Global Bicycle Tourists Share Stories in Denver

When one of my roommates first asked me if she could host two people at our house last weekend, I said “of course” and didn’t think much more of it. But when I later found out that our two guests were bicycle tourists who’d been pedaling around the globe for years, I got really excited.

100 Colorado Creatives 3.0: Josiah Hesse

Author, pop-culturist, freelance journalist, editor-in-chief of the quarterly Denver lit zine Suspect Press and former Westword contributor, Josiah Hesse is a habitué of the city’s underground whose first novel, Carnality: Dancing on Red Lake (a Suspect Press imprint), hit the shelves two years ago.

The Other Half of You: Remembering Jonathan Demme

Not long before the surprisingly violent finale of Jonathan Demme’s Something Wild (1986), Melanie Griffith’s wild girl-turned-good-girl-turned-complicated-girl Audrey asks Charlie (Jeff Daniels), a straight-arrow-Wall-Streeter-turned-desperate-romantic-turned-man-of-action, “What are you gonna do now that you know how the other half lives?” “The other half?” he asks, confused. “The other half of you.” The…

The Dinner Is an Invitation to Decline

Steve Coogan is at a fancy dinner, but he’s not doing any Michael Caine impressions. Instead, he’s brooding with resentment of his workaholic congressman brother, Stan (Richard Gere), and grappling with the realization that his son might be a psychopath. It’s all supposed to be harrowing, and the British comedian…

The 21 Best Events in Denver, May 2-8

This week marks the beginning of warm-weather events Denver knows and loves, like the return of TheBigWonderful, the Denver Derby Party and Cinco de Mayo. So bust out your sunscreen, dust off that derby hat and have a ball. Tuesday, May 2 Denver-based author Peter Andreas has lived a life…

Citizen Jane Champions Jane Jacobs’ Fight for What Made Cities Great

Ever wonder how New York City was able to escape L.A.’s expressway-choked fate? Thank Jane Jacobs, the journalist, author and community activist who continually predicted — and fought to stave off — the public-planning policies that would kill the American city. In Citizen Jane: Battle for the City, documentarian Matt…

Review: Edge’s Misery Has All the Fright Stuff

William Goldman’s Misery, a dramatization of Stephen King’s horror novel, is now receiving a searing production at the Edge Theatre. You may have read the book or seen the film starring Kathy Bates and James Caan, but you have never experienced this freaky story in such an intimate environment.

The Ten Best Film Events in Denver in May

In the world of cinema, May brings us the official slide-into-summer movie season where the big ticket blockbusters come rolling in to share screen space with little art-house flicks and classic greats to keep every theater, whether it be a multiplex or a twin cinematheque, poppin’ like the corn at the concession stand.

The Circle: The Dystopia Begins with a Visit from HR

It’s easy to giggle at The Circle, the movie, just as it’s easy giggle sometimes at Dave Eggers, whose novel is the film’s source. James Ponsoldt’s adaptation (co-written with Eggers) is, like Eggers’ books, nakedly earnest, engaged with nothing less but The State of Things Now, more smart than its…

Review: She Rode Horses Like the Stock Exchange Is Hot to Trot

Square Product Theatre founder Emily K. Harrison focuses on innovative work that has audiences talking and guessing — and perhaps feeling just a touch unbalanced by the end. Now Square Product is presenting the regional premiere of Amelia Roper’s acerbic, wonderfully-titled one-act comedy, She Rode Horses Like the Stock Exchange, at the Dairy Arts Center.