Big laughs help compensate for unimaginative plotting in this entertaining sequel.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Comedy
Big laughs help compensate for unimaginative plotting in this entertaining sequel.
Just a few weeks after the pleasures of Long Shot comes another smart adult comedy, showcasing Emma Thompson and Mindy Kaling.
Jim Jarmusch’s delightfully deadpan zombie movie makes excellent use of a talented ensemble cast.
Another fine performance from Blythe Danner buoys this unchallenging movie about a dedicated survivalist (John Lithgow) looking for companionship.
Unapologetically frank and real, Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut is a comedic joyride.
Olivier Assayas’ returns to meditations on art, commerce, and flawed celebrities with a look at the Parisian publishing world.
The Asheville Movie Guys crash-land in Kansas with an evil Superman. What could possibly go wrong?
The misunderstood Emily Dickinson gets the revisionist history she deserves.
The pleasant period dramedy from the Downton Abbey team has a sensibility closer to a classy TV movie than to a more nuanced indie drama.
The comedic talents of Anne Hathaway and Rebel Wilson are largely wasted in this gender-swap remake of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.
Contrary to popular opinion, the R-rated reboot is a humorous, action-packed blast of entertainment.
The comedic duo of Issa Rae and Marsai Martin help one forget about the film’s rote plot and lazy moralizing.
In near perfect tandem with a comedically committed Matthew McConaughey, Harmony Korine rebounds spectacularly from the ineptitude of Spring Breakers.
Inheriting the teen sleuth reins from Emma Roberts, Sophia Lillis (It; “Sharp Objects”) continues to be a beacon in mediocre projects.
The scattered successes by Tyler Perry & Co. feel haphazard and the barrage of attempts at humor and the high percentage of failure is borderline exhausting.
Stephen Merchant’s fact-based wrestling comedy is thoroughly entertaining and disarmingly mature.
Rebel Wilson proves generally ready for leading lady status in this skewering of rom-com conventions.
The sequel ably changes its genre gears with only slightly diminished returns.