In the Shadow

Terms of Endearment was the perfect date movie—romance, humor and death—but it doesn’t hold a candle to the late-life love shared by American poet Joy Gresham and C.S. Lewis, the celebrated Irish writer and theologian. Fifty-year-old “Jack” was a classics professor at Oxford—in the middle of writing Chronicles of Narnia—when…

Boobin’ Ball

Melons. Knockers. Cha-chas. Woo-woos. Hoo-hoos. Ta-tas. Roundies. Fun bags. Love bubbles. Honkers. Hooters. Jugs. Naughty pillows. Whoppers. Headlights. Twin peaks. Watermelons. Tig ol’ bitties. Harmonic oscillators. Mammaries. Airbags. Gazongas. Mary Kate and Ashley. Orbs. What-nots. Personalities. Breasteses. Zeppelins. Man boobs (only they’re on women). Babaloos. Umlauts. Twofers. Gajunka-junks. Join the…

Alterna-Art

I have to admit, I’m a little miffed with the Pawn Gallery in Deep Ellum. The other day I went to check my office mailbox and noticed all these cool, slick postcards (mailed in clear Mylar envelopes) in everyone’s slot. I was excited when I reached into mine but found…

Cirque du Morte

OK, everybody already knows that Cirque du Soleil is not your average circus experience. Sure, there’s a big top, but instead of questionably treated animals doing spirit-destroying stunts beneath it, there’re incredibly talented acrobats, dancers, gymnasts, contortionists and every other sort of body artist doing death-defying feats that more than…

Bayou Blues

In the summer of 2005, an IMAX film crew descended on southern Louisiana to film a documentary on the state’s rapidly shrinking wetlands. The film was to serve as a warning, depicting the destruction a large hurricane could wreak on New Orleans if something wasn’t done to restore its natural…

Folkie Femme

Queen of folkabilly. That’s what Rolling Stone has called singer Nanci Griffith, the woman I would want to be in my next life if I believed in reincarnation—I covet her high, clear voice; the steeped-in-Texas songwriting; and the sense of humor, plus she’s darn cute in cowboy boots. If Griffith…

Play a Game

Come see A Dating Game 7:30 p.m. this Friday at Repertory Company Theatre’s new Promenade Theatre, 650 N. Coit Road in Richardson. It’s an original musical show that claims it’s “perfect for a date.” I say it’s only perfect to drag a date to an “original musical” if you’re going…

Date My Mom

Though I’m sure it’s purely coincidental, the decision to release the Diane Keaton-Mandy Moore romantic comedy Because I Said So with the scent of this year’s Sundance Film Festival still fresh in the air provides us with an excellent opportunity to review the wayward career of the movie’ s director,…

The Kids Are Not All Right

PARK CITY, UTAH—We all know about the cathartic power of blues music, but until the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, who knew that it could serve as a cure-all for everything from nymphomania to childhood sexual abuse? In Hustle & Flow director Craig Brewer’s Black Snake Moan, whose out-of-competition premiere screening…

Sympathy for the Devil

PARK CITY, Utah — Ten days of terse texting among professional narcissists working on little or no sleep in one of the last cold spots left on Al Gore’s inconvenient Earth: Welcome to Sundance ’07, where wounding homefront melodrama Grace Is Gone sells and it hardly pays to be nice…

Dissent for Sale

PARK CITY, Utah–Even by the lacerating standards of recent Sundance docs Why We Fight and Iraq in Fragments, the nonfiction at this year’s fest felt, well, real — alarmingly so. Indeed, after doing battle with films about U.S. policies on Iraq, Darfur, and global warming, this critic was nearly moved…

The Sundance Kids

One morning, Gary Walkow was suddenly transformed into a successful Hollywood filmmaker. Gone were the hat-in-hand searches for financing, the deferred salaries, the long shooting days with undermanned crews, and the months upon years spent touring the festival circuit while seeking a distribution deal. For a moment, he was taking…

The Music Men

PARK CITY, Utah –On the first Saturday of the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, I rolled out of bed and hustled up Main Street for the 8:30 screening of Tamara Jenkins’ The Savages, starring Philip Seymour Hoffman and Laura Linney as adult siblings caring for an irascible elderly parent. Only I…

Say Wa?

Great casting makes great theater. For The Miracle Worker to work as well as it does in Dallas Children’s Theater’s current production, it’s not enough just to find a young actress who can fling herself into the furniture portraying blind and deaf Helen Keller as a child. The role of…

The Terrorist’s Mind

Catch a Fire (Focus) In his commentary for the underrated, undervalued Catch a Fire, director Phillip Noyce discusses the inspiration: witnessing the terror attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001. He wanted to comprehend “the terrorist’s mind,” so he found a story that accomplishes such a difficult thing: the…

Cold Hearted

Anyone who played games back in the olden days (i.e., the late ’80s) knows they used to be a lot tougher. Cartridges back then subscribed to the “Oh, you want some of this?” school of game design. They made you gnash your teeth, throw your controller, and bellow four-letter words…

Our top DVD picks for the week of January 30

Academy Awards Collection (MGM) The Comedians of Comedy (Anchor Bay) Dallas: The Complete Sixth Season (Warner Bros.) The Doctor, the Tornado & the Kentucky Kid: Ultimate Collector’s Edition (New Video Group) Dora the Explorer: Cowgirl Dora (Paramount) The Fabulous Baker Boys (MGM) Facing the Giants (Sony) The Festival: The Complete…

Midnight at the Round Table

Now a staple of weekend entertainment in Dallas, most people go to midnight movies at the Inwood to relive the magic of seeing the movies for the first time. Personally, though, I go for the educational value—not from the movie itself, but from the trivia contest that precedes it. At…

Working Blue

Remember when you were sipping your latté at the Uptown Starbucks and you laughed at the handicapped kid trying to cross the West Village parking lot? Make yourself feel a little better–jerk–by going to see Josh Blue at the Addison Improv. The comedian has cerebral palsy and encourages you to…

Beyond Art

Sudden death is neither easily understood nor reconciled. Oftentimes, survivors cling to the tangible, material memories those that pass leave behind. When possible, the most amazing mourning for and celebration of a life can take place thanks to the dead’s creations. We can feel the artist’s energy. We can fawn…

Familiar Faces

If you’ve ever had a dollar bill in your pocket, then you’ve seen the inspiration for artist Ike E. Morgan’s painting career. One of his first subjects was the little green portrait of George Washington that we’ve all carried in our wallets at one time or another. But, despite most…

Mission to Read

Children’s author Christopher Paul Curtis will be the featured guest reader at the 2007 African-American Read-In hosted by the Dallas County Community College District. He will read from his new book, Mr. Chickee’s Messy Mission. The theme for this year’s read-in is “Light Up Your Life with Reading, Books and…