Crash and Yearn

The parade of real-life figures strolling into the googolplex has been endless this year: There’s Jamie Foxx as musical Mount Rushmore Ray Charles, Johnny Depp as Peter Pan author J.M. Barrie, Kevin Spacey as forgotten teeny-popper Bobby Darin, Liam Neeson as sexologist Alfred Kinsey, Kevin Kline as standards composer Cole…

Focking Wonderful

When your movie gets riotous laughter out of endless utterances of the word “Focker,” it doesn’t have to try very hard. So it’s no surprise that much of Meet the Fockers, the inevitable sequel to the 2000 hit Meet the Parents, barely breaks a sweat. When in doubt, after all,…

Texas Tribalism

With all the rhetoric of globalization, any public discussion of localism in the arts would seem to be déclassé. Somehow localism appears to run in direct opposition to the forward march of progress supposedly borne by the forces of globalization. In our area of the world, however, localism in the…

Capsule Reviews

Super 8 The kids were at it again. For one night only, the art collective Oh6 exhibited their work in the gallery at South Side on Lamar. Yet far different from your usual pristine and ruminative gallery space, the setting was more a fusion of Warhol’s Factory and the Dollar…

Capsule Reviews

The Gift of the Magi Feeling a little anemic Christmas spiritwise? This production by the Classical Acting Company is just the tonic for the holiday-weary. Dallas actor-writer Lee Trull blends two O. Henry stories–Magi and Compliments of the Season–into a seamless one-act that loses not a morsel of the writer’s…

Art of the Dance

“When we dance together, my world’s in disguise/It’s a fairy-tale land that’s come true/And when you look at me with those stars in your eyes/I could waltz across Texas with you.” When Ernest Tubb wrote these words in 1967, he captured in song the feeling of being lost in a…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, December 23 In Christmas movies, the redeeming ending is the big gift. The rest of the plot is just stocking filler. Take It’s a Wonderful Life, for example: While being Christmas’ most hackneyed film, it is also perhaps the saddest–until the joyful conclusion. Then there’s A Christmas Story, a…

It’s Totally High School, Eh

Take a moment, cop a squat on a shag rug, pop a Sunkist open and remember that awesomely on-the-edge Canadian teen drama series Degrassi Junior High (aka Degrassi High). Remember feeling completely lucky that you caught that episode when Spike got pregnant while your parents weren’t home. Maybe it’s those…

Out of Africa

12/26 When it comes to holiday greetings and salutations there’s always been “Merry Christmas!” for Christians, “Happy Hanukkah!” for your Jewish pals and “I hope you enjoy your extended weekend!” for any Jehovah’s Witness acquaintances you may have. But ever since Kwanzaa became all the rage in the mid-’90s, the…

Ball Games

12/27 At first, the idea of playing poker for no money struck me as a lousy idea–what is the point of gambling when nothing’s at stake?–but around the time I lost my first $100, I came around. Mind you, this happened the very first time I played some years back,…

Eyes on Hope

12/28 We all make jokes that our houses are in disarray, that we live in garbage dumps if everything isn’t picked up and spotless. It’s that whole “My house is a total heap right now, pardon the mess!” thing. But as the Duncanville Church of Christ Mission Team discovered in…

Tricksters

12/29 Harry Houdini lent a degree of legitimacy to the magic arts early in the 20th century, performing illusions in public venues, lecturing and appearing in the movies until his death in 1926 on Halloween. Contemporary magicians Jonathan and Charlotte Pendragon re-create two of Houdini’s illusions, besting the best in…

All You Can Eat

In Spanglish, which is less a story than a snapshot of a crumbling marriage populated by sitcom characters, Adam Sandler plays John Clasky, an average man with an average name and an above-average life. With his burgeoning double chin always covered in a slight shadow of stubble, he’s a celebrated…

Sour Lemony

This much can be said for the movie version of Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events: Its villain, Count Olaf, just might be Jim Carrey’s finest screen role. A bitter, would-be master thespian who delights in donning ridiculous disguises and adopting funny accents, he doesn’t seem that far removed…

Bomb-alie

A Very Long Engagement, the new film by French director Jean-Pierre Jeunet (most famously of Amélie), will have its fans. For one thing, there’s no denying its beauty, an onslaught of gorgeous tableaux, painstakingly arranged and shot through filters to exclude colors that don’t suit (i.e., anything other than sepia…

Hang on, Snoopy

Can Snoopy be due for a comeback? Back in the 1960s and ’70s, the black and white beagle and his pie-faced little pals from Charles M. Schulz’s cartoon strip Peanuts reigned as beloved pop-culture icons, up there with rock stars and astronauts. Even during the flower power years, more than…

Capsule Reviews

A Closer Walk With Patsy Cline Nobody can sing Patsy Cline the way Jenny Thurman can, and she gets to do it again in this two-hour musical tribute. All the hit songs are here: “Crazy,” “Walkin’ After Midnight,” “Leavin’ on Your Mind,” “Back in Baby’s Arms.” It’s like a living…

Capsule Reviews

Constructions & Architecture This show makes what might otherwise seem like the incongruent forces of art and architecture seamless and fluid. This gathering of things, sounds and interactive sculpture reinforces the turn toward media contamination and full-body sensuality in the art world over the last 30 years. John Frost’s walk-through…

Horse Play

If painter George Stubbs had lived in the era of the Trapper Keeper (instead of the 18th century when there was just drab old paper in sheets), Stubbs would have a horse-covered binder, possibly with “George + Bandit = BFF” scratched in the margin in ball point pen. He loved…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday 16 Maybe this is just another of our obsessive-compulsive thoughts, but we hope not too many hands have touched our sushi. Is that wrong? We don’t think so. In whichever sushi establishment we happen into, we like to think that we have an assigned professional that is the only…

Oh, Canada

You read it here first. The flood of American liberals sneaking across the border into Canada has intensified in the past few weeks, sparking calls for increased patrols to stop the illegal immigration. The re-election of President Bush has prompted the exodus among left-leaning citizens who fear they’ll soon be…

Park It

12/18 If anybody in this city knows how to work a theme, it’s those feisty fund-raisers at the Resource Center of Dallas. Whether it’s superheroes or movie stars, their monthly GayBINGO parties are lavishly decorated with hosts and participants in elaborate costumes or otherwise decked out to the nines. It’s…