Denver Film Festival 2018 Weekend One Review: Flat Earth Mayhem!
The Denver Film Festival’s first weekend was filled with movies that ranged from failed to fascinating.
The Denver Film Festival’s first weekend was filled with movies that ranged from failed to fascinating.
Vote, then reward yourself with a free drink and more free fun.
A Denver native, Sarah Bowling returned from school at the Art Institute of Chicago with her BFA and fresh new ideas to re-infiltrate into the Denver art community over the last couple of years.
This weekend marks the hundredth anniversary of the end of World War I, and several programs will commemorate that.
It documents with an incisive drabness the group sessions, garbled sermons and general shoddiness of Love in Action, the program that 19-year-old Jared (Lucas Hedges) gets enrolled in by his parents, played by Nicole Kidman and Russell Crowe
Denver Film Festival artistic director Brit Withey highlights The World Before Your Feet, a documentary about a man who spends years walking every block of New York City, as his must-see pick for November 5, 2018.
As Aldo El Creator, he draws from underground culture and gives it a modern twist in his clothing line.
While the holiday shopping season is just days away, Denver comedy remains a gift that keeps on giving giggles all year round. November’s comedic offerings are no exception; the days ahead are replete with well-produced local shows, innovative performers and benedictions from legends of the stage and screen. Keep reading…
Etsuko Ichikawa’s art glass and Peter Olson’s ceramics fill the gallery.
Finding new ways to get fit is no sweat in Denver.
Born in Ulaanbaatar, artist Eriko Tsogo is forever a traveler in thought and actions, and though she eventually settled with her family among metro Denver’s large Mongolian community, Tsogo still longs to bridge the opposing cultures with which she’s grown up.
No surprise: The Denver metro area’s arts economy is booming.
Denver Film Festival artistic director Brit Withey names his must-see picks for films screening at the event November 2 to 4, including Pity, Behind the Curve and Cold War.
The Denver Film Festival’s decision to launch its 41st edition on Halloween avoided disaster thanks in part to its opening night film, The Favourite.
Halloween may have gone the way of the rotted pumpkin, but there’s still plenty of ways to scare up a good time during the days ahead.
Immerse yourself in the visions of Denver’s finest artists, buy affordable works, and think politics as Denver Arts Week and First Friday converge.
Denver Film Festival artistic director Brit Withey touts The Wolf House, an animated film from Chile, as the must-see pick for November 1, 2018.
Author Ramona Ausubel thinks strange thoughts; luckily, she puts them on the page for readers to experience too.
Women have come together to write, direct, produce, and perform the feminist absurdist tragedy, Witches & Harlots on Halloween night.
Denver Film Festival artistic director Brit Withey previews the 41st edition of the Mile High City staple as well as the opening night selection, The Favourite.
Don’t miss Claes Oldenburg With Coosje van Bruggen: Drawings, of Eyes On: Julie Buffalohead.
Despite being built based on Welles’s notes and the input of people who were in front of and behind the camera on set, this The Other Side of the Wind has a haphazard “well, he shot it, so we better include it” vibe