By Matt Brunson
THE MEN WHO STARE AT GOATS
DIRECTED BY Grant Heslov
STARS George Clooney, Jeff Bridges
Loopy enough to stand out from the homogenized pack but not bold enough to truly go the distance, this eccentric satire (inspired by Jon Ronson's nonfiction book of the same name) proves to be a modestly pleasing piffle in which journalist Bob Wilton (Ewan McGregor, sincere but straightjacketed by an undemanding role) searches for a great story on the outskirts of the Iraq War and finds one in Lyn Cassady (George Clooney).
By Matt Brunson
COCO BEFORE CHANEL
**1/2
DIRECTED BY Anne Fontaine
STARS Audrey Tautou, Benoit Poelvoorde
Like Young Mr. Lincoln, Butch and Sundance: The Early Years and the Che Guevara yarn The Motorcycle Diaries, Coco Before Chanel is one of those films that promises audiences a peek at the formative years of a historical figure, in that underreported stretch of life before fame (or, in some cases, infamy) came calling.
Welcome to the Stupid Thing of the Week. North Carolina Republican Party chair Tom "I'm not gay, dammit!" Fetzer is throwing his partys support behind the Palin/Beck faction and its move to purge the GOP of moderates. In a move that is leaving some political observers gasping or scratching their heads, Fetzer has invited New York Conservative Party congressional candidate Doug "Mr. Excitement" Hoffman to speak at the Republican Partys Hall of Fame Dinner on Nov. 21 in Raleigh. Hoffman was endorsed by various Republican bigwigs Palin, Pawlenty, Perry over the GOPs own candidate, Dede Scozzafava, who just wasnt Neolithic enough for the new, improved, and increasingly nutzoid party.
Hoffman -- who doesnt even live in the New York congressional district in which he ran -- of course lost the race, giving that congressional seat to Democrats for the first time since the Civil War. That's success enough for Fetzer, though, who said Hoffmans candidacy against a Republican, remember inspired conservatives across the country . . . he will reach out to North Carolina conservatives to help us reclaim our government." Well, good luck with that, Tom. Encouraging disarray in your own party is certainly one way to be remembered. By the way, here's the kind of oratorical excitement you can expect from Hoffman if you head to Raleigh for his speech:
Sometimes blogs are useful for simply passing along something worthwhile. If youre like me and enjoy dark humor, like The Onion, and cant stand even the thought of Glenn Beck, then check out this video from Onion News Network.
Well, thats a breath of fresh air. Mayor-elect Anthony Foxx says his first act as mayor will be to sign the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement. Weve written about the USMCPA before, Mayor McCrorys refusal to sign it, and City Councils dithering on the issue. Check out this link for a reminder.
The irony of McCrorys refusal to sign the USMCPA is that he was chairman of the U.S. Conference of Mayors environmental committee, which drafted and approved the measure in the first place. At the time, McCrory was bucking for a federal job scuttlebutt had it that he wanted to be head of the EPA, thus his slot on the mayors environmental committee but its one of the jobs he couldnt talk his way into, sort of like the governors office. McCrory wouldnt sign the agreement because it didnt include nuclear power as a recommended power source. As the Observer pointed out at the time, McCrorys objections were irrelevant since local governments dont build nuclear plants. Local governments can, however, carry out the climate agreement pledge's suggestions, such as preserving open space, enforcing land-use policies, promoting public transit, and inventorying greenhouse gas emissions in city operations.
At the time, of course, McCrory was on the payroll at Duke Energy, which wants to build more nuclear plants. Now, Im not saying McCrory was in Dukes back pocket, but ... yeah, actually, that is what Im saying. Also, Im saying it will be a nice change to have a mayor whos able to tell the difference between the public interest and corporate profits.
FYI, the linked column above is included in my upcoming book, Deliver Us From Weasels, to be released later this month. End of commercial, thank you and good night.
Here are the five best events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area today, Nov. 6, 2009 as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.
Here and Now exhibition at Joie Lassiter Gallery
Paranormal Investigators Convention at Ramada Airport South and Conference Center
Eyes of the Elders CD release party at Snug Harbor
The Ladys Coffee exhibition at The Art House
Charlotte Comedy Theater at Prevue Music Hall
Check out these events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area this weekend as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.
Paranormal Investigators Convention
Ramada Airport South
Things will get spooky during the Paranormal Investigators Convention, a three-day event which stops in Charlotte Nov. 6-8, and features a variety of seminars and workshops on paranormal activity and ghost-hunting led by experts in the field. This includes celebrities like Steve Gonsalves, Dave Tango, and Tiffany Johnson of Ghosthunters, and more.
