Céline Sciamma’s wonderfully mischievous time-travel drama is loaded with thought-provoking concepts and emotional resonance.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Foreign film
Céline Sciamma’s wonderfully mischievous time-travel drama is loaded with thought-provoking concepts and emotional resonance.
Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animation/documentary hybrid puts a creative spin on an already unusual refugee saga.
James finds the latest big anime film overly grating, while Edwin considers it one of the year’s best films.
Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s meditation on loss and regret is one of the year’s best films.
Far more dark fantasy than horror, this Icelandic slow-burn thriller is a master class in suspenseful wonder.
Roy Andersson doles out 33 slice-of-life vignettes that carry significant individual and cumulative power.
This Oscar nominee skewers everyone from celebrity artists to refugee advocates in its tale of a Syrian man who is turned into an art object.
The story of a shy young woman who falls in love with an amusement park ride is a charming fantasy, until it’s not.
This slice-of-street-life documentary follows a stray dog around Istanbul, where she bonds with some homeless teenage Syrian refugees.
Two men of retirement age start a covert affair in modern Hong Kong in this remarkable glimpse into closeted lives in the cosmopolitan city.
Thomas Vinterberg and Mads Mikkelsen reunite to glorious ends in this amusing twist on the midlife crisis dramedy.
This harrowing documentary about the COViD-19 lockdown in Wuhan, China, is a real-life horror film that may presage our immediate future.
This gentle, gritty Italian comedy about three pensioners turns on the tension between “the grass is always greener” and “home sweet home.”
This Norwegian film is like reading a great novel that unfolds gradually and offers poignant imagery and sharply drawn characters.
Yvan Attal excels as co-writer, director, and star of this quirky French dramedy.
Makoto Nagahisa throws everything in his cinematic arsenal at the proverbial wall — and gets most of it to stick.
A gripping and unpredictable German drama, set in the world of classical music.
This three-part film traces the progress of LGBTQ rights across more than 30 years through the turmoil in the lives of one French family.
This French-Algerian film is an admirable portrait of resilient youth, diluted by its rather soapy plot choices.
One of the most intimate and unlikely documentaries you’re ever likely to see, the film traces an artist’s obsession with the thief who stole two of her paintings.