Seth MacFarlane proves there are A Million Ways to Die in the West

We’re still adjusting to Seth MacFarlane as a big-screen star. Not just because his breakneck absurdist humor often demands that viewers pause and rewind, but because the man himself looks like a hand-inked cartoon, with his black, pupil-less eyes and an alabaster baby face that appears to reflect light like…

Cold in July is warmed by talented acting and directing

The triptych of masculinities at the core of director Jim Mickle’s Sundance hit Cold in July (he co-wrote the screenplay with Nick Damici) pulls double duty; it leads the viewer down a nerve-racking rabbit hole of violence, gore and clever throwaway wisecracks while anchoring the film’s sly musing on what…

Tobias Fike’s solo at David B. Smith is a conceptual beauty

Conceptual artist Tobias Fike, who’s been showing his creations around Denver for the past few years, is the subject of an elegant solo at David B. Smith Gallery titled Then and now and then. Fike is perhaps best known for his performances done with Matthew Harris, which are documented in…

Now Showing

1959. Dean Sobel, director of the Clyfford Still Museum, is the host curator for Modern Masters at the Denver Art Museum, and he’s done a companion exhibit at his own stamping grounds called 1959: The Albright-Knox Art Gallery Exhibition Recreated. (Special tickets allow visitors to see both.) The backstory for…

Now Playing

A Lie of the Mind. Thundery weather and a voice in the darkness: At the very beginning of A Lie of the Mind, Jake is on the phone telling his brother Frankie that he’s killed his wife. Over his brother’s protests, Frankie insists on visiting his sister-in-law to discover her…

Jolie the Great and Powerful

Boil Maleficent down to one newt’s nose-sized piece of advice and you’d get this: Don’t dump Angelina Jolie. It’s not a problem most mortals will face, but as seen through director Robert Stromberg’s lens, the antlered arch-villain of Sleeping Beauty is a sympathetic scorned woman, equal parts Gloria Gaynor, Princess…

Arts Buffet

The wooing of young-professional audiences has become one of the most important trends in the marketing of cultural attractions, from art museums to the ballet. And if you’ve been watching, you’ll have noticed that many of our cultural institutions support philanthropic “in” clubs that blend mingling at fundraising events with…

Stirring the (Sex) Pot

Sexpot Comedy will celebrate the six-month anniversary of its showcases at the Oriental Theater by booking its biggest headliner yet. “I think bringing in a comic the caliber of Andy Kindler is a testament not only to the success of the Sexpot Comedy monthly shows at the Oriental, but to…

Bronze Star

Art and science may seem like strange bedfellows, but the two fields cross over more often than most people imagine. Their intertwined relationship is the subject of Untitled 67: Chain Reaction, the latest installment in the Denver Art Museum’s Final Fridays series. “We took inspiration from our newly opened Western…

The Kinfolks Soul Food Festival

If you were to make a short list of the greatest bass players of all time, Bootsy Collins would surely be included. After firing his backing band in the late ’60s, James Brown hired Collins and his brother Catfish’s band, the Pacemakers, to back him up. Collins later became a…

It’s Insane!

A couple of guys had a crazy dream, and it all came together in a bar in Orlando. “We wanted to do some kind of a race, and decided to do something with inflatables,” recalls Insane Inflatable 5K co-creator Stuart Kaul. “The more beers we had, the crazier the ideas…

The Air Apparent

At tonight’s Aerial Acrobatic Arts Festival, spectators can catch sixteen of the country’s up-and-coming aerialists as they compete for inter-national honors in the hoop, strap, silk and trapeze categories. The festival was created as a place for aerial performers to display their skills for a panel of judges, many of…

Liquid Gold

After last September’s floods devastated Lyons, the focus was on rebuilding: lives, homes and spirits. At the time, no one was in the mood for fun and games. But they definitely could have used a beer — and Oskar Blues, which got its start in Lyons, was happy to help…

Play Right

From the pen of one of the most prolific and revered living American playwrights comes the Bug Theatre’s new show, A Lie of the Mind. The 1986 drama, by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Sam Shepard, follows two dysfunctional families through the days following a serious act of domestic violence in which…

Chalk It Up To Art

Colorado sure loves the arts, as shown by the lineup of summer festivals — and one of the best is the annual Denver Chalk Art Festival, which turns Larimer Square into one big canvas. “It’s a unique opportunity for people to see art being created from the ground up and…

Out of This World!

Next to the indelible image of Darth Vader, there’s nothing more iconic of the Star Wars mythos than John Williams’s stirring musical cues. From the booming main theme to the foreboding “Imperial March” and beyond, the music of Star Wars is as essential to the experience as ‘droids, Jedi and…

One Good Turn

As Hustle Man on fellow standup comedian Martin Lawrence’s show Martin in 1994, Tracy Morgan gave TV audiences their first taste of his bullish humor. But it wasn’t until the eccentric comedian landed a spot on Saturday Night Live that his bizarre view of the world was given a proper…

Cubic Feed

Colorado native Montgomery Knott began the first incarnation of Monkey Town more than ten years ago in a Williamsburg loft in Brooklyn, but his dream to take the immersive film-and-food experience on the road will bring him back to Denver for a three-month stand that he says is a testing…

A Slice Of Pie

Fans of Tom Robbins have (rightfully) wondered what the creative powerhouse has been up to since the publication of his most recent book, B Is for Beer, in 2009. For decades, the mystical-realism giant has been creating worlds that captivated readers, and many of his books have become New York…