Creative visuals and an ominous sense of gloom buoy this period horror tale.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
Creative visuals and an ominous sense of gloom buoy this period horror tale.
Dominic Savage's trans drama is filmed with minimal visual foresight and written with even less.
Tilman Singer’s wildly imaginative modern folk horror tale is one to treasure.
The real-life superhero team of Isa and Edwin discuss the team-up of two comic book legends.
This storm-chaser thriller struggles in ways similar to its predecessor.
Not even a pairing with a glass of quality bubbly can save this biopic from mediocrity.
Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum have chemistry for days in this Apollo 11 rom-com.
Ti West’s laborious trilogy sputters out with this would-be thriller.
Yorgos Lanthimos returns to his twisted satiric ways with this darkly comedic triptych.
The first of Kevin Costner’s four-part series plays like a corny but entertaining TV movie.
This series prequel features similar traits that plagued and uplifted its two predecessors.
Playwright Annie Baker’s first film is well-made, pleasant…and kind of pointless.
Joshua John Miller’s uneven film is essentially the “Scream” of exorcism movies.
Writer/director Jeff Nichols maintains his flawless track record with this emotionally rich, fact-based tale of 1960s biker life.
The “Saint Frances” team returns with another hilarious yet emotionally rich film.
Much like her talented father 25 years ago, writer/director Ishana Night Shyamalan is a talent to watch.
June Squibb and Richard Roundtree aren’t the heroes we deserve, but they’re the ones we need