Art Beat

In the main space at Pirate, John Crandall has brought in a handful of abstract paintings for his solo, Infinitely Minute. Several large and aesthetically ambitious paintings have been placed on top of shiny silver paint cans and are lined up leaning against the walls. The most successful of this…

Trial of the Century

Atticus Finch is perhaps the only resident of Depression-era Maycomb, Alabama, who believes that it’s possible to live by high-minded principles. He doesn’t merely espouse empty eloquence — the Southern lawyer accepts “payments” of turnip greens, hickory nuts and firewood from a dirt-poor farmer who desperately needs legal help he…

Hey, Hey, It’s the Fourth of July

1776 winds up being more — and less — of a history lesson than audiences might expect. Sherman Edwards and Peter Stone’s award-winning musical, which premiered on Broadway more than thirty years ago, is an enjoyable retelling of the events that led to the signing of the Declaration of Independence…

Xmas Marks the Spot

Director John Frankenheimer has been putting bad guys on the street since Luca Brazzi slept with a teddy bear, and he shows no sign of letting up at age seventy. In Reindeer Games, a relentless, and relentlessly witty, crime thriller set in the frozen wastes of northern Michigan, a sleazy…

A Family Affair

In the early ’90s, British actor Tim Roth made his bones with American audiences as one of Quentin Tarantino’s anointed hipsters: After getting gruesomely shot to pieces in Reservoir Dogs and sticking up a pancake house with batty Amanda Plummer in Pulp Fiction, Roth’s credentials as a bad cat were…

Wonder Bread

Step right up, youth of the world, and receive the boomer inoculation that is Wonder Boys, the first feature from director Curtis Hanson since his much-lauded adaptation of James Ellroy’s L.A. Confidential. Then marvel at Michael Douglas showing off his wide spectrum of inert doldrums and tedious self-pity. Thrill to…

Soul Power

Tom Goldsmith, the man behind the Denver Jazz on Film Festival, has assembled an impressive lineup of flicks for his brainchild’s fourth edition. The event’s roster features several movies making their U.S. debuts, including In the Key of Eh, about ECM recording artist Paul Bley; a pair of projects by…

Concrete and Barbed Wire

Each year on or around February 19, members of the Japanese-American community gather for a complicated ceremony. A mixture of somber observance, flat-out activism and unbridled hope for the future, the annual Day of Remembrance is a protracted commemoration of one of this country’s darker lapses in judgment: the day…

Dynamic Duo

It’s really quite inspiring the way the entire metro art world is focusing, at least briefly, on ceramic artists, a group that is typically unsung, ignored and rarely exhibited around here. A year and a half ago, artist and Auraria art professor Rodger Lang began calling the city’s museums, art…

Art Beat

The O’Sullivan Arts Center is just a couple of big rooms in an old, nondescript building on the Regis University campus. But somehow, there’s always a good show on display, like the impressive Bill Joseph: A Retrospective, which fills the place now. Joseph, who has been making art in Denver…

The Winter of Their Discontent

The African Company Presents Richard III recounts events that, four decades before the Civil War, prompted the nation’s first African-American theater group to perform a Shakespearean tragedy next door to the Manhattan auditorium where a white company’s version was in production. Despite threats of civil unrest and objections from an…

A Moment to Reflect

Years before playwrights decided that raw emoting was preferable to shaded feeling and thought, Harold Pinter masterfully exploited the ambiguities of modern communication. Like Samuel Beckett, whose Waiting for Godot was described by one critic as a collection of “wordless meanings and meaningless words,” Pinter delved into the notion that…

The Greeding of America

Twenty-seven-year-old Ben Younger delivers the message of his first feature, Boiler Room, with all the subtlety of a car bomb. To wit: Greed is alive and well in the new century, fueled by the material dreams of a generation bent on instant gratification and the distorted expectations of neophyte investors…

Disconnect

Even at just 92 minutes, Hanging Up feels endless. Intended as a humorous, heartwarming take on dysfunctional family relationships, this film doesn’t work as comedy or drama or anything in between. Given its wealth of above-the-line talent — director and costar Diane Keaton, writers Delia and Nora Ephron and actresses…

Prepare for Blastoff!

Moviegoers, rejoice! The first fun movie of the year has arrived. Oh, Leo’s little seaside adventure was pretty to look at, but its attempts at depth were a real bummer. And let’s not even talk about Scream 3: Even the first one was highly overrated, and it’s been downhill from…

Tea for Brew

Denver storyteller Skywalker Payne has a good explanation for her flighty moniker, which she says is her legal name: She’s firmly disconnected from the ground and proud of it. “I’ve been a professional gypsy most of my life,” Payne declares with a worldly smile that practically covers her thin, well-traveled…

Its Their Party

What if HBO held a party for the comedy industry and everybody in the whole world came except A.C.E.? The Denver improv comedy trio’s multinational members would rather not find out. Not invited by the bigwigs for the second year in a row, Canadian Barb Gehring, American Linda Klein and…

Prelude to a Kiss

You could spend your whole life trying to find a novel way of telling the girl in your life — whether she’s two, 22 or 82 — you love her. But the frenzy to prove it — with spontaneity and zest — boils over this week when the telltale heartbeat…

Winter Wonders

Despite the trends elsewhere, winter in Colorado, as much as fall, is high season in the art world. This may have something to do with the way we handle the colder months. In New York recently, a few inches of snow almost shut down the city. In Denver, on the…

Art Beat

The Edge Gallery is highlighting the work of two artists who couldn’t be more different from one another. In the front space, Gail Wagner features the artist’s sophisticated abstract sculptures; in the back is Wendy Clough: Recent Work, a collection of representational paintings of the landscape. Upon entering Edge, the…

The Icing

He had already written Othello to explore the jealous impulses that precipitate a great man’s tragic downfall, fashioned As You Like It to teach a few comic lessons about the strangely similar romantic yearnings of courtiers and country types, and penned a historical series about the Wars of the Roses…

It’s a Man’s World

Although most people might think of Romeo and Juliet as a lusty, melodramatic love story, Shakespeare’s play is more a tragic tale about the sometimes catastrophic clashes between parents and children. After all, the two lovers aren’t thwarted by bouts of jealousy, sexual incompatibility or even Romeo’s refusal to share…