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Feed: VILLAGE VOICE | COMPLETE ISSUE
Village Voice: for news, music, arts, and events in New York
In Darkness: Down in the Sewer, Desperate to Survive
08-Feb-12
Holocaust culture has proved to be essentially infinite—almost 70 years since the end of World War II, and untold stories of decimation and survival are still hitting the mainstream with no light at the end of the tunnel. Agnieszka Holland's new film, In Darkness, opens a scab perhap...
Short and… Sweet, Sincere, Cloying, Beautiful: Oscar Nominees, in Brief
08-Feb-12
This year's Academy Award–nominated shorts offer a little something for every viewing temperament—though some categories require sitting through a lot of mediocre to get to the good.
Of the five documentaries, Saving Face and God Is the Bigger Elvis were sadly no...
Back from War, a Mom and Wife Fights the Consequences in Return
08-Feb-12
Still wearing desert camo, Kelli (Linda Cardellini) comes back from a tour of duty in an unspecified country to the husband (Michael Shannon), the two young daughters, and the suburban house in a small Ohio town that she left behind a year ago. Deployed with the National Guard to work in the not-...
Down into the Black Hole with Turin Horse and Miners' Hymns
08-Feb-12
Béla Tarr, the Hungarian director who became something like the patron saint of slow cinema with 1994's 450-minute Sátántangó, has made some of the toughest endurance tests in film history. Watching his latest, The Turin Horse (co-credited to Ágnes...
Chico & Rita
08-Feb-12
In Oscar nominee Chico & Rita, the life of Cuban pianist and composer Bebo Valdés seems to have been translated first into fairy tale and then through the filter of cinema before it wound up as a work of animation. The result has only a loose resemblance to Valdés's story&mda...
'Talking Landscape: Early Media Work, 1974-1984'
08-Feb-12
Chicago-born Andrea Callard, among the first wave of Tribeca artist-settlers in the early '70s, loved to find the country in the city. Several of her Super 8 short films from that period on view at her Maysles tribute (which also includes slide shows of her hand-colored print collages) reveal nat...
The Dish & the Spoon
08-Feb-12
In premise, plotting, and style, Alison Bagnall's sophomore feature would seem like just another mumble-stumble down micro-indie lane. Averting makeup and employment, boho goddess Greta Gerwig tentatively inhabits a beach house off-season, while the camera, as well as the action it records, has t...
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island
08-Feb-12
Its production design inspired by Yes album covers and Candy Land, Journey 2: The Mysterious Island continues the weak Jules Verne–inspired adventures of 2008's Journey to the Center of the Earth. Of the original cast and major crew, only Josh Hutcherson, as Sean, a sulky teen...
Bonsai People: The Vision of Muhammad Yunus
08-Feb-12
Ideal only for the junior-high classroom, Holly Mosher's dull-as-dishwater doc fudges the line between socially progressive message-spreading and suspicious hagiography in its celebration of Bangladeshi economist Muhammad Yunus, winner of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize. Working to alleviate poverty, ...
Private Romeo
08-Feb-12
Although there was a time when only men were allowed to perform Shakespeare, writer-director Alan Brown's queer, all-male riff on Romeo and Juliet overconfidently shoehorns the star-crossed romance into a pandering coming-of-ager about sexual identity and equality. Transposed to a modern m...
Free Will Astrology: February 8-14, 2011
08-Feb-12
ARIES [March 21–April 19] "Marriage must be a relation either of sympathy or conquest," said author George Eliot. I believe the same is true even about intimate bonds that have not been legally consecrated. Each tends to either be a collaboration of equals who are striving for common...
Best in Show: Doug Wheeler at David Zwirner; 'It's the Political Economy, Stupid'
08-Feb-12
When you walk toward Doug Wheeler's bright, alluring enclosure, you might feel like one of those characters about to visit another dimension in fantasy films. Wearing paper booties (supplied for the journey), you will take tentative steps toward the glowing threshold, pass through what appears to...
Pulqueria: ¡Hola, los Cocktails!
08-Feb-12
According to Aztec myth, Mayahuel—the divine personification of the agave plant—invented pulque and pumped the Mexican booze from her 400 breasts, feeding and intoxicating her offspring, known as the 400 Rabbits. Nowadays, the milky alcohol is made by fermenting the sap of several dif...
Kavkaz: Nuts to You
08-Feb-12
In a borough famous for its pickle platters, this one was exceptional. The tantalizing assortment flaunted big leaves of cabbage tinted bright pink with beet juice, slender green pepperoncini, a puckeringly tart carrot slaw, sliced unripe tomatoes, pale gooseberries with wrinkly skins, miniature ...
Charles Gayle Embraces His Alter Ego
08-Feb-12
The East Village has been transformed into a high-rise highbrow apocalypse, but at least one vestige of downtown's grizzled avant-garde remains: jazz titan Charles Gayle. "I walked into this because one winter, I couldn't make it anymore, living in the squat and the cold all the time," explains G...
Don Giovanni Keeps the Jersey-Punk Dream Alive
08-Feb-12
The informal slogan of New Jersey's Don Giovanni Records is "local hits for the drunk and alone crowd." It's a fitting characterization of a DIY label incubated in New Brunswick, a Rutgers-stuffed town close enough to New York City and Philadelphia to feel overshadowed by those neighbors, but rem...
Skrillex Gets Deep on the Cusp of the Grammys
08-Feb-12
This Sunday, the music business celebrates itself with the 54th running of the Grammy Awards, where the impossible task of categorizing pop music is made plain. Songs from diametrically opposed genres butt up against one another in the Big Four categories—Album, Record, and Song of the Year...
Remember How to Dance, New York?
08-Feb-12
New Yorkers are going to have to learn to dance again. After being conditioned to just sit around and blab thanks to years of lounges foisted on us by the city's no-dance-licenses-for-the-wicked restrictions, the gays are being cannonballed onto the dancefloor with xl, the glossy West 42nd Street...
House Arrest, Redefined
08-Feb-12
On a recent Tuesday around 9 p.m., 21-year-old Terrence Brown left his Bronx apartment to take out the garbage. Dressed in slippers and pajamas, he walked down the hall to the trash chute. Three police officers approached him.
"Do you live here?" one of them asked.
"Yes," he said....
Look Back in Anger: Surly to Bed
08-Feb-12
For the British theater, the historical importance of John Osborne's 1956 play, Look Back in Anger (Laura Pels Theatre), can't be underestimated. It marked a pivotal shift not only for theatergoers but also for Britain's cultural consciousness generally. Playwrights as different from Osbor...
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