While you’re at it

So the amateur–I mean avid–art fans are swarming the Kimbell to see this year’s Big Show, and sure enough, Matisse and Picasso are worth the drive to Fort Worth and the elbow-digging crowds. But in the process of obsessing over these two masters’ obsessions with each other, you may miss…

Pickin’ Cotton

By now, Darrell Jordan figured he would be in the middle of building a dream. Not two years ago, he had this moment so perfectly pictured in his mind: Construction trucks rumbling through Fair Park, workers rebuilding one of this city’s few remaining historic monuments, engineers getting ready to raise…

Why?

Maybe it’s because the show is set in the ultra-glamorous, intrigue-ridden world of journalism. Or maybe because there’s a glaringly unnecessary subplot about clairvoyance and ghost sightings. Or perhaps my cold critical heart has begun to thaw and leak watery pink juice. For whatever reason, the latest Pegasus Theatre comedy…

Dangerous intentions

For Cruel Intentions, his directorial debut, writer Roger Kumble has come up with the clever idea of updating Choderlos de Laclos’ durable 18th-century novel Dangerous Liaisons. With its focus on amoral protagonists who use sex as a tool to manipulate innocents, the book caused a scandal when it was first…

Chance of a lifetime

In the three decades that director Ken Loach has been a steadfast champion of the British working class, his films have lost none of their sting. Whether examining a brutal Belfast police incident in Hidden Agenda (1990) or the plight of an unemployed man struggling to buy his daughter a…

Hard copy

“Honey,” Ellen Burstyn’s character in The Last Picture Show remarks to her daughter, “everything gets old if you do it often enough.” The specific activity she had in mind was sex, but the maxim applies at least as appropriately to genre conventions in movies, which even the casual moviegoer can…

The Prozac don

When hit men wore hats and Cadillacs had running boards, the average Mafia don could knock off the bosses of the five boroughs in mid-afternoon and sit down to a nice plate of chicken cacciatore that evening, content that he’d seen to the family business and blazed a path for…

Night & Day

thursday march 4 Most of the time, reading a humor book is about as entertaining as running through a crowded mall wearing nothing but a few strategically placed pats of butter and a smile. (Well, that’s actually pretty amusing, so long as you’re not the one doing it.) The reason:…

Screen dreams

While the hubbub over the American Film Institute’s list of top 100 films of all time has died down, the bright power of the films among its ranks has not. These celluloid masterpieces prove their visceral and technical impact with every viewing, and the bigger the screen, the better. No…

Help for the tacky

There are millions of drug addicts in this country. And that is a tragedy. But other groups have their worries too. Like homeowners, for instance. There’s burglary, dealing with property taxes, and being convinced by some washed-up athlete to take out a second mortgage on your home, but that’s not…

Square to be hip

Here’s the pitch: It’s New Year’s Eve, 1981. Wait, there’s more. But not much. Kevin (Paul Rudd) and Lucy (Courtney Love) are best friends out on the town, dateless. He’s a sad sack of self-loathing; she’s into slapstick sex in bathroom stalls. Kevin was just dumped by Ellie (Janeane Garofalo),…

The final solution was survival

In Hungary, the Holocaust lasted only for a year. But the word only is deceptive in this context. The Nazis, who entered the country in March 1944, had been in the genocide business for a few years by then, and they’d gotten good at it. They were efficient, and they…

Unreal world

Director Garry Marshall (Pretty Woman, Beaches) has always tended toward unrealistically feel-good movies, and The Other Sister is no exception. Billed as “a love story for the romantically challenged,” it concerns a mentally handicapped young woman (Juliette Lewis) struggling for independence from her overprotective mother (Diane Keaton). With the exception…

Presidential suite

So the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza isn’t exclusively obsessed with the assassination. That’s probably a good thing. We wouldn’t want such a fine establishment to take on the creepy, narrow compulsion of its chief subject: November 22, 1963. For 10 years, the Sixth Floor Museum has offered far…

Hey Yiddle Yiddle

Name this movie: A wildly popular actress stars as a young, sassy, headstrong Jewish woman who masquerades as a man and falls in love with one of her colleagues. Sound familiar? Oh yeah, and this proto-feminist must flout tradition to follow her heart and…play a fiddle in a band of…

Night & Day

thursday february 25 When you talk to Fury III singer-guitarist Stephen Nutt, you get the feeling that one day, as he’s being led away in handcuffs, his neighbors will be standing in their front yards saying to reporters, “He seemed like such a nice guy.” And he does. But it’s…

You Godot, girl

Samuel Beckett has become more useful as an allusion, an adjective to qualify the heirs and pretenders of his perverse comic legacy. Rarely is the novelist-playwright spoken of as a living voice. Perhaps being widely regarded as one of the most influential theatrical sensibilities of the 20th century comes with…

Like a rolling stone

Art-scenester folklore has it that Brice Marden and Julian Schnabel came to blows in a New York bar back in the 1970s. The story pits the established abstract minimalist and the emerging young painter against each other at Max’s Kansas City, the dark and smoke-choked stomping grounds of glam rockers,…

Master stroke

Jerry Heidenreich stood alone on the starter’s block, waiting for his teammate to touch the wall. Heidenreich had done this thousands of times before, waited God knows how many times for his turn to dive into the pool and put away a relay race. He’d been doing it since he…

It takes a script

There’s one moment in Global Village, the Actors’ Stock Company world premiere by playwright-collaborator Tom Grady, that arrives just before intermission and knocks the breath right out of you. I won’t be so thoughtless as to reveal it here. Suffice to say it’s the culmination of a slow tragicomic buildup…

Coal miner’s son

What’s entertaining about October Sky is the unlikely-but-true spectacle of backwater West Virginia teens teaching themselves rocket science in the Eisenhower ’50s. They progress from a glorified cherry bomb to sophisticated missiles through trial-and-error-and-error. Their inner rocket fuel is the desire to avoid getting stuck in the dying coal industry…

The plot thickens and thins

Plot is a central problem in both Jawbreaker and Office Space, two comedies opening this week: The first has too much, and the second (and far better of the two movies) has too little. Jawbreaker’s 26-year-old writer-director, Darren Stein, says he wanted to make an homage to the films he…