twi-ny recommended events

DAN LAURIA IN CONVERSATION WITH PETER FILICHIA

the blue hair club

Society of Illustrators
128 East 63rd St. between Park & Lexington Aves.
Monday, December 16, free but advance RSVP required, 5:30
www.thegodfathertales.com
www.societyillustrators.org

In his first children’s book, The Blue Hair Club and Other Stories, actor Dan Lauria collects made-up stories he’s been telling his godson, Julian Farnsworth. The book is the first in a new series called “The Godfather Tales”; Lauria collaborated on the text (the book also includes “The Boy Who Built a Bridge Our of Carrots” and “The Story of the Sun”) with Julian’s mother, L.A.-based photographer Cathryn Farnsworth; the playful illustrations are by Brandon Morino. The Brooklyn-born Lauria, who starred as grumpy father Jack Arnold in The Wonder Years and is about to reprise his role as narrator Jean Shepherd in A Christmas Story: The Musical, running at the Theater at Madison Square Garden December 11-29, will be at the Society of Illustrators on December 16, in conversation with Star-Ledger theater critic emeritus Peter Filichia, discussing his long career onstage, on television, and in the movies, as well as the book. Also on hand will be the famous leg lamp from the show, along with members of the cast of the musical, who will perform excerpts from the book, followed by a signing. In addition, there will be fudge and a cash bar. Proceeds from sales of the self-published book ($21.73) will go to the nonprofit Front Door Agency, whose mission is “to offer support and provide services to assist individuals and families in their transition from crisis to self-sufficiency,” focusing on the needs of single moms and their children. Advance RSVP with the number of books you’d like to reserve is required.

FIFTH ANNUAL LATKE FESTIVAL

latke festival

Metropolitan Pavilion
125 West 18th St. between Sixth & Seventh Aves.
Monday, December 2, $55-$110, 6:30-9:00
www.greatperformances.com

Of course, there’s nothing quite like grandma’s Hanukkah latkes, burning hot and oh-so-fresh, you and your siblings devouring them nearly as fast as they’re coming out of the kitchen. But it will be a lot more than just potatoes, oil, onions, and salt and pepper on December 2, when the Metropolitan Pavilion plays host to Great Performances’ fifth annual Latke Festival. Fifteen local restaurants will be competing for the People’s Choice award, serving unique variants on the traditional holiday favorite. The decidedly nonkosher menu will consist of Kutsher’s Tribeca’s Peking duck, scallion, and sesame hoisin latke, known as the Big Megillah; Veselka’s latke with braised pork and cherry compote; Mile End’s butternut squash latke and fresh sage; Commerce’s scallion latke with farmer’s cheese, smoked salmon, and caviar; the Butterfly’s aged beef basted latke with sliced prime rib, caramelized onions, horseradish cream, and crispy rosemary; Delicatessen’s sweet potato latke slider with ground brisket, roasted apple, black pepper crème fraîche, and cranberry chutney; La Vara’s latke canaria, made with sweet potato chickpea, taro, and cadiz shrimp; Blue Hill Yogurt’s butternut squash latke with curried butternut yogurt; Stone Park Café’s braised short rib latke with smoked crème fraîche and sour cherry compote; the Vanderbilt’s potato and seaweed latke with sweet Maine shrimp; Benchmark’s caraway-scented latke, with short rib pastrami, truffled sauerkraut, and mustard crème; Toloache’s yucca latke with salmon pastrami and mojo de ago salsa; the Plaza Hotel’s crispy duck fat Yukon gold potato latke with Hudson Valley duck confit and kumquat-pomegranate gelée; Sylvia’s Table’s spaghetti squash latke with dehydrated olives, whipped feta, and sumac (with Great Performances); Garden Court Cafe at Asia Society’s sweet potato and kimchi latke with soy vinegar dipping sauce and perilla leaves; and Mae Mae Café’s potato pancake with maple mascarpone and cranberry bourbon sauce. There will also be breads and sufganiyot from Hot Bread Kitchen and drinks courtesy of Cliffton Dry Hard Cider, GuS (Grown Up Soda), the Brooklyn Roasting Company, and the Shmaltz Brewing Company, along with wine and vodka. The culinary judges who will select the Latke Festival Master include Ben Leventhal, Lee Schrager, Amanda Hesser, Joanne Wilson, Elinor Tatum, Jason Ackerman, Robert Lavalva, Alan Boss, and CBS medical correspondent Jonathan LaPook, who is not on hand to discuss the health concerns of such an eating frenzy. Tickets range from $55 to $110 depending on time of entry and various VIP bonuses and must be purchased in advance.

