' powerful, must-see film explores several of the lives altered when right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik went on a deadly rampage in Norway in 2011, killing 77. Greengrass balances showing a mass murderer's violence without glorifying it and letting the gunman explain himself without feeding supremacist hatred. Reviewed by Mark Kennedy, Associated Press. (R) V. 144 minutes.    ½

“The Wife” — Bjorn Runge's sublimely wrought drama captures the complex and contradictory nuances that accompany long-term marriages. Glenn Close stars as the wife of a celebrated author, creating a subtle, astonishing performance worthy of an Oscar nomination. (R) L, S. 100 minutes.    ½

Passables

“Bad Times at the El Royale” — In director Drew Goddard's pulpy but artificial thriller, a motley crew of travelers (Jeff Bridges, Cynthia Erivo, Jon Hamm, Dakota Johnson, Chris Hemsworth), all with secrets in tow, meet at the rundown El Royale hotel in Lake Tahoe. While this slow-burn thriller looks terrific, the payoff is less than. Reviewed by Jake Coyle, Associated Press. (R) D, L, S, N. 140 minutes.  

“Colette” — Wash Westmoreland's handsome but too-timid period film stars Keira Knightley as author Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, who blazed a relentlessly unconventional path through Belle Epoque Paris, leaving behind a litany of affairs, scandals and dozens of books. Reviewed by Jake Coyle, Associated Press. (R) N, S. 121 minutes.   ½

“The House With a Clock in Its Walls” — As far as kid-centric comic horror goes, Eli Roth's film has everything going for it, outside of originality and cleverness. A young orphan aids his magical uncle (Jack Black) in locating a clock with the power to bring about the end of the world. Cate Blanchett is superb as the stylish sorceress Mrs. Zimmerman. (PG) 104 minutes.   ½

“Night School” — A smooth-talking salesman (Kevin Hart) seeking his GED joins a group of misfits in a class presided over by a no-nonsense teacher (Tiffany Haddish). The crude comedy has heart and an important message, but the road to knowledge here passes through bodily fluids. Reviewed by Pat Padua, Washington Post. (PG-13) D, L, S, V. 111 minutes.   ½

“Peppermint” — Jennifer Garner stars as a mom who learns how to dispatch bad guys in all sorts of gruesome and psychotically theatrical ways to avenge the murders of her husband and daughter by agents of a powerful drug boss in Pierre Morel's cliched, bloody revenge tale. Reviewed by Lindsey Bahr. (R) L, V. 102 minutes.  

“The Predator” — A mercenary (Boyd Holbrook) teams up with an evolutionary biologist (Olivia Munn) and others to battle aliens, but plot and character become collateral damage in a free-for-all of goofy jokes, blood-splattering violence, cluttered visual effects and preposterous stunts. (R) L, S, V. 107 minutes. ½

“A Simple Favor” — A fashion publicist (Blake Lively) disappears after leaving her son with a friend, a widowed parenting vlogger (Anna Kendrick), in Paul Feig's hybrid of twisty mystery and absurdist comedy. The film, however, makes a better comedy than thriller. Reviewed by Sonia Rao, Washington Post. (R) D, L, N, S, V. 116 minutes. ½

“Smallfoot” — A Yeti (voiced by Channing Tatum), raised in a community where government deceit has kept his massive fellow creatures from knowing that humans exist, befriends a “smallfoot” (James Corden) in a needlessly complicated animated tale that delivers an unexpected lesson in integrity. (PG) 109 minutes.   ½

“Venom” — Tom Hardy plays a TV investigative journalist whose body is invaded by an alien organism in a destabilizing mix of intentional and unintentional comedy that for better and worse returns the superhero movie to its natural state: camp. Reviewed by Jake Coyle, Associated Press. (PG-13) V, L. 112 minutes.

Unpreviewed

“Exes Baggage” — A musician who prefers to be alone with his music falls for a rebellious woman who fights for what she believes in. (NR) 104 minutes.

“Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween” — Slappy is back to wreak more havoc this Halloween in this sequel based on the “Goosebumps” books by R.L. Stine. Jack Black, Chris Parnell and Ken Jeong star. (PG) 90 minutes.

“Gosnell: The Trial of America's Biggest Serial Killer” — This drama follows the true story of the investigation and trial of Dr. Kermit Gosnell, who ran an unchecked abortion clinic where at least one patient died and many were injured. (PG-13) 93 minutes.

“Hell Fest” — A masked serial killer stalks a horror-themed amusement park, terrorizing patrons. (R) L, S, V. 89 minutes.

“Kinky” — An introverted surgeon begins a whirlwind romance with a handsome investor in Atlanta. (R) L, S. 93 minutes.

Foreign language

“Andhadhun” — In Hindi.

“Aravindha Sametha Veera Raghava” In Telugu.

“Badhaai Ho” In Telugu.

“Hello Guru Prema Kosame” In Telugu.

“Namaste England” — In Hindi.

“Son of Manjeet Singh” — In Punjabi.

“Sui Dhaaga” — In Hindi.

“Vada Chennai” — In Tamil.

“Ya Veremos” — In Spanish.

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