Visual Arts Complex

The University of Colorado’s Department of Art and Art History, as good as it is and as talented as some of the faculty are (see review, page 46), has long been the campus stepchild, as indicated by the rundown building in which it’s been housed for decades. While other academic…

Sketches

Breaking the Mold. In 2003, Connecticut collector Virginia Vogel Mattern donated some 300 pieces of contemporary American Indian art to the Denver Art Museum. For one of the special shows inaugurating the new Frederic C. Hamilton Building, Native Arts curator Nancy Blomberg has selected over a hundred works for the…

Booger and Borat. You Likes?

Revenge of the Nerds: Panty Raid Edition (Fox) Revenge of the Nerds is a great movie. No, really. It’s got a bitching new-wave soundtrack and some truly inspired performances — memorable enough to wreck the careers of Robert Carradine (Lewis) and Curtis Armstrong (Booger). But mostly it’s the mix of…

No Replay for Wii Play

From the newest iPod to the Olsen twins’ collective waistline, the world loves all things mini. The Nintendo Wii embraces this digestible format once again for Wii Play, a collection of nine easy-to-play mini-games that comes bundled with a free Wii controller. However, the result is like a Happy Meal:…

Our top DVD picks for the week of March 6

A Brush With Death (New Light) Buster Crabbe Collection (St. Clair Vision) Captain Horatio Hornblower (Warner Bros.) Care Bears: Friends Forever (Lions Gate) Commissar (Kino) Confetti (Fox) Death Row (Anchor Bay) The Electric Company’s Greatest Hits & Bits (Shout) Fast Food Nation (Fox) The Full Monty: Fully Exposed Edition (Fox)…

Sew Forth

If you’ve been slacking, then it’s time to get your hands sewing and styling because March 7 is the deadline to enter Tamarac Square’s Fashion Project. The four-week Project Runway-style competion will feature a dozen or so designers each trying to win tickets to fall Fashion Week in New York,…

Spring Eternal

From images of Mayan goddesses and Mexican madonnas to hand-wrought works of fiber and clay, Primavera: A Spring Celebration of the Divine Feminine — an all-woman show opening today at the Chicano Humanities and Arts Council — delivers its theme on a veritable Botticellian half-shell. “A lot of us do…

Back-doored

“For me,” begins Laura Cuetara, associate professor of theater at the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, “the big white ball — the moment when I decided, yeah, I really have to do this — was when I was looking in the library at taking out some…

Street Fighting Man

As the inspiration for the Rolling Stones’ 1968 anthem “Street Fighting Man” and a former comrade of the late John Lennon, British Pakistani writer, historian and filmmaker Tariq Ali knows a thing or two about dissent. “Tariq ranks among the foremost critics of U.S. foreign policy,” says David Barsamian, founder/director…

Unholy Rollers

“We just went to this tournament of twelve teams in the Western division,” reveals Jen Frale — aka She Who Cannot Be Named of the Rocky Mountain Roller Girls. “The teams are so fast, and the girls are so agile and physical; these people are athletes. It’s amazing to see…

Chic Cause

The cause for Africa is almost as large as the continent itself, and it’s not just Angelina Jolie who has a vested interest in African children. Kelsey Horine, marketing director for Alliance Française de Denver, spent last summer volunteering at an orphanage in West Africa and wanted to do something…

Building Blocks

For Amanda Rea, balancing creativity with making a living has not been easy. The fiction writer has had to juggle multiple low-paying jobs, sometimes getting up at 4 a.m. to write. When she moved to Denver, the Lighthouse Writers Workshop helped her create a writing routine. Today she’ll join in…

Wild Moo Yonder

Ever wondered how Bovine Metropolis Theater comes up with its comedy sketches? Here’s a behind-the-scenes walk-through, provided by Bovine director Eric Farone, of the complicated creative process behind one of the sketches created for the theater’s new production, Cows on a Plane, which runs at 8 p.m. tonight and every…

Black Snake Moan

It may be hard out there for a pimp, but it ain’t too hard for a writer-director to make a movie whose marketing hinges on the lurid spectacle of Samuel L. Jackson pulling a half-naked Christina Ricci around on a chain. This sort of cheap trick is what they used…

Zodiac

When the editorial cartoonist turned amateur sleuth Robert Graysmith published Zodiac, he wrote that the tale was “the most frightening story I know.” His sprawling and meticulously researched account of the eponymous San Francisco serial killer was written in 1985, some sixteen years after the Zodiac’s last confirmed attack, and…

Wild Hogs

Wild Hogs — in which John Travolta, William H. Macy, Tim Allen and Martin Lawrence play emasculated suburbanites taking a cross-country motorcycle trip to rediscover their masculinity — doesn’t even sound like a real movie when you describe it to people. They give you that yer-shittin’-me stare, as though it…

Breaking and Entering

Let us applaud, on principle, Anthony Minghella’s return to small-scale storytelling. Breaking and Entering marks his first original screenplay since the oddball romantic comedy Truly, Madly, Deeply (1991), and a retreat from the jumbo-sized period pieces of his Miramax-to-the-max phase. Overrated as they are, The English Patient, The Talented Mr…

Frankie and Johnny at the Clair de Lune

I’ve been worrying about Frankie and Johnny all day, trying to figure out whether or not they’ll stay together. Which is odd, because they’re a fictitious couple dreamed up by playwright Terrence McNally in his Frankie and Johnny at the Clair de Lune and brought to life by Emily Paton…

Two Trains Running

I know that August Wilson is a great playwright in the same way I know that Notre Dame is a majestic cathedral, but whenever I re-encounter his work, I find myself trying to figure out exactly why it’s so great. In past reviews, I’ve used words like “rich” and “multi-layered”…

Now Playing

Clue: the Musical. The pleasure of this Country Dinner Playhouse production of Clue: the Musical is that it boasts a truly outstanding cast. Which is good, since the music is serviceable rather than clever or melodious, and this is less a show than a big, cheerful game. Cutouts of the…

108 Blue Cranes

Just last year, Japanese-American artist Yoshitomo Saito moved to Colorado, and he’s already the subject of a major solo: 108 Blue Cranes, at Rule Gallery, one of Denver’s top venues. I don’t need to tell you that this is no mean feat. Born in Tokyo in 1958, Saito attended Jiyugakuen…

REALationships: Works of Surreal Inspiration

Michael Chavez has been the curator at Foothills Art Center (809 15th Street, Golden, 303-279-3922) for a little over a year, but the current exhibit, REALationships: Works of Surreal Inspiration is the first show he’s had the opportunity to put together. The idea for the show is twofold, with Chavez…