Category: So Little Time
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The Band's Visit
"Once, not long ago, a small Egyptian police band arrived in Israel. Not many people remember this. It wasn’t that important." So begins The Band’s Visit, an understated little film from Israeli director Eran Kolirin. When no one is at the airport to meet the eponymous band, the musicians, dressed in baby blue police uniforms…
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La Bohème
What better way to spend your Valentine’s Day than taking in La Bohème, a silent, melodramatic classic at the beautiful and, dare we say, sexy Heights Theater. This 1926 film, based on the Puccini standard, has all the usual suspects: the tragic Mimi, a consumptive, and her jealous lover, the Bohemian poet Rodolfo. Their love…
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Our Man in Havana
Unavailable on DVD in the U.S., this 1959 British noir classic reunites director Carol Reed and writer Graham Greene, the sly duo who gave us The Third Man and The Fallen Idol, also classics. Here, Alec Guinness plays James Wormold, a British vacuum cleaner salesman stationed in Cuba who is enlisted as a spy for…
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What Is It?
What is it? Debuting for the first time in Minnesota and unavailable on DVD, What Is It? is Crispin Glover‘s 2005 directorial debut (lately he played Grendel in Beowulf). The movie is described by its director as "being the adventures of a young man whose principal interests are snails, salt, a pipe, and how to…
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Functional Sculpture: Furniture from the Upper Midwest
When IKEA opened here a couple of years ago, critic Glenn Gordon contributed a fine piece to this magazine that carefully and wittily assessed the design quality and craftsmanship of the Swedish behemoth’s furniture. Now Gordon has put together (with co-curator Laurel Bradley) his own showroom of sorts, with furniture makers, sculptors, and industrial designers…
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Arts of Japan: The John C. Weber Collection
This show was organized by the National Museums in Berlin, and comes to Minneapolis via Boston. Weber, for his part, is a New Yorker-a doctor who’s no doubt made a splash among collectors of Japanese art, having assembled what we’re told is a world-class collection of objects-ranging from the twelfth century to the twentieth-in just…