Geek-chic for Denver’s socially AWKWRD stretches its legs tonight

After ten successful years in the advertising business, Brian Wilkens decided to refocus his creative talents to help those who struggle withfeelings of awkwardness in social situations. He now turns geeks into geek-chic with the help of the new designs he creates under his own branch, AWKWRD. See also:Forever Darling…

MegaFauna will reopen in new space tomorrow

MegaFauna, the award-winning retail store, boutique, cafe and artists’ emporium, closed its doors at 2101 Larimer Street on September 28. But the news is all good, because MegaFauna needed to close in order to move to its new home at 3102 Blake Street. And it will launch that space tomorrow,…

10 things to do for $10 ( 5 free!) in Denver this weekend, October 4-6

Fall is making its presence known with cooler weather, even snow. And just in time for this season change, this weekend is packed with both indoor and outdoor activities — including a chili cook-off, a larger-than-life comedy showdown, a masquerade ball, an all-ages dance party, and the triumphant return of…

Now Showing: Chip Walton and Brian Freeland

For this year’s Now Showing, Westword’s fall arts guide (you’ll find it tucked into our September 26 issue), we asked artistic movers and shakers to answer a few questions about the state of the arts, both locally and around the world. We’ll be rolling out their answers over the next…

Frock Shop returns with a flock of bargains this weekend

A good sale can be found daily — just check out Groupon. But a great sale is much harder to find — and twice a year, Frock Shop delivers. Katie Gartner, founder of Frock Shop, even does all the leg work. See also: Fashion Lab Runway Show, Mona Lucero Fashion…

100 Colorado Creatives: Burlesque and cabaret queen Cora Vette

#42: Cora Vette Cora Vette, aka Reyna Von Vette, is larger than life, with a big sassy voice, a ribald sense of humor and a sparkly way with a needle and thread, which all come in handy when she tackles her many roles as a burlesque-show hostess-with-the-mostest, costume-maker and show-tune…

Jeff Campbell on Who Killed Jigaboo Jones?, his one-man show on hip-hop

In Who Killed Jigaboo Jones?, Jeff Campbell dissects the current state of hip-hop through the fictional story of a fallen rapper. His “one-man mockumentary on the hip-hop industrial complex” is an exploration on the exploitation of hip-hop culture, taking aiming at the industry in a humorous, thought-provoking way. After the…

Ken Foree on Dawn of the Dead and being a horror fan

Veteran character actor Ken Foree has deep roots in Denver. He graduated from a small Catholic high school here, where he was an all-city, all-state basketball player for two years — “arguably the best player in the state of Colorado,” he says — and his appearance at this year’s Mile…

Now Showing: Kent Thompson and Emily Tarquin

For this year’s Now Showing, Westword’s fall arts guide (you’ll find it tucked into our September 26 issue), we asked artistic movers and shakers to answer a few questions about the state of the arts, both locally and around the world. We’ll be rolling out their answers over the next…

Now Showing

Al Karim, Zimmer, Al Karim, Friberg. Robischon Gallery is so large that it can easily handle four (or, in a pinch, five) substantial solos. Typically, there’s some unifying element that links them all together, and that’s true this time, as all of the artists involved use photo-based methods ranging from…

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After the Revolution. Playwright Amy Herzog enters a very specific world in After the Revolution: the passionate, close-knit, hyper-idealistic world of Jewish Communism in New York City during the early decades of the twentieth century. For these activists, Soviet Russia was a model. But when Khrushchev denounced Stalin during the…

Smart casting elevates the entertaining Haute Cuisine

Over time, French president François Mitterrand grew weary of the fancy foods being dished up by his chefs, and so it came to pass that a little-known provincial cook was invited, in the late 1980s, to take over the president’s kitchen. In Haute Cuisine, a diverting, fictionalized version of the…

Gravity connects with viewers and pulls them in

Some movies are so tense and deeply affecting that they shave years off your life as you’re watching, only to give back that lost time, and more, at the end. Alfonso Cuarón’s Gravity is one of those movies. Sandra Bullock and George Clooney play astronauts — one a medical engineer,…

Parkland revisits the Kennedy assassination and its aftermath

“What a shitty place to die.” Whatever your feelings about Dallas, that’s a pretty harsh assessment. Then again, the character in Peter Landesman’s well-intentioned but unfulfilling Parkland who says it, an aide to fallen President John F. Kennedy, can probably be forgiven for his snotty Yankee attitude. Next month marks…

Metallica: Through the Never‘s Weird Provocation of White Aggrievement

In their experimental new film, the members of Metallica endeavor to translate the anger and pain in their music into a visual medium. Directed by Nimród Antalis, Metallica: Through the Neveris the band’s second big-screen effort, the first being being the 2004 behind-the-scenes documentary Metallica: Some Kind of Monster. That…