The impressive feature directorial debut of Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz is one of the great modern social thrillers.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Thriller
The impressive feature directorial debut of Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz is one of the great modern social thrillers.
Charlie Kaufman’s twisty, challenging, yet rewarding film might be his most Charlie Kaufman-y work yet.
Russell Crowe’s road-rage thriller is the perfect film for 2020 — and that's not a compliment.
Dave Franco makes a strong directorial debut with this smart, haunting thriller.
Atom Egoyan returns to form, thanks to confident direction, twisty storytelling, and a commanding lead performance by David Thewlis.
Though well-made and plenty tense, this Australian horror/thriller may have missed its calling as a short film.
Tom Hanks returns to nautical adventure with nearly as impressive results.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt returns to feature films with this compact, heart-pounding thriller.
Kevin Bacon can’t save his toothless thriller from the formerly reliable David Koepp..
Absurdist filmmaker Quentin Dupieux keeps his weird streak intact with a classic tale of a man and his possessed jacket.
The second film to tell this amazing and true East German escape story is consistently entertaining and adheres largely to the facts.
The Chinese crime thriller cements Yi'nan Diao as a major creative talent.
The “Goodnight Mommy” team returns with another top-notch psychological thriller.
A fine performance by Blake Lively and a talented female director aren’t enough to rescue this latest in the “sexy female assassin” genre.
Sam Mendes’ WWI epic puts a fresh, exciting spin on an oft-tired genre.
The latest “Alien” rip-off has more in common with the “47 Meters Down” series than Ellen Ripley.
The Safdie brothers guide Adam Sandler to career-best work in this magnificent, tense thriller.
With his frenetic, emotionally devastating coming-of-age drama, Trey Edward Shults proves that the third time is indeed the charm.
Go into Bong Joon-ho’s rightly-praised new film blind as possible and reap its plentiful rewards.
Adam Driver is mesmerizing in Scott Z. Burns’ fact-based political procedural.