Patriotic Pastimes

An afternoon spent at a Florida Marlins game is already a pretty awesome afternoon, but one day of the weekend is about to become even better. Behold Super Saturdays, a hybrid of music, baseball, giveaways, and fireworks designed to bring the fans out for a day worth remembering. To kick…

Go South, Young Cineaste

Traveling the world in a weekend is possible, but only if you venture down to Key West for the journey. The Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival (FLIFF) is being resurrected for the Southernmost Mini Fest, featuring many of the lauded films from the 2006 festival. Start out with Pittsburgh —…

The Dawning of Your New Wardrobe

Are you stuck in a fashion rut? Do you have a perfectly formed groove around your midsection from your excessive use of waist-cinching belts? If you answered yes, maybe your body on a Friday evening and your wardrobe aren’t so different — they’re both in need of some Toxic Cocktails…

Café con Artsy

A creative compulsion led Miguel Fleitas from early stage aspirations to a career as a photographer, cameraman, and television director. But it was an unshakable passion for modern and contemporary art that recently drove Fleitas to make a switch to the canvas and brush. The self-taught artist has been creating…

They Thought it Wouldn’t Last

Jaded locals scoffed when Arturo Sandoval opened his jazz club last year. The Arturo Sandoval Jazz Club at the Deauville Beach Resort seemed like an anomaly, a throwback to a previous era when Miamians actually listened to instrumental music that wasn’t techno, and live performance didn’t prominently feature a dude…

Kill Da Wabbit

You call it blasphemy, the economy calls it “cha-ching!” And this month’s holiday/pyramid scheme is represented by snow-white bunnies and an endless hunt for pastel, hard-boiled eggs. Rest assured, parental units, there will be Easter egg hunts at locations across Miami-Dade County — some in the most unexpected places. All…

We’re Nuts About Him

If your mental picture of a self-help guru involves a comb-over, a speech impediment, and a powder-blue cardigan (because gosh darn it, people like you), allow Christopher Lee Nutter to completely destroy that warm and fuzzy stereotype. First of all, he’s kind of hot. Second of all, the dude has…

Are You In?

Thanks to everyone’s favorite South Beach-residing German design goddess, Project Runway fans worldwide think of Miami as the perfect place to flit about in dazzling “paaahty dresses.” While season three contestant Uli Herzner certainly captured our fair city’s penchant for social events, we know that local fashion can be just…

Join the Cirque-us

When you drive through downtown Miami and see a giant tent erected along the causeway’s bank, you think one of two things: Cirque du Soleil, or mass-termite genocide. Those custom-built big tops have become synonymous with Soleil. They usually double as playground and dormitory for the traveling cadre of high-brow…

Intoxicating Musiq

In the late Nineties there was a musical movement called neo-soul that was characterized by gritty, conscious vocals laid over soul, R&B, or jazz tracks. And with this movement came a bunch of neo-soulsters and soulstresses who are now curiously absent, missing in action, candidates for a Behind the Music…

Gee, Wiz

Finally a true eccentric has joined the pantheon of NBA superstars! Ever since that Jordanian corporate-patty-cake stretch that included his Airness, Vince, Kobe, McGrady, Duncan, et al., it has seemed greatness has required a willingness to kowtow (even Shaquille O’Neal and Dwyane Wade, bless ’em, have rated disturbingly high on…

Preserve Your Sexy, Sex Machine

When was the last time you got sexy? If it was somewhere around the time when Prince was wearing assless pants, it just might be time for you to knock the dust off your come-hither stare, and there’s this chick named Victoria who has the secret to doing just that…

Planetary Protection

While you are gently whispering sweet nothings to your potted plants this morning, don’t mention driving over to Whole Foods later today to learn how to reduce your carbon dioxide footprint. In conjunction with Earth Month the green supermarket chain is presenting the Whole Earth Weigh-In throughout April. It’s a…

A Princess Diary

Grace Kelly led a fairy-tale life. She was a beautiful, Academy Award-winning actress who married a prince. But her life didn’t have a happy ending. The American-born princess died at age 52 in a tragic car accident. If you’re captivated by Grace head over to Books & Books (265 Aragon…

Amateur Hour at the Asylum

My beagle died at the end of February. His name was Ricky, and I’d had him for eleven years. He died a terrible death, poisoned by his own dog food. That same month, my basset hound, Toast, acquired a spinal disease that left his hindquarters paralyzed. Now he has been…

Miami Filmmakers Keeping Busy

The stories of Miami’s famous and infamous sure are keeping the good people over at Rakontur busy. Rakontur, you may recall, made the stunning documentary Cocaine Cowboys, about Miami’s drug heydey in the 1980s. The Miami-based production company has several projects on tap in the coming months, says Alfred Spellman,…

Oh, the Humanity of a Heist

At various times over the last decade, David Fincher, Sam Mendes, and Michael Mann were all slated to direct Scott Frank’s screenplay for The Lookout, about a brain-damaged high school hockey stud who’s smooth-talked by distant acquaintances into robbing a small-town bank. That Frank — best known for straightening and…

The Hills Have Eyes II

War movie, horror movie — the difference is negligible in the grim sequel to last year’s hit remake of Wes Craven’s 1977 mutant thriller. After a grisly childbirth and some gory killings, the real action starts with a group of gung-ho National Guardsmen blasting their way through Kandahar. It proves…

The Sty of the Blind Pig

The Sty of the Blind Pig: Phillip Hayes Dean’s play, a classic in African-American theater, debuted onstage in 1972 and was made into a movie in 1974. The work explores race, gender, and spirituality, set against a backdrop of the early civil rights movement in Chicago. The work is performed…

Bold as Ice

During a recent visit to Kunsthaus Miami, Xavier Cortada was putting the finishing touches on his show while ruminating on the “transformative effects” of his visit to the South Pole. “Antarctica,” his solo exhibit, features videos and photographs accompanied by wall text documenting a handful of installations he created as…

Hernan Dompé, Juan Lecuona, Andres Waissman, and Nora Correas

Hernan Dompé, Juan Lecuona, Andres Waissman, and Nora Correas: Hernan Dompé transports viewers with his whimsical sculptures of dreamlike ships, contorted fish, and powerful totemic figures hinting at fugitive warriors from an imaginary past. The gallery is also exhibiting Andres Waissman’s abstract paintings, whose rich surfaces vibrate with ancient text…

Tomorrow’s Misery Today

Children of Men (Universal) Set in a tomorrow that looks like yesterday, Alfonso Cuarón’s wrenching adaptation of P.D. James’ novel feels more like documentary than fiction. In the movie’s world, women have gone barren, and immigrants are tossed into prison camps; it’s the proverbial nightmare to which we might actually…