Kevin Klean

Goodbye, Mr. Chips. Hello, Mr. Hundert. If we can judge from the new Kevin Kline vehicle, The Emperor¹s Club, the notion remains alive (if not particularly well) that a self-sacrificing boarding-school teacher can enrich the lives of his students while subsisting in relative emotional misery himself — and that the…

What Was Going On

The tragedy is that even those who should have known better didn’t know at all. How could they? The people whose names they sought weren’t listed; their contributions weren’t cited; their influences weren’t credited. So even those who spent hours and days and forevers wearing out the grooves in search…

Flick Pick

After more than 400 books, countless TV documentaries and half a dozen movies, can the huge, untidy pile of dark speculations about President John F. Kennedy’s assassination support one more theory? Writer/director Neil Burger thinks so. Shot with a hand-held camera in jittery mock-doc style, Interview With the Assassin (opening…

Sky Writer

Elyse Singleton has been supporting herself as a freelance writer for years. She’s had articles and columns in the Denver Post, the Miami Herald, USA Today, the Chicago Tribune and Westword. She’s done a lot of travel writing and also turned out pieces for women’s magazines. But all that time,…

Justice for All

Denver’s nomadic CityStageEnsemble could almost be counted among the city’s disenfranchised: After losing its permanent home a few years ago, the company founded by Dan Hiester and David Earl Jones went into hibernation. But now CityStage is back to pick up the pieces, with or without a venue. And if…

Free for All

Now in its 22nd year, Boulder’s Imagination Makers Theater Company does something rare and wonderful for kids: It gives credibility to their own sweet, immature voices. Instead of force-feeding them drama created by adults who think they know what kids will like and understand, this troupe plucks its productions from…

Sporting Chance

Nothing announces the start of the snowriding season like Warren Miller’s annual late-fall film extravaganza, and this year is no exception. Storm, Miller’s 53rd adventure epic, takes moviegoers on screaming rides down vertical cliffs in our own back yards of Breckenridge, Aspen and Steamboat. It also ventures up the steep…

Talking Shop

Who knew? Golden-based Fulcrum Publishing is the largest independent book house in Colorado, and its output includes hundreds of titles geared to readers in the West: From xeriscape gardening to hitting the trails, Fulcrum’s drawn a bead on Colorado interests without an ounce of help from the big publishing firms…

Happy Birthday, Havu

On the frigid night of November first, hundreds of art enthusiasts made their way to the opening of the Four Year Anniversary Show at the William Havu Gallery. The occasion, of course, was a celebration of the gallery’s fourth year in business. “We’ve never had an opening like it,” says…

Artbeat

The Soup Gallery (554 Santa Fe Drive, 720-946-2899) is run by artist Josh Bemelen in the space that was formerly the home of the ILK co-op. Sadly, ILK exists today only as ILK @ Pirate, where it started — and where, if rumors are to be believed, it will soon…

Poetry Men

The Denver Center complex hummed with activity last Saturday night. On the streets outside, cars circled aimlessly around the full parking structure. In the Buell, Tony Curtis maundered onto the stage in Some Like It Hot, and a stage away, playwright Martin McDonagh’s mean-spirited brothers tormented each other in The…

Wonder Boy

So, you wish to know if Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets is as good as the first Harry Potter movie? Is it as charming, visually gratifying and faithful to filthy-rich author J.K. Rowling’s inescapable books? Well, that’d be “yep” times four, as it’s definitely an enchanting spectacular for…

Curve Ball

The current TV ad campaign for the sleeper hit My Big Fat Greek Wedding plays cleverly on the film’s cross-cultural appeal by substituting the words “Italian,” “Jewish” and “Russian” for “Greek.” The implication: A person from any ethnic or religious background will relate to this story’s characters, drama and humor…

Flick Pick

Movie buffs who are in the mood for a little blood, deceit and darkness need look no further than this week’s second annual Longmont Film Festival, which presents three film noir classics Thursday and Friday at the Longmont Performing Arts Center, 513 Main Street. At 7 p.m. Thursday, Colorado Public…

Buddha-ing Artists

As candles burn brightly along the wall at the Funky Buddha Lounge on a chilly Tuesday evening, the conversations below revolve around Bill Kinsey’s creepy, crawly 3-D bug masks hanging in each of the venue’s booths. Not exactly your style? Don’t worry: Next week’s feature will be Sumi ink sketches…

Real Sex

Faithful followers of Sex in the City must suspend their belief in return for the emotional paydirt: Though adorable Sarah Jessica Parker and her licentious single cohorts flounce their way through various escapades of the heart (and other body parts) each week, the comedy always seems to come to roost…

Talking Shop

When I was a little girl, my grandfather had a train table. Somehow, though, the word “table” doesn’t do it justice: The site was an entire miniature town and took up more than half the basement. This fantasy place had a lake that was dotted with sailboats in summertime, a…

Free for All

Eric Saperston certainly isn’t the first person to ever climb into a vintage VW bus with his dog to follow the Grateful Dead on tour. But the upshot of his travels, which began in 1993 and continued for seven amazing years, turned out to be a different story altogether –…

Hello Andy!

The fall/winter show at Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art, POPjack: Warhol to Murakami, is a thoughtful and thought-provoking survey of the interrelationships between the American art of the 1960s and ’70s and Japanese and American art from the last five years. The compelling exhibit is highly unusual, even if the…

Artbeat

Spark Gallery, the city’s oldest co-op, is hosting a pair of intelligent and complementary solo shows, Sue Simon: How Many? and Foci: Photographs by Barbara Carpenter. Simon, a former scientific illustrator, has created a group of abstract paintings that vary widely in appearance even though they are apparently all part…

Parade of Pointless Pain

I must admit, I don’t see the point of Martin McDonagh’s The Lonesome West, a play about a pair of hateful and hate-filled brothers, set in a bleak Irish village called Leenane (this is the third of a trilogy of plays set in this place). One of the brothers, Coleman…

Tapping Into Success

Most of us remember the 1952 movie version of Singin’ in the Rain for the inspired partnership of Donald O’Connor and Gene Kelly and the infectiously upbeat songs of Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed. The plot revolves around Hollywood and the film industry just as America was discovering talking…