Thrills for the week

Thursday November 13 So zoo me: In the world of offbeat artist Dede LaRue, “Doberman Dominatrix” is just another day’s work, along with the irresistibly characteristic mixture of social commentary, brute rapture, surreal humor and plain old puppy love evinced by LaRue’s life-sized papier-mache animal creations. Her adorable, corpulent cats…

Back to the Futurist

The term “Orwellian” is often used to refer to situations in which authority figures like police or even employers poke their noses into people’s private concerns, root out potentially incriminating information and then use that knowledge to manipulate somebody. To many people, that might constitute blackmail. To others, it’s simply…

Play It…Again?

Maybe it’s because it touches on hot-button issues that haven’t yet vaporized, as so many talk-show topics do. Maybe it’s because it’s a two-character play that’s relatively easy and inexpensive to produce. Or maybe it’s because David Mamet–always a perennial favorite among theater companies–wrote the Obie-winning drama. For whatever reason,…

A Subhuman Bean

For those of us living here in the Colonies, British slapstick has always been an acquired taste, and the Mother Country’s ever-so-popular TV character “Mr. Bean” takes more acquiring than most. Meanwhile, the producers of Bean, which marks the goggle-eyed buffoon’s first appearance on the big screen, have collected more…

Love at First Slight

The rebellious heroines of Deepa Mehta’s Fire have gotten viewers in the filmmaker’s native India a lot more worked up than Thelma and Louise ever dreamed of doing here. While women are applauding, hundreds of thousands of Indian husbands apparently see the picture as a threat to their happy homes…

For Love and Money

Put brutally, The Wings of the Dove is the story of a romantic frameup that backfires. Thankfully, nothing is put brutally in this smart, lyrical movie. Director Iain Softley and screenwriter Hossein Amini cut to the thick of Henry James’s masterpiece about amorous extortion and moral purification. Helena Bonham Carter…

Bored to the Core

Writer-director Mike Figgis has mastered a kind of style I usually mistrust: Jumpy and almost free-associative, it begs to be dubbed “arty.” At Figgis’s best (say, Leaving Las Vegas), this mercurial mode can be sensationally effective, allowing him to leap from one supreme expression of extreme emotion to the next…

Thrills for the week

Thursday November 6 Pet project: It’s hard to understand how the animal urge ever got stuck with a negative connotation. After all, the birds and beasts have a much better grip on the natural order of things than humans do, and they exercise their urges merely because they’re supposed to…

U.S. Steel

Each of the artists in the Arvada Center’s current show Steel: Nature and Space gets plenty of room to stretch out. And that’s a good thing, since Robert Mangold, Andrew Libertone, Russell Beardsley and Carl Reed–four of the most talked-about contemporary sculptors in Colorado–create wildly different forms of sculpture. Oddly…

Color Commentary

In 1965 a young African-American actor, Douglas Turner Ward, produced two one-act plays he had written, Happy Ending and Day of Absence. The double bill enjoyed a successful fourteen-month run off-Broadway, and its triumph precipitated Ward’s creation of New York’s Negro Ensemble Company, where he continues to serve as artistic…

Honor Students

Outstanding theater programs have a way of thriving in the face of adversity. Nowhere is that more true than in academia, where the general rule for arts programs is that you either have state-of-the-art facilities populated by meager talent or talented performers forced to toil in substandard conditions. In the…

Future Shock Troops

In Paul Verhoeven’s Starship Troopers, based on the late Robert Heinlein’s 1959 sci-fi opus, the killer arachnids upstage the humans. Not that it’s much of a contest, since the humans are all raging dullards. We’ve seen these young men and women with their square jaws and pert noses emoting their…

You’re So Vain

The Joe Eszterhas who wrote the screenplay for Telling Lies in America is a kinder, gentler soul than the hard-nosed hipster who got a couple million bucks for turning Sharon Stone into the lethal temptress of Basic Instinct or conceived that masterpiece of the cinematic arts, Showgirls. This new Joe…

Living Proof

The quirky documentarian Errol Morris finds human drama in strange places. His most renowned film, 1988’s The Thin Blue Line, made such a compelling case for the innocence of a convicted Dallas cop-killer that the prisoner eventually walked off death row. Morris has also examined the genius physicist Stephen Hawking…

Media Cool

Mad City, a descendant of Billy Wilder’s Ace in the Hole, may irritate orthodox movie buffs. In the coruscating Wilder classic, Kirk Douglas’s supremely cynical newspaper reporter turns the rescue of a cave-in victim into “the big carnival” (the film’s alternate title). The protagonist of Mad City, a TV reporter…

Thrills for the week

Thursday October 30 Where you been? Songwriters don’t come any tougher–or any more tender–than Austin musician Lucinda Williams, whose songs have been snatched up and made into hits by the likes of Mary Chapin Carpenter and Emmylou Harris. After holing up for months, painstakingly recording a long-awaited followup to her…

The Great Escape

It’s no exaggeration to say that American culture got its greatest boost ever from the rise of the Nazis in Europe in the 1930s and ’40s. Hitler’s hatred for modernism in the arts led many of the most important contemporary figures to flee the continent and seek safe haven in…

High Flyer

The always opinionated George Bernard Shaw once challenged the so-called Father of Modern Drama, Henrik Ibsen, to explain “if he can, why the building of houses and the raising of families is not the ultimate destiny of mankind.” All this despite the fact that Shaw never reared a child of…

Class Clowns

How did you respond in school when you were told by the teacher that the day’s learning was going to be “fun”? Did you imagine that you’d be entertained by Spandex-clad song-and-dance specialists? Were sing-alongs what you envisioned when a math lesson was on tap? No, even though education and…

Chilling Truths

The ongoing anxieties and agonies of the American family don’t make for a pretty picture. Divorce and disorder have replaced macaroni and cheese as the domestic commonplace, but most people can give little credence to either the self-righteous prescriptions of the fundamentalist right or the ecstatic bleatings of the new-agers…

Future Chic

In Andrew Niccol’s Gattaca, the cleverest (if not quite the most convincing) science-fiction movie of the year, the near future is inhabited by designer humans whose DNA codes have been rigged down at the lab for conformist perfection and by “in-valids,” the inferior products of parents who’ve relied on mere…

Ugly Americanization

Despite its muckraking pretensions, Red Corner is a rickety throwback to escapist adventures that featured beautiful foreign idealists spouting high-flown hooey to fighting Americans. The heroine, a scrappy Beijing defense lawyer, ends up whispering a whole succession of sweet somethings to the hero, a framed Yank. The banalities include (I…