This Jamie Fox action flick is like watching someone else play a videogame — you might follow the action, but you’re not involved.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
This Jamie Fox action flick is like watching someone else play a videogame — you might follow the action, but you’re not involved.
A faithful David Ayer supporter and one of the writer/director’s biggest non-believers debate the filmmaker’s latest LA crime saga.
Double Seth Rogens yield plentiful laughs, but the film’s zany premise is diluted by sentimentality and subpar plotting.
This Norwegian film is like reading a great novel that unfolds gradually and offers poignant imagery and sharply drawn characters.
Gillian Jacobs, Jemaine Clement and an appealing cast are delightful in this sneakily smart campus comedy.
Five ACLU attorneys are lovingly profiled in this inspirational and educational documentary.
Dave Franco makes a strong directorial debut with this smart, haunting thriller.
This worshipful, star-studded, oh-so-Canadian documentary will leave you with a warm nostalgia for the man it argues is the Bob Dylan of the North.
Yvan Attal excels as co-writer, director, and star of this quirky French dramedy.
The selection of short films from this year’s Sundance is more of a mixed bag than usual.
The provocative fashion photographer is lauded and assessed by his fellow icons, including Grace Jones and Isabella Rossellini.
An all-star vocal cast and a creative premise help this animated charmer overcome a bumpy start.
Unless you’re an art historian, this film is guaranteed to tell you things you didn’t know about the artist, his works, and his family.
Romola Garai makes an impressive feature filmmaking debut with this ambitious slice of slow-burn horror.
Essentially a “making of” documentary, “Yours Truly” chronicles the creation of a remarkable art installation at Alcatraz in 2014.
No preview trailer or still image can do justice to the beauty of this documentary and its subject, gender-bending astrologer Walter Mercado. Put it on your watch list now.
Atom Egoyan returns to form, thanks to confident direction, twisty storytelling, and a commanding lead performance by David Thewlis.
Makoto Nagahisa throws everything in his cinematic arsenal at the proverbial wall — and gets most of it to stick.
Though well-made and plenty tense, this Australian horror/thriller may have missed its calling as a short film.
Gina Prince-Bythewood makes a clunky transition to action filmmaking and wastes the talents of a gifted ensemble.