Michael Clayton

It will no doubt be said time and again of Michael Clayton: best John Grisham adaptation ever. Only, of course, it did not spring from the billion-dollar mind of the attorney-turned-franchise, but from Tony Gilroy, who made his big-screen bow fifteen years ago as the screenwriter of the ice-skating melodrama…

Hype Machine

What’s left to say about Halo 3? How about this: All the pomp and circumstance surrounding its launch sure have been distracting. Commercials that look like clips from a Hollywood movie, extravagant collectors’ sets that sell for $130, limited-edition Xbox 360s with a green-and-gold Halo-inspired color scheme, and a midnight…

You’ll Laugh Dying

You Kill Me(Genius) Funny thing seeing Philip Baker Hall in You Kill Me, as he’s already played the role of a drunken hit man’s boss in The Matador, to which this feels like a slapshtick-noir sequel. It’s also the photo-negative of Sexy Beast: Once more Ben Kingsley plays a killer…

Up and Coming

Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Season Three (Universal) Black Sheep Unrated (Genius) Bob Mould: Circle of Friends (Granary) Bruce Springsteen: Under Review-1978-82: Tales of the Working Man (Sexy Intellectual) Concert for Diana (Universal) CSI New York: The Third Season (Paramount) Man Push Cart (Koch Lorber) The Marx Brothers Collection (Passport) Meerkat Manor:…

Defiance

Any play by John Patrick Shanley is worthwhile, but Defiance is a far slighter script than other works of his that I’ve seen. The second play in a projected trilogy (the first is Doubt, which took the Pulitzer Prize and will be staged by the Denver Center Theatre Company in…

You Can’t Take It With You

In 1936, the year it was written, You Can’t Take It With You would have been described as zany or madcap. It’s about the doings of a dotty, vaguely artistically inclined family. Penelope Sycamore writes plays because someone once left a typewriter on the doorstep. Her husband, Paul, makes fireworks…

Now Playing

How I Learned to Drive. “Look at me,” Uncle Peck pleads to his young niece, the narrator-protagonist of How I Learned to Drive. “Listen to me.” And that’s just what she does. Deeply and over a period of years, she ponders her relationship with the uncle who first molested her…

A Bold New Era Begins, The Eclectic Eye

In August, the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center unveiled its new wing, designed by Denver architect David Owen Tryba and his team. The addition is attached to the original John Gaw Meem building, which was built in 1936, a masterpiece of the art moderne that melds Pueblo-style design with early…

Stefan Kleinschuster: 10 Ways to Kill a Hero

For his swan song as the outgoing director of the Phillip J. Steele Gallery at the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design (1600 Pierce Street, 303-225-8575, www.rmcad.edu), Eric Shumake is presenting the spectacular Stefan Kleinschuster: 10 Ways to Kill a Hero. Kleinschuster is one of the area’s most exciting…

On Display

Artisans & Kings. For its first extravaganza of the season, the Denver Art Museum has unveiled a sprawling blockbuster in the Frederic C. Hamilton Building that focuses on the royal collections from the Louvre. You don’t have to know much about art to have heard of the Louvre, so Artisans…

The Pink Floyd and Syd Barrett Story

During the early portion of his career, the late Syd Barrett, who named and led Pink Floyd, generally maintained his equilibrium while treading the fine line between genius and madness — but he couldn’t keep up this balancing act indefinitely. His slow-motion tumble into mental illness, and the strange, beautiful…

Feel the Burn

There’s possibly no better book to discuss at a library than Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury’s prophetic parable about a book-burning society of the future. The novel was an obvious choice for The Big Read, a nationwide initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts to encourage folks to read. And…

Ink and Tunes

Jake La Botz has a lot of tattoos — so many he’s not even sure how many he has anymore. “It starts getting blurry when your whole back is covered,” he says. He also has a lot of friends in the tattoo business. And it also turns out that a…

Murals, Murals Everywhere

One brush stroke at a time. That’s how the Santa Fe Arts District went from being a crumbling old commercial strip a decade ago to becoming the center of Denver’s visual arts community. So when gallery owners and studio renters started looking for a way to spruce up the ol’…

Forever 21

While Simon Schama geeks his jittery British way through his weekly art-history lessons on Simon Schama’s Power of Art (which is surprisingly riveting, in a PBS sort of way), another public-television gem, Art:21 — Art in the Twenty-First Century, looks to the future. And in honor of the future, and…

Screaming Banshee Ball

Stitched up and spurting, the dancing dead will come alive as Bad Art for Bad People digs up some fiendish fun at its pre-holiday spookfest, the Zombie Dance Party. The two-night phantasmal prom hangs over forty local and national artists, conjures live magic by Phelyx, features the haunted honeys of…

Naturally High

Travelers call it the “Last Shangri-la,” while locals think of Bhutan as the “Land of the Thunder Dragon.” Regardless, the tiny, isolated and pristine Himalayan nation remains a relatively peaceful place where the scenery is spectacular, Buddhism is practiced openly and old traditions live on. From out of Bhutan’s rarefied…

X Marks the Spot

The Mile High Chapter of the American Red Cross wanted to find a fun way to educate Denverites on how to prepare for emergencies. And what could possibly be better than a treasure hunt? Today’s Paint the Town Red Treasure Hunt leads participants through downtown, going from clue to clue…

Sweet Moves

Although this show is titled 3D: Dance, Drinks, Desserts, the performance won’t give you indigestion. Put on by Denver’s Kim Robards Dance company, it’s more about audience repose: Spectators are invited to taste Colorado wines and locally baked pastries as they watch modern choreography unfold on stage. The night’s program…

Ride On, Sisters

Want to see the hottest women’s winter sports apparel while raising money for Boarding for Breast Cancer (B4BC), an organization educating young women about the importance of early detection? And what if the clothing were modeled by strapping young men instead of women? Outdoor DIVAS knew you couldn’t say no…

Show Us What You Got!

Come on, now — bust a move! Have you been stifling your fly break-dancing moves? Do you miss old-school hip-hop and those outrageous ’80s fashion choices of b-boys and girls? If so, slide on over to Club Feel tonight at 9 p.m. for a flashback of tight hip-hop and breakbeats…

Bible Thumper

For one year, A.J. Jacobs — who “grew up Jewish the same way Olive Garden is Italian” — decided to strictly obey the Bible for his book, The Year of Living Biblically: One Man’s Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible. “My goal was to follow every…