Time Travel

As Communicating Doors opens, a leather-clad prostitute called Poopay enters a hotel room for an assignation and discovers that her customer, Reece, is a dying old man who doesn’t require her usual services. Instead, he wants her to witness his confession. In the course of his business dealings and the…

Encore

Bat Boy: The Musical. The character of Bat Boy is based on a recurring character in the Weekly World News — a two-foot-high boy, found in a cave in West Virginia, who endorsed Al Gore for president and later almost died after being sprayed by a pesticide truck. In the…

None Like It Lame

When we first see the title characters of Connie and Carla, a penny-dreadful imitation of one of Hollywood’s most inimitable comedies, they are loud-mouthed junior-high girls mugging in the school cafeteria. A minute later, they are loud-mouthed grownups (well, they’re the size of grownups) screaming out show tunes in a…

On the Flip Side

The six-month intermission is over; those of you left in the lobby wondering if Uma Thurman ever did kill Bill, may now return to your seats, unbuckle your belts and resume your gorging. Rest assured that Kill Bill Vol. 2, the final half of Quentin Tarantino’s fifth movie, offers just…

Flick Pick

Claude Lanzmann’s agonizing epic Shoah (1985) remains, in critic Roger Ebert’s phrase, “one of the noblest films ever made” and, beyond all doubt, one of the greatest non-fiction works committed to celluloid. It runs almost nine and a half hours but never betrays its great length because (Ebert again) this…

Walk That Walk

Boulder musician and outdoorsman Loren Mach is a guy who’s thrown himself into his passions one by one: The owner of percussion performance degrees from the Oberlin and Cincinnati conservatories and a former percussionist with the New Mexico Symphony, he shucked a career on the skins to take a walk…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, April 15 Student moviemakers from around the world can bask in the limelight this weekend during the First Look Student Film Festival, a wide-ranging celebration of cinema’s bright future. More than sixty short films, including narrative, documentary, animated and experimental works, are set to screen today through Saturday at…

Fresh Ear

Terry Gross has mastered the quiet craft of listening. As the host of National Public Radio’s Fresh Air, she’s conducted more than 10,000 on-air interviews, and she faces everyone — artists, pornographers, international war correspondents, Tammy Faye Bakker and Triumph the Insult Comic Dog — with a willing ear and…

Talking Shop

Denver fashionistas no longer have to make a run for the coasts to deck themselves out in red-hot designer duds. Now they can simply strut down to Skye, a newly opened LoDo boutique. “I really think it’s time to put Denver on the fashion map,” says owner Skye Forrest. “The…

Flip Out

FRI, 4/16 Think you play a mean pinball? Prove it. You’ll be up against the best of the flippin’ best at the Rocky Mountain Pinball Showdown, which starts today at the Jefferson County Fairgrounds. Elton John will be there, ready to whup your ass from behind the glass of his…

Bowled Over

FRI, 4/16 Denver artist Jean Smith always had a knack for giving whimsy a three-dimensional shape, rolling slabs of clay into brightly glazed flowers and sweetly humorous wall plaques. But then her artistic career took an unexpected turn. “It all started when I bought this box full of bowling trophies…

Neverland Lands

FRI, 4/16 Soar past the second star on the right and find yourself joyfully lost in Neverland at the Colorado Ballet’s world-premiere production of Peter Pan. “I’ve been thinking about doing Peter Pan for a long time, but it’s a very hard story to tell because it’s very poignant,” says…

Women on the Edge

Half a century ago, women artists were viewed as second-rate, at best. Then, around 35 years ago, women challenged that old chestnut. In the intervening decades, numerous important female artists have emerged, and works from previous generations have been upwardly reappraised. This Cinderella story is the political narrative and organizational…

Artbeat

Susan Goldstein is one of the best experimental fine-art photographers in the region, and POLI VESTURE: Photographic Images From a Catholic Statue Factory, her current solo at Edge Gallery (3658 Navajo Street, 303-477-7173), proves it. The fairly large exhibit is handsomely installed in the front gallery. Poli Vesture was a…

Now Showing

Don Stinson, Chuck Forsman and Eric Paddock/Jim Colbert. The Western landscape’s natural beauty has taken hold of the imagination of generations of artists, but during the last twenty years, some have chosen to examine the stickier topic of civilization’s affect on the scenery. This intellectual approach is the collective theme…

Enchanted Evening

In many ways Noel Coward’s life’s work was being a blithe spirit — and an intensely elegant one at that. An actor, writer and composer of songs, he was as much known for his suave persona as for his hilarious plays. He wrote Blithe Spirit in 1941, while German bombs…

Tragic Comedy

Although it’s a comedy, The Merchant of Venice is far darker than such sunny Shakespearean offerings as Much Ado About Nothing and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. It’s also a difficult piece for modern audiences because of the central figure of Shylock. Shylock is the money-lending Jew to whom Antonio, the…

Encore

Bat Boy: The Musical. The character of Bat Boy is based on a recurring character in the Weekly World News — a two-foot-high boy, found in a cave in West Virginia, who endorsed Al Gore for president and later almost died after being sprayed by a pesticide truck. In the…

Messin’ With Texas

It is, to those of us born and raised in Texas, the Greatest Story Ever Told and Retold; who can forget the Alamo when it’s on every Texas history-class final exam? At 5 a.m. on March 6, 1836, some 189 Texan soldiers and volunteers were slaughtered while trying to protect…

Family Ties

Israeli writer-director Nir Bergman’s Broken Wings never shows an automatic weapon, a military roadblock or a horrific explosion on a city street. Rather than deal with the volatile politics of the Middle East, this quiet, soul-wrenching film examines the unresolved traumas of one middle-class family trying to cope with the…

Flick Pick

Among the film world’s brilliant jokers and devoted anarchists, Luis Buñuel has no equal — never will. And in the great, daunting body of the Spanish director’s work, which spans five decades, That Obscure Object of Desire (1977) must rank somewhere between the sublime and the miraculous. Always at home…

Rod’s Body of Work

Rod Stewart, if you’re reading this: Please give up. He first appeared as a street-walking urchin with a heart full of R&B, then evolved into a suave, rooster-coiffed crooner of ballads and standards — and still, Stewart just will not fade away. Rod the Mod started out as, believe it…