THRILLS

Wednesday May 11 Bigger and better:Funsters John Flasburgh and John Linnel are better known to the world as They Might Be Giants. The quirky, goofy, hook-laden dynamic pop duo will make them all giddy tonight at the Ogden Theatre, located at 935 E. Colfax Ave. Tickets to the show, which…

THE SKY’S THE LIMIT

Landscape As Metaphor, a show originally intended as a celebration of site-specific art, opens Saturday at the Denver Art Museum after more than two years of planning and construction. Such international talents as Judy Pfaff, Ursula Von Rydingsvard and Ed Ruscha scouted out locations in and around the museum in…

ROCK OF MIDDLE AGES

What a review of Love, Janis really needs is a rock critic, not a theater critic. The show at the Denver Center Theatre Company has plenty of hot moments, but works best as a re-creation of Joplin’s music, rather than her life. Nevertheless, Janis lives again. And all of us…

BACK TO THE FOLKIE

Singer-songwriter Tom Lehrer, an enemy of sentimentality in all its forms, built an interesting career thrashing middle-class pretensions and undermining “good taste” wherever it reared its ugly head. His black, satirical songs scorched many a prejudice and failing in American society during the Fifties and Sixties, and while some of…

HIS OWN ROLE MODEL

Ray Liotta does not bullshit, and he has zero tolerance for those who do. As a result, if you persist in asking him bullshit questions, you will be rattled. Not because of the 38-year-old’s spectacularly intense gaze (the dominant image of such diverse films as Something Wild and Dominick &…

THRILLS

Wednesday May 4 Spirit world: Tesuque Indian sculptor Mark Swazo-Hinds creates astounding contemporary stone fetish and effigy figures decorated with feathers, shells, potsherds, deer antlers and buckskin. Examples of his work can be seen at the Heard Museum in Phoenix and at the Smithsonian, but Denverites now have a chance…

TV OR NOT TV

Television’s pervasive influence on society and the deconstruction of domestic life provide the major themes for two very different installations at Spark Gallery. Annalee Schorr and Virginia Folkestad fill the Platte Street space with mixed-media paintings, minimal sculpture and topical humor. Schorr’s fascination with the sequential imagery of television flavors…

AN EMPTY ROOM

It’s easy to pity someone dying of a painful disease. In the theater, it’s too easy. When disease is the subject of a play, it almost always becomes a substitute for dramatic structure–a built-in twister of heart-strings and manipulator of our personal and public fears. There are, of course, important…

ILL WILL

It’s no surprise that Cyril Collard’s Savage Nights became an instant cult hit when it was released in France in October 1992. This blunt autobiographical portrait of youthful narcissism and recklessness in the age of sexual peril was the first European film to confront the AIDS epidemic head-on. Not only…

THE GOULD VARIATIONS

Glenn Gould, the eccentric Canadian pianist and celebrated hermit, would be a tough nut for any filmmaker to crack. As a child prodigy who could play Bach before he could read, Gould sat next to the radio, transfixed by Toscanini. But later he announced: “I just don’t like the sound…

THRILLS

Wednesday April 27 A walk on the cyber side: Journalist Douglas Rushkoff took a leap off the technological cutting edge and the result was his book Cyberia: Life in the Trenches of Hyperspace, a look into the virtual reality world with insightful interviews of William Gibson, Timothy Leary, Terence McKenna…

ALTERNATIVE VIEWPOINT

Mackey Gallery’s Annual Photo Show grows more popular with each passing year. The current, third edition displays the young artspace’s customarily astute selection of more or less traditional fine-art photos, this time augmented by adventurous photo collages, photograms and 3-D photo constructions, all by local artists. Nostalgia tints Patricia Barry-Levy’s…

FANTASTIC VOYAGE

Because of dazzling special effects and a funny, bloodcurdling villain called the Trickster (he looks like a Mohawk warrior freaked out on acid but talks like a Phi Beta Kappa), the witty techno-fantasy Brainscan could be the teen hit of the spring. But there’s something else here, too–a distinction between…

THE PREFAB FOUR

At first glimpse, Iain Softley’s Backbeat looks like a gritty trifle aimed at nostalgic Beatles buffs. It dusts off the old story of Stu Sutcliffe, John Lennon’s best friend in Liverpool, who played bass with the group from 1959 to 1961. A halfhearted musician, Sutcliffe found his head turned by…

THRILLS

Wednesday April 20 Riddim method: Reggae queen Judy Mowatt has all the right roots–when Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingston left Bob Marley’s Wailers, she stepped in alongside Rita Marley and Marcia Griffiths as one of the I-Threes. Since then, this talented Rasta gal has gone solo, making waves wherever she…

PERSONAL BEST

The pungent smell of peeled onions welcomes viewers to a rambunctious exhibit of installation art at Edge Cooperative Gallery. Three artists turn the alternative space into separate and diverse environments, each defined by gallery walls. Since works constructed onsite like this are almost impossible to sell, the dedication and sacrifice…

DOUBLE FEATURE

Daniel is lonely. He misses the barrio, and a distant ‘burb with a goofball name like “Enchanted Acres” is a bleak wasteland in comparison to the warm feel of the old ‘hood. But Daniel is more than lonely: He’s in the midst of a mid-life crisis with cultural overtones. Tired…

JUNE WITH A CLEAVER

John Waters may have grown up, but he hasn’t gone straight. In his days as an enfant terrible, the most notorious moviemaker in Baltimore served up raw sensation, black comedy and low camp to fringe audiences who prided themselves on all manner of deviance. Those raucous midnight screenings of Pink…

THE DECLINE AND FALL OF ROMAN

If the Manson Family hadn’t stumbled across Sharon Tate, maybe Roman Polanski would be making movies for the Disney Channel. As it is, this once-fascinating artiste of the cinema has turned his personal life into a trashy novel and his mercifully infrequent movies into guided tours of his own sour…

THRILLS

Wednesday April 13 How big was it?: On the subject of fishing, you probably fall into one of two categories–those who do and those who can’t fathom it. Author John Gierach belongs to the former group and his book Dances With Trout, a collection of perceptive fish stories, does everything…

SMART ART

Longtime CU art instructor Luis Eades’s extraordinary paintings at first resemble illustrations in children’s science books. His clean, expert representational style is technically flawless and viewer-friendly. But the paintings on display at Foothills Art Center are far from simplified schematics of difficult subjects. Instead, Eades attempts to portray complicated interconnections…

SOCIETY’S CHILD

Love may be hard to find, but trust is even harder. The regional premiere of Trust, a new play by expatriated Denverite Steven Dietz (he now lives in Seattle), dives into the shallows of contemporary lust and longing to prove just how tough trust is to come by. Funny, twisted…