Celine Song’s phenomenal feature debut is the film to beat in 2023.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
All in Drama
Wes Anderson sticks the landing on his most ambitious narrative yet.
Margaret Qualley and Christopher Abbott manipulate each other in this over-stretched erotic thriller.
The latest dramatized product chronicle is one of the year’s best films — until an epic collapse undermines its significant gains.
Kelly Reichardt’s latest character study is sparse and dry even by the filmmaker’s arid standards.
Honest explorations of male friendships that don't involve toxic levels of masculinity or virility are a welcome change from the hardened stoicism we’re so often fed by our franchised heroes and loner tough guys.
Kristoffer Borgli’s pitch-black comedy dishes up a scathing critique of attention hounds and fame-seekers in the age of social media.
Judy Blume’s seminal 1970 novel receives a thoughtful adaptation from writer/director Kelly Freeman Craig.
James and Edwin discuss Ari Aster’s sprawling new film.
Ben Affleck’s entertaining dramatization of Nike courting Michael Jordan is catnip for basketball fans.
Zach Braff’s dramedy is the best narrative examination of the opioid impact thus far.
Series star Michael B. Jordan pulls double duty behind the camera and produces the trilogy’s best installment.
Frances O’Connor makes an impressive directorial debut with this Brontë sister biopic.
Luca Guadagnino’s cannibal road-trip movie might be the year’s most disjointed release.
Steven Spielberg dramatizes his youth to highly entertaining ends.
A minimal plot and esoteric subject matter keep this debut drama from making much of an impression.
A friendship comes to a sudden end in Martin McDonagh’s dark, metaphorically rich, period dramedy.
Todd Field and a career-best Cate Blanchett match tempos in the writer/director’s first film in 15 years.