Trans Series Her Story Screens to Benefit The Center

Visibility of the LGBTQ community in new media and pop culture continues to rise, and adding to it is the new web series Her Story. The trans-forward series is getting an in-depth presentation, complete with its creators and talent, and courtesy of the GLBT Community Center of Colorado and the Sie FilmCenter,…

Nuts! Reintroduces the Quack Who Sold America Goat Testes

Nuts!, a marvelous, mostly animated doc/drama hybrid, couldn’t have come along at a better time. Director Penny Lane (Our Nixon) showcases, with wit and suspense, the undoing of one of the 20th century’s great flimflam artists, a huckster who seized then-new communication technologies — and the trappings of Christian divinity…

Netflix’s The Get Down Makes You Wonder How It Keeps from Going Under

The Bronx is burning in the introductory episodes of The Get Down, Netflix’s new series that presents as urban-cinematic fable the genesis of rap. The cluttered, over-caffeinated 90-minute pilot, directed by creator and executive producer Baz Luhrmann, takes place in the summer of 1977, when a serial killer terrorized New…

On the Screen, Roth’s Indignation Only Fitfully Comes to Spiteful Life

Writer Keith Gessen once said that Philip Roth wasn’t a misogynist and didn’t hate women because he spent all his time “thinking about fucking them.” But he did concede that Roth probably thought “women were a foreign country.” In James Schamus’ debut feature Indignation, an adaptation of a late Roth…

The Low-Key Pete’s Dragon Dares to Mostly Let Its Beast Chill

Pete’s Dragon is as cuddly as the mountains of plush toys Disney hopes to sell from it. A disarmingly homespun blockbuster, this loose remake of the studio’s 1977 live-action/animation hybrid is perhaps best defined by all the things it’s not: It’s not a soaring action flick, nor an indulgence in…

Don’t Think Twice Is a Spot-On Comedy About Comedy

Mike Birbiglia’s Don’t Think Twice stands as the best, most revealing film about comedy people and one of the best about artistic collaboration. It’s a boisterous and sensitive work of many facets: tender group portraiture, bang-on media satire, low-key romance, evenhanded inquiry into the ethics of selling out. Above all…

Das Jackboot: Don’t Sleep on Netflix’s NSU: German History X

You can have your houses of cards, your Jessica Joneses, your wet hot American summers. The Netflix original with its finger firmest on the pulse of our fraught current moment? It comes from Germany, comprises three feature-length “episodes,” and commences its tale more than a quarter-century ago. NSU: Germany History…

Drawn to Misery: BoJack Horseman‘s Third Season Is Its Best Yet

Just over a minute into the third season of the Netflix animated comedy BoJack Horseman, an entertainment-news interviewer asks our hero, “What would an Oscar nomination mean for BoJack Horseman?” The rest of the season is dedicated to answering that question, tracking BoJack (voiced by Will Arnett) from press junkets…

The Ten Best Geek Events in Denver in August

The end of summer is in sight, but there’s still plenty of geek fun to be had before it’s gone. August has a full slate of nerd-tinged fun, from movies to music and all points in between. Here are the month’s ten best geek events, in chronological order.  10. Weird Al…

The Ten Best Film Events In Denver In August

August is here, marking the start of the long stretch between the summer and holiday movie seasons. To fill the gaps, local film programmers are getting in gear to roll out special acquisitions, programs and guest stars that will keep the movie-watching machine well-oiled and running smoothly.  Here, in chronological…

A Reel Deal: Sie FilmCenter to Offer $2 Tuesdays

The Sie FilmCenter gets it. “We understand, it can be a gamble to walk into your local independent theater and buy a ticket for film you don’t know anything about,” says JoAnna Cintron, the Denver Film Society’s spokeswoman. “It can be scary. There might be subtitles (shudder)… or possibly an actor you haven’t…

Eat That Question Sifts Through Frank Zappa’s Cosmik Debris

Steve Allen didn’t know what to make of Frank Zappa. The clean-cut young musician was promising to “play the bicycle” on the set of The Steve Allen Show in 1963, spinning the wheels and tapping on the spokes. The result, with the help of a tuneless orchestra behind him and…