Night & Day

Thursday October 22 Hear that faint tinkling of bells off in the distance? Yep, it’s the holiday shopping season rearing its ugly head. But since it’s still early in the game, you have time to plot a clever course to avoid the ordinary choices, and Kaleidoscope, a bazaar gathering merchandise…

Hidden Treasure

Only rarely can one individual literally change the cultural landscape of a major city. But that’s exactly what Nancy Tieken has done since she came to Denver for health reasons in 1991. Bored by a lengthy recuperation process, Tieken, a lifetime art historian with a BFAfrom Radcliffe, volunteered at the…

A Long Strange Trip

Teeming with macabre, whimsical episodes and peopled with bizarre, charming characters–all 23 of whom, save one, are played by a first-rate quartet of actors–Giles Havergal’s acclaimed adaptation of Graham Greene’s novel Travels With My Aunt is now being presented at the Space Theatre by the Denver Center Theatre Company. But…

Casa Bernarda

Sixty years before American audiences were entranced by the 1992 Mexican film Like Water for Chocolate, a mystical fable about a young woman’s repressed dreams, Spanish playwright Federico Garcia Lorca wrote a trilogy of tragedies about the hopes and fears of his country’s peasant classes. Shortly before he died, in…

Only the Lonely

For filmmaker Todd Solondz, it’s always midnight in suburbia. Life is lonely, and the natives can be hostile. In his daring second film, Happiness, the darkness engulfs victims of all ages: a boy in the throes of impending adolescence, three New Jersey sisters tormented by sex and love, an obscene…

Hearts of Darkness

A riveting but darkly disturbing thriller, Apt Pupil isn’t easy to sit through. The subject matter itself proves deeply unsettling, while two brief acts of sadism are so horrifying as to be unwatchable. And yet this brutal film borders on the brilliant. Beautifully structured and edited, with a chilling central…

Poetry in Locomotion

The first time we see Ray Joshua, the young black hero of director Marc Levin’s impressive feature debut Slam, we get a vivid taste of the conflicting forces that rule him. His olive-drab pants, so hip-hop baggy that you could fit two rail-thin Rays inside, are stuffed with bags of…

Color Guard

At the beginning of Gary Ross’s Pleasantville, two unhappy suburban teenagers (is there any other kind?) fall down the rabbit hole of their TV set and find themselves trapped in a parallel universe–a 1950s sitcom more idealized than Ozzie and Harriet, sweeter than Father Knows Best. In this black-and-white realm,…

Flower Talk

Teri O’Neill doesn’t take photographs of flowers; she takes pictures from the flowers’ point of view. Using a standard 35mm camera and photographic equipment intended for medical and industrial use, O’Neill is able to get her ethereal shots from inside the flowers. “I’m trying to show that there’s more to…

Night & Day

Thursday October 15 If those passive boob-tube debates don’t do it for you, get up-close and personal with Colorado’s political hopefuls at a 1998 Candidates Forum, sponsored by the Allied Jewish Federation and the National Council of Jewish Women. All of the high-profile candidates, including gubernatorial, U.S. Senate and congressional…

Hail to the Chief

Greg Sarris is one of those California creations: Part Filipino, part German Jewish and part Coast Miwok Indian, he’s a bowl of soup in the melting pot of America. And if you think Sarris might, as a result, be a complex guy, you’re right. A Stanford-trained writer of fiction who…

View Masters

Though it may seem as if the current exhibition season has just gotten under way–and it has–some of the fall openers have already closed. But there’s still time to see three marvelous shows that are just entering their final days at two of the city’s most notable galleries. These three…

Security Chicks

If you grew up participating in duck-and-cover air-raid drills and memorizing the exact location of your neighborhood’s official fallout shelter, then you probably didn’t regard the end of the Cold War as just another over-hyped media event. As the first images of a collapsing Berlin Wall flickered on your television…

Night of the Living Dead

Hardened by years of debilitating despair, a young woman shuffles into a Midwestern living room, saunters over to the dining-room table and matter-of-factly declares, “I’m going to kill myself, Mama–in a couple of hours.” Ninety intermissionless minutes later, the character of Jessie Cates regrettably fulfills that awful promise. Apart from…

Mission: Unfilmable

The Jonathan Demme-directed Beloved runs nearly three hours, and it’s a long slog. This adaptation of the 1987 Toni Morrison novel bursts with ambition: It tries to get inside the fevers of the African-American slave experience, but it also wants to be an epic family saga and a whopping ghost…

Bell, Book and Boring

As witch movies go–even lighthearted, supposedly comic witch movies –Practical Magic is conspicuously lacking in supernatural phenomena. There are no ritual murders, resurrected warlocks or conventions of hags bent on turning the world’s children into mice. Director Griffin Dunne (1997’s Addicted to Love) can’t scare up a single bedeviled infant…

Soul of the Matter

In The Eel, which won the Palme D’Or at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival, director Shohei Imamura once again demonstrates his empathy for the outsiders and aliens of Japanese society. In this case he muses on the tormented relationship between a paroled wife-murderer who’s struggling with his past after eight…

Grim Fairy Tale

The hero of The Mighty–the title character, in fact–is an eighth-grader known by the nickname Freak. His might isn’t physical–he’s a small, frail boy who suffers from a degenerative birth defect. His spine curves painfully, and he’s able to walk only with crutches and leg braces. But he has a…

Night & Day

Thursday October 8 We’re on the verge of depression season, when shorter days and gloomy weather seem to bring out the worst in people. But that doesn’t mean you have to sit there and take it like a bout of the flu. Today is National Depression Screening Day, which means…

When in Turkey

There are 22 globe-trotting characters in Graham Greene’s Travels With My Aunt. But when the Tony Award-winning Denver Center Theatre Company opens its season with the play this week, only four actors–all men dressed austerely in business suits–will be interpreting the roles. It’s the main quirk of Scottish theater director…

The Name Game

The owners of the Elle never intended for it to be a mostly lesbian bar, but somehow it ended up that way. Over the past three and a half years, the club, located at the corner of Speer and Colfax, in the heart of Denver, has grown into something of…

Hard Wares

Eight years ago Denver Art Museum director Lewis Sharp hired his old friend Craig Miller, with whom he had worked at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, to put together a design collection at the DAM. The museum had accumulated a hundred years’ worth of chairs, vases and candlesticks, but…