JULIANNE MOORE: THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT

Things are not necessarily quite as happy as they might seem for this very different kind of dysfunctional family

THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT (Lisa Cholodenko, 2010)
Museum of the Moving Image
35th Ave. at 36th St., Astoria
Sunday, December 1, free with museum admission, 7:00
Series runs November 29 – December 1
718-777-6800
www.movingimage.us
www.filminfocus.com

When half-siblings Joni (Mia Wasikowska) and Laser (Josh Hutcherson) decide to track down their anonymous sperm-donor father, their two moms, Jules (Julianne Moore) and Nic (Annette Bening), are justifiably concerned with how that might affect their close-knit family. And when the donor ends up being a motorcycle-riding, free-spirited hottie (Mark Ruffalo) who would like to become part of the kids’ lives, it doesn’t take long for some major dysfunction to set in. The third feature-length narrative written or cowritten and directed by Lisa Cholodenko, following 1998’s High Art and 2002’s Laurel Canyon (she directed 2004’s Cavedweller but did not write it), The Kids Are All Right is another intimate drama that explores deeply personal relationships with grace and intelligence — along with a little lesbianism. Bening is strong as the man of the house, overly determined to control and protect her family; Moore is beguiling as the other mother, wanting to develop her own business as a landscape architect; and Wasikowka, who was so outstanding in the HBO series In Treatment, impresses again as the prodigal daughter preparing to go to college. Ruffalo, however, is too flat, and the film takes several missteps, including a final scene that is sadly predictable, detracting from an otherwise fresh and original story. The Kids Are All Right is screening at the Museum of the Moving Image on December 1 at 7:00 as part of the weekend series “Julianne Moore,” which pays tribute to the award-winning actress known for taking on challenging roles, showing six of her films, including the Coen brothers’ The Big Lebowski, Steven Spielberg’s The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Paul Thomas Anderson’s Boogie Nights, and Todd Haynes’s Safe and Far from Heaven.

BLACK FRIDAY DEAL OF THE DAY: ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER AT CITY CENTER

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Antonio Douthit-Boyd and Linda Celeste Sims perform in a new production of Alvin Ailey’s THE RIVER (photo by Paul Kolnik)

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Antonio Douthit-Boyd and Linda Celeste Sims perform in a new production of Alvin Ailey’s THE RIVER (photo by Paul Kolnik)

New York City Center
130 West 56th St. between Sixth & Seventh Aves.
December 4 – January 5, $25-$135; 40% off select performances with code ALYFRI
212-581-1212
www.alvinailey.org
www.nycitycenter.org

Next week, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater returns to City Center for its annual holiday season, its twenty-fifth since Alvin Ailey passed away on December 1, 1989. As a special one-day-only Black Friday special, tickets for select performances are being discounted up to forty percent by using the promo code ALYFRI, available online from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm, by phone 11:00 am to 8:00 pm, and at the box office 12 noon to 8:00 (where there is no service charge). Running December 4 to January 5, the 2013-14 season, the third under artistic director Robert Battle, is chock-full of company classics and exciting new commissions. Back again are such recent additions as Rennie Harris’s Home, Ohad Naharin’s dazzling Minus 16, Jiří Kylián’s Petite Mort, Kyle Abraham’s Another Night, Ronald K. Brown’s breathtaking Grace, Battle’s Strange Humors and In/Side, and Paul Taylor’s Arden Court. This year’s world premieres include Aszure Barton’s LIFT, Wayne McGregor’s Chroma (featuring music by Jack White), Bill T. Jones’s D-Man in the Waters (Part I), and Brown’s Four Corners, along with new productions of Ailey’s Pas De Duke and The River. Most performances conclude, of course, with the Ailey mainstay Revelations, several with live music.

