More Is Less

In the annals of social change, Alma Schindler is strictly small potatoes, and Bruce Beresford’s new biopic, Bride of the Wind, unwittingly threatens to erase her altogether. For those who don’t have the history of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at their fingertips, Alma (Sarah Wynter) was an outspoken party girl from…

On the Reel Road

Up for a quick trip across the United States? If you can’t spare the time and gas money, an alternative might be the “road” movies currently screening as part of the Reel America Film Series at the Wolfsonian-FIU in Miami Beach. The idea behind the minifestival is to “explore travel…

Laughing Matters

Sabrina Matthews, a self-professed flannel-shirt-wearing truck-driving dyke who employs the word butcher as an adjective (“If I was butcher….”), and Jason Stuart, a goateed gay actor and comedian from a “very crazy and lovable Jewish family” who has a proclivity for leather and Speedos. Put them together and you have…

Picture Old Florida

Watch your back for flying debris: Miami landmarks are falling fast. Witness the recent demolition of the 1899 house owned by Miami’s first doctor, James Jackson (as in Jackson Memorial Hospital), ranked second on Dade Heritage Trust’s list of the Ten Most Endangered Historic Sites just a short time ago…

The Great Escape

At this moment, Baz Luhrmann, control freak and self-proclaimed ringleader of conspirators “who conspire to something greater than ourselves,” is not in control at all. The cameraman trailing behind him, like a faithful puppy awaiting treats, does not work for the director; rather, he is in the employ of the…

The Same Old Song

When Sonia (Connie SaLoutos), an aspiring lyricist, meets successful composer Vernon (Dan Kelley) in They’re Playing Our Song, she hesitates while searching for the right words to describe his work: “Your music is, well, universally embraced…. I don’t want to use the word commercial.” Ironically adjectives like commercial have plagued…

Real Still Life

Fernando Garcia’s paintings are crafty enough to bring to mind Plato’s distrust of art. For the Greek philosopher, by attempting to become more real than reality, painting was a deceiving art form. But in fact Garcia’s work makes you relish the delicate balance between perception and illusion. Is that really…

Old Ghosts

When he was in his thirties, Ivan Reitman made comedies like a young man. His early movies, among them Stripes, Meatballs, and Ghostbusters, were messy, cocky, charming, daffy, and restless; they did anything for a laugh, even if that meant dousing John Candy in mud or Bill Murray in a…

The Big Swill

Now here’s a tricky one. Start with a busload of familiar and appealing stars shacked up together for a couple of weeks in a house in the Hollywood Hills. Assign them their mission: to emulate themselves — sort of — while dutifully reminding us that human relationships can be complicated…

Motor Thrills

Vroom. Vroom. America gets going — by bus, boat, car, plane, and train. Braking, however, is another event altogether. The catchy chant of the winning young imp in the ubiquitous car commercial says it all: We’ve zoom, zoom, zoomed through the past century. Accordingly there are few better metaphors than…

Speaking Private Parts

Wherever there’s a vagina holding forth, a penis in need of countering dialogue must be close by. It’s no surprise, then, that on the heels of Eve Ensler’s critically acclaimed and commercially successful play The Vagina Monologues comes Dean C. Dauw and his play, Penis’ Responses to The Vagina Monologues…

Skip It

Tamra Davis is bound by contract not to discuss the film that, at this very moment, she’s editing for release next year. “I’m officially not supposed to do any press for it,” the director says sheepishly, so she offers a few off-the-record comments about the movie, a road-trip comedy-drama starring…

A Time for Love and Romance

Early on in Florida Stage’s The Pavilion, the narrator looks out at the audience and declares, “This is a play about time.” Normally such an audacious statement might undercut the play’s actual content, but The Pavilion delves into the concepts of time, memory, and perception so thoroughly, and often eloquently,…

Troubles with Harry

Just when we culturally deprived, mystery-starved Americans were convinced that that most delicious of movie genres, the French thriller, was dead and buried, a literate and exciting new filmmaker named Dominik Moll has emerged to revive it — and set our nerves exquisitely on edge. It’s a minor miracle that…

The More Things Change

Chalk up another one for George Dubya. A few weeks ago the U.S. Immigration Department refused to allow acclaimed Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, director of both the Oscar-nominated The White Balloon and the Venice Film Festival Golden Lion winner The Circle, to change planes in New York on his way…

The Company Loves Misery

“Now wait a minute,” you may ask yourself during the setup of Ken Loach’s new film, Bread and Roses. “Is that Tom Green? Because it sure looks like Tom Green, and judging by the way he’s climbing into that garbage can, he certainly acts a bit like Tom Green….” Well…

Wassa Up

The soothing sweet voices of a dozen women, their skin tones a subtle spectrum from pale bark to shining ebony and adorned by bright fabrics, chant a cappella in Goro, a West African dialect: “Don’t worry…. Welcome…. See everybody…. Say “hi’…. Enjoy yourself.” This inviting community — a mélange of…

Play It en Español

With the first International Monologue Festival barely finished and the sixteenth International Hispanic Theatre Festival just beginning, South Florida audiences are reveling in one of our greatest assets: the abundance of talented local artists who work in Spanish and Portuguese. The International Hispanic Theatre Festival, which runs from June 1…

Hits So Easy

It’s 9:00 a.m. in Los Angeles, and Sergio Mendes, undisputed master of jazzy bossa nova, the man who put much of the ease in easy listening, the creature who created the soundtrack for the international jet set with his cohorts Brasil 66, has just gotten through 45 minutes on his…

Look Ahead

The publicist asks if I’d like to speak to D.A. Pennebaker to commemorate the 60th birthday of Bob Dylan, which falls on May 24. She asks this because, during the spring of 1965, Pennebaker made a documentary about Dylan’s tour of England, Dont Look Back, which captured a drained, cagey…

Gone Camping

Leave the tent and bug spray at home; there’s a better camp already set up at Miami Light Project Light Box Studio. The theater is now hosting two one-acts written by William Busch, an off-Broadway cult figure known for his high-camp style, and cleverly directed by Heath Kelts. Sleeping Beauty…

Staying on Target

Welcome to the movies of summer 2001! Of course whether you’ll actually feel welcome is another issue: Hollywood is doing its usual stuff to attract the most dollars, which may not always mean your dollars … unless you belong to that centrally crucial demographic — males, ages 13 to 25…