Dec 14, 2007
Popcorn & Candy: Shadowy Men in a Shadowy Sewer
DCist’s highly subjective and hardly comprehensive guide to the most interesting movies playing around town in the coming week. Repertory: The Third Man The AFI continues to please with yet another showing of an absolute must-see classic. Last week it was The 400 Blows, and this week it’s three showings of Carol Reed’s gripping British noir, The Third Man. Based on a story and a screenplay by Graham Greene, the movie is a study in…
Sep 10, 2007
Chinatown Bus: All Things Go
YouTube user northeastcentral edited together this little music video ode to the Chinatown bus to Sufjan Stevens’ song “Chicago,” writing: I got this idea while watching a sequence from “Little Miss Sunshine” and decided that a video of the Chinatown bus could also be relatively faithful to the lyrics of the music in those scenes. This was the result. ~The price… ~The speed… ~The sketchiness… ~The freedom… Many of us who rely on the…
Feb 23, 2007
Out and About: Weekend Picks
FRIDAY: >> Friends ‘o DCist Middle Distance Runner have had quite a ride since playing our special Unbuckled/Anniversary concert last September. Despite a few bumps on the road, they’ve gone from little band that could to having their first headlining slot at 9:30 club tonight. We’ll say we knew them when. With The Dance Party. 10 p.m., $10. >> Akron/Family impressed the pants off of critics in 2005 with their self-titled neo-folk stylings. They’ll be…
Dec 11, 2006
D.C. Film Critics Awards Announced
It must be hard out there for a Washington film critic. You’ve got big-city cinema dreams, but you’re stuck in a town where politics is usually the order of the day. The number of people who turn to you as the last word in quality filmmaking is probably frustratingly small considering the size of the media market you’re working in. So what are our humble D.C. area film critics to do? Well, as we’ve noted…
Nov 15, 2006
In Woolly’s Latest, Not All The Weirdness Works
Many critics accused the recent hit movie Little Miss Sunshine of borrowing stock eccentric characters from the abstract Land of Generic Quirk. The same might be said of Martha, Josie and the Chinese Elvis, a play with characters who seem to be a conveniently thrown-together group of wackos rather than anything resembling a realistically dysfunctional family. We’re talking a dominatrix, a possibly-retarded sister, an obsessive-compulsive cleaning lady, and naturally, the Elvis, to name a few….