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Sep 20-26, 2007 - Pittsburgh City Paper | News, Dining, Music, Best Of, Arts, Film

Sep 20-26, 2007

Sep 20-26, 2007 / Vol. 17 / No. 38

Attention Starved

It’s easy to ignore the fact that Mike Butler is going hungry. It’s easy to walk down the 3700 block of Forbes Avenue in Oakland and pay no attention to his protest. Which means he has a lot in common with Iraq War he opposes: It’s easy to avert our gaze from each. Butler, an…

Global Warning

Thanks to yokel TV news, we can all stay up-to-the-second on the dangers of life in the local land. Which — if you’re counting — are pretty much infinite. This week’s worth of warnings alone was enough to keep ‘fraidy cats cowering behind their curtains. But not me: I go out there, and bring it…

Penn Avenue Fish Company

Trance music and larger modern metal sculptures set the tone for the newest addition to the fish fold in the Strip District. Not your grandpa’s fish market, the Penn Avenue Fish Company may have created a new style: Deep Sea Chic. The décor and the menu are designed to hook the next generation of fish…

New Invisible Joy returns to the stage with Kontakt

In early 2005, New Invisible Joy decided to take a hiatus from playing live, with the idea of taking a couple of months off to record material the band had been stockpiling — an artistic decision more than a practical necessity. “Most local bands are working,” explains guitarist Mike Gaydos, “and are really not afforded…

Essential Art House: 50 Years of Janus Films

While Filmmakers’ selection includes some familiar titles, most of these films — Buñuel’s Viridiana, Dreyer’s Day of Wrath and Bresson’s Pickpocket among them — have not appeared on local screens in at least a decade. Yet the impact of these films stretches deep into today’s visual media, whether it’s America’s continued embrace of foreign cinema,…

Fall Arts Preview

(Click the following links for a look at other cultural events coming up this fall) Theater Music Dance and live performance  Art & Exhibits Lectures and literary events Film In 2004, the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust engineered a pair of hits with its Quebec Festival and the Pittsburgh International Festival of Firsts, both multi-genre series of…

In the Valley of Elah

The drama concerns Sgt. Hank Deerfield (Tommy Lee Jones), a long-retired military-police investigator, now drawn to investigate why his Iraq-vet son was brutally murdered after returning to his U.S. base. Along the way we get a bitter dose of our current reality: Iraq is an insane bloodbath, the military will not look after its own,…

Eastern Promises

The diary of a dead teen-age prostitute leads a midwife (Naomi Watts) into the shadowy world of London’s vory v zakone, or Russian organized crime, a diasporic culture nimbly adjusting to the very worst aspects of an open society. Her concern and blithe impulsiveness provide the catalyst to the film’s real drama — a three-way…

The Hunting Party

Inspired by a 2000 Esquire article about a handful of international reporters in the former Yugoslavia who were mistaken for CIA agents, Richard Shephard’s film is wobbly hybrid of political thriller, action adventure, black comedy and cynical history lesson. It’s postwar Bosnia, and a discredited reporter (Richard Gere) is driven to catch an elusive war…

Mr. Woodcock

In Craig Gillespie’s comedy, a former weakling turned successful inspirational author (Seann William Scott) returns to his small hometown. But after discovering that his mom (Susan Sarandon) is engaged to his old nemesis, junior-high coach Mr. Woodcock (Billy Bob Thornton), he freaks out. Thornton is barely breaking a sweat here — fans have already seen…

Fall Arts Preview: Art and Exhibits

A timely entry is What’s for Dinner?, at the Silver Eye Center for Photography — a show of large-scale color images by Diana Shearwood, who documents trucks bearing super-sized images of the food inside.

System Disabled

Unlike older workers who file claims for disability benefits, “They’re hitting their peak earning years,” VonHofen says. “And all of the sudden their careers are taken away.”

Casinos: The battle for a Community Benefits Agreement Moves to the North Side

On Sept. 15, Pittsburgh UNITED kicked off its second grassroots campaign in front of a bank of TV cameras. The foundation-funded economic-justice group vowed to strive for a Community Benefits Agreement for North Side residents from the casino’s builder, PITG Gaming. But while organizers didn’t mention it, PITG already had struck a bargain with neighborhood…

Fall Arts Preview: Film

Summer is officially over and we can expect more serious fare at the movieplex: dramas about the Mid-East, quirky indies, wrenching exploration of family dysfunction, top-notch adventure and fantasy epics, and, well, Saw IV. Jigsaw won’t lie still, and neither, it seems, will the Middle East. Hollywood has put some of its best earners on…

Going Through the Motions: Sept. 11-12 and 18, 2007

If you thought Dan Rooney would blow his O-ring when the new casino was green-lighted for the North Side, imagine what will happen if a proposed nudie bar makes its way next door to the gambling parlor. A developer has filed an application to open a gentlemen’s club at 1025 Beaver St. (insert joke here).…

Universities: CMU students not alarmed by terror threat

Three times in the past three weeks, Carnegie Mellon University has received bomb threats in anonymous e-mails. Like a dozen other universities across the country receiving similar threats, CMU evacuated buildings and swept them for bombs. But nothing has been found — and if the e-mailer is hoping to terrorize students, it isn’t working.

James McBride

The play, by Pittsburgh Playwrights artistic director Mark Clayton Southers, starts promisingly, with three old Irish guys complaining to each other — humorous enough to count as budget Beckett. But all too soon we realize that it’s part of an over-rigged lead-up to a painfully obvious “joke”: The winner of an Irish literary award is…

Bill Was Due

Few things make me happier than watching sacred cows get their comeuppance. And I’m not alone. Thanks to the holier-than-thou Bill Belichick and the New England Patriots, football fans from Philadelphia to St. Louis, from Miami to New York, hated the Patriots for their hubris and petulance. We also hated them because they won a…

A Window to Home

“A Window to Home” is a quiet story about lonely people in the big city — their frustrations, their losses and grievances. If the story feels slow and a little cluttered, it’s because the “plot” barely matters: The dialogue is so believable that the conversations seem real. But it’s a fragile work, and the actors…

Savage Love

I have a swim-cap fetish. I don’t know why; it’s not like I saw my grandmother bathing with a shower cap on or anything like that. My GGG girlfriend is willing to wear a swim cap during sex, and I think that’s wonderful, but it goes beyond that. I go to the pool several times…

Trauma Queens

Where were you on Sept. 11? No, not Sept. 11, 2001. Sept. 11, 2007. I was at the Brillobox, a bar which doubles as performance space in Lawrenceville. I was doing some Sept. 11-themed material. Because really, what’s funnier than the events of 9/11? Don’t get your back up: Nobody’s happy about religious fanatics from…

Zombies From Beyond

The story finds a group of hapless but earnest military and scientific yahoos, from their secret command center in Milwaukee, looking into the heavens with their new outer-space camera and discovering a UFO about to attack. It turns out that the aliens hail from Planet X and, as their leader, Zombina, explains, all the guys…


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