Working Girls

Regarding our mothers, there are certain thoughts we block out — both as kids and as adults. For instance, mom’s most intimate moments with dad. (Even putting it delicately gives us the willies.) And then there’s, frankly, the most frightening and unthinkable — until now, that is: Mom sticks a…

“F” Bombs

FRI 2/25 So many people still shudder at the “F” word: Feminism, that is. The Guerrilla Girls don’t understand that — after all, they’ve been trying to reinvent the word since 1985, adopting the names of dead women artists as pseudonyms, donning gorilla masks, and using “facts, humor and fake…

Great Scots

2/26-2/27 Stereotypes are an awful blight, which is why the Scottish are such an inspiringly indefinable people. Any group that counts among its sports the Hammer Throw, Weight Toss, and Standing Stone Put are on the high side of macho. Yet those same people are just as likely to be…

Rocks Stars

SAT 2/26 It seems that KTAR personality Gayle Bass really knows how to shake it. And by “it,” we mean a martini — which also, it just so happens, serves as her moneymaker, when Bass and more than a dozen other local luminaries serve as wanna-be mixologists during the Celebrity…

Hello, Goodbye

Goodbye Blue Monday might sound like a nod to ’80s New Wave pioneers New Order. But GBM, a San Diego quartet whose name actually references Kurt Vonnegut’s seminal Breakfast of Champions, has no desire to imitate either the Manchester Invasion (despite citing The Cure as a major influence) or the…

Bad to the Bone

This is what it’s come to: I have driven for nearly an hour in order to interview a big plastic skeleton. What’s more, I’m doing it at a place I swore I’d never, ever visit: the Arizona Renaissance Festival, a faux medieval village (one of the largest of its kind…

Bonding Rituals

“I just got done burning all my clothes,” explains The Barin, whose real name is Brian, but likes to go under the name Barin Darnew, probably just to piss off his parents, “so I could buy some new ones.” I look at my pal as we make our way toward…

Heart Attack

If Larry Kramer’s The Normal Heart isn’t often revived, it’s almost certainly because it’s an issue-related drama with a story — about the first few years of the AIDS epidemic in Manhattan — that sounds, in quick summary, quite dated. It doesn’t help that the play is equal parts lecture…

Short Cuts

If you run into Josh Provost this weekend, make sure there’s no spinach in your teeth. You never know — you might just wind up an extra in the 28-year-old’s latest short film. Along with the six other members of aptly named Matter of Chance Productions, Provost will be hurriedly…

This Week’s Day-by-Day Picks

THU 17 It’s game time for local painter David McPherson. If pro athletes can summon the power of the Almighty — you know, “God was on our side today . . .” — McPherson can draw upon his Zen teachings and the blessing of the Venerable Norbu Lama with the…

Vid Kid

Now out on DVD is the entire third season of Fox’s brilliant 24, probably one of the best dramas ever made for television. Much like the first two seasons, this one stars Kiefer Sutherland, and the story in this “season” takes place in a period of 24 hours straight. It…

Art Scene

“The Heart Show” at the Paper Heart: Artists are often accused of thinking with their hearts, especially when it comes to the creative process. So it’s only fitting that this juried showcase of more than 20 different works focuses on the organ itself, as well as its symbolism and significance…

Enemy Lines

We are under attack. The enemy, invisible and silent, has annexed every living room, classroom and workplace — and gallery. At monOrchid Gallery in downtown Phoenix, a show titled “A WarLike People: Victims or Perpetrators?” exposes the adversary, sounding the alarm on government control through fear, subsequent elimination of civil…

Still the One

At first (and second and maybe even third) glance, it’s all so familiar: Keanu Reeves shrouded in a black trench coat that flaps behind him like a superhero’s wings, moving between netherworlds and a real world used as a battleground, breeding ground, and playground for higher beings amused and appalled…

Pooch Kicks

It’s hard to know what to expect from Wayne Wang. The Hong Kong-raised director has made one gorgeous mood movie (Chinese Box) and two intelligent literary adaptations (Smoke and Anywhere but Here); he was also responsible, in his early days, for the overwrought sob fest The Joy Luck Club. Then,…

Death Becomes Him

The Sea Inside, the new right-to-die drama from Spanish director Alejandro Amenábar (The Others), is a flawed film worth seeing. Based on Letters From Hell, a book by quadriplegic Ramón Sampedro about his 30-year quest to kill himself, the movie favors the emotional over the legal, foregrounding Sampedro’s relationships with…

Standup Straight

What’s the worst way to begin an interview with Paula Poundstone? “Uh, well, how about, ‘Got any TV coming up?’ Yeah, that’s a bad way,” Poundstone says, as a matter of fact. “People have a tendency to belittle [me]. You know, like, ‘Got anything that really impresses me?'” No belittling…

Reel Life

2/17-2/20 If you think all black movies have to include the words “phat,” “dope” or “fly” in the dialogue, prepare to be schooled at the Arizona Black Film Showcase, which runs from Thursday, February 17, through Sunday, February 20, at South Mountain Community College, 7050 South 24th Street. “This event…

Air Play

SAT 2/19 It’s been said that the hardest thing to do in sports is hit a baseball. Those selling that tired line, however, are most certainly blocking out painful childhood Wiffle memories. Making contact with a perforated ball possessed of the ability to move up, down, and sideways seemingly all…

Men o’ War

MON 2/21 The words of American soldiers in Iraq are officially “Rated R” by the Motion Picture Association of America. Michael Tucker’s appealing that rating, because he feels his documentary Gunner Palace, about the U.S. Army’s 2/3 Field Artillery unit housed in Uday Hussein’s former Azimiya Palace, needs to be…

Tuna Guitar

THU 2/17 Something fishy this way comes, when the Tuna Helpers flop onto the stage at the Emerald Lounge, 1514 North Seventh Avenue on Thursday, February 17. The female trio call themselves a “pop-goth, performance art, puppet-wielding band,” and intersperse their own songs with performances by homemade puppets, some of…

Island Fever

According to the Internet site TV Tome, more people between the ages of 6 and 30 have heard of Gilligan, that eternal television castaway, than Theodore Roosevelt, John Glenn, or Mary Magdalene. More people have seen an episode of Gilligan’s Island than watched the first astronaut landing on the moon…