Jason Reitman’s dramatization of SNL’s opening night is the year’s biggest surprise.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All tagged Willem Dafoe
Jason Reitman’s dramatization of SNL’s opening night is the year’s biggest surprise.
Michael Keaton and Tim Burton resurrect the titular demon to gloriously entertaining ends.
Yorgos Lanthimos returns to his twisted satiric ways with this darkly comedic triptych.
Yorgos Lanthimos channels Jean-Pierre Jeunet in this wild and wonderful societal critique.
Wes Anderson sticks the landing on his most ambitious narrative yet.
Robert Eggers’ viking epic feels like it couldn’t have been told any better.
Jon Watts’ best Spidey film yet is fan service done right.
Wes Anderson’s most ambitious film to date is also one of his best.
Paul Schrader and Oscar Isaac prove a formidable team in this enthralling poker drama.
The ultimate vanity project, this four-hour endurance test is the work of a director so lost in his personal interests that the level of egotism would be impressive if the film itself wasn’t so poorly made.
Every aspect of Edward Norton’s ‘50s-set noir is good enough, but mysteriously never aspires to greatness.
Robert Eggers’ follow-up to The Lighthouse is one of the year’s most unpleasant viewing experiences.
Natalie Portman and young Raffey Cassidy shine in Brady Corbet’s unusual celebrity satire — or whatever it’s supposed to be.
Julian Schnabel’s intrusive van Gogh biopic is a less creative take on much of the same information already explored in Loving Vincent.
Under the direction of Kenneth Branagh, the best that the latest star-studded adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express can hope for is a manslaughter charge.
Sean Baker's follow-up to Tangerine gets a major boost from Willem Dafoe, but is otherwise another endurance test with unlikeable and irredeemable characters.