Contrary to popular opinion, the R-rated reboot is a humorous, action-packed blast of entertainment.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Adventure
Contrary to popular opinion, the R-rated reboot is a humorous, action-packed blast of entertainment.
Alan Arkin’s character best sums up Tim Burton’s latest film: “Wow, that was a disaster!”
Halldóra Geirharðsdóttir excels in dual roles in this quirky Icelandic eco-thriller.
The Asheville Movie Guys flash back to the ‘90s to discuss Brie Larson’s lead MCU turn.
Mads Mikkelsen utilizes his powerful presence in Joe Penna’s engrossing one-man survival thriller.
Joe Cornish’s family-friendly King Arthur movie makes a star out of Angus Imrie as “Young” Merlin.
True to form, the year’s most joyful film is practically perfect in every way.
Robert Zemeckis’ effects-heavy hybrid builds on Mark Hogancamp’s psychology as introduced in the acclaimed documentary Marwencol.
The ‘80s-set Transformers prequel is one of the year’s most emotionally manipulative films.
The delightful return to the wizarding world of J.K. Rowling is the rare sequel that might be better than its predecessor.
Steampunk imagery and surprisingly creepy elements vault this CGI-laden fantasy above typical genre fare.
The Asheville Movie Guys take different trajectories with Damien Chazelle’s Neil Armstrong biopic.
Tom Hardy shows off an appealing, awkward comic side in this charmingly weird comic book flick.
Eli Roth pivots from gory to Gorey (of the Edward variety) and fares nearly as poorly.
Shane Black’s irreverent sci-fi action/comedy is welcome entertainment after the past few weeks of dull studio fare.
Much like Dwayne Johnson’s Skyscraper, The Meg make mindless entertaining use of Jason Statham’s dumb charms.
This reheated bowl of dystopian young adult clichés is best left unsampled.