Art Drop by Lark & Key Gallery tonight during NoDas Gallery Crawl for the opening reception of Revisit: A Group Exhibition. It features works by Duy Huynh, Charlotte Foust, Angie Renfro, Flora Bowley, Jen Swearington, Linda Plaisted and Sofia Barao. more...
Music Charlotte music act, Eyes of the Elders, will celebrate the release of its new CD with a party tonight at Snug Harbor. Get out and support local music! more...
Twenty-Two
Head to Plaza-Midwood tonight for the opening of a new art gallery called Twenty-Two. Its first exhibition is titled Emergence. It features funky abstract creations by artists Mike Watson and Nick Bloomberg.
Festival Don't get the wrong idea. Though there is a "Viking Village" at the 6th Annual ScanFest of the Carolinas, it's not filled with ruthless brutes. Check out cultural displays on Scandinavian countries (that's Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland and Finland), dance performances, authentic cuisine, arts and crafts and more during this fest. more...
Special Event The Pig Pickin Oyster Roast at Common House will feature more than just barbeque, including live music, a cornhole tournament, and beer. more...
Booth Playhouse
Runway for the Ballet is a little like Project Runway meets So You Think You Can Dance, and its for a good cause. This fashion and dance affair benefits North Carolina Dance Theatre and will exclusively feature fashions from a variety of boutiques on the runway. NC Dance Theatre's Innovative Works, will also be showcased.
Theater Matthews Playhouse of Performing Arts presents performances of E. B. White's classic tale, - about a pig named Wilbur and his friendship with a spider named Charlotte - Charlotte's Web. more...
Benefit Its good to laugh, and even better to be doing some good in the process. Charlotte improv group, The Chuckleheads will perform this special show at Sandtrap Bar & Billiards to raise funds Victoria Martinsen, a 6-year-old child with cancer. more...
We send our young folks to war with a bunch of promises. Then, they come home and we break them. That sucks.
Fortunately, UNC Charlotte is doing the right thing and allowing students on the G.I. Bill to continue attending classes until the government gets their shit together.
Coming home from war and going to school -- that's the plan for many U.S. soldiers. But we've discovered the new GI Bill isn't working like it's supposed to.Instead, many vets, including plenty in our area, are still asking, "Where's the tuition money?"
"We have 463 total VA students," said Alisa Roy, assistant registrar at UNC-Charlotte.
One of those is 23-year-old Army vet Tavoris Adams.
"I was stationed at Fort Bragg, then I went to Afghanistan," said Adams.
Now, he's studying computer science at UNCC. But, he ran into a snafu when the GI Bill did not come through with his college tuition.
"It was like a month late. I was kind of hurting at first," he said. "I was just going to work and back to school, so I just had to save every penny I could."
"Tuition and fees for an undergraduate student is about $2,000 a semester," Roy said.
Adams is not alone and neither is UNCC. The VA is backed up with tuition payments around the country because of changes made to the new Post-9/11 GI Bill.
"Anyone that served longer than 30 days after 9-1-01 in the military is eligible, so there's a volume that the VA can't get caught up," said Roy.
She says that UNCC is letting war veterans stay in school until the money comes through, but some colleges are kicking those students out for nonpayment.
Read the entire article at MSNBC.com.
In my ongoing efforts to point out the neverending wackness of my homestate of South Carolina, I couldnt have asked for more than Rodell Vereen. You may remember him as the guy who had sex with a horse named Sugar at Lazy B Stables in Longs, S.C., near Myrtle Beach and, when he was given parole, went right back and was caught again, having sex with the same horse. At the time of the second arrest, the host of NPRs Wait Wait Dont Tell Me comic quiz show said maybe the problem was that Sugar is an unusually alluring horse. A judge took another view yesterday, though, and sentenced Vereen to three years in prison and ordered him to stay away from Sugar. There was no ruling on the possibility that Vereen was unstable ba-da-boom.
As the headline suggests, here are a few picks of art exhibition openings to check out this weekend in Charlotte and the surrounding area as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.
Winter Whites exhibition at Ciel Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.- 9 p.m. Juried exhibition of white-themed art. The exhibition will feature a variety of mixed media, including mosaic, textile art, acrylic, photography, and clay.
Exhibition continues through Jan. 9, 2010.
Ciel Gallery, 1519 Camden Rd. 704-577-1254.
