Shooting Blanks

Lovers of American movies used to joke that foreign films wouldn’t look so good if you saw them without subtitles. John Sayles’ latest movie, Men With Guns, plays better than his other films because it does have subtitles. Bald dialogue always sounds better in Spanish and Indian dialects. Set in…

Night & Day

thursday april 16 “You guys got baseball now!” says Tom Paxton, by phone, of the Valley. “I’ll have to remember to do some baseball songs. I’ve got one called ‘My Favorite Spring’ that I’ll have to do.” Paxton, the legendary Pete Seeger protege best known, perhaps, for “Goin’ to the…

Sex Drive

We wrote the book to be almost like a tuneup on your car–you’d do it, and a year later, it’d be like, that was great, let’s do it again. The “we” is Janet Lever, a.k.a. “Dr. J,” who’s speaking, and her partner Pepper Schwartz, both Ph.D.’s, and the sex and…

Spade in Full

“I’m a true dirtball,” says David Spade, and visiting his home state of Arizona allows him “to get back to my dirtball roots.” As if to prove his assertion, he does “an impression of me on a date: ‘Come on, chug it!'” That was Spade in high school; he’s only…

Blue-Pate Special

My dissatisfaction with Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters’ First 100 Years is not about the quality of its production. The show’s current interpretation by Phoenix Theatre is well-acted and–with the exception of some dreadful age makeup–a technically proficient version of this well-regarded Broadway hit. But playwright Emily Mann’s adaptation…

Here’s to You, Missing Robinsons

Danger, Will Robinson! Sensors detect boomer-TV redux once again. This time the victim is Lost in Space, Irwin Allen’s enjoyably absurd sci-fi TV fantasy which ran from 1965 to 1968 on CBS, before ABC’s Batman trounced it in the ratings. Grown-ups are likely to cringe at the prospect of sitting…

Populist Mechanics

Two chocolate croissants and a mixed bowl of Raisin Bran and Frosted Flakes–with skim milk. The first thing anyone wants to know when he hears you had breakfast with Michael Moore, director of Roger & Me and now The Big One, is what the Falstaffian filmmaker put away. To be…

Prole Violation

If nothing else, the current edition of Michael Moore’s continuing self-love fest does have a great subject: the desperation hidden inside a “thriving” U.S. economy. While politicians and financial wizards point to unemployment on the wane and profits on the rise, Moore notes that the largest employer in the country…

Loudon Clear

Write what you know–no one in popular music has ever taken this dictum more to heart than Loudon Wainwright III. For nearly 30 years, his cult of fans has looked forward to the continuing chapters of his work-in-progress. During a span of more than 15 albums, this “one man guy”…

Night & Day

Thursday April 9 Cross-dressing, gender ambiguity, unrequited sexual longings–in case anyone supposed that these were new concerns of the theater, proof to the contrary is offered by Twelfth Night; or What You Will (the only subtitle Shakespeare ever provided for one of his plays). Southwest Shakespeare Company concludes its season…

Those Who Can’t Do, Rock

There can be remarkably few Americans born between 1960 and 1980 for whom phrases like “Lolly, Lolly, Lolly, get your adverbs here” or “Conjunction Junction, what’s your function?” won’t evoke instant sense-memories of Saturday-morning cold cereal. Ask a kid from the same demographic to recite the Preamble to the Constitution,…

Urbane Sprawl

It’s too bad that theater audiences aren’t usually interested in the evolution of a play. If they were, the new Guillermo Reyes comedy, now playing at Arizona State University’s Lyceum Theatre, could sell tickets as a specimen of a project that’s on its way to being a funny, thought-provoking piece…

Blight Spirit

British actor Gary Oldman, who made his mark playing a punk in Sid and Nancy and a playwright in Prick Up Your Ears, wrote and directed Nil By Mouth, which has already drawn comparisons to the class-conscious dramas of Mike Leigh (Naked, Secrets & Lies). The film, which Oldman dedicates…

A Boy and His God

Rosie O’Donnell sure makes a believable nun. In the kids’ movie Wide Awake, she plays Sister Terry, a sports-loving teacher at a swanky private school in the Philadelphia suburbs, a sympathetic good egg in whom the troubled 10-year-old hero (Joseph Cross) confides. There’s not a minute when she isn’t convincing…

Jewry Deliberation

A Price Above Rubies confirms writer-director Boaz Yakin’s place on the list of filmmakers who barged into the opposite sex’s clubhouse and returned with an unsentimental, resonant understanding of a woman. It isn’t Yakin’s first exploration into milieu many would insist he had no right to enter. His debut feature,…

On the Q.C.

“A very interesting person!” observes the title character of the film Orlando, speaking of Queen Elizabeth. But the exclamation would fit just as well for the man who was playing her: Quentin Crisp. Crisp, who visits the Valley this weekend, was born Denis Pratt–“My name before I dyed it”–into middle-class…

Night & Day

Thursday April 2 If, for you, the phrase “Ukrainian music” conjures up endless refrains of “Ring Christmas bells/Ring Christmas bells/Ring Christmas bells . . . ,” you can get your horizons broadened when the 39-member Ukrainian Boys Choir of Kiev comes to the Valley for a show at 7:30 p.m…

What About BOB?

What’s the price of getting a major-league baseball franchise? To the fan, it’s usually been a generation of ineptitude. The system has been so rigged against expansion teams that most diehards could merely pray that a pennant would come in the lifetime of their grandchildren. After their ’60s debuts, it…

Sci-Fi, So Good

Imagine an undiscovered Star Trek episode, say, from the third season, when the show’s consistency and sense of structure had grown slipshod even by its own laughable dramaturgical standards. It begins with the Enterprise routinely chasing a comet when it receives a distress call from a nearby planet–the inhabitants are…

Firing Squad

The railroad didn’t do many favors for Southwestern American Indians. But in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, it did bring them a vital new market for their arts and crafts. Just when traditional tribal wares were losing their place to manufactured ones (also brought by train), the iron…

My Brilliantine Career

“Slick” is the word. At a glance, it would be hard to find two performances farther apart than the latest star turn of John Travolta as presidential hopeful Jack Stanton in Primary Colors, which opened last weekend, and one of his earliest, as Danny Zuko in Grease (or Vaselina, as…

Slack in the Saddle

Probably every film director itches to make a Western, so let’s be thankful that, with The Newton Boys, Richard Linklater has scratched his itch. Now he can go back to making movies about subjects he has some feeling for. Linklater should not be begrudged his chance to “stretch.” But he…