A committed Jennifer Lopez can only do so much to help this bland action/thriller.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Thriller
A committed Jennifer Lopez can only do so much to help this bland action/thriller.
Ben Affleck and Robert Rodriguez achieve new career lows with this astonishing failure.
Guy Ritchie isn’t the best fit for this respectable Afghanistan War thriller.
Daniel Goldhaber’s activism docudrama does what it can with inherently limited material.
M. Night Shyamalan’s weaknesses as a writer/director hamper this would-be apocalyptic thriller.
Brandon Cronenberg’s latest mindf*#& is visually creative but narratively messy.
Luca Guadagnino’s cannibal road-trip movie might be the year’s most disjointed release.
Mark Mylod’s star-studded foodie satire is far funnier than you’ve been led to believe.
Park Chan-wook’s meticulously crafted crime thriller is a wonder to behold.
Idris Elba tries to protect his two daughters from a bloodthirsty lion in this well-made Man vs. Nature thriller.
Short takes on “Fire of Love,” “Prey,” “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On,” “The Gray Man,” “RRR,” “Vengeance,” and “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris.”
Thick atmosphere and a few good jump scares can’t save this so-so horror film.
David Cronenberg’s latest body horror film is merely weird for weird’s sake.
James and Edwin discuss Alex Garland’s trippy new horror film.
Robert Eggers’ viking epic feels like it couldn’t have been told any better.
A manipulative, unnecessary (and untrue) backstory is one of several factors that dilutes this fact-based mountain survival story.
Not nearly as playful as it initially suggests, Ti West’s period horror film is a straightforward but generally well-crafted affair.
Ben Affleck, Ana de Armas, and a talented supporting cast embarrass themselves in Adrian Lyne’s ludicrous thriller.
Mariama Diallo’s feature debut plays like the heir to “Get Out,” but falls apart at the end.