Pete Davidson and Griffin Gluck are a comedic dream team in this offbeat coming-of-age comedy.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Comedy
Pete Davidson and Griffin Gluck are a comedic dream team in this offbeat coming-of-age comedy.
Will Forte and a talented Irish cast are hilarious in this silly paranormal comedy.
Some viewers may be offended, but a fine lead performance by Betty Gilpin makes this dark comedy worth checking out.
Michael Winterbottom and Steve Coogan keep their winning streak intact with this hilarious yet sobering satire on wealth inequality in the fashion industry.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss the latest adaptation of the Jane Austen classic.
The SEGA video game adaptation is corny beyond belief, yet manages to be spottily entertaining.
The English-language remake of "Force Majeure" improves on the Swedish original in every conceivable regard.
The toxic male gaze of “Suicide Squad” is thankfully gone, but not the sloppy writing and directing.
Fun, funny, and visually rich, the latest Dr. Dolittle is nowhere near the disaster many critics claim it to be.
Tiffany Haddish and Rose Byrne earn big laughs despite a flimsy, predictable story.
With a somnolent Will Smith voicing an especially boring bird, and a tired supervillain plot line, there’s not much here to recommend.
The entertaining sequel doubles down on its predecessor’s funniest elements.
Shia LaBeouf exorcises his demons by playing his father in this extraordinary cinematic experiment.
Scarlett Johansson, Adam Driver and writer/director Noah Baumbach are all in top form in this divorce dramedy.
Rian Johnson’s mediocre whodunit was doubtlessly more fun to make than it is to sit through.
Elizabeth Banks’ clunky reboot struggles to justify its existence.
Go into Bong Joon-ho’s rightly-praised new film blind as possible and reap its plentiful rewards.
Romance blended with recovery drama, the movie is almost guaranteed to defy whatever expectations you have of it going it.
Pre-tweens will enjoy the lame jokes employing poop, farts, mud, pratfalls, and the so on, but parents — and filmmakers — can do better.