Careful what you wish for: Film
By Martin Barna | November 30, 2001Contain your ebullience--the Christmas DVD season is upon us.
Contain your ebullience--the Christmas DVD season is upon us.
Want to know what to get your best friend/new love/old flame/baby sister/awesome editorial staff for Christmas? Here's a hint: The best gifts are stuff that everyone wants, but no one would buy for...
Last night, seven actors performed eight plays in Shaefer Theater.
Just when you thought you couldn't love a boy band, here they come.
What would the holiday season be without food? Time is running out to indulge in your favorite goodies before New Year's resolution time comes around, so Otis the season for culinary gifts.
James Downey of Columbia, Mo., is a dreamer--with way too much time on his hands. The writer/artist is soliciting the help of everyone in the world to make his latest fantasy come true. On Nov.
This holiday season will likely be the most competitive in video game history.
A real hangover cure--is it too good to be true? After seeing commercials for Alka-Seltzer's new Morning Relief tablets, Recess decided to find out if it's the real deal.
Say hello to the girl that I am/ You're gonna have to see through my perspective.
t can be taken as a refreshing proof of the existence of some sort of natural justice in the universe that Giorgio de Chirico, a genius most mortally in touch with his own unique muse, was plagued...
If you thought that last movie you saw was crap, why don't you just make a better version yourself? Well, go on. No, really.
When I went to see Monsters, Inc., I full well knew that half the audience I was seated with was really here to see the 45-second teaser-trailer for Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones.
avid Mamet is a great playwright, a very good screenwriter and a pretty good director. Up until Heist, every film he has helmed has been, at best, a beautiful mess.
know it may be sacrilegious to say this on a college campus where one out of every five students count Dumb and Dumber as one of their all-time favorite movies, but I must admit that I am not the...
n 2000, Jill Scott posed a seemingly simple query to an unprepared nation: "Who Is Jill Scott?" Today, everyone from Moby to Ron Isley can answer that question.
The age of Innocence is a bit older than expected. In Paul Cox's new celluloid rhapsody, it's pushing 60.
If Oprah had a movie club, Life as a House would be a must-see. It has all the elements of one of her book picks--contrived laughs, silly animals, teary-eyed women, troubled teens, etc.
Techno Animal sounds like two dogs trapped in a car with the windows rolled up and a sampler as their only toy. They're staring death in the face and pissed off.