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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Bake Sale Set for Hit-and-Run Victim Shannon Parker

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  • centralprespb.com

A bake sale is being held on Saturday, June 23rd, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., to raise funds for Shannon Parker, a victim of a hit-and-run.

On Sunday, May 20th, Shannon Parker and Kat Solaas were hit by a car while crossing the street in Cooper-Young. Parker tried to push Solaas out of the path of the vehicle and sustained multiple injuries, including a fractured pelvis and is receiving treatment at the Med. Solaas broke her ankle. Parker has no insurance.

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Film Features Film/TV

Back in Black

Coming a full decade after the cash-grab second installment of the sci-fi comedy franchise, the unlikely and seemingly unnecessary Men in Black 3 is also surprisingly enjoyable. At a time when most blockbusters take the form of live-action cartoons, here’s one that actually has a little Looney Tunes in it.

As guided by well-chosen director Barry Sonnenfeld, who brought the incorrigible wit of his precursor Addams Family films to the enterprise, the original Men in Black rose above its station. Based on a comic book series from Lowell Cunningham, the film explored the workings of a mythical INS for extraterrestrials via a pair of agents — Tommy Lee Jones’ stern, deadpan vet Agent K and Will Smith’s charismatically nonchalant new recruit Agent J — that updated the Eddie Murphy/Nick Nolte salt-and-pepper buddy-cop chemistry from the 48 Hours movies while mostly freeing the concept of its racially charged undertones.

The first film was a gentle satire about negotiating the diversity of modern urban life and was so packed with charm and visual detail that plotting was happily secondary. The second film was a purposeless, product-placement-laced rehash. And yet, though I can barely remember the plot, I still recall the multi-limbed alien working as a behind-the-scenes letter sorter and the entire community of miniature visitors living inside a Grand Central Station locker.

A deft negotiation of ethnic humor in the kitchen of a “Chinese” restaurant aside, Men in Black III is less rooted in urban satire, instead finding its sense of purpose via a time-travel plot line that enables a deliriously enjoyable performance from newcomer Josh Brolin, who gets to mimic Jones as the 1969 version of Agent K.

The film — clocking in at a breezy 103 minutes — sets its plot in motion with a brisk series of opening scenes. “Boris the Animal” (Jemaine Clement), a Randy Savage-lookalike humanoid alien, escapes solitary confinement on a lunar prison facility and heads to Earth to plot the destruction of the planet and seek vengeance against Agent K, though not necessarily in that order. Agent K had apprehended Boris — shooting off his arm in the process — back during the Woodstock era, and Boris’ new plan involves time travel, sending “the Animal” back to 1969 and Smith’s Agent J back after him.

As always, plot is secondary to incident, ideas, and frames packed with flourishes. Scanning the background reveals that Yao Ming and Lady Gaga are extraterrestrial visitors. A brief visit to K and J’s apartments offers a character juxtaposition without comment — K’s settled home is fireplace, leather, books; J’s is ultra-modern, uncluttered, transitory. Among the many alien bits is one mouthy interrogation subject at the Cosmic Lanes bowling alley front whose round head dislodges, allowing J to use it as a ball while K badgers the witness. (“That ain’t a finger hole, you sick bastard.”)

The film offers a snazzy literalization of the “time jump” concept, with the Black Friday stock market crash and a WWII ticker tape parade flying by in transit. Back in 1969, the film doesn’t overplay the fish-out-of-water period details the way others might, and assumes audience knowledge — or maybe just doesn’t care — with a trip to The Factory, where Andy Warhol is revealed to be a MiB agent surveilling alien visitors and “I’m Waiting for My Man” is on the soundtrack.

Jones and Smith don’t bring the same energy to this material as they did 15 years ago, but everything around them — Brolin’s brilliance, a welcome turn from Michael Stuhlberg (A Serious Man) as an alien unstuck in time, the constant rat-a-tat-tat of visual gags and sidelong observations, the zippy cartoon pacing — more than makes up for it. And all that turns a seemingly worn-out concept into a surprisingly satisfying summer movie.

