Alex Garland’s speculative thriller is equal parts bracing, challenging, and entertaining.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Drama
Alex Garland’s speculative thriller is equal parts bracing, challenging, and entertaining.
Quick takes on this week’s new arthouse releases.
Rose Glass takes a tremendous leap forward with help from a talented cast.
This star-studded, fact-based drama honors the tremendous good deeds of Sir Nicholas “Nicky” Winton.
Wim Wenders’ soulful dramedy celebrates life’s simple pleasures.
Anh Hung Tran’s culinary romance is a feast for the senses.
This Oscar nominee starts strong before crumbling under the weight of implausibly bad character decisions.
Andrew Haigh’s emotionally rich meditation on grief and imagination is a wonder to behold.
Jonathan Glazer’s Holocaust drama may have missed its calling as a short film.
Ava DuVernay rebounds in spectacular fashion from “A Wrinkle in Time” with this fact-based social justice drama.
Cord Jefferson’s satire has plenty of bite, but also an unexpectedly warm heart.
Michael Mann’s Enzo Ferrari biopic is the best film of 2023.
Ready for some incest, rape, domestic violence, and racial injustice in movie musical form?
George Clooney’s lifeless adaptation of Daniel James Brown’s fact-based bestseller is a pandering slog.
Jim shows Edwin the, uh, ropes in this discussion of Sean Durkin’s Von Erich film.
Bradley Cooper’s Leonard Bernstein is a scatterbrained, occasionally brilliant effort.
Quick takes on new films from Hayao Miyazaki, Hirokazu Kore-eda, and Aki Kaurismäki, plus the latest Godzilla movie.
Let weird Joaquin cook!
Emerald Fennell’s ambitious follow-up to “Promising Young Woman” is a sinister comic marvel.
Alexander Payne reteams with Paul Giamatti for what could be the director’s best film yet.