Not Too Frank

This is one of those reviews that finds me struggling as I sit at the computer: Imagine the classic movie scene in which the protagonist has an angel on one shoulder and a devil on the other, each whispering persuasively into an ear. Or think of this as a battle…

Ashes to Ashes

The set is spare and symmetrical, an apartment dominated by a bank of gray-lit windows and furnishings in varying shades of black and gray. This is downtown New York, ash-covered in the aftermath of September 11, 2001. We hear the sound of a plane engine getting louder and louder, newscasters’…

Encore

Impulse Theater. Basements and comedy go together like beer and nuts or toddlers and sandboxes. The basement of the Wynkoop Brewery where Impulse Theater performs is crowded, loud and energetic. Impulse does no prepared skits, nothing but pure improv — which means that what you see changes every night, and…

Problems at Home

The consequences of marital discord in Mr. & Mrs. Smith go way beyond sleeping on the couch or maintaining icy silence at the breakfast table. Thanks to a cartoonish premise by British screenwriter Simon Kinberg — and the dictates of the summer-movie marketplace — the battling Smiths of the title…

Bad Education

Before there was School of Rock, the 2003 movie in which Jack Black awakened a class of subdued elementary-school kids with lessons in America’s loudest subject, there was rock school. Students of the Paul Green School of Rock Music in Philadelphia have been worshiping at rock’s altar — and learning…

The Wiz

Although they’re exceptional, there is also a numbing sameness to the movies of Hayao Miyazaki, the revered animator who has bewitched Japanese audiences since the late 1970s and bewildered American ones since 1999, when Princess Mononoke was among the first of his movies to receive significant Stateside release. There is…

Quelle Horreur!

About a year ago, buzz started building among horror fans about a French slasher movie titled Haute Tension, about two girls who go to a country house and get terrorized by a maniac in workman’s coveralls. It had been well received in Europe, and horror geeks with websites here occasionally…

Flick Pick

Jonathan Swift’s observation that satire is “a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody’s face but their own” almost certainly applies to moviemakers who ape the work of their peers with comic intent, as evidenced by a well-chosen selection of films on view in Boulder this week. Under…

Sounds of Silence

For me, silent films usually conjure images of mustache-twirling evil-doers, jazz-age slapstick or, more chillingly, D.W. Griffith’s groundbreaking yet racist opus, The Birth of a Nation. Griffith wasn’t the only director of the silent era who saw both the aesthetic potential and propagandist power of moving pictures. In 1929, Russian…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, June 9 The Greeks had a succinct way of explaining the seasons: It was all the fault of a pomegranate seed ingested by Persephone after she was abducted and taken to the underworld by Hell’s top dog, Hades. Her highfalutin’ mom, Demeter, goddess of the harvest, mourned so loudly…

Outsider Art

Gregory “Griz” Robinson calls himself “the starving artist of the motorcycle business.” The Pueblo native and longtime motorcycle racer and enthusiast owns the fastest fuel drag bike in Colorado. (It’s so fast, in fact, that he won at Sturgis last year with it.) When he’s not competing, the blue-collar Harley-Davidson…

Summer Savings

SAT, 6/11 Denver’s Baker Neighborhood is one of those nostalgic-home neighborhoods that people from other places never seem to understand. “Wait — it’s a neighborhood right in the heart of the city, with actual houses and everything, not skyscrapers?” they ask. Exactly. The eclectic area is a hodgepodge of quaint…

Bike Naked!

SAT, 6/11 You don’t need a reason to bike in the buff, but it helps — especially if a lot of other people are doing it with you. That’s the idea behind the World Naked Bicycle Ride, a global exercise in critical mass and mass nudity taking place today in…

Out of Iraq

SAT, 6/11 Iraqi intellectual and artistic life essentially ceased to exist under the relentless grip of Saddam Hussein’s Baathist regime. If you weren’t willing to paint glowing images of the despot, you simply weren’t allowed to be an artist in Iraq, and many people fled the country as a result…

Rock the Mike

WED, 6/15 In one of his bits, comedian Tony Rock discusses the need for a black president. Not a Colin Powell-type black president, Rock explains, but somebody with an edge, somebody just out of prison. “We need a president named Keef,” Rock concludes. “K-E-E-F. President Keef’s entourage would include the…

Weather Changes

Entering the first of the galleries off the main entrance of Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art, viewers are surrounded by white-on-white color-field paintings by German-born Udo Nger, one of three artists in WHITE OUT: Lighting Into Beauty. As I looked around at the dazzling lack of color, it occurred to…

Artbeat

Rule Gallery (111 Broadway, 303-777-9473) is currently putting on a pair of back-to-back solos, both of which are made up of sophisticated abstract paintings. In the front is Udo Nger: Light as a Material; in the back is Maggie Michael: (T)rain. The Nöger paintings are more modest examples of what…

Now Showing

Alden Mason, Kimberlee Sullivan, and Lorey Hobbs. The changing of the seasons from spring to summer is what inspired William Biety, director of the Sandy Carson Gallery, to put together three solos, each comprising nature-based abstractions. Alden Mason marks the debut of the Washington artist, who is represented in this…

Viva la Diva

Little Tina Denmark was born with talent. No one knows where it came from — her mother is a perky, cookie-baking,’ 50s-style housewife, her father always away on unspecified business — but dancing and singing are in her blood. So when Tina loses the lead in the school musical, Pippi…

Encore

Impulse Theater. Basements and comedy go together like beer and nuts or toddlers and sandboxes. The basement of the Wynkoop Brewery where Impulse Theater performs is crowded, loud and energetic. Impulse does no prepared skits, nothing but pure improv — which means that what you see changes every night, and…

Broke, but Not Broken

There was no reason to expect much from Cinderella Man, Ron Howard’s biography of boxer James Braddock, who in the summer of 1935 became the most unlikely heavyweight champion in the history of boxing. After all, it’s a true tale whose outcome has been pre-determined; surely there could be no…

All the Right Moves

Ten is a magical age, when kids are old enough to make articulate statements about their experience and young enough to express their feelings without shame. In a couple of years, excitement will go the way of the sack lunch and become uncool, and acceptable poses will shrink to a…