A Soluna Art Installation Will Recreate the Experience of Dreaming

Artistic couple Frank and Lee Dufour figure the interpretation of dreams is better left to psychoanalysts. That’s why their current project instead focuses on another aspect of our dream lives. “We’re trying to illustrate the mechanics of dreams and how movement happens inside them,” Frank says. Dreams, as you’re probably well…

7 Best Spa Experiences in DFW

Tax refunds are finally rolling in, which means it’s officially treat-yo-self season. Skip run-of-the-mill spa centers and stretch your dollars by choosing something extra special. Whether you find yourself in a flotation cabin, Russian banya or Himalayan salt cave is totally up to you. Salt Cave of Southlake 200 N…

King Kong Roars Again in a Suitably Silly Monster Mash

For a movie in which a major character’s death is discovered when a giant lizard-monster vomits out his skull, Kong: Skull Island is a surprisingly breezy affair. It’s not so much that the characters or situations are particularly lighthearted. The film offers up plenty of wartime atmosphere and grim backstory,…

42 Murals’ Instagram Contest Ends Amid Suspicions of Vote Purchasing

Last week, final votes, in this case “likes,” were cast in the 42 Murals Instagram contest to determine which three Deep Ellum murals get to stay up. The winners will be announced March 15, but some artists are already calling the judging process unfair for allowing contestants to purchase votes. Several murals…

Watch List: Here’s All the TV Not to Miss in March

It’s March! Time to celebrate spring by staying inside and watching more TV! National Treasure (Hulu), March 1Originally a UK Channel 4 miniseries, this is a four-hour deep-dive into rape and sexual assault allegations against a beloved celebrity comedian. Sound familiar? I have some apprehension that it’ll try too hard…

Our Top Picks for the South Asian Film Festival This Weekend

Dallas doesn’t long for film festivals, big or small, long or short. And that’s fine by us. The window into various topics, cultures and technologies provided by fests is invaluable, if not always entertaining. And c’mon, that’s not meant as an insult. There has to be one real dinger each…

Yemaya’s Belly Asks Whether the American Dream Is Good, or Even Real

On Saturday, Cara Mia Theatre Co. will give a Dallas debut to a play by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Quiara Alegría Hudes, who also collaborated with Hamilton playwright and composer Lin-Manuel Miranda on his first musical In the Heights. The play, Yemaya’s Belly, is the story of a Cuban boy’s dream to…

10 Things to Do in Dallas for $10 or Less: March 3-5

Nightmares on Wax It’ll Do 4322 Elm St. 10 p.m. Friday $10 to $15 Despite the catchy name, Nightmares on Wax is neither an ’80s horror movie inspired tribute band nor a recreational party drug. It is the nom de plume of George Evelyn, a legendary English DJ and respected…

La La Land Is a Propaganda Film

The one thing I know for sure is that most Oscar voters don’t care that a film as seemingly pleasant as Damien Chazelle’s modern musical La La Land has proven so divisive. Even as lyrics from “City of Stars” have become inspirational memes, artists like songwriter Elon Rutberg are calling…

5 Art Events for Your Weekend: March 3-5

Bizarro — Robert Barsamian Conduit Gallery 1626 C Hi Line Drive. Ongoing through March 25 DC Comic’s antihero Bizarro first appeared in 1958 as an antagonist to Superman. In pop culture, the character has come to be known as a metaphorical mirror to Superman: Everything seen in a mirror is in…

Grim and Bloody, Logan Gets Wolverine Right

Logan is a punch in the gut in all the right ways. Onscreen, the X-Men series has always found ways to morph and expand, from time-traveling fantasy to social allegory to political thriller. And it’s done so as other comic-book franchises have ossified, with the DC movies (foolishly) doubling down…