Ben Affleck’s entertaining dramatization of Nike courting Michael Jordan is catnip for basketball fans.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Based on a true story
Ben Affleck’s entertaining dramatization of Nike courting Michael Jordan is catnip for basketball fans.
Frances O’Connor makes an impressive directorial debut with this Brontë sister biopic.
Steven Spielberg dramatizes his youth to highly entertaining ends.
The late Roger Michell’s final narrative film is lovely, well-rounded portrait of a real-life humanist.
A manipulative, unnecessary (and untrue) backstory is one of several factors that dilutes this fact-based mountain survival story.
George Clooney flirts with a new career low in this uninspired memoir adaptation.
Ridley Scott’s second film of 2021 is a mix of compelling performances, lush visuals, and spotty writing.
Will Smith delivers his first respectable performance in nearly a decade as the Williams Sisters’ father.
Matt Damon, Adam Driver, and Jodie Comer head to the Middle Ages for the engrossing true story of France’s 14th century #MeToo moment.
In which an Asheville Movie Guy recalls his own close encounter with Tammy Faye Bakker, and considers Jessica Chastain’s movie version.
This full-on, feel-good musical follows an English teenager who aspires to be a drag queen — including at the school prom.
Reviews of Pig, Space Jam: A New Legacy, Escape Room: Tournament of Champions, Joe Bell, and Val.
Janicza Bravo’s Twitter thread adaptation is a refreshing amalgam of A24 cautionary tales.
This fact-based U.K. twist on “Bridge of Spies” finds Benedict Cumberbatch in his best role since “The Imitation Game.”
With major assists from Margaret Qualley and Sigourney Weaver, Philippe Falardeau ends the cold streak of Salinger-centric films.
The film is based on a terrific Rolling Stone article. Seek out that story, but skip the clumsily fictionalized movie.
Daniel Kaluuya, LaKeith Stanfield, and Dominique Fishback are excellent in Shaka King’s Fred Hampton biopic.
The Asheville Movie Guys discuss the new fact-based period drama starring Carey Mulligan and Ralph Fiennes.
Casey Affleck, Dakota Johnson, and Jason Segel shine in this fact-based tearjearker.