DEAL US IN

Spike Lee’s in-your-face moviemaking style–the pounding insistence that we get it–is familiar by now. So there’s little surprise when Clockers, which explores the complex, uneasy relationship between cops and bottom-rung drug dealers around a decaying Brooklyn housing project, opens with a grim montage of bloody police crime-scene photos interspersed with…

THRILLS

Wednesday September 6 Ain’t had enough fun: This kind of longevity, for a rock band, is no little feat: True to its name, Little Feat has been mastering chunky, infectious rhythms since the early ’70s, despite the 1979 loss of original guiding light Lowell George, whose stunning slidework and droll…

PIGMENTS OF THE IMAGINATION

To many in the art world, painting is the center stage, the place where the aesthetic stakes are the highest. The Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art’s thought-provoking exhibition Pure Painting provides snapshot views of current events in the venerable medium. Organizing such a show (this one was put together by…

BEACH CRAFT

When you think of Edward Albee, the word “hopeful” does not readily leap to mind. The author of The Zoo Story, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and All Over, among many other dark dramas, lashes out at human cruelty, egotism and the inability to communicate across gender and class lines…

TAPPY DAYS

The great movie and Broadway musicals of the 1930s seem both naive and extravagant in hindsight. Depression-era folk wanted to lose sight of their dreary poverty in visions of glittery gowns and lighthearted romances. The humor in these shows was usually slightly naughty but never really earthy; the brash showgirl…

DRAG RACE

Apparently, Mr. Selznick’s search for Scarlett O’Hara had nothing on this affair. Robin Williams, James Spader, Stephen Dorff, John Cusack and Robert Sean Leonard were among the throngs answering the casting call for To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar. But none of them landed a job. None of…

SICK TRANSIT

Just when we thought nothing else could go wrong on this beleaguered planet, environmentalists and medical researchers have unearthed something called “multiple chemical sensitivity.” Ten U.S. government agencies currently acknowledge the existence of this politically correct affliction, which is probably nine more than knew about it an hour and a…

THRILLS

Wednesday August 30 Now and Zen: “I am a synthetic pessimist, not the real thing.” So writes author, traveler and martial arts enthusiast Mark Salzman in his wry, pot-drenched, coming-of-age memoir Lost in Place: Growing Up Absurd in Suburbia. Salzman, whose book is written in the droll tradition of autobiographers…

PEEP SHOW

The depiction of the nude figure in the fine arts isn’t just ancient–it’s genuinely age-old. In the Paleolithic cave paintings of France and Spain, usually seen as the oldest works of art on Earth, those famous bison and deer are being pursued by nude men with spears. In the tens…

BEYOND BELIEF

Sometimes you have to be beastly to be kind. And as beastly as Geniuses, Madmen, and Saints can be, all British playwright Peter Barnes’s rage and wit is directed at what is most vicious and self-deceptive in human beings–particularly those who use religion as a cloak for peculiar vices. The…

BIG TWANG THEORY

You have to love country music–particularly country music from the early 1960s–to really get the most out of Always…Patsy Cline. It also helps if you like being part of the show, since the actors talk and sing directly to you and even draw individuals into the action. But even if…

BURMA KNAVE

British director John Boorman’s fondness for exotic locations and quasi-mystical quests give his best films, like the memorable Southern river trip Deliverance, an air of heightened reality, while his botched forays into Arthurian legend (Excalibur) or Amazonian splendor (The Emerald Forest) reveal the boisterous-tourist side of him, along with a…

RIOT ON THE SET

A wise man–or was it a wise guy?–once cautioned that there are two things you should never watch being made: sausage and movies. (Consider the ingredients.) Nonetheless, directors have convinced themselves from time to time that the moviemaking process itself is suitable material for a movie. Most notable was the…

THRILLS

Wednesday August 23 Someday your prints will come: The Denver Public Library’s new Central Library isn’t finished yet, although you can go there to check out a book. But little by little, the witty structure, already brimming with character, is gaining a bit more–as is its excellent, if staid, Western…

SPELL-BOUND

A principal benefit of following the Denver art scene is the wealth of local artists who pursue their work oblivious to the shifting sands of contemporary trends. Sometimes, though, a solitary approach can lead an artist right into the middle of those trends. That’s apparently what’s happened with Roland Bernier’s…

GOING UP

For nearly twenty years, the Rocky Mountain Women’s Institute has chosen a handful of writers, dancers, visual artists and others to receive “associateships”–essentially $1,000 stipends. Since the institute’s founding in 1976, more than 100 individuals–not all of them women–have been selected. And from these awards has emerged an annual art…

CLASH DISMISSED

Playwright David Mamet understands how people really converse. He articulates the rhythms of the inarticulate, because he grasps how hard it is sometimes to talk and think at once, even to finish sentences. The mind and the emotions race so far ahead of the mouth. Mamet also appreciates the fact…

POETRY IN MOTION

“Poetry theater” as defined by the Denver troupe called the Open Rangers is part theater, part poetry, part dance, part music and part chutzpah. Sometimes exhilarating and sometimes embarrassing, the Open Rangers try for authentic and immediate artistic expression in their current production, The Reign of the Scar Clan, with…

THE UNUSUAL SUSPECTS

The most unnerving–and delectable–skill of film noir masters like Huston, Wilder and Dassin may have been the way they turned all of human relations into a slippery fiction, a pack of lies, an extended alibi. In the dangerous netherworld of these movies, no love was true, no emotion sound, no…

BROTHERLY LOVES

If you work mainly at home, get your mother to do the catering and play one of the lead roles yourself, you might be able to eke out a feature-length movie for $16,000. That’s what 27-year-old Edward Burns did. The surprise is not that Burns got The Brothers McMullen into…

THRILLS

Wednesday August 16 Burke’s lawman: Like Dave Robicheaux, the fictional Cajun detective he created, Edgar Award winner James Lee Burke has an exacting eye for detail. And eight novels into the Robicheaux series, Burke continues to use his gift to not only plot another mystery, but also to conjure time,…

THE JOY OF SIX

Short plays, like short stories, must be skillfully wrought to involve the audience instantly, delivering their substance with comparatively little development. So their goals tend to be more modest than those of longer works, and their action more obvious. Still, they can make powerful, lasting impressions. Theatre at Muddy’s 10…