Fall in Step

Great art is just a hop, skip and a jump away 9/17 “What lives in art and is eternally living is first of all the painter and then the painting.” Van Gogh’s words offer an explanation for that awkward moment when your dear friend shows you that painting she just…

Open Dialogues

Universal languages of art, music and dance 9/17 he number of reasons to travel to Fort Worth these days seems to increase proportionally with the rise in gas prices. There are great museum exhibits, new plays, music every weekend. For a limited time, Dallasites can enjoy one of the wonders…

New releases available this week

Da Ali G Show: Da Compleet Second Seazon (HBO Home Video) Sacha Baron Cohen’s inching closer to Tom Green territory; come this time next year, his HBO show is likely to be on the pop-culture junk pile. Which isn’t to say this double-disc set doesn’t hold up–it’s just wearing thin,…

Dallas Observer‘s top DVD picks for the week of September 15

After Sex (New Yorker Video) Ben-Hur: Four-Disc Collector’s Edition (Warner Bros.) Candlemass: The Curse of Candlemass (Navarre) Carlito’s Way: Ultimate Edition (Universal) Escaflowne: The Movie–Ultimate Edition (Bandai Entertainment) Everybody Loves Raymond: The Complete Fourth Season (HBO Home Video) Fever Pitch (20th Century Fox) Happily Ever After (Kino International) The Hitchhiker’s…

Capsule Reviews

Bug The two-legged freaks battle six-legged ones in Tracy Letts’ thoroughly fascinating dark comedy about paranoia, love and anarchy. Kitchen Dog Theater stages the two-act play in their tiny black box space, giving the audience an even better sense of the claustrophobia the characters feel in their cramped hotel room…

New releases available this week

The Blues Brothers 25th Anniversary Edition (Universal Studios Home Video) Dan Aykroyd and John Goodman’s modern-day revival of the Blues Brothers is less a stroke of comedy genius than a dose of karaoke night at Hooters. Fight off those thoughts and pop in this 1980 classic. John Belushi and Aykroyd,…

Dallas Observer‘s top DVD picks for the week of September 6

Barn of the Naked Dead (Koch Vision Entertainment) The Bela Lugosi Collection (Universal) Bruce Springsteen: VH1 Storytellers (Sony Music) Charmed: The Complete Second Season (Paramount) Crash (Artisan) The Deer Hunter: Special Edition (Universal) Dragnet: Volumes 1-3 (Delta Music) Fat Albert’s Halloween Special (Ventura) Fraggle Rock: Season 1 (Hit Entertainment) Greta…

Grizzly Man

Fans of the last two Miramax films from Swedish director Lasse Hallström–Chocolat and The Shipping News–may be happy to know that he has stuck to the exact same formula for his latest, An Unfinished Life. Like its predecessors, this is the tale of an itinerant single parent with a precocious…

Go to Hell

The Exorcism of Emily Rose, which is based on a true story the same way Harry Potter and Star Wars movies are, is the latest–though certainly not the last–movie of this bloody (awful) year trying to scare the money right out of your wallet. It has but one thing going…

Capsule Reviews

forces of evil in a bozo nightmare Plush Gallery heralds its return to Commerce Street downtown with a provocative gallimaufry of witty and mostly small pieces. Reinforcing the oddity of this jumble is its new location in a small boxy office space on the fourth floor of the Manor House…

Capsule Reviews

The Imaginary Invalid They didn’t warn about the rhymed couplets. If they had, there’s no way we would have agreed to sit through more than two hours of the highfalutin’, Dr. Seuss-style, sing-songy stuff. Theatre Three’s Jac Alder has done his own translation of the Molière farce about a hypochondriac…

Farce Majeure

The real test of any play written as a star vehicle is how it works when performed by lesser mortals. Two productions that have just opened–Theatre Britain’s Lettice & Lovage and Theatre Three’s The Imaginary Invalid–feature so-so scripts that could benefit from more commanding personalities in the leading roles. Peter…

What Goes Up

In a blur of frenetic movement, old galleries are shutting down, relocating and cocooning while word of new galleries crackles among cognoscenti and crowd alike. The logic of this shake-up seems more cockeyed than the stuff of 20-20 vision, with all the movement creating a virtual geography of Brownian motion–so…

Full House

No more antes, no more chips, no more green felt. Please. There’s little we wouldn’t at least consider giving up if it meant we never had to hear another word about poker again. This five-card frenzy has gone on long enough. Isn’t Dave Foley supposed to realize that he’s wasting…

This Week’s Day-By-Day Picks

Thursday, September 8 Our first year of college, we faced many challenges: trying to avoid the Freshman 15 while living off grilled cheese sandwiches, sneaking beer into our dorm without the RAs noticing and calculating the last possible second we could wake up and still make it to our 8…

Zest is Best

Once upon a time during a rather tedious drive from Dallas to Washington, D.C., my driving companion and I discovered that, having been out of Texas for nearly 24 hours, we had a hankering for some Mexican food. Just off Interstate 81 in Virginia, we spotted a wildly colorful Chi-Chi’s…

Sip Soiree

Aged to perfection 9/8 In the pantheon of ancient gods and goddesses, few lived a remotely fun life. They were forever grappling with hardships such as being seduced by another species and giving birth to an egg or pissing off the guy in charge and being cast into the underworld…

Troubled Waters

Up the river without a paddleboat 9/10 We don’t like to be party poopers, but in the case of Saturday’s Trinity River Challenge, a grievous error floats on the horizon and we can’t help but call it out. The race, which begins with a 7:45 a.m. check-in at McInnish Park,…

Office Space

Faxing and copying made John Pomara a Legend 9/8 John Pomara has art down to a science. The abstract painter relies on modern contraptions such as fax machines and copiers to produce his work. “It’s all about a personal touch and mechanical engagement fused together on the same picture plane,”…

Steer Queer

Take a road trip to Queertown 9/8 Dallas is a multi-faceted city containing a variety of neighborhoods and even independent towns, each with its own distinct personality. Whatever might tickle your fancy, it’s available here in our fair city. Into muggings and bad metal bands? Try Deep Ellum. Prefer shallow…

Drift Wood

The problem with making black-lacquered high school satire is this: Heathers came out in 1989, and it pretty much did the trick. There’s always room for an excellent addition to the genre, and in 1999, it appeared in the form of Alexander Payne’s Election, a film blessed both with a…

Low Yield

At the opening of The Constant Gardener, Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles’ adaptation of the novel by John le Carré, we hear a conversation before we see it. The screen remains black, still running credits, as a man and a woman negotiate a departure. Slowly, the scene dawns, revealing the couple…