With major assists from Margaret Qualley and Sigourney Weaver, Philippe Falardeau ends the cold streak of Salinger-centric films.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Based on a true story
With major assists from Margaret Qualley and Sigourney Weaver, Philippe Falardeau ends the cold streak of Salinger-centric films.
The film is based on a terrific Rolling Stone article. Seek out that story, but skip the clumsily fictionalized movie.
Daniel Kaluuya, LaKeith Stanfield, and Dominique Fishback are excellent in Shaka King’s Fred Hampton biopic.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss the new fact-based period drama starring Carey Mulligan and Ralph Fiennes.
Casey Affleck, Dakota Johnson, and Jason Segel shine in this fact-based tearjearker.
Steve McQueen's "Mangrove" and "Red, White and Blue" provide potent drama, while the unconventional "Lovers Rock" is a bit of an endurance test.
Directing his father’s script, David Fincher guides Gary Oldman to career-best work in this entertaining, insightful look at the making of the “Citizen Kane” screenplay.
Claes Bang and Guy Pearce go head-to-head in this entertaining fact-based drama.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss Ron Howard’s adaptation of J.D. Vance’s best-selling memoir.
The poignant emotions of this chamber drama will be recognizable to any adult child coming to understand the full humanity of his or her own mother.
Aaron Sorkin’s masterful fact-based courtroom drama is the year’s best film thus far.
No one needs to the “Ghost in the Noonday Sun,” a terrible slapstick pirate comedy from 1973, but anyone interested in moviemaking should certainly see this doc about how the star sank the film.
There’s nothing original about Military Wives, but its predictability is part of its charm.
The second film to tell this amazing and true East German escape story is consistently entertaining and adheres largely to the facts.
Two equally uninteresting story lines, one in a girls’ school, one in Haiti 60 years ago, eventually collide in an incoherent finale.
Johnny Depp ably portrays photographer W. Eugene Smith on his most famous assignment.
Jesse Eisenberg is future world-famous mime Marcel Marceau, who fought in the French Resistance, in this compelling World War II drama.
Anne Dagg has been labeled the “Jane Goodall of giraffe research,” but her story is in many ways the more remarkable one.
In the spirit of Pavarotti comes another slick, entertaining, informative, music-filled documentary about an act that shaped the history of popular music.
Despicable Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky takes on a contradictory heroic cast in his two-decade fight with Vladimir Putin.