Two for the Road

Directed by Walter Salles (1995’s Foreign Land), the Brazilian Central Station concerns the relationship between a homeless nine-year-old boy and the insensitive, acerbic woman who reluctantly agrees to help him find his father. Winner of the Golden Bear award for Best Film at the 1998 Berlin Film Festival (along with…

Junkie Food

For better or worse, the father figure in Larry Clark’s ironically titled Another Day in Paradise turns out to be Mel, a foul-mouthed forty-year-old junkie wearing a devil’s-red tennis shirt. His notion of good counsel is showing his surrogate son how to disable the burglar alarm at a medical clinic…

Sermon on the Mount

In the 1993 hit Groundhog Day, Bill Murray played a show-biz smartass who grew into a human being. Murray added a core of warmth and romance to his comic arsenal without losing his zinging wit and crack-up irony, and he’s kept that progress going, even in piddling vehicles such as…

Plane Truths

Adriel Heisey takes pictures of landscapes that might as well be on other planets. Most of us have seen what the land looks like from an airplane–but not Heisey’s airplane, a custom-built ultralight with a control stick that straps to his right leg. With both hands free to hold his…

It Takes a Village

Canadian author Lilian Nattel grew up in the shadow of a lost culture. Her parents, Jewish Holocaust survivors, often spoke of their vanished lives in pre-WWII Poland, but there was no way for her to truly know what it was like. “It was almost a dream–like a fairy tale or…

Night & Day

Thursday January 28 Prepare to stretch your mind: When noted journalist David Barsamian drops by the Tattered Cover LoDo tonight at 7:30 to discuss his book The Common Good, it’s the ideas of brilliant thinker Noam Chomsky that will take center stage. Barsamian’s book, a cerebral Chomsky interview published as…

Private Passions

The private passions of two collectors have gone very public in Boulder. Sans Titre: Works From the Collection of Peggy Scott and David Teplitzky, which opened in mid-January at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art, has been attracting huge crowds–and not just the partyers who broke all BMoCA attendance records…

Parrot Heads

After slogging through the two hours of aimless conversation and mildly entertaining lounge tunes that permeate Rick Lawson’s Incident at the Blue Parrot Cafe, it comes as welcome relief when one character finally says something that’s been on every theatergoer’s mind since the play began. Seemingly investing his remarks with…

Out of Africa

Begging forgiveness from God and anyone else who will listen, a mortally wounded policeman staggers through the West Indian jungle and bemoans the “Africa of my mind” and “glories of my race.” The mulatto corporal, ever aware that his mixed-blood origins effectively brand him an outcast among his fellow islanders…

The Mild Bunch

“Freedom’s just another word for nothin’ left to lose,” Kris Kristofferson sings in his most beguiling song, “Me and Bobby McGee.” Stephen Frears’s The Hi-Lo Country tries in vain to be just as lyrical about love and liberty. In this twentieth-century Western, a cattle rancher named Pete (Billy Crudup) narrates…

Drinking to Success

Frank Rich thinks he’s found the keys to successful filmmaking: abstinence from women and dope. “Our motto was ‘Keep your hands off the ass and your brain off the grass,'” says Rich. “No masturbation, no sucking on the bong. A clear head and pent-up sexual energy are very valuable tools.”…

L’Chaim To Life!

Like many old structures around Denver’s Capitol Hill neighborhoods, the Temple Events Center Uptown–in its heyday the third home of Congregation Emanuel, Denver’s oldest Jewish congregation–has seen better days. But if director Roger Armstrong has his way, the building’s public centennial celebration on Sunday won’t be just a tribute to…

Night & Day

Thursday January 21 The Colorado Symphony Orchestra honors Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. tonight with a SuperClassics Concert that’s contemporary, stirring and all over the musical map–but as CSO maestra Marin Alsop points out, the selections are the work of African-American composers, pay tribute in some way to the African-American…

Common Sense

Many collectors are interested in buying so-called museum-quality artwork. For a gallery owner, the trick is to convince potential clients that what they’re looking at could just as easily hang in a museum as in their own home. But Bill Havu, owner of the William Havu Gallery, came up with…

Still Very Much Alive

As an undergraduate at University College in Dublin, James Joyce once published an 8,000-word article on Henrik Ibsen’s final play, When We Dead Awaken, that prompted the father of modern drama to dash off a sincere letter of thanks to his ardent admirer. Moved and humbled by his literary hero’s…

Love’s Labors Lost

A.R. Gurney is famous for writing middlebrow off-Broadway plays in which well-to-do WASPs comically mourn the passing of their cherished way of life. Past Gurney bromides examined such hallowed American myths as the old-boy network (The Old Boy, presented a few years back by the Director’s Theatre in Boulder), the…

Such Devoted Sisters

Genius can be a terrible, destructive gift. Jacqueline du Pre, the brilliant British cellist who enraptured audiences in the Sixties and Seventies with her musical passion and intensity, lived a life of great renown and acclamation but also one of harrowing loneliness and emotional turmoil. Her story is movingly told…

Love for Sale

Elevate The Jerry Springer Show a notch or two–in other words, dispense with the one-legged serial killers who are having sex with their blind mothers and other such nonsense–and you’ve got Willard Carroll’s Playing by Heart. Too harsh a judgment, some will say. After all, this well-meaning, relentlessly sincere ensemble…

Soul of the Matter

In the archetypal dead-end town of Lawford, New Hampshire, cold-eyed men looking for trouble prowl the streets in 4-x-4s with chrome spotlights and loaded gun racks. The gloomy barrooms are not gathering places so much as solitary-confinement cells, and the most popular local sport is macho posturing. In wintry Lawford,…

You’ll Laugh! You’ll Cry!

The coldhearted among us have watched Camille die tragically on the late show and have seen Brian Piccolo run his last yard through the cancer ward often enough to understand the several hazards of Hollywood “disease movies”–false sentiment, synthetic emotion and tears for tears’ sake. It is with wariness, then,…

Night & Day

Thursday January 14 Things just cain’t be right in these parts in January without the Colorado Cowboy Poetry Gathering. Presented by the Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities, it’s the ultimate assemblage of all things folksy and philosophical that’s parallel to, if not quite in conjunction with, the National…

Hot Wired

The word “wire” trips on itself right out of the gate: Fraught with imagery of fences and telephone poles, it’s all about boundaries–where one thing ends and another begins. But when it gets all twisted up, that’s when wire can become downright dangerous, as you’ll find when two different yet…