Funny folks from the Parks & Rec., Office and Veep extended families collide to hilarious ends in this winner from the Neighbors writing team.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Comedy
Funny folks from the Parks & Rec., Office and Veep extended families collide to hilarious ends in this winner from the Neighbors writing team.
Thanks to a concerted effort by a talented cast and crew, Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man at last has a worthy saga successor.
Edgar Wright's talents are on full display in this entertaining and well-balanced mesh of action, comedy and music.
Salma Hayek and especially John Lithgow are terrific in this otherwise undeveloped and redundant critique of the One Percent.
The concept of Cate Blanchett playing 13 characters lives up to its potential in Julian Rosefeldt's cinematically rich collection of monologues on art.
Three gifted comediennes — plus Scarlett Johansson and Zoë Kravitz — form a hilarious team in this tale of a bachelorette party gone wrong.
Colin Trevorrow's return to indie filmmaking between Jurassic World and Star Wars installments is a mixed bag.
Eleanor Coppola's gorgeous road trip movie is rich in sightseeing and food photography yet poor in meaningful content.
Debra Winger and Tracy Letts lead a mostly phenomenal cast in this painfully relatable (in a good way) look at midlife romance.
Seth Gordon’s horrible comedy fails to ride the coattails of CHiPS and the Jump Street series.
Plenty of thrills, laughs and surprises await in the series' fifth installment.
Joseph Cedar follows up his brilliant Footnote with another stunning dark comedy.
A gifted supporting cast bails out a tolerable Amy Schumer in this entertaining mother-daughter comedy.
A terrific British cast lives up to its potential in this old-fashioned delight about filmmaking in the 1940s.
Star-Lord, Gamora, Drax and Rocket are joined by Baby Groot, former adversaries and new faces in James Gunn's rollicking sequel to the 2014 surprise hit.
Anne Hathaway and a skyscraper-tall Korean monster are oddly connected in this quirky yet unexpectedly dark little film.
In his glorious follow-up to High-Rise, Ben Wheatley stays in the '70s but drops the social satire in favor of pure action/comedy entertainment.
Gael García Bernal is a riot as an unfaithful telenovela actor who tracks his writer wife to Iowa.
Mckenna Grace delivers one of the great child performances as a seven-year-old math prodigy whose uncle/guardian is committed to giving her a normal life.