Men in Black 3

Now playing

Multiple locations

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News

Remembering Duck Dunn

Randy Haspel shares some stories about legendary Memphis musician Donald “Duck” Dunn.

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News

Walkin’ With Patsy Cline at Playhouse

Chris Davis reviews the new production of Walking With Patsy Cline now at Playhouse on the Square.

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Art Exhibit M

Trolley Night: Leadership Memphis Art Gallery

A solo exhibition of art by Alexander Paulus will open tomorrow during the S. Main Art District’s monthly Trolley Night from 6-9 p.m. at the Leadership Memphis Art Gallery on 363 S. Main. The show will be on display through the month of June. Michel Allen of Leadership Memphis approached Paulus to display his work in the new space beside the organization’s offices.

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“I’m going to have a wide range of things. They will all be minimal in imagery and color, but conceptually heavy,” says Paulus.

Paulus put together an incredible show earlier this year for the Broad Avenue Spring Art Walk in April titled “Sorry,” featuring his own work along with art by Adam Farmer, Leanna Hicks, Johnathan Robert Payne, Joseph Kendrick, St. Francis Elevator Ride, and the collaboration of Hamlett Dobbins and Tad Wright. The successful one-night exhibition began with the loose idea to create pieces that dealt with space, open to interpretation by each individual artist.

“My past work was all about gods, religion, and science. From there I started thinking about outer space, and how older civilizations believed their gods came from the heavens and stars. I’m really interested in creation and evolution and the intertwining of the two in the formation of myth and religion. I also like sci-fi stuff too, so robots and laser guns made their way into the work as well,” says Paulus.

“Most of the pieces for tomorrow night’s show still address the concept of “space” but some are just weird things that happen to pop up in my brain.”

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Categories
News

Memphis Youth Fly High

There an inspiring story about two Memphis kids that Bruce VanWyngarden thinks you should read.

Categories
Opinion The BruceV Blog

The Memphis “Fly Boys”

There’s a great story in Atlantic magazine about two Wooddale High School students who are competing the national rocketry finals. Read it here.

Categories
Opinion The BruceV Blog

Video of That Philip K. Dick Android

This week’s Flyer cover story tells the strange tale of a Philip K. Dick android created by a team at the University of Memphis. This video (hat tip, Tom Guleff) shows him in action.

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News News Blog

BET Seeks Next Big Music Star From Memphis

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BET Network is stopping in Memphis on Sunday, May 27th on their five-city BET Awards Next Big Music Star Mobile Tour, in which they’re searching for homegrown talent to feature on the BET Awards show and the 106 & Park pre-awards show on July 1st.

The fully equipped mobile music studio will be parked at Mud Island River Park from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Aspiring contestants are asked to register on the tour’s Facebook page . Contestants will be asked to sing a capella in front of a judge. If selected, the contestant will move on to record a track in the mobile studio. Winners will be selected from the recordings made at each tour stop.

Other cities on the tour include Washington D.C., Philadelphia, Atlanta, and Houston.

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

Mid-South Pride Karaoke Idol

American Idol winner Phillip Phillips

  • American Idol winner Phillip Phillips

Move over, Phillip Phillips. There’s about to be new Idol in town. The annual Mid-South Pride Karaoke Idol contest takes place this Sunday, May 27th at Dru’s Place (1474 Madison) at 7 p.m.

But arrive early for the Karaoke Idol cook-out at 5 p.m. Plates of burgers and hot dogs with all the fixins’ will be available for $5.

It’s $10 to enter the karaoke contest. The first and second place winners will go on to compete in the Mid-South Karaoke Idol finals for a shot at singing on the main stage at this year’s Mid-South Pride festival on October 6th.

For more information, check out the event’s Facebook page.