Night & Day

thursday july 23 “It’s always merengue, merengue, merengue,” laments Miami-based Dominican artist Charo Oquet, who is bent on letting local audiences know there is more to her native culture than that hyperactive Latin-radio sound. The third annual Dominican Youth Arts Festival features a performance by musicians from the Dominican Republic…

His Junk, Your Treasure

The word detachment has never been part of Cesar Becerra’s vocabulary. Until now. Becerra, a 25-year-old local historian known for his celebrations and newsletters honoring everything from the centennial of Miami to the 50th anniversary of Everglades National Park to the 40th anniversary of Frankie’s Pizza in Westchester, is also…

Beating the Spread

The last place you want to visit in midwinter is gray, freezing Buffalo, New York. The last people you want to see in the last place you want to visit are Jimmy and Janet Brown, a pair of comic demons so indifferent, so surreally out of touch, that they scarcely…

Life During Wartime

The first shot in Steven Spielberg’s remarkable World War II epic Saving Private Ryan is of an American flag with the sun behind it. The image is somewhat diaphanous, the fabric having the transparent delicacy of a chrysalis. This is the perfect introduction to a movie about the fragility –…

Worthy of an Oscar

The most startling scene in Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde — having its Florida premiere at the Caldwell Theatre Company in Boca Raton — opens the second act. It’s set on the stage of a twentieth-century talk show on which a fatuous TV host and a self-important…

When Laura Met Ray

Writer-director Ernest Goodly laughs heartily as he ticks off his financing sources for his debut feature-length film, Love Bizarre. A grant from the National Black Programming Consortium provided the bulk of the cash. A few private investors kicked in some more. “And my credit cards are totally maxed out,” he…

Night & Day

thursday july 16 Difficult to believe, perhaps, but wooden, one-note actor Sam Shepard is considered to be among the most influential playwrights of his era. The author of works such as The Tooth of Crime, Buried Child, Fool for Love, and True West, Shepard received the Pulitzer Prize in 1979…

Your Futbol Fix

For the serious soccer fan nothing compares to the excitement of the World Cup, but that event occurs only once every four years. Fans who now find themselves in withdrawal after France’s victory will be relieved to know that South Florida is fast becoming a soccer mecca. Broward has the…

Reservations Recommended

Unlike Hollywood fare such as Dances with Wolves (1990), the new Smoke Signals is that rare drama about modern Native Americans that was actually written and directed by Native Americans. It feels genuine and heartfelt, quirky and whimsical, with a deft understanding of the characters’ problems. But the film is…

The Z Stands for Zzzzzz

In The Mask of Zorro, Anthony Hopkins plays the eponymous masked man as if he were doing Shakespeare. He’s trying to turn a kitsch hero into a real one, and his efforts are so weirdly off-key that you don’t know whether to cheer him on or titter. This dolorous Don…

Getting a Kick Out of Cole

In his five-decade career, Cole Porter wrote songs for Fanny Brice, Fred Astaire, Ethel Merman, Louis Armstrong, Jimmy Durante, and Bert Lahr, just to name a few. One measure of his virtuosity as a composer, however, is that no one singer really owns a Porter tune. Not even Frank Sinatra,…

Wet Sounds

Now that punk rock is dead and all so-called independent record labels are actually controlled by international supercorporations, underground music is as uncool as mainstream. Next big thing: underwater music. Okay, maybe not. And frankly, the music itself is somewhat beside the point. The fact that it’s being broadcast beneath…

Looks Are Everything

“So much of what we are all about is what we see.” This according to Judith Ann Graham, a professional image consultant and a member of the Association of Image Consultants International, a nonprofit organization made up of men and women who specialize in working with individuals, groups, or corporations…

Night & Day

thursday july 9 In 1947 twenty-year-old Antonio Carlos Jobim left behind his dreams of becoming an architect and opted for a career in music. Vocalist, composer, arranger, pianist, guitarist, and one of the founding fathers (along with Jo‹o Gilberto and Vinicius de Mor‹es) of the bossa nova movement, Jobim became…

Angst Eats the Soul

High Art is a low-budget, American independent movie about junkie-lesbian photographer Lucy Berliner (Ally Sheedy), who spends most of her time looking romantically mournful. She’s famished and abrasive and oh-so-world-weary. When she smokes cigarettes, she exhales in a way that can best be described as existential; the smoke curls out…

Cat’s Cradle

The winds that sweep across the Sahara kick up ferocious sandstorms. Dunes change shape by the hour, flying particles blind the eye, and all reason and sense of direction can be lost. In such disorienting surroundings, reality and hallucination converge; the most inexplicable, unimaginable events can occur. Passion in the…

The Bore of Flatbush

Milton Berle isn’t actually backstage at The Last Supper, but his voice is, if only on Memorex. The Borscht Belt comedian has loaned his name and endorsement to Artie Butler’s hapless but ambitious new musical about a hapless but ambitious guy trying to sell a musical comedy to a Broadway…

Crave the Rave

Give the hippie-dippie music fest Woodstock a Nineties spin and the result would be raves, all-night concerts catalyzed by hypnotic electronic music and mind-bending light shows and tempered by a prevailing sense of tranquillity, which is often induced and sustained by drugs. Usually held at sprawling outdoor venues whose locations…

Night & Day

thursday july 2 Tonight at 8:30 the Wolfsonian-FIU presents the finale of its Florida on Film series, and the closing flick is a classic: Where the Boys Are. Boys and girls alike will have a blast at the Hotel Astor (956 Washington Ave., Miami Beach), which is hosting the event…

Chip Off the Old Rock

Michael Bay is the director of Bad Boys (1995) and The Rock (1996) and the new asteroid-attack movie Armageddon, which should be called The Very Big Rock. He has, I’m afraid, perfected a new form: His movies are trailers for themselves. Every scene is all climax and no foreplay. When…

Love Is a Battlefield

Armed again with the comedy of despair but with far more focus than the last time out (1995’s Kicking and Screaming), director Noah Baumbach takes on perhaps the most coiled and resilient of the seven deadlies in his bright comedy of manners, Mr. Jealousy. The affable Lester (Eric Stoltz) has…

The Education of Julie

Since there aren’t many coming-out stories about lesbians in Hoboken, New Jersey, it’s easy to imagine why the folks at the Humana Festival of New American Plays in Louisville sat up and took notice in 1994 when Wendy Hammond sent in the script for Julie Johnson. What made them choose…