Lam Chops

Too many post-Woody Allen movies have been made about “sex in the head.” The smart, engaging Out of Sight is an action-comedy about love in the head. The real thing ignites between bank robber Jack Foley (George Clooney) and U.S. Marshal Karen Sisco (Jennifer Lopez) when she stumbles into his…

Afterthought Special

The 1967 musical Dr. Dolittle, which starred Rex Harrison, was a commercial disaster for its studio, Twentieth Century Fox. The new nonmusical Fox version of this material, starring Eddie Murphy, isn’t in the same overblown category as the Harrison film–its disasters are more mundane. It’s a kiddy comedy that really…

Night & Day

thursday june 25 The vast screens and marrow-shaking sound systems of IMAX Theatres have been put to use taking armchair travelers to the wreck of the Titanic and to the Great Barrier Reef, up Everest and over the Grand Canyon, into space stations and beaver lodges–in short, to places we…

Trunk Federation

So a guy goes into a bar, and he sees another guy sitting there nursing a beer, looking incredibly depressed. The two strike up a conversation, and finally the first guy asks the second guy why he’s so down. “I hate my job,” the second guy says. “Where do you…

You Go, Girls!

Call Lilith Fair whatever you want (and critics of last year’s tour had plenty of names for it–Breast Fest, Lesbopalooza, etc.). What you can most certainly call it is a success. The all-woman tour, founded by Sarah McLachlan and named after a reference to Adam’s first wife in Jewish mythology,…

She Is Woman, Hear Me Snore

In Hollywood, sequels are compulsory. Live theater, unlike Tinseltown, tends to be more selective about revisiting its characters and stories. Most of the time, anyway. A . . . My Name Is Still Alice, currently onstage at Phoenix Theatre, is the sequel to A . . . My Name Is…

Maroon for the Misbegotten

Early on in Six Days, Seven Nights, Harrison Ford’s drunken beach pilot Quinn Harris offers some advice to Anne Heche’s vacationing Robin Monroe. He warns that people often go to isolated island paradises looking for romance. But if you don’t bring it with you, he says, you ain’t gonna find…

Shadow Logic

The X-Files is a movie that answers questions. . . . No, wait a minute: The X-Files is a movie that asks questions. . . . The X-Files is a movie that makes me wanna ask some questions, like . . . what the hell does “Fight the future” mean?…

Turkey Under Glass

In 1993, the acclaimed husband-and-wife documentary team of Chris Hegedus and D.A. Pennebaker released The War Room, an intimate study of the first Clinton/Gore campaign. That done, they turned their cameras on the mounting of a less successful comedy: Ken Ludwig’s Broadway farce Moon Over Buffalo, which opened at the…

Night & Day

Thursday June 18 Those Czars of Rock ‘n’ Roll, that Politburo of Pop, those Bolsheviks of Boogie The Red Elvises hail from the former Soviet Union and bill themselves as “the legendary legends of Siberian surf music and the highest-payed [sic] wedding band of the Kamchatka Peninsula.” The L.A.-based act,…

The Docs Are In

Summer. ‘Tis the season of iced tea by the tankard and bikinis and baseball, of soaring electric bills and movies with numbers after the titles–and of reruns. NBC is making a game attempt to market its off-season with the line “If you haven’t seen it, it’s new to you.” But…

Sense of Humidor

Smoking fine cigars was long the province of the overprivileged. Now, although you won’t find many food stamp recipients puffing on Cubanas, it’s no longer reserved for the high and mighty or those who aspire to such. In the late ’90s, cigars have become as vital a fashion accessory as…

Shtick Shift

If it isn’t surprising that this theater season began and ended with Neil Simon plays, it’s at least comforting that both of them–if not the half-dozen other Simon comedies foisted on us in between–were adequately executed. Arizona Jewish Theatre Company’s Broadway Bound wraps up a season that began last September…

Bud Not for Me

Though Lilies was shot in Quebec with a French-Canadian cast, the actors don’t speak French. Based on the play Les Feluettes ou la Repetition d’un Drame Romantique (The Lilies, or the Revival of a Romantic Drama) by Michel Marc Bouchard, the script was adapted into English by Inda Gaboriau, probably…

Strictly Mirrored-Ball Room

A bird’s-eye view of the Brooklyn bridge opened John Badham’s Saturday Night Fever in 1977, when disco was in full swing. It was the route the working-class hero took to travel from where he lived and worked to the disco in Manhattan where he danced and partied. Then the titles…

Westward the Women

Popularly known as a “dude ranch,” Merv Griffin’s Wickenburg Inn will cater more to the “dude-ettes” on the weekend of Friday, June 26, through Sunday, June 28, when the inn hosts its first-ever summer “Cowgirl Camp,” a wild-West weekend for women of all ages. Just how wild does the West…

Stargazer’s Trek

There’s a group of people who salivate at the thought of coming to the desert wasteland we Arizonans call home, a segment of the population that would sell its eyeteeth to be where you’re sitting right now. And no, we don’t mean the country’s retirees, half of whom seem to…

Night & Day

thursday june 11 Bay Area soul diva E.C. Scott belts out straightforward, deliciously lewd blues tunes, many self-written, with authority, a gospel backbone and a contemporary groove. Touring behind her splendid new Blind Pig CD Hard Act to Follow–which includes 10 of her own songs, plus a snaky cover of…

The Network Guy

The Truman Show, starring Jim Carrey, is the Zeitgeist movie of the hour. How could it not be? It’s all about the omnipotence of television and how our lives seem scripted by some unseen force–a TV producer, perhaps? Zeitgeist movies, almost by definition, get written about not only by film…

Road Rave

Since The Kingston Trio has been hitting America’s highways–including a certain fabled stretch that passes through the great desert southwest–for four decades, what headline act could be more appropriate for Flagstaff’s Route 66 Celebration? Touring an average of 28 weeks a year, the Trio still makes a joyful acoustic noise…

Night & Day

thursday june 4 Touring in a VW van in the company of her cat, Tosca, Seattle-based thrush Jill Cohn plays two free shows this week in the Valley. Supported by her delicate piano playing, Cohn’s Lilith Fair-bait voice–soft yet rich and soulful–is a great vehicle for the self-composed laments of…

Nocturnal Zoo Mission

A twitch, a scratch, maybe a yawn–that’s the extent of the activity you’re likely to see at the zoo from those among God’s creatures that don’t keep bankers’ hours. For adults, that’s just the way things are, but for kids from grades four to eight, there is an alternative during…