The plucky, fourth-wall-breaking adventure/comedy is an ideal star vehicle for Millie Bobby Brown.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Adventure
The plucky, fourth-wall-breaking adventure/comedy is an ideal star vehicle for Millie Bobby Brown.
Gina Prince-Bythewood makes a clunky transition to action filmmaking and wastes the talents of a gifted ensemble.
The new animated Scooby-Doo adventures is a goofy and charming distraction.
The second film to tell this amazing and true East German escape story is consistently entertaining and adheres largely to the facts.
Benh Zeitlin’s unfortunate Peter Pan riff has much in common with his bafflingly celebrated “Beasts of the Southern Wild.”
The SEGA video game adaptation is corny beyond belief, yet manages to be spottily entertaining.
The toxic male gaze of “Suicide Squad” is thankfully gone, but not the sloppy writing and directing.
Fun, funny, and visually rich, the latest Dr. Dolittle is nowhere near the disaster many critics claim it to be.
Michael Bay’s hyperbolic style is sorely missed in the series’ third installment — as is Will Smith’s charisma.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss the conclusion of the “Star Wars” episodic saga.
The entertaining sequel doubles down on its predecessor’s funniest elements.
The reunion of Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne amidst decent atmospheric spectacle elevates this fact-based adventure.
Elizabeth Banks’ clunky reboot struggles to justify its existence.
James Mangold’s fact-based auto-racing film is old school Hollywood entertainment at its finest.
Badass women, deadpan humor, and (eventually) exhilarating action make for an entertaining new Terminator film.
Dated special effects, an overly reverent script, and one of the dullest, whitest casts ever assembled pay poor homage to WWII heroes.
What is the brilliant director Ang Lee doing directing this potboiler with a weary Will Smith trying to make an action comeback?
With ambitions well beyond its science fiction adventure plot line, the movie melds intense character conflicts with the oft-asked question: Are humans alone in the universe?
Cate Blanchett may be one of the few actors who could hold together a movie that’s part farce, part intervention, part melodrama and always entertaining.