Tiffany Haddish and Rose Byrne earn big laughs despite a flimsy, predictable story.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
Tiffany Haddish and Rose Byrne earn big laughs despite a flimsy, predictable story.
Sam Mendes’ WWI epic puts a fresh, exciting spin on an oft-tired genre.
The latest “Alien” rip-off has more in common with the “47 Meters Down” series than Ellen Ripley.
If any horror film characters deserve to die gruesome deaths, it’s these idiots.
With a somnolent Will Smith voicing an especially boring bird, and a tired supervillain plot line, there’s not much here to recommend.
The star-studded dramatization of Roger Ailes’ downfall merely leaves a shallow mark.
The fact-based legal drama is unfortunately timely, but potentially unifying.
The Asheville Movie Guys debate Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of the literary classic.
The Safdie brothers guide Adam Sandler to career-best work in this magnificent, tense thriller.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss the conclusion of the “Star Wars” episodic saga.
The entertaining sequel doubles down on its predecessor’s funniest elements.
Clint Eastwood’s biopic of the Atlanta Olympic bombing hero-turned-villain is well-made and acted, but casts some troubling shadows.
Shia LaBeouf exorcises his demons by playing his father in this extraordinary cinematic experiment.
Todd Haynes’ heavy-handed environmental drama does wrong by its inspirational real-life hero.
The reunion of Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne amidst decent atmospheric spectacle elevates this fact-based adventure.
Scarlett Johansson, Adam Driver and writer/director Noah Baumbach are all in top form in this divorce dramedy.
The passable documentary about a legendary East L.A. high school football rivalry struggles to develop its human-interest arcs.
With his frenetic, emotionally devastating coming-of-age drama, Trey Edward Shults proves that the third time is indeed the charm.