Despite strong performances and occasional elite suspense, this Appalachian-set tale of religious fanatics is sadly underdeveloped.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
Despite strong performances and occasional elite suspense, this Appalachian-set tale of religious fanatics is sadly underdeveloped.
Alex Holmes’ documentary about Tracy Edwards and her all-woman Whitbread Round the World Race team is frequently thrilling as well as inspiring.
David Leitch gifts the series its crispest visuals and most ambitious stunts thus far, but the spin-off remains a big, dumb Fast & Furious movie.
The Asheville Movie Guys head to China for a discussion of Lulu Wang’s sophomore feature.
This shuffling, low-key Southern comedy is a joy and palate cleanser, full of wit and wonderful performances.
Quentin Tarantino’s latest stunner makes expert use of modern cinema’s biggest stars in a landscape fitting of their talents and charisma.
The hagiographic bio-doc on the Nobel-winning author might just be the dose of positivity that humanity needs.
Starring a textbook sharp Jesse Eisenberg, the well-made dark comedy is a difficult film to recommend.
Beyond a fun new Timon and Pumbaa, Disney’s latest remake is little more than another nostalgia-driven cash-grab.
Stuber’s lead actors are talented and appealing, but they’re trapped in a poorly thought out, sloppily executed movie that does them no favors.
You have to respect horror B-movie producer-director Alexandre Aja’s steadfast devotion to his absurd killer alligator story.
Jessie Buckley anchors this honest look at the quest for musical stardom.
Poetic moments define Joe Talbot’s moving portrait of gentrification’s victims in the Bay Area.
Just two films in, is the new Spider-Man series one of the best solo superhero sagas Marvel has yet to produce?
Ari Aster’s masterful follow-up to Hereditary wisely favors dread over cheap horror scares.
The third film in the lousy creepy doll series is overrun with human ineptitude and all but absent of scares.
In Danny Boyle’s delightful Boomer fantasy, a struggling musician awakens to a world in which The Beatles don’t exist — and does his best to fill that absence.
Though Dylan in the Canyon is a more accurate title, this tribute to Laurel Canyon’s musical legacy is frequently magical.
Polygamy is a heavy lift for a light comedy, but the lead performers’ likability keeps the movie afloat.
Following the twists and turns of this female assassin flick is moderately interesting if you don’t think too much about the absurdity of the body count.