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Clyfford Still. For the opening of the Clyfford Still Museum, director Dean Sobel has installed a career survey of the great artist that starts with the artist’s realist self-portrait and features his remarkable post-impressionist works from the 1920s. Next are Still’s works from the ’30s, with some odd takes on…

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Dixie’s Tupperware Party. Dixie is a booze- and sex-addicted, trash-talking, child-neglecting ex-con from Alabama who holds Tupperware parties in her trailer, and she’s invited you to this one. Dixie’s Tupperware Party, at the Galleria, really is a Tupperware party — you get a name tag and raffle number when you…

It’s on like Donkey Kong at the 1UP this week

His obsession was born at the world’s largest Entertainment McDonald’s. It was there, at the Orlando behemoth, that sixteen-year-old Jourdan Adler began playing Mortal Kombat. And he’s never really stopped. The original Mortal Kombat was released in 1992, the same year that Adler got his first job, as a McDonald’s…

A Late Quartet weaves its plot in musical metaphors

Woody Allen has been known to suggest that, in directing a good movie, much of the battle lies in casting. Were that entirely true, the Philip Seymour Hoffman-, Catherine Keener- and Christopher Walken-starring A Late Quartet would be phenomenal. As it is, the film about a New York City string…

Humor and drama blend in This Must Be the Place

If you Google the phrase “Danzig shopping for cat supplies,” you’ll find links to phone-cam shots of former Misfits singer Glenn Danzig crossing a grocery-store parking lot while wearing a Danzig T-shirt and carrying Fresh Step. He’s a striking figure, and, with his pale, vampiric aspect, totally incongruent with the…

The studied, somber Lincoln is hugely entertaining

There’s an un-fun tendency in American life to fictionalize our national heroes as rigid statue-people who only speak as though they are delivering commencement addresses, with a kind of unlovable, Al Gore-ish anti-charisma that would inhibit anyone in real life from becoming a national hero in the first place. Own…

How the World Began engages the intellect, not the emotions

What better time to contemplate the beginning of the world, or, as playwright Catherine Trieschmann puts it in How the World Began, “the leap from non-life to life,” than now, with the East Coast still struggling with the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy? As the evening begins, we hear terrifying winds,…

Lincoln takes the good Spielberg with the bad

The first few minutes of Lincoln play out like a parody of the expectations of Steven Spielberg’s detractors. The Great Emancipator rests like a humble Solomon upon a hard wooden chair, surrounded by freely mixing black and white soldiers of that great war of his. One black soldier dares to…

Has James Bond ever fit in?

Attention, Eon Productions, Daniel Craig and Heineken: James Bond is not a beer drinker! Sure, I know. Getting all worked up about the new James Bond installment is like freaking out about a new Tim Burton movie: Past glories don’t justify contemporary relevance. The year 2012 marks fifty years since…

American cinema was over before it started

That the American cinema is deader than Dillinger is a fact no right-thinking observer unwilling to be laughed out of the room would even think of denying today. To do the current round of think-piece writers one better, we will add that not only are the movies dead, but they…

Check in at the Denver Web Awards

Best Instagram Account; Most Viral Video of the Year; Best Politician on Social Media: These are just some of the categories in West-word’s third annual Denver Web Awards, which honor the best and brightest minds and projects on the city’s digital landscape. More than fifty awards dedicated to arts, news,…

Heart Work

Take a little art, a little comedy, some music and an interview, then throw them all together on stage with a colorful host. Sounds like the golden age of late-night, right? That’s the spirit Onus Spears aims to re-create with Rawlitix. “This series, it’s everything — all kinds of art…

Get In The Spirit

Every generation of artists has its hangout, and from 1984 until 1999, that place in Denver was the topsy-turvy City Spirit Cafe, on Blake Street in early LoDo. It was as much a work of art itself as it was a place for artists — and anyone, really — to…

Dance, Magic, Dance

The whole concept of a quote-along movie screening — wherein the audience is invited to join favorite characters in iconic spiels — is so inherently awesome that there’s really only one thing that could make it any better: the thrill of the unexpected. “We started adding interactive props and pyrotechnics,…

More Than Meets the Eye

For Denver’s Tranzcend drag and burlesque troupe, performance is all about fluidity. In tonight’s presentation, Under the Covers, drag kings and dancing queens will take on each other’s personae, trading roles and bringing favorite songs to life with lip-synching and seductive choreographed numbers. “Tranzcend provides opportunities for us to try…

Showga You Care

Showga — a form of yoga practiced to different musical styles — has been shifting and changing its format since originator Piper Rose conceptualized it; she was directly inspired by Astral Glamour’s Ester Hernandez (who’ll be one of many musicians playing the upcoming Showga series). “She’s ethereal and otherworldly and…

Laugh Your Face Off

It’s no secret: The performers who make up Denver’s sketch-comedy troupe LadyFace are all women. But the group hardly discriminates based on gender, and tonight’s LadyFace Presents: A Year of the Face proves it, as the act throws down some of its best material of the year — and invites…

Who Will Be the Next King of Kong?

n 2007, a little film called The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters earned the entire retro-gaming world a bonus round. The critically acclaimed documentary explores the obsessive culture of competitive arcade gaming through the eyes of two men seeking the world record in Donkey Kong, that classic, barrel-tossing…

Feel the Flow State

“We revel in that experience of getting into a zone where you’re so incredibly focused on what you’re about to do and what you’re doing,” says Aspen-based skier Chris Davenport, explaining the title and concept behind Warren Miller Entertainment’s 63rd film, Flow State. “When you’re dropping into a line and…

Joystick to the World

“When you play a video game, you become that character, so the music kind of becomes the soundtrack to your life. That’s why so many people are attached to this music,” says Tommy Tallarico, iconic video-game music composer and the man behind Video Games Live, a rock/symphony celebration of memorable…