Tasteful writing and directing, plus Nicholas Hoult’s strong lead performance make this better than the average literary biopic.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
Tasteful writing and directing, plus Nicholas Hoult’s strong lead performance make this better than the average literary biopic.
Penny Lane’s documentary on the misunderstood Satanic Temple is a cheeky, thoroughly entertaining and enlightening work.
A more complete home inspection could have prevented all this violence.
As Ask Dr. Ruth makes clear, there has never been anyone quite like Dr. Ruth Westheimer and isn’t likely to be again.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss the culminating film of the current MCU era.
The long-shelved Aretha Franklin concert doc has the potential to resonate with anyone capable of being moved by great music.
In this bleak drama, Tessa Thompson and Lily James deliver powerful performances despite amateurish, anonymous filmmaking.
Family audiences, people of faith and anyone exhausted by superheroes and supernatural horror should find warm comfort here.
The prospect of watching Lindsay Weir get chased by a ghost for 90 minutes isn’t nearly as exciting as it sounds.
Claire Denis’ dull sci-fi drama squanders sharp visuals and strong performances.
A documentary captures revealing behind-the-scenes footage of nationalist strategist Steve Bannon in both victory and defeat.
A strong lead turn by Mary Kay Place and near-universal relatability can’t save this plodding drama.
Contrary to popular opinion, the R-rated reboot is a humorous, action-packed blast of entertainment.
The comedic duo of Issa Rae and Marsai Martin help one forget about the film’s rote plot and lazy moralizing.
Set in a Nevada prison, the movie takes some unexpected turns and rethinks a lot of the expected man-beast bonding points.
A fan fiction novel becomes a curiously titled and inexplicably bland YA movie romance.
Emilio Estevez’s Cincinnati-set wake-up call about the relevancy of public libraries is a bit too folksy and loose for its own good.
A Canadian comedy duo embark on a journey of history and noshing through Montreal’s Jewish neighborhood.
Keira Knightley, Jason Clarke, and Alexander Skarsgård bolster this compelling post-WWII drama.