Dec 06, 2007
Popcorn & Candy: New Wave is Middle Aged
DCist’s highly subjective and hardly comprehensive guide to the most interesting movies playing around town in the coming week. Repertory: The 400 Blows Expect to see plenty of French New Wave retrospectives over the next year or so, as 2008 represents the movement’s 50th anniversary. If Claude Chabrol’s 1958 Le Beau Serge lit the fuse, François Truffaut’s 400 Blows was the first in a subsequent series of cinematic explosions that announced France’s new generation of…
Oct 23, 2007
Rashomon: He Stabbed, She Stabbed
Meat and Potato, the low-fi theatre company devoted to reviving disused devices such as puppetry and masks, has taken on Rashomon as their latest experiment. Is this a good idea? No, it’s a great idea, which makes it all the more disappointing that the show, despite the obvious care and labor that has gone into it, arrives half-formed. The story, of course, is so iconic that its title has become shorthand for any situation wherein…
Aug 02, 2007
About Tonight
>> It’s the annual Night of 1,000 Cakes at Fort Reno. Did we mention the Free Cake? Free Cake! (in the form of cupcakes). Also Aquarium, Benjy Ferree and Yell County. 7:15 p.m. >> Jammin’ Java in Vienna is trying something different tonight with Porto Beat, a night of electronic music featuring four of the area’s top DJ talents: Ross Lara, DJ Lantern, Ramiro and DJ Nexius. All ages show, $10 for under 21,…
Jul 23, 2007
The Banality of BurleyQ @ The Fringe Festival
Puppets. Off-color humor. Off-color humor involving puppets. What could go wrong? Well, plenty, if BurleyQ is any indication. This exhaustingly awful entrant into the Capital Fringe Festival may appear to have a wacky, whimsical premise, but instead is the kind of show where you find yourself digging your nails into the knee of your theatergoing companion, eagerly waiting for the 50 minutes to pass. Think painfully bad jokes, laughably poor production value, frequently off-key singing,…
May 18, 2007
Imagination Takes Flight in Arena’s Peter & Wendy
Written by DCist contributor Chris Klimek Arena Stage’s Peter & Wendy is so swollen with visual and musical marvels one might undervalue the performance of Karen Kandel, narrator of this hypnotic take on Peter Pan. She plays Wendy, along with every other speaking part, but this is no one-woman show. Sharing the stage are seven white-hooded puppeteers, and a company of dolls they bring to such astonishing life that it’s hard not to think of…
Jul 28, 2006
Out and About: Weekend Picks
FRIDAY: >> It’s going to be a stormy, steamy night in the District, so we’d recommend heading over to catch one of the Capital Fringe Festival’s most buzzed-about plays, Rorschach’s The Arabian Night, at the Sanctuary Theatre at Casa Del Pueblo. The space doesn’t have air conditioning, so take a cue from our theater critic: “All in all, the dreamy, smoldering Arabian Night is worth every sweltering moment. But follow the cue of the play’s…
Jul 24, 2006
The Fringedown: Monday
In its first weekend, the Capital Fringe Festival turned downtown D.C. into a moveable feast of performance, as show after show made its Fringe debut. As we enter Day Five of the festival, it’s now time to go get a second helping—a show you want to see again or a show your friends have told you is a must-see. Even still, a handful of shows will get their start today. At DCist, we’d love to…
Dec 21, 2005
Capital Fringe Wants You …
… to come to their 3rd Wednesday Happy Hours. And if you aren’t yet as excited about the Capital Fringe Festival as we are, let it be known that the time to wave those freak flags high is nigh. Here’s the deal: From July 20 to 30, 2006, the District will host its very own, first-ever Fringe festival, in the tradition of Edinburgh and Edmonton. Imagine a city-wide arts festival that leans on the crazy…
Oct 28, 2005
Out and About: Weekend Picks
FRIDAY >> The folks over at MN8 have put together a Masquerade Ball at Black Cat, featuring prolific Venezuelan alt-rockers Los Amigos Invisibles (right) and DJ Afro. DCist’s request to the band: For one night only, please change the lyrics to the song “Bruja” from “No eres ni bruja (ni santera),” to “Tu eres una bruja…” It’s a masquerade party, after all. And we want to be your bruja. 9:30 p.m., $18. >> Never in…
Jan 21, 2005
God Hates Rags?
If you missed it at the local National Film Challenge screening at the Warehouse Theater or at Artomatic 2004, the hilarious (and perhaps a bit prophetic) mockumentary “Felt: Tearing the Fabric of America” is now available online. The short piece, produced by local groups Cavegirl Productions and Defectiv Films, was fully made over the course of one weekend and was recently named “Best Mockumentary” by the NFC. “Felt” was also named one of the top…