Well, that was a near complete waste of time.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Musical
Well, that was a near complete waste of time.
Sam Taylor-Johnson’s Amy Winehouse biopic honors the late singer/songwriter’s talents and flaws.
Ready for some incest, rape, domestic violence, and racial injustice in movie musical form?
This Roald Dahl prequel delivers whimsy and imagination but little heart or purpose.
John Carney adds to his already rich oeuvre of feel-good films about the healing power of music.
Baz Luhrmann’s musical biopic features a star-making performance by Austin Butler, but is bogged down by repetitious storytelling — and Tom Hanks.
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.
This full-on, feel-good musical follows an English teenager who aspires to be a drag queen — including at the school prom.
This extremely safe Aretha Franklin biopic honors the singer’s music, but not the woman herself.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss the big-screen adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s first musical.
The imagination and craftsmanship of Sia’s controversial musical nearly compensate for its cliché characters and screenplay.
An engaging blend of densely packed history, countless interviews, and soaring performances, all grounded in the Big Easy’s musical traditions.
The heavy-handed, brightly-colored sequel is full of ebullient nonsense, but nevertheless has a positive message at its core.
In the spirit of Pavarotti comes another slick, entertaining, informative, music-filled documentary about an act that shaped the history of popular music.
Beyond Renee Zellweger’s all-in performance, the Judy Garland biopic offers few memorable takeaways.