Yorgos Lanthimos returns to his twisted satiric ways with this darkly comedic triptych.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Thriller
Yorgos Lanthimos returns to his twisted satiric ways with this darkly comedic triptych.
This series prequel features similar traits that plagued and uplifted its two predecessors.
Richard Linklater’s latest fact-based winner makes the most of star Glen Powell’s charms.
Emerald Fennell’s ambitious follow-up to “Promising Young Woman” is a sinister comic marvel.
James and Edwin discuss Nicolas Cage’s new dark comedy.
David Fincher re-teams with Se7en screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker to similarly memorable ends.
Martin Scorsese’s enthralling fact-based drama adds another masterpiece to his already legendary resumé.
Wes Anderson returns to the rich Roald Dahl well with charming adaptations of four short stories.
Sébastien Marnier’s slow-burn thriller rewards viewers’ patience.
Dominik Moll’s police procedural is the French equivalent of “Memories of Murder.”
Margaret Qualley and Christopher Abbott manipulate each other in this over-stretched erotic thriller.
A committed Jennifer Lopez can only do so much to help this bland action/thriller.
Ben Affleck and Robert Rodriguez achieve new career lows with this astonishing failure.
Guy Ritchie isn’t the best fit for this respectable Afghanistan War thriller.
Daniel Goldhaber’s activism docudrama does what it can with inherently limited material.
M. Night Shyamalan’s weaknesses as a writer/director hamper this would-be apocalyptic thriller.
Brandon Cronenberg’s latest mindf*#& is visually creative but narratively messy.
Luca Guadagnino’s cannibal road-trip movie might be the year’s most disjointed release.