An entertaining but fairly shallow documentary about Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camp.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
An entertaining but fairly shallow documentary about Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camp.
Casey Affleck, Dakota Johnson, and Jason Segel shine in this fact-based tearjearker.
Jerry Rothwell’s documentary provides a welcome bridge into the minds of nonspeaking autistic people.
This engaging, well-made documentary focuses on three unhappy households among the 130,000 residents of a Florida retirement community called The Villages.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss Regina King’s promising directorial debut.
This generally empty military thriller is occasionally enlivened by Anthony Mackie’s android officer and other sci-fi sights.
In a year filled with strong movies about women, this parable about parenting and pulling together after domestic abuse is a standout.
“Yet Another Young Monk Documentary” becomes something far more intriguing with the introduction of modern technology.
Directors Ian Cheney and Martha Shane take a seemingly frivolous subject and fortify it with unexpected profundity.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss Carey Mulligan’s (finally available) dark comedy/thriller.
Patty Jenkins, Gal Gadot & Co. let loose and improve on the series’ safe, basic predecessor.
George Clooney gets back on track as a filmmaker with help from an appealing ensemble and slick special effects.
Paul Greengrass’ reunion with Tom Hanks is a dull, forgettable affair.
A movie about a worldwide calamity seems ill-timed, but Gerard Butler’s crashing-comet disaster movie “Greenland” is here nonetheless.
Christopher Nolan's latest mind-bending adventure is wildly entertaining and immensely frustrating.
This slim documentary on Dolly Parton's Imagination Library will immerse you in untarnished goodness for an hour or so.
More meta-drama than melodrama, this self-aware romance blends laughter with family drama along the path to bliss.
Riz Ahmed’s masterful lead performance and Nicolas Becker’s stunning sound design nearly compensate for this drama’s spotty screenplay and pedestrian filmmaking.
David Osit’s documentary on charismatic, devoted Ramallah mayor Musa Hadid depicts Palestine in a refreshingly sympathetic manner.