AltWeeklies Wire
Horny Teens Get a Mockumentary in The Virginity Hitnew

The Virginity Hit depicts a cadre of semiprivileged New Orleans teens whose penchant for illicit drinking, drug use and recording every moment of their lives on camera is more or less not worth remarking upon.
Safe Birthday Cakes Worth the Candlesnew

Recipe for Depression-era Cockeyed Cake that uses oil and vinegar in place of eggs and dairy, plus a list of local bakeries that cater to those with allergies.
INDY Week |
Joyce Clark Hicks |
09-03-2010 |
Food+Drink
Tags: Recipes
Valient Thorr's Strangernew

Valient Thorr still finds its distinction by directing its menace at deserving targets via social commentaries charged by precision and power.
Tags: Valient Thorr
Mao's Last Dancer Blooms in Americanew

It may be hopelessly retro to say it, but this is the kind of film Hollywood used to make regularly: not focus-grouped to a niche market; dealing with the joys and sorrows of life and art.
Tags: Mao's Last Dancer, Bruce Beresford
The Body Might Have the Most Terrifying, Electrifying Album of the Yearnew

All the Waters of the Earth Turn to Blood takes doom metal -- that is, the most torturously heavy and slow music you can imagine -- and reshapes it with zeal.
INDY Week |
Grayson Currin |
09-02-2010 |
Profiles & Interviews
Tags: The Body
George Clooney's Hit Man Hides Out in The Americannew

Few actors today both possess and exercise the star power needed to make films like The American. But artistic appreciation does not always produce artistry.
Tags: The American, Anton Corbijn
The Lack of Wit is a Weeds Killernew

When most of the fun is in the subplots, maybe it's time for the writers to come up with some real breakthrough for Nancy Botwin.
Tags: Weeds
Algonquin Books' 25th edition of New Stories From the Southnew

Are guest editor Amy Hempel and series editor Kathy Pories pointing us to a change in Southern literature?
Tags: Amy Hempel
Quiet Desperation in Mademoiselle Chambonnew

The virtue, and limitation, of Mademoiselle Chambon is the ordinariness of the characters and their quotidian affair. It's one we can relate to, but it's not necessarily one that we go to the movies to watch.
Jim Avett's Tribesnew

With six of its seven songs being Avett originals, Tribes can be considered Avett's proper debut as a country music singer-songwriter.
Tags: Jim Avett
Get Low Doesn't Go Low Enoughnew

A film that looks to Horton Foote for inspiration is worth taking seriously, but this director and screenwriter don't have what it takes to give their synthetic concoction any authority.
Tags: Get Low, Aaron Schneider
Uncovering the Recipe to Chinese Bubble Teanew

I have leveraged my countless good deeds as a husband and prevailed on my wife to develop a facsimile recipe for zhen zhu nai cha.
INDY Week |
David A. Ross |
08-31-2010 |
Food+Drink
Tags: Bubble Tea
The Honored Guests finally value the process, not just the productnew

"It's about understanding your situation and understanding that something has to change in order to get to a better place," says frontman Russell Baggett of the band's third album, Please Try Again.
INDY Week |
Chris Parker |
08-27-2010 |
Profiles & Interviews
Tags: The Honored Guests
Freeze the gamenew
Summer is an assemblage of unscripted experiences, and there's generally still daylight when it's all over. Or so I'd hoped.
Tags: Columns
Rosanne Cash keeps composure, discusses new memoirnew
Cash discusses her feelings about the film Walk the Line, her early musical influences and having Morrissey as an in-law.
Tags: Rosanne Cash