Categories
Arts

Capsule Reviews

Angels and Demons (PG-13, 138 minutes) Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks) returns to the big screen to pursue another secret society—just replace “Opus Dei” with “The Illuminati.” Can he prevent a deadly terrorist act from devastating the Vatican? Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

Dance Flick (PG-13, 83 minutes) The Wayans family spoofs the recent spate urban dance movies. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

Drag Me to Hell (PG-13, 99 minutes) Evil Dead and Spider-Man director Sam Raimi returns to his horror roots with the story of a loan officer (Alison Lohman) who makes an unfortunate, unholy enemy. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

The Hangover
(R, 105 minutes) From the director of Old School, a comedy about some dudes (Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis, Ed Helms, Justin Bartha) who go to Vegas for a bachelor party and get into all kinds of trouble but don’t remember any of it. Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

Imagine That (PG, 107 minutes) Eddie Murphy plays a financial executive who ignores his young daughter—until her imagination bails him out of big trouble. Thomas Haden Church co-stars. Opening Friday

Is Anybody There? (PG-13, 92 minutes) A youngster growing up in an assisted living center befriends an old magician (played by Michael Caine). Playing at Vinegar Hill Theatre

Land of the Lost (PG-13, 93 minutes) A time-travel-adventure comedy based on the cult hit ’70s TV show of the same name and starring Will Ferrell, Anna Friel and Danny McBride. Playing at Regal Seminole Square 4

My Life in Ruins
(PG-13, 96 minutes) My Big Fat Greek Wedding’s Nia Vardalos, in Greece, in a romantic comedy. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (PG, 105 minutes) Ben Stiller reprises his role as night watchman for whom museum exhibits come to life—this time at the Smithsonian. Amy Adams, Hank Azaria, Ricky Gervais, Robin Williams, Owen Wilson and many others co-star. Playing at Regal Seminole Square 4

Sin Nombre (R, 96 minutes) Cary Fukunaga’s stirring directorial debut follows a trio of teenagers who flee the violence of the Mexican gang scene. Playing at Vinegar Hill Theatre

The Soloist (PG-13, 105 minutes) Robert Downey, Jr. perhaps shines brightest as an LA Times reporter who discovers a schizophrenic music prodigy (Jamie Foxx). Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

Star Trek (PG-13, 127 minutes) So this is how Kirk and Spock first got to know each other. The most beloved sci-fi franchise ever—or the second most beloved, depending on your degree of