Channing Tatum gives his best lead performance yet in Derek Cianfrance’s melancholic, Charlotte-set comedy.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Comedy
Channing Tatum gives his best lead performance yet in Derek Cianfrance’s melancholic, Charlotte-set comedy.
Paul Thomas Anderson’s thrilling, Pynchon-inspired action/drama is an entertaining lark.
Kogonada gets supernaturally romantic in this charmer that’s not as different from his past films as it may seem.
The Crawleys say farewell (?) in this comforting but largely inconsequential third film.
Darren Aronofsky delivers his most entertaining film thus far without sacrificing his gritty, grisly ways.
Jay Roach’s divorce “comedy” quickly runs out of steam.
Ethan Coen's latest good, not great diversion is the cinematic equivalent of junk food.
Liam Neeson and a crackerjack cast and crew deliver by far the best comedy of the summer — if not the year.
Two new indies celebrate the power of commas — but is either film worth seeing?
It only took 30-plus years, but we finally have a good F4 movie.
Ari Aster continues his phenomenal young career with this blisteringly funny COVID-era satire.
James Gunn’s thoroughly fun take on the Man of Steel gets this long-suffering series back on track.
Celine Song’s sophomore effort is an old-fashioned romance loaded with charm.
Wes Anderson continues to evolve with his most sophisticated film thus far.
French director Laura Piani’s rom-com is neither especially romantic or comedic.
MCU antiheroes unite for one of the saga’s best post-Endgame films.