Mike White takes a significant step up from Beatriz at Dinner with this well-rounded midlife crisis tale starring Ben Stiller.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
Mike White takes a significant step up from Beatriz at Dinner with this well-rounded midlife crisis tale starring Ben Stiller.
Though pleasant and good-looking, the latest from Bend It Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha is less a narrative film than an elaborate history lesson.
The first of the inevitable “Children of Moonlight” films is barely a shadow of its Best Picture winning forebear in every conceivable way.
As the titular hard luck Jewish widower, amateur actor Menashe Lustig delivers the kind of magnetic, natural performance rarely seen in cinema.
If goal of the team behind the new adaptation of Stephen King’s It was to make a comedic vehicle for Stranger Things’ Finn Wolfhard, then job well done. Otherwise...
Co-directed by Judd Apatow, this in-depth look at the Concord band is a treat for fans and a near perfect recruitment tool for the uninitiated.
Architect Steve Arnaudin discusses Kogonada's picturesque drama and its use of the titular Indiana town's rich modernist designs.
The Asheville Movie Guys talk Michael Caine impressions and fine dining in regard to the third installment in the Coogan/Brydon/Winterbottom series.
A film so bad and disappointing it escaped notice for two weeks, Patrick Hughes' star-studded action/comedy is a near all-around failure.
Lake Bell follows up In A World... with another delightfully wacky look at filmmaking and modern society.
Matthew Heineman's documentary on Syrian citizen journalists' efforts to expose ISIS' atrocities is thoroughly informative.
Matt Spicer's critique of social media and celebrity obsessives is a good looking film with an appealing cast — and some glaring narrative issues.
The Asheville Movie Guys step in the cypher and battle over the hip-hop coming of age dramedy.
Sabaah Folayan and Damon Davis excel at telling the story of Ferguson, Missouri, and its citizens' efforts to hold local police accountable for criminal acts.
The Safdie brothers establish themselves as filmmakers to watch in this promising but uneven look at — appropriately enough — male siblings in a tight spot.
Kyle Mooney is delightful at the forefront of a talented cast in this warm, quirky comedy about a sheltered young man and his love for a Barney-like TV show.
The Asheville Movie Guys take a few laps around the track debating the merits of Steven Soderbergh's latest caper comedy and its use of the word "cauliflower."
Amanda Lipitz’s documentary about a Baltimore all-female step team is the kind of uplifting, insightful film that contemporary viewers want and need.
Stephen King's beloved novel translates poorly to the screen – and Matthew McConaughey is largely to blame.