Soul Essence: Spirit Portraits/Innertainment exhibition at Gallery 620. Opens on Nov. 6. Featuring Carol Marley's Spirit Portraits-Photography and Micaila Milburn-Thomas' Masks and Sacred Geometry.
Gallery 620, 620 W. Morehead St. 704-618-9966.
A Kaleidoscope of Color & Style exhibition at Green Rice Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 7 p.m.- 9 p.m. Featuring new works by Paul Hastings. Exhibition continues through Nov. 29. Green Rice Gallery, 451 E. 36th St. 704-
Works by Arless Day exhibition at Hidell Brooks Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.- 8 p.m.
Exhibition continues through Dec. 19.
Hidell Brooks Gallery, 1910 S. Blvd., Ste. 130. 704-334-7302.
New Urbanscapes exhibition at Jerald Melberg Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.- 9 p.m. Exhibition features drawings by Susan Grossman.
Exhibition continues through Dec. 26.
Jerald Melberg Gallery, 625 S. Sharon Amity Rd. 704-365-3000.
Here and Now exhibition at Joie Lassiter Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.- 9 p.m. Featuring works by Radcliffe Bailey, Willie Little, and Etiye Dimma Poulsen.
Exhibition continues through Nov. 30.
Joie Lassiter Gallery, 1440 S. Tryon St. Ste. 104. 704-373-1464.
Revisit: A Group Exhibition at Lark & Key Gallery and Boutique. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.-9 p.m. The exhibit features works by Duy Huynh, Charlotte Foust, Angie Renfro, Flora Bowley, Jen Swearington, Linda Plaisted and Sofia Barao.
Exhibition continues through Jan. 31, 2010.
Lark & Key Gallery and Boutique, 453 E. 36th St., Ste. B. 704-379-1826.
Works by Ashlynn Browning, Dan Allegrucci, and Ashley Lathe exhibition at Pantone 278. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.-9 p.m.
Exhibition continues through Nov. 30.
Pantone 278, 1710 Camden Rd.
Innermost Thoughts: The Paintings of Harriet Marshall Goode exhibition at Providence Gallery. Wine and cheese reception with the artist: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.-9 p.m. Exhibition will feature new figurative paintings by Goode.
Exhibition continues through Nov. 30.
Providence Gallery, 601 Providence Rd., Ste. A. 704-333-4535.
New Works by William Jameson, Kim Schuessler, and Terry Delapp exhibition at Shain Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.-9 p.m.
Exhibition continues through Nov. 30.
Shain Gallery, 2823 Selwyn Ave. 704-334-7744.
The Lady's Coffee exhibition at The Art House. Opens on Nov. 6. Featuring works by Natasha Powell. Exhibition explores themes such as self-respect, self-image, social consciousness and interdependent relationships.
Exhibition continues through Nov. 30.
The Art House, 3103 Cullman Ave. 704-962-9700.
Emergence exhibition at Twenty-Two Gallery. Grand opening of Twenty-Two Gallery and opening reception: Sat., Nov. 7, 7 p.m. Featuring art by Mike Watson and Nick Bloomberg.
Exhibition continues through Nov. 29.
Twenty-Two Gallery, 1500 Central Ave. 704-342-0122.
Fine Arts and Design Faculty Exhibition at Winthrop Universitys Rutledge and Elizabeth Dunlap Patrick Galleries. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6:30 p.m. - 8 p.m. Features works by 19 artists and designers.
Exhibition continues through Jan. 14, 2010.
Winthrop University, 106 McLaurin Hall, Rock Hill, SC. 803-323-2493.
Conversations with Echo exhibition at Winthrop Universitys Elizabeth Dunlap Patrick Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6:30 p.m. - 8 p.m. Exhibition by Paul Martyka, associate professor of fine arts. Focuses on hand-printed paper cut collages. Artist talk in Elizabeth Dunlap Patrick Gallery on Thurs., Nov. 12, 11 a.m.
Exhibition continues through Jan. 14, 2010.
Winthrop University, 106 McLaurin Hall, Rock Hill, SC. 803-323-2493.
Trials and Revelations exhibition at Winthrop Universitys Rutledge Gallery. Opening reception: Fri., Nov. 6, 6:30 p.m. - 8 p.m. An exhibition by Seth Rouser, Department of Fine Arts instructor.
Exhibition continues through Jan. 14, 2010.
Winthrop University, 106 McLaurin Hall, Rock Hill, SC. 803-323-2493.