Let weird Joaquin cook!
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Comedy
Let weird Joaquin cook!
Emerald Fennell’s ambitious follow-up to “Promising Young Woman” is a sinister comic marvel.
James and Edwin discuss Nicolas Cage’s new dark comedy.
Alexander Payne reteams with Paul Giamatti for what could be the director’s best film yet.
The usually reliable Taika Waititi fails to score with this fact-based sports comedy.
Nia DaCosta’s convergence of Carol Danvers, Monica Rambeau, and Kamala Khan ably synthesizes their narrative strands with plentiful laughs and Marvel’s typical top-notch action.
Craig Gillespie’s wildly entertaining dramatization of the GameStop stock saga is one of the year’s best films.
John Carney adds to his already rich oeuvre of feel-good films about the healing power of music.
Wes Anderson returns to the rich Roald Dahl well with charming adaptations of four short stories.
Sherry Cola establishes herself as a comedic force in this hilarious road trip adventure.
While Harrison Ford and several other familiar faces are back, along with some amusing nods to the original trilogy, this concluding (?) installment is defined more by what’s absent onscreen.
Wes Anderson sticks the landing on his most ambitious narrative yet.
Action and comedy blend well in this multiverse tale that unites old favorites and new heroes.
The jokes keep coming in this horror/comedy that’s not nearly the genre-skewering event that was “promised.”
Isa and Edwin discuss the sequel to the Oscar-winning animated extravaganza.