Broken and Battered

Fair warning: Enough time has passed that it’s okay to discuss the ending of writer-director M. Night Shyamalan’s Unbreakable. Those who’ve not yet seen the film and intend to might want to keep on moving. Or perhaps not: To reveal the ending, all 180 or so seconds of it, is…

Look Out Below

The subjects of Mark Singer’s extraordinary documentary Dark Days were once the stuff of urban myth — the homeless “mole people” said to inhabit dank railroad tunnels below the streets of Manhattan, eking out subsistence in the face of scurrying vermin, disease and drug addiction. As it turns out, they…

Sexual Reeling

When assessing the merits of Quills, the lusty new feature by director Philip Kaufman (Henry and June), you’re tempted to seek corresponding characters from popular movies in order to illustrate just how average this story is. In Kaufman’s film — affectionately constructed from a screenplay by Doug Wright, who adapts…

Mel Sells Out

What Women Want could be the first movie to win a Clio Award for Advertisement of the Year. No fewer than two dozen products receive prominent placement in the film, from Federal Express to Foster’s Lager to Cutty Sark to L’eggs pantyhose to US Airways. After a while, you begin…

A Woven Life

With luck, Yi Yi (A One and a Two), the seventh release from writer/director Edward Yang, one of Taiwan’s most respected filmmakers, will inspire interest in Taiwan’s cinema, but time isn’t on its side. While this is a rich and rewarding film, its pace is more leisurely than most American…

Nutcracker…Not!

Looking for Christmas entertainment that’s off the beaten path? Nancy Cranbourne and Patti Dobrowolski, last seen together in these parts at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art Theater in their hit show 2 Women Avoiding Involuntary Hospitalization, have been coerced into a holiday followup at BMoCA, based on the same…

Paradise Lost

Oral history plays a major role in the magic created year in and year out by Denver’s Su Teatro ensemble, whose early acts of Chicano guerrilla theater, performed on the streets during grape boycott demonstrations years ago, have metamorphosed into fully staged productions. And so it goes with the group’s…

Down and Out in Downtown Denver

The free-for-all campaign to erase the recent history of Denver’s architecture, endorsed and enabled by Mayor Wellington Webb’s administration, continues unabated. And it’s amazing how many of the losses are associated with the Colorado Convention Center. The latest heartbreaking chapter came one step closer to ending a couple of weeks…

Art Beat

Ron Judish Fine Arts (1617 Wazee Street, 303-571-5556) is currently presenting a trio of superb solo shows. In the grand front room is Keith Milow: drawings, which features recent works by the world-famous Anglo-American artist. Milow uses steel and copper that have been chemically oxidized so that the steel is…

Season’s Bleatings

Its title is a clever play on Tantalus, the high-priced Greek epic that effectively displaced the Denver Center’s annual presentation of A Christmas Carol, but theatreMEDINA’s Santaless: The Twelve Plays of Christmas proves to be a collection of aimless skits worth considerably less than its $20 admission. Haphazardly constructed and…

Bless the Blockhead

Christmastime is here, but for the first time, Charlie Brown’s father will not be around to watch his depressed, round-headed child celebrate the holiday. He will not be in front of the television next week to watch his little boy seek psychiatric help from a nickel-grubbing girl who diagnoses her…

Mountin’ Frustration

About halfway through the mega-budget mountain-climbing adventure Vertical Limit, even the most rugged, thrill-hungry disaster-movie fans may find themselves going numb. Not from the howling weather on the icy faces of K2 in the Himalayas, where the action supposedly takes place. Not from oxygen deprivation. Not even from stretches of…

Held Hostage

Day 1: It was just part of the job, just another movie on another afternoon. This one promised to be no more special than any other, save for the casting of Meg Ryan and Russell Crowe. Proof of Life was the movie during which they fell in love, or whatever…

The Kindness of Strangers

Fascinating and engrossing on every level, the beautifully constructed Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport opens with the mournful sound of a train and images of toys and books sitting untouched in what was once a child’s bedroom. As the credit sequence ends, an elderly woman addresses…

Gay Caballeros

Jake Brady and Wiley Deluce met in a bar in Alma in the 1880s and became fast friends. In fact, they became partners — and not in the “Hold it right there, partner” sense. The cowboy protagonists in part-time South Park resident Dave Brown’s Golden Feather Series of gay westerns,…

Shop, Shop

Some people are power shoppers. They’re the palm pilot-brains with impeccable budgeting skills and the remarkable ability to remember which store has the lowest price on which item. The most irritating thing about them is this: They’ve finished all their holiday shopping for the year and are preparing their lists…

3-D Glances

World-famous modern and contemporary artists are part of the stock and trade of the Robischon Gallery, which makes the point with Judy Pfaff: An Installation of Drawings. The fairly large show highlights some of the New York legend’s latest creations. It runs until the end of the year. Pfaff first…

Art Beat

Gallery Sink, owned and operated by Mark Sink, is currently hosting a retrospective entitled Ann White: 1950-2000. Sink has a special interest in White, with whom he has had a lifelong relationship: White is Sink’s mother. White has long been associated with “The Nine,” a Denver artist group that’s still…

One-Act Wonders

Anton Chekhov is as famous for writing pause-filled comedies about frustrated dreamers as Eugene O’Neill is for penning dramas with more stage direction than dialogue. Beyond their writerly quirks, however, both men were masters at creating unforgettable characters. And the Shadow Theatre Company’s evening of one-acts pays homage to each…

A True Blockbuster

A product of its time that proved powerful enough to transcend the tumult of ensuing decades, The Fantasticks opened at New York’s Sullivan Street Playhouse on May 3, 1960, and has been running there ever since. Although its universal appeal is unparalleled in musical theater history, some critics continue to…

Heist Society

The grandpere of all jewel-heist movies, Jules Dassin’s Rififi hasn’t lost a thing since its initial release in 1955. Seeing it anew in revival, anyone who knows and loves this cinematic gem will be reminded that its descendants — which include everything from the old Mission Impossible TV series to…

Easy Riders

Every artist has a shtick. For photographer Michael Lichter, it’s the biker lifestyle, a milieu he’s gone with, like the wind, for over twenty years — that is, when he’s not designing annual reports or doing other commercial work for large corporations, the bread and butter of his professional life…