Selling Avon

Fast and funny, The Compleat Works of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged) skewers the Bard and honors him, too. In fact, the more you love Shake-speare, the more amused you’re likely to be by this jolly nonsense, now in its regional premiere. The comedy, which replaces Shake-speare’s immortal verse with game-show pandering,…

Do the Wrong Thing

True story: A young seminary instructor was discussing the nature of evil in his class when a woman raised her hand and told him she did not believe in evil. “Really?” he said. “What do you call Auschwitz?” The student replied, “Well, it’s evil for me.” The insulated arrogance of…

Stealing Your Heart and Mind

Andre Techine’s Les Voleurs (Thieves) is stuffed with sex, blood and grand-theft auto, and at its heart lurks a homicide detective who’s deeply compromised himself in the investigation of a big case. But before anyone gets the wrong idea, please note that neither Clint Eastwood nor Arnold Schwarzenegger got within…

Not Your Typical Shoot-’em-up

The spookiness that has seeped into first-time director Vondie Curtis Hall’s surreal action comedy Gridlock’d is the kind of dramatic bonus no moviemaker hopes for. It derives from the gang murder last September of the film’s 25-year-old co-star, Tupac Shakur, and it colors the entire length of this dark farce…

Premature Eruption

“In the constant struggle of man against nature,” the press notes inform us, “it is the most devastating adversary of all–a force… which suddenly explodes to wreak havoc and destruction on an unsuspecting population.” The notes are, of course, referring to a volcano. But…wait! Didn’t I read the same thing…

Thrills for the week

Thursday January 30 Ai on life: The compelling and beautiful works of award-winning distinguished poet Ai–the author of four published collections and a guest professor and artist at CU-Boulder–cut straight to the point, telling forthright stories of the downtrodden in a parade of cracked, unremitting voices. And accordingly, whether you’re…

Naked Ambitions

The Denver Art Museum has undertaken one extensive remodeling job after another in the last few years. And the efforts have gone a long way toward increasing available space within the masterful if quirky building, the work of Italian modern master Gio Ponti and his Denver collaborator, the able James…

No Strings Attached

The only way to describe playwright August Wilson’s Seven Guitars is with superlatives: Wilson’s writing is inspired, and Israel Hicks’s casting and direction is nothing short of brilliant. The night I saw the show, it received a standing ovation from an audience that seemed floored and fascinated–and distinctly grateful for…

Sea Minus

It may seem intriguing at first, but self-indulgent craziness gets old fast. That’s the problem with Don Nigro’s Seascape With Sharks and Dancer–it starts out well, but because the main creature is so sunk in self-pity, she doesn’t evolve. Such a failure to change may be true to life, but…

Selling You on an IRA

If the brutal miscarriage of British justice that drove In the Name of the Father didn’t send you running to the nearest Sinn Fein recruiter and the fiery romanticism of Michael Collins didn’t have you putting together a tidy shipment of machine guns for the Provisionals in Belfast, maybe Some…

The Force Is Almost With You

At a twenty-year remove, Star Wars comes off less as the work of a wizard than as the weird obsessive outgrowth of an eccentric American primitive. George Lucas is a tycoon version of those self-taught craftsmen who fill backyards, storage rooms and cramped city apartments with paintings, gewgaws or wire-hanger…

No Magic Wanda

Eight years after A Fish Called Wanda rang up $200 million at the box office and won an Oscar for its manic villain, Kevin Kline, the cast has reunited in hopes of putting another dark charge into movie comedy. Fierce Creatures is not a sequel but a major departure, and…

Thrills for the week

Thursday January 23 Eastern parade: Old-style brushwork and ancient Chinese motifs collide–or maybe just blend peacefully–with modern and Western techniques and themes in this year’s Contemporary Asian Art Exhibition Series, an annual show assembled by the Asian Art Coordinating Council, opening today at the Arvada Center for the Arts and…

A Stylish Woman

Denver exhibition-goers will have to go to great lengths–or should that be heights?–to see the city’s latest ad-hoc art gallery. It’s located in a couple of hallways on the twelfth floor of a downtown high-rise, just off the lobby of the OZ Architecture firm. Now showing in the penthouse suite:…

Lady in Waiting

Eleanor of Aquitaine was arguably the greatest woman of the late medieval period. She was beautiful and brilliant, a patron of the arts and a cultivator of the chivalric code. She defied the church hierarchy, married a French king and dumped him for an English king, bore six daughters and…

Applause and Effects

When that broken-down, opera-sized chandelier lying on the stage flies out over the audience and up to the ceiling in The Phantom of the Opera, it’s enough to justify the price of admission. The special effects in the Broadway road show of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s extravaganza, now at the Buell…

Not a Pretty Picture

When an incredulous Jane Campion fan asked what I hated about Campion’s version of Henry James’s The Portrait of a Lady, I immediately responded, “Everything.” Actually, I thought Barbara Hershey, as the subtle villainess, Madame Merle, made a good first impression: I laughed appreciatively when the heroine, Isabel Archer (Nicole…

Oedipus Wrecks

In Mother, Albert Brooks plays John Henderson, a science-fiction novelist recently divorced from his second wife who decides he can’t risk another relationship until he comes to terms with his mother. So he does the logical thing: He moves in with her. He hauls out of her garage all his…

The Lost Metro

Just when you think Eddie Murphy has pulled off a glorious comeback, he slips up on the banana peel of ego. To wit: Not six months ago, Murphy burst back to the top with his energetic takes on seven different characters–fat, skinny and uniformly hilarious–in the sleeper of 1996, The…

Great Dane

Let’s give Kenneth Branagh credit, shall we, for the breadth of his good sense. At 35, this Irish prodigy is the foremost cinematic interpreter of Shakespeare in a time when everyone just short of Jackie Chan and Jim Carrey seems to be cooking up a new movie version of Macbeth…

Thrills for the week

thursday january 16 The Doctor is in: In music, there are legends and then there are legends — living, breathing, walking, talking, genre-embodying types. Crescent City music man Dr. John, the reigning witch doc of New Orleans-style R&B, falls securely in the latter category, relying on wry, blusey trademark vocals…

Cheyenne Autumn

It was a research project with the drama of a detective story. And just as Sherlock Holmes unraveled mysteries–using a method reliant on fanatical attention to detail–so too did the organizers of Cheyenne Dog Soldiers, which currently fills the main-floor galleries at the Colorado History Museum. The genesis for this…