Writer/director/star Vera Drew’s trans coming-of-age story is an inspired mess.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Romance
Writer/director/star Vera Drew’s trans coming-of-age story is an inspired mess.
Rose Glass takes a tremendous leap forward with help from a talented cast.
Anh Hung Tran’s culinary romance is a feast for the senses.
Andrew Haigh’s emotionally rich meditation on grief and imagination is a wonder to behold.
Bradley Cooper’s Leonard Bernstein is a scatterbrained, occasionally brilliant effort.
Yet another Sofia Coppola film that keeps emotions at a distance and only resonates on aesthetic levels.
Franz Rogowski, Adèle Exarchopoulos, and Ben Whishaw collide to memorable ends in Ira Sachs’ bisexual romance.
Wes Anderson sticks the landing on his most ambitious narrative yet.
Rather than parody Bob Ross, writer/director Brit McAdams has something more ambitious in mind, and his distinct, heartfelt take on the romantic comedy is a treat to experience.
Rampant silliness and the chemistry of Julia Roberts and George Clooney more than compensate for predictable storytelling.
Short takes on “Fire of Love,” “Prey,” “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On,” “The Gray Man,” “RRR,” “Vengeance,” and “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris.”
Though visually and sonically rich, this British period romance is agonizingly slow and demure in its exhibition of emotions.
Owen Wilson rises to the occasion in this glitzy rom-com, while Jennifer Lopez struggles to keep up.
The team of Steven Spielberg and Tony Kushner pay homage to the 1961 original while putting their own fresh twists on the material.