This pointless remake of the McQueen/Hoffman classic continually raises the reason for its existence.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
This pointless remake of the McQueen/Hoffman classic continually raises the reason for its existence.
The fourth Peter Berg and Mark Wahlberg collaboration lacks the humane fact-based stakes of their prior films, but still delivers plenty of action-packed entertainment.
The Asheville Movie Guys tag along to Singapore for a wild wedding week with an under-represented cast.
Much like Dwayne Johnson’s Skyscraper, The Meg make mindless entertaining use of Jason Statham’s dumb charms.
The Asheville Movie Guys infiltrate a local movie theater and report back on Spike Lee’s new film.
The interconnected vignettes of Ken Marino’s canine ensemble comedy are funny, family-friendly and not-so-secretly adult.
Kate McKinnon and Mila Kunis are hilarious in the summer’s superior espionage movie.
This reheated bowl of dystopian young adult clichés is best left unsampled.
Elsie Fisher is perfect as a young woman navigating her final week of middle school in Bo Burnham’s promising feature directorial debut.
The Asheville Movie Guys take their second trip to the Hundred Acre Wood in nine months.
The meditative documentary soulfully profiles the Oscar-winning composer.
The summer’s second exploration of modern-day Oakland is a stunning glimpse at friendship threatened by outside forces.
Gus Van Sant’s John Callahan biopic successfully walks the tonal tightrope between comedy and drama.
The Asheville Movie Guys choose to accept a sixth mission with Ethan Hunt & Co., but may live to regret that decision.
Ben Foster and Thomasin McKenzie are terrific as an independent father-daughter team forced to adapt to society.
Denzel Washington and Antoine Fuqua reunite for another absolute snoozer.
Eugene Jarecki’s metaphorical bio-doc on Elvis Presley packs a cumulative wallop that didn’t seem possible in its early stages.
The Asheville Movie Guys return to the Greek islands for a second dose of ABBA songs, dancing and romance.
Tim Wardle’s entertaining documentary about triplets separated at birth is one best viewed knowing as little about it as possible.
Vera Farmiga and Christopher Plummer earn occasional laughs in this family road trip comedy that tries way too hard to be quirky.