Free For All

Are you just dying to know the ins and outs of Denver’s Solid Waste Management division’s hazardous-waste-collection methods? Waiting with baited breath to hear what Blueprint Denver means to your neighborhood? If so, this is your lucky weekend: Denver residents are invited to the free City Service Open House, Saturday,…

Speak Out

Instead of taking to the streets to protest a potential war with Iraq, peace activists in metro Denver — and in over 600 cities around the world — will instead take to the stage with the Lysistrata Project, believed to be the first-ever worldwide theatrical act of dissent in the…

Small World

Thanks to Henry Thoreau, the name “Walden” evokes the ultimate in natural tranquility. Of peace and quiet. Of simpler times. But the new, highly touted Walden Family Playhouse — a professional children’s theater the likes of which we haven’t seen in these parts — is anything but tranquil. The Walden’s…

That Pioneering Spirit

Photography’s fortunes are soaring right now — not only in Colorado, where photography shows are cropping up left and right — but in the New York-based art magazines, too. The shutter craze has been coming on for a couple of decades, but in the current season, photography is taking an…

Artbeat

Chance Operations Gallery (232 East 20th Avenue, 303-894-0377) is a pretty funky place. In fact, I nominate it as the funkiest art venue around. There’s the requisite bohemian location, of course — a shabby storefront in a row of shabby storefronts at the very shabby northeast end of downtown (you…

Popped Culture

The violence wrought by the Manson family continues to hold our imagination. There’s something about the confluence of evil, pop culture (the best known of the group’s victims was beautiful blond movie star Sharon Tate, who was eight months pregnant) and the politics of the late ’60s that feeds our…

Pigs Rule

George Orwell’s reputation has been a little clouded of late. For decades after his death, he was seen as a kind of secular saint, a truth teller, a font of wisdom and decency whose writing brought desperately needed clarity to a murky world. But there were always grumblers, and the…

Steal This Movie

This should really piss you off: What follows is a story about a very funny movie you will have absolutely no chance of seeing any time soon. The powers that be who distribute movies–who copy prints, print up posters, deliver them to theaters, collect receipts, split profits (well…)–do not want…

Impossible Dreamer

Filmmaker Terry Gilliam is no stranger to fiasco. After all, this is the human dynamo who saw 1989’s inventive (if sometimes incoherent) The Adventures of Baron Munchausen through a series of artistic and financial crises that would have landed most people in an asylum. But Gilliam’s encounter with the tale-spinning…

French Kiss-Off

Apart from “I Am Fascinating” and/or “My Parents Are Horrid,” the reigning theme of film students’ movies is “Lovers Are Bonkers.” Thus, it comes as no surprise when a director’s first feature contains many elements that’ll be instantly familiar to anyone who’s ever hung around a film school. So it…

Flick Pick

The Fly does not loom large in the great scheme of things. It may not even rank high on the list of movies in which airborne objects — doomed dirigibles, hijacked 747s, Alfred Hitchcock’s assorted jays and starlings — play a major part. But director Kurt Neumann’s low-budget shocker has…

“R” Is for Rock

The word “bingo” usually conjures up visions of nursing homes and church gymnasiums. But when “B” stands for “bastard” and “I” is for “Iron Maiden,” and there’s a DJ on the premises spinning Pat Benatar hits, it can only mean one thing: Rock ‘n Roll Bingo at the Lion’s Lair…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

Thursday, February 20 How’s the weather? Admit it: Your life revolves around that question — and that’s one that reason Bryan Yeaton of the Mt. Washington Observatory in New Hampshire is such a popular guy. Yeaton, who travels the nation in his “WeatherMobile” (actually, a sturdy Subaru Outback packed with…

Elvis Lives

Elvis Cole used to be a wiseass, a Los Angeleno P.I. with a classic chip on his shoulder and an inspiration-giving statue of Jiminy Cricket overlooking his cheesy gumshoe office. What happened? The invention of popular mystery writer Robert Crais, Cole has gotten noticeably deeper as his series of adventures…

Free For All

Not unlike many Holocaust survivors, onetime World War II Japanese internment-camp detainees just don’t want to talk about it, so they bury their anger and sadness. But in the current political climate — one in which North Carolina congressman Howard Coble can condone the camps by noting that they were…

Talking Shop

If all this gray winter weather is getting you down, fly to Sparrow, a tiny new Capitol Hill store that is adding a breath of fresh air to 17th Avenue. Whether you’re looking for an exotic bromeliad plant or a cheery paper pinwheel, Sparrow is the just the place to…

Exhibit A

Worshiped as gods by the ancient Egyptians for their dazzling speed and sharp talons, peregrine falcons were almost completely wiped out in the late 1960s after decades of battling habitat loss and pesticide contamination. A new exhibit opening at Parker’s Wildlife Experience Museum this Saturday, The Peregrine Falcon: The Return…

End of an Era

Foothills Art Center, which was founded in 1968, is located in the charming old part of Golden, next to the Colorado School of Mines campus. The center is so quaint, it looks like it came right off a postcard. Ensconced in a nineteenth-century church and a pair of red-brick Victorian…

Artbeat

Terry Maker is one of Colorado’s most relentlessly innovative artists, constantly changing approaches. Over the years, she’s exhibited hard-edged paintings, sculptures made of old books, and beach balls covered in latex and wax. For heaven’s sake, she even did an installation inside a travel trailer. Her latest wild creations are…

Love’s Labors Pay Off

There’s a lot of charm, humor and zest in director Anthony Powell’s production of Shakespeare’s Love’s Labor’s Lost. It’s an odd play — short on plot and long on punning and wordplay, full of courtship and poetry, but for the most part skirting any deeper conception of love. Ferdinand, King…

Raising Canine

Sylvia is about a middle-aged man, mildly depressed by his companionably routine marriage and meaningless job, who finds a stray pup in the park and brings her home. The pup, Sylvia, is enchanting, distracting, puzzling and endearing, and naturally, his wife doesn’t like her at all. The plot concerns the…

Natural Disaster

Tony Grisoni can always tell when his old friend Terry Gilliam, the visionary who sees too far for his own good, is in pain: He laughs. The worse the pain, the harder the laughter. If that is the case, then the Terry Gilliam seen throughout Lost in La Mancha, Keith…