Big-Screen Cuba

Actor Juan Carlos Diaz knows an opportunity when he sees one. Following the speeches recently given by Cuban-born stars Gloria Estefan and Andy Garcia in front of the home of Lazaro Gonzalez in Little Havana, the Venezuelan actor quickly expressed his “support for Elian,” then began plugging his new film,…

Vietnam Piece

In Vietnamese artist Huong’s 64-by-100-inch painting Of Her Treasure, one child cries as the other clings to their mother’s leg. Head tilted upward, face contorted in anguish, the mother clutches a bowl full of skulls and bones and screams at the heavens. They cower in a rainstorm, the sky behind…

Stuff (New column. Online exclusive!)

A mildly retarded man who works in a grocery store believes he is Batman, the Dark Knight on a mission to free Gotham City from the clutches of The Joker. An actress playing the role of Wonder Woman becomes a spokeswoman, then scapegoat, for the Commie witch-hunters working for the…

Interior Outfitters

When is a room not a room? When it’s a catalogue. Sound confusing? Get this: ROOM is a New York City-based catalogue created two years ago by former House & Garden style editor Amy Crain. A magazine collector and inveterate shopper frustrated by the lack of chic and affordable offerings,…

The Last Word

In the rich mythology of The New Yorker, a periodical renowned for the quality of its writing and the quirks of its writers, no legend carries more weight than that of Joseph Mitchell. On the occasion of the magazine’s 75th anniversary, it is currently great sport among the literati to…

Life Swapping

Although its themes are about as revelatory as those of the average Cathy comic strip (clothes don’t fit, job too busy, male not clairvoyant, AACK!), there’s something irrefutably charming about Philippa “Pip” Karmel’s debut feature, Me Myself I. The editor of Academy darling Shine has scripted a laundry list of…

Dead Men Shooting

It seems incredible that an oxymoron such as heroin chic ever entered our lexicon. But the film Black Tar Heroin: The Dark End of the Street should kill all appeal for that skinny, skanky look. It may even make people glad that cocaine remains the drug of choice in South…

In Transit

The film trans, which was lauded at the Sundance and Berlin film festivals, finally has an American distributor. Some say it wasn’t picked up sooner because the hard-to-describe indie doesn’t fit into a neat category. And yet there is an apt description: a languid road movie. Shot in southwest Florida…

New Gallery Sensations

We’ve been seeing some interesting stuff happening at the New Gallery, the only art gallery on the University of Miami campus. In the past the exhibition hall was used mainly to showcase students and faculty. Then, in November 1999, the art department, to provide a much needed direction and curatorial…

Frog Princess

The world’s population of frogs, toads, and other amphibians is disappearing, according to a study released two weeks ago in the journal Nature. Although wart-haters might breathe a sigh of relief, the decline of our slimy friends could signal disaster for us all. Scientists claim herptile health is a good…

Stuff (New column. Online exclusive!)

Even if you have devoured every word about the cinematic adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis´ 1991 novel American Psycho, about a Wall Street yuppie obsessed with using skin-care products and devouring the entrails of prostitutes, you have not read this one particular fact. And it is a fact. No one…

Death Be Not Dull

In 1615 John Donne did something that changed the course of his life, and four hundred years later, the life of Vivian Bearing Ph.D.: He became an Anglican priest. Donne dedicated his life to writing religious prose and poetry. As a priest and poet he explored the barriers of mortality…

The Killer Inside

It’s quite possible that American Psycho is a brilliant movie. It’s also quite possible that it’s a dreary, obvious chop-’em-up dressed in Alan Flusser suits and Ralph Lauren boxers, drenched in Pour Hommes after-shave, all to disguise it as bracing satire on the greed-is-good Eighties. The option audiences choose to…

Good First Time Out

It’s Eric Mendelsohn’s turn in the spotlight. The 34-year-old stood behind the camera to shoot his first feature film, Judy Berlin, but the movie’s acclaim has turned the attention around. Mendelsohn is about to have his coming-out party, because Judy Berlin, after garnering him the Best Director award at last…

The Straight Story of SAVE Dade

Sergio Giral’s documentary, Chronicle of an Ordinance, is not at all queer. The strait-laced title gives the first clue that the 50-minute video intends to tell, as simply as possible, the tale of the political struggle over the addition of “sexual orientation” to the long list of identity categories protected…

Gay Theory

The Einstein of Sex is a historical drama of epic scope that manages to pull off the surprising trick of achieving low-budget aesthetics. Veteran German filmmaker Rosa von Praunheim (with more than 50 films to his credit) uses digital video in an entirely different way than his Dogme 95 contemporaries…

Sounds Like Hialeah

Maybe it’s something in the water. Or just the fact that they have their own confounding system of numbering streets. And a mayor who gets into fistfights with citizens at protests, skates through criminal charges like Brian Boitano at the Olympics, and persuades the powers that be they owe him…

High Flyers

“We realized there was nothing like it in South Florida, and we thought how perfect. It’s a unique, pretty, nice, family oriented fundraiser,” says Linda Gelinas, cofounder with her husband Rick of the nonprofit organization Little Acorns, about the International Kite Festival. For the past sixteen years, Little Acorns has…

Staged for TV

What happens when you put Hot Lips Houlihan in yellow chiffon three sizes too tight on a roof with a ghost who looks like he could be a skinny second cousin of Elvis Presley? Paste this scene against a Technicolor blue sky reminiscent of those you see in toilet paper…

On Avant-Garde in Little Havana

It’s 9:00 on a breezy night in early spring, and the sounds of live music and people chatting announce this first studio crawl, a way to acquaint the public with the 6street visual arts collective. They make up a quarter-block of artists’ studios off South Twelfth Avenue that stand alone…

Metropolis Now

In this corner: a fabulously falling-apart Art Deco structure, all curving walls, porthole windows, and terrazzo floors. Should it be squashed like a bug, or should the building and its environs be respected? This is the perennial dilemma of the developer and the residents of Miami Beach. In the far…