THE END OF TIME

THE END OF TIME

Peter Mettler explores the nature and perception of time in dazzling documentary

THE END OF TIME (Peter Mettler, 2012)
Film Society of Lincoln Center
Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center
144 West 65th St. between Broadway & Amsterdam Ave.
November 29 – December 5
212-875-5601
www.theendoftimemovie.com
www.filmlinc.comg

Beginning with air force pilot Joe Kittinger’s 102,800-foot jump from a helium balloon in 1960, experimental filmmaker Peter Mettler takes viewers on a wildly varying, cosmic, occasionally psychedelic, and always thought-provoking journey through the nature, perception, and very existence of time in his latest stunning documentary, The End of Time. The third in a trilogy following 1996’s Picture of Light and 2002’s Gambling, Gods and LSD, his latest film explores the concept of time by visiting with nuclear physicists working on the CERN particle accelerator in Switzerland, which is trying to re-create the conditions that led to the Big Bang; meeting with Jack Thompson, the only person left living on a section of Hawaii’s Big Island that has been covered in lava from a nearby active volcano; traveling through the decimation of Detroit, speaking with squatter Andrew Kemp and popular techno DJ Richie Hawtin; making a pilgrimage to Bodhgaya in India, where the Buddha found enlightenment; and saving a personal surprise for the extremely apt conclusion. “For me, the meaning of time is that we are,” CERN physicist George Mikenberg says, getting right to the point. Incorporating archival footage with original material, Mettler, who served as writer, director, editor, photographer, and sound designer, has created a unique visual language in The End of Time, reminiscent of Stanley Kubrick’s sci-fi epic 2001: A Space Odyssey, which also examined time and space, albeit in a futuristic, fictional way; Mettler, on the other hand, deals exclusively with the here and now, the present. He treats his film as if it were a carefully conceived architectural structure built out of sound, image, and spoken word, incorporating gorgeous shots of nature — particularly the sun, the moon, clouds, and vast landscapes of mountains, forests, and waters — alongside modern technology (including dazzling animation) and humanity’s thirst for knowledge, resulting in a mesmerizing, poetic cinematic experience that is wholly unpredictable and endlessly satisfying even when it confounds. Mettler even takes care in the film’s opening and closing titles, imbuing every moment with an element of, well, time.

THE PUNK SINGER

(photo courtesy of Pat Smear)

Riot grrrl Kathleen Hanna opens up about her life in intimate documentary (photo courtesy of Pat Smear)

THE PUNK SINGER: A FILM ABOUT KATHLEEN HANNA (Sini Anderson, 2013)
IFC Center, 323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St., 212-924-7771
Nitehawk Cinema, 136 Metropolitan Ave. between Berry St. & Wythe Ave., 718-384-3980
Opens Friday, November 29
www.thepunksinger.com

A cofounder of the riot grrrl movement, Kathleen Hanna was an outspoken feminist as she toured the world with Bikini Kill and then Le Tigre starting in 1991. But it all came to a mysterious halt in 2005 when the Portland, Oregon, native suddenly went on what became a long hiatus for undisclosed health reasons. Director Sini Anderson gets to the heart of the matter in the intimate, revealing documentary The Punk Singer: A Film About Kathleen Hanna. Incorporating rousing archival footage and photographs along with new interviews, Anderson, in her feature debut, gets Hanna to open up about her life and career, discussing such influences as Kathy Acker and Gloria Steinem as well as the serious health problem that kept her out of the public eye for five years. Hanna also talks about her childhood, a sexual assault that happened to her best friend, her photography and fashion work in college, her zine writing, and the formation of her bands, along the way always pushing her message. “We didn’t give a shit,” she says about the beginnings of Bikini Kill. “We weren’t making money; we knew we were never going to make money. And it was really important that we made our music. We were on a mission. We were going to do what we did whether we got attention or not.”

Kathleen Hanna gets her message out with Bikini Kill, Le Tigre, and the Julie Ruin

Kathleen Hanna gets her message out with Bikini Kill, Le Tigre, and the Julie Ruin

Anderson also speaks with such former and current Hanna bandmates as Johanna Fateman, JD Samson, Kathi Wilcox, and Tobi Vail, musical icons Joan Jett and Kim Gordon, Sleater-Kinney’s Corin Tucker and Carrie Brownstein, and Hanna’s husband, Beastie Boy Adam Horovitz; many are interviewed in the back of a snazzy van during a Hanna tribute concert at the Knitting Factory in 2010. Anderson weaves in plenty of music clips that display Hanna’s powerful stage presence, including snippets of such songs as “Rebel Girl,” “White Boy,” “Distinct Complicity,” “Hot Topic,” “Deceptacon,” and “Aerobicide” from Bikini Kill, Le Tigre, and the Julie Ruin. The Punk Singer is a gripping portrait of a fearless, talented woman who continues to do whatever it takes to get her message out. “What is the story of my life?” Hanna says near the end. “I have no fucking idea.” But now, thanks to Anderson, we do, even if that story is still being written. The Punk Singer opens November 29 at the IFC Center and Nitehawk Cinema; Anderson, cinematographer Jennie Jeddry, and editor Bo Mehrad will be at the Nitehawk to participate in Q&As following the 7:30 and 9:55 screenings on Friday night, and Hanna will be at the IFC Center for Q&As moderated by Lizz Winstead after Friday and Saturday’s 7:55 and 9:55 shows. In addition, Hanna will be signing copies of the new album by the Julie Ruin, Run Fast, at 10:00 on Saturday.

THX BKLYN: THE SQUID AND THE WHALE

take measure of their lives in THE SQUID AND THE WHALE

Walt (Jesse Eisenberg) and Lili (Anna Paquin) take measure of their lives in THE SQUID AND THE WHALE

NITEHAWK BRUNCH SCREENINGS: THE SQUID AND THE WHALE (Noah Baumbach, 2005)
Nitehawk Cinema
136 Metropolitan Ave. between Berry St. & Wythe Ave.
November 30 & December 1, 12 noon
718-384-3980
www.nitehawkcinema.com

We have no idea how Noah Baumbach managed to pull this off. You’ll think you’ll know just where his 2005 Sundance Film Festival award winner (for writing and directing) and New York Film Festival hit is going — yet another painfully realistic look into the dissolution of a New York City family — but lo and behold, The Squid and the Whale will surprise you over and over again. And even when it does head toward the cliché route, it adds just the right twist to keep things fresh. Bernard (Jeff Daniels) and Joan Berkman (Laura Linney) are reaching the end of their marriage, and their two sons, Walt (Jesse Eisenberg) and Frank (Owen Kline), aren’t handling it very well; Walt is taking credit for having written Pink Floyd’s “Hey You,” and Frank has developed the curious habit of pleasuring himself and then – well, you’ll have to see it to believe it. And while Joan hits the dating scene and has begun writing, Bernard is becoming a woolly has-been author who just might be getting the hots for one of his sexy students (Anna Paquin). Set in 1986 Park Slope (there are scenes shot in Prospect Park, the Santa Fe Grill, and other familiar locations), The Squid and the Whale features sharp dialogue, well-developed characters, and outstanding acting. The soundtrack includes Lou Reed’s great “Street Hassle” and a score, composed by Dean Wareham and Britta Phillips (of the defunct Luna), that borrows liberally from Risky Business, of all things. The Squid and the Whale is screening November 30 & December 1 at 12 noon as part of the Nitehawk Cinema series “November Brunch & Midnite: Thx Bklyn,” a month-long collection of films either set in Brooklyn or written and/or directed by Brooklynites or both, as in the case of Baumbach (Frances Ha, Greenberg), who was born in Brooklyn and graduated from Midwood High, and his much-loved 2005 work.