Back to Lyle

Matching short sets, our more red than golden retriever and Lyle Lovett. During summer breaks in elementary school, those three things seemed to make up most of my memories. There’s no particular summer; there remains just a muddled heap of them that’s been consolidated into a sort of all-encompassing recollection…

Metro Retro

9/3 Metropolis could’ve been the most influential silent movie of all time with little effort. After all, its 1926 release had few peers in size and scope, so if director Fritz Lang merely took a dump in the middle of the movie’s beautiful sets, he still might have inspired sci-fi…

RAW Deal

9/5 Either we’re prophetic or we watch entirely too much professional wrestling. Yeah, we knew months ago that golden boy-turned-franchise player Randy Orton would win the big gold belt, sparking a bitter, extended feud with eternal bastard Triple H. The WWE pulled the trigger on just these events recently, and…

The Big Stain

9/4 Stomping grapes sounds like serious fun…if only feet weren’t involved. What if a seed gets in between two toes? Exactly how many bare feet will we be seeing? Just how soon will we be able to wash off our feet? Deep breaths. The LightCatcher Winery, 6925 Confederate Park Road,…

Homecoming

9/3 If we type BookerTWashingtonHighSchoolforthePerformingandVisualArts as one word, we’ll save 10 words we can use to tell this story in our carefully controlled space. Did you go to high school there? Do you remember Griff Braun? There’s not a pair of eyes reading this that doesn’t realize what SMU stands…

Reese’s Piece

In Victorian England, 40,000 novels were published every year. Of the few that have endured, perhaps none is more worthy of a film adaptation than Vanity Fair, if for no other reason than this: It’s a chore to read. Clocking in at 850 pages, with frequent excursions into unrelated subjects…

Capsule Reviews

Autism of Desire: Work by Lionel Maunz Lionel Maunz is obsessed with the body, human and animal alike. A combination of sculpture, painting, drawing and taxonomic expression, Maunz’s installations reveal him to be something of a young artist coming into his own, that is, a painter productively becoming a mad…

Capsule Reviews

The Exit The new Labyrinth Theatre company debuts with Kevin Ash’s dramatic two-act answer to Sartre’s existential classic, No Exit. This time, writes Ash, there’s a way out of hell. Trapped together in a hotel room decorated in nauseating colors (and sans mirrors, beds or air-conditioning), three characters–a sweaty fat…

The Agony of Adultery

In We Don’t Live Here Anymore, an overwrought domestic drama about a pair of entangled couples, Peter Krause plays philandering writer Hank Evans, struggling to produce as he propositions female students at the college where he teaches. Blithely pretentious, fretful only over his writing, Hank observes from a distance as…

Into the Woods

Some of the best performances of the year can be found in Mean Creek, a small independent film that marks the auspicious feature debut of 31-year-old writer/director Jacob Aaron Estes. An ensemble drama with a relatively unknown cast, the film looks at six kids and what happens when an innocent…

Jet Propelled

There’s a new movie called Hero. Don’t confuse it with that dusty Dustin Hoffman vehicle, nor with the epic Bollywood musical espionage extravaganza Hero: Love Story of a Spy (though that’s worth a mind-altering look if you can find it). America and India aren’t directly involved here, but huge imperial…

Screenplay Zero

You know how fear is scary? Well, director E. Elias Merhige is into that, especially in his new serial-killer thriller Suspect Zero. Absent, however, is the dark-comic malevolence the director smartly cultivated in his successful and disquieting Shadow of the Vampire a few years ago, bullied and bulldozed out of…

The Big Tease

Flapping and honking like geese in a yard, the six female characters in Steel Magnolias are exaggerated versions of pushy Southern women as seen through the eyes of a gay man, playwright Robert Harling. For Love! Valour! Compassion!, gay playwright Terrence McNally gathers eight stereotypes of artsy, East Coast-y homosexual…

Capsule Reviews

Love! Valour! Compassion! Terrence McNally’s three-act play finds eight artsy gay men sharing a country house for three summer weekends. Couples form and break up. Infidelity abounds. There’s an evil twin, a picnic and a thunderstorm. Love means kissing a lesion. And somebody dies. Like an all-gay All My Children,…

Capsule Reviews

Pierre Huyghe: One Million + Kingdoms Pierre Huyghe (pronounced “Weeg”) is an artist who’s in touch with the power of mass media–both as it molds our collective identity and as fodder for making good art. The three videos now showing at the Fort Worth Modern confront the manner in which…

Dial M for Murderer

Becoming a bona fide film buff is like making ranks in the Girl or Boy Scouts. You have to earn your marks. But instead of campfire safety badges or first aid pins, you have to see the right films, know your trivia and, like a good scout, be prepared…to fight…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, August 26 Presidential campaigns require a lot of energy. The candidates need energy to go out and promote themselves; the public needs it to deal with the onslaught of media telling them who to love and who to hate. It seems like with every campaign, mudslinging increases and the…

Support Group

Step right up, ladies and germophobes, and see the amazing local artist maneuver the treacherous tightrope of everyday life! See him firmly plant one foot in the studio–time, tools, time, materials, time. See him wiggle the other foot in and out of reality–rent, groceries, laundry, maybe a family, maybe a…

Ladies First

8/28 “What took so long?” we remember a male companion asking as we emerged from a pit stop at a public women’s restroom. We tried to explain that there had been a queue, a woman with three children and an “out of order” sign on two of the toilets. He…

Work Out

8/28 Did there used to be a treadmill in your living room? Did it move to the attic four years ago, where it now sits behind the stationary bike? Did you find that the problem with the stationary bike was its essence–in other words, its immobility? You were sweating, but…

Love and Marriage

8/28 In the topsy-turvy world of Hollywood, there are at least a few known absolutes: Eventually, you will do a film with Kevin Bacon; eventually, you will sleep with Colin Farrell; and if you happen to be one of those rare acting couples who stay together, then eventually, you will…

Motley Cloak

8/31 Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat is, perhaps, the best musical ever conceived. If it’s not the best, well, it certainly ranks pretty high up there. Definitely in the top five. Maybe six. This fact–which we will not dispute, not for a second–doesn’t have much to do with the…