Whether you’re casually interested or a dedicated fan, this documentary will draw you into the artist’s fascinating works and life.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Documentary
Whether you’re casually interested or a dedicated fan, this documentary will draw you into the artist’s fascinating works and life.
Sergio M. Rapu’s documentary letter to his infant son raises awareness of his native Rapa Nui, but is too narrow and disjointed to have a wide-reaching impact.
Ivete Lucas and Patrick Bresnan’s observational documentary brims with honesty and big emotions.
The loving, humorous, and frequently moving documentary is practically guaranteed to lift viewers’ spirits.
The documentary on the abstractionist pioneer is informative and inspirational, but also dryly academic.
This love letter to the people who love books is also a fun virtual tour of shops, expositions, and apartments overflowing with the printed word.
The decade’s second documentary on the famed New York Times photographer tastefully expands the great man’s story.
This documentary asserts that gerrymandering is snuffing out representative democracy and uses Asheville as a case in point.
Anne Dagg has been labeled the “Jane Goodall of giraffe research,” but her story is in many ways the more remarkable one.
In the spirit of Pavarotti comes another slick, entertaining, informative, music-filled documentary about an act that shaped the history of popular music.
Despicable Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky takes on a contradictory heroic cast in his two-decade fight with Vladimir Putin.
Harrowing stories from around the world define this year’s five nominees, though hope and inspiration shine through in the program’s best works.
Conservative talk show hosts Dennis Prager and Adam Carolla lead this engaging documentary that asks, When does the right to protest infringe on the right to speak?
The film aims to condemn President Trump, not because he associated with the notoriously corrupt attorney, but because Trump emulates him.
The concert doc is a pleasant way to experience Bruce Springsteen's new album.
The seemingly endless beneficial properties of mushrooms are extolled via gorgeous time-lapse photography and compelling interviews.
The chronicle of the first dedicated hospital ward for AIDS patients is one of the most difficult and moving documentaries of 2019 so far.
The energetic, entertaining, and enlightening documentary is bound to spark renewed interest in the late, great journalist and her dedication to active citizenship.
With remarkably frank interviews with its subject, this doc is a case study in talent given early means to excess and abuse.
Whether you remember her at her peak or not, you’ll be amazed that someone could have had her career and connections.