Welcome to 130 minutes of ear-splitting boredom and feeling sad for really good actors in a really bad movie.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
Welcome to 130 minutes of ear-splitting boredom and feeling sad for really good actors in a really bad movie.
The remarkable real-life story of Soviet ballet star Rudolf Nureyev’s visit to Paris in 1961 is compellingly recreated by actor-director Ralph Fiennes.
Unapologetically frank and real, Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut is a comedic joyride.
Olivier Assayas’ returns to meditations on art, commerce, and flawed celebrities with a look at the Parisian publishing world.
The Asheville Movie Guys crash-land in Kansas with an evil Superman. What could possibly go wrong?
The misunderstood Emily Dickinson gets the revisionist history she deserves.
Compelling performances by Judi Dench and Sophie Cookson are undermined by sluggish pacing and flat direction in this fact-based spy drama.
The pleasant period dramedy from the Downton Abbey team has a sensibility closer to a classy TV movie than to a more nuanced indie drama.
Back for another taste of the old ultra-violence, Keanu Reeves adds to the legacy of what could be his best character — or at least his most fitting.
It’s the YA variation on a popular movie theme: It sucks to meet your soul mate at an inconvenient turning point in your life.
For viewers agnostic about Pokémon, this dopey, laugh-free “mystery” might be the year’s worst film.
Diane Keaton and an entertaining finale rescue this thinly written senior comedy.
The comedic talents of Anne Hathaway and Rebel Wilson are largely wasted in this gender-swap remake of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.
A mesmerizing fever dream set in Budapest, Hungary, just before World War I.
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.