Alex Garland’s speculative thriller is equal parts bracing, challenging, and entertaining.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in War
Alex Garland’s speculative thriller is equal parts bracing, challenging, and entertaining.
Against all odds, this military action/adventure flick is quite good.
Guy Ritchie isn’t the best fit for this respectable Afghanistan War thriller.
Jalmari Helander’s hyper-violent revenge film elicits immense joy via killing Nazis.
Short takes on “Fire of Love,” “Prey,” “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On,” “The Gray Man,” “RRR,” “Vengeance,” and “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris.”
The Russo brothers reunite with Tom Holland in this Frankenstein’s monster of well-worn genres with little new to say about any of them.
Tom Hanks returns to nautical adventure with nearly as impressive results.
Spike Lee joins the sadly short list of great filmmakers who’ve made great films about the Vietnam War.
Jesse Eisenberg is future world-famous mime Marcel Marceau, who fought in the French Resistance, in this compelling World War II drama.
A series of Oscar-caliber performances in supporting roles boost this tear-jerker about the effort to get a Medal of Honor for an airman who died heroically in Vietnam.
Sam Mendes’ WWI epic puts a fresh, exciting spin on an oft-tired genre.
Dated special effects, an overly reverent script, and one of the dullest, whitest casts ever assembled pay poor homage to WWII heroes.
Christopher Nolan's sharp first foray into WWII is compact in runtime but broad in scope.
The third in the rebooted Apes series carries over many admirable qualities of its predecessors, though the absence of those films' screenwriters is sadly evident.
Christopher Plummer and Janet McTeer inspire the best work yet from Jai Courtney and Lily James in this WWII drama.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson and John Cena try to survive against an Iraqi sharpshooter in Doug Liman's tense three-man war thriller.