What films will you be watching in 2018?

Another year approaches with plenty of big-screen offerings to keep you gripped, amused and entertained all the way to next Christmas.

But how should you plan your time between now and then? By following our month-by-month guide, of course. Here are our tips for the next 12 months.
You've got Aaron Sorkin's poker biopic Molly's Game starring a tough-as-nails Jessica Chastain, gritty western Hostiles with Christian Bale, and Gary Oldman doing his best Winston Churchill in Darkest Hour.

You've got Frances McDormand cussing in the hilariously profane Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep probing The Pentagon Papers in Steven Spielberg's The Post and Ridley Scott surviving last-minute reshoots to give us a Kevin Spacey-less All the Money in the World.

There's also animation in the form of Pixar's Day of the Dead-themed Coco and Aardman's prehistoric caper Early Man.

It may be the shortest month of the year, but there are still plenty of hopefuls vying for your attention up in the run-up to the Oscars.

There's Daniel Day-Lewis giving what he's said will be his final film performance in Phantom Thread, Denzel Washington fighting for justice as lawyer Roman J. Israel, Esq., and Colin Firth setting out to circumnavigate the globe in sailing drama The Mercy.

On the female front, likely best actress contenders Saoirse Ronan and Sally Hawkins will be going head to head on 16 February in Lady Bird and The Shape of Water respectively, while Margot Robbie will be on thin ice in the skating biopic I, Tonya.

February also brings us the year's first superhero film in Black Panther, not to mention the final part in the Fifty Shades trilogy, Fifty Shades Freed - a Razzie contender if ever there was one.

Formidable females are the order of the day this month, with Jennifer Lawrence playing a seductive Russian spy in Red Sparrow, Rooney Mara tending to Jesus in Mary Magdalene and Alicia Vikander reviving Lara Croft in Tomb Raider.

Giant robots battle even bigger monsters in Pacific Rim: Uprising, while Steven Spielberg follows The Post with virtual reality spectacular Ready Player One.

There's also Peter Rabbit, an animation-live action hybrid that's nominally based on Beatrix Potter but whose trailer makes it look closer to Home Alone.

Thought you'd seen the last of the X-Men? Think again. Marvel's superheroes return this month in The New Mutants, which sees Maisie Williams and Anya Taylor-Joy play youthful misfits coming to terms with their nascent powers.

That will be followed two weeks later by Avengers: Infinity War, the first in a two-part get-together for Marvel's other superhero stable.

Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson is all that stands between humanity and a giant mutant gorilla in Rampage, while Emily Blunt co-stars with husband John Krasinski in his supernatural horror film A Quiet Place.

Then there's The Guernsey Literary And Potato Peel Pie Society, both an adaptation of Mary Ann Shaffer's posthumously published historical novel and the leading candidate for 2018's most peculiarly titled film award.

The big release this month is Solo: A Star Wars Story, a stand-alone spin-off that explores the early lives of space pirate Han Solo - played by Alden Ehrenreich - and his furry co-pilot Chewbacca.

There are warring stars of a different kind in A Star is Born, which sees Lady Gaga play a rising talent whose career blossoms while that of her mentor (Bradley Cooper) flounders.

The makers of Gnomeo and Juliet return with Sherlock Gnomes, while raucous comedy Game Night sees Catastrophe's Sharon Horgan make her Hollywood debut alongside Rachel McAdams and Jason Bateman.

Animal lovers are well catered for, meanwhile, by canine comedy Show Dogs and moving equine drama Lean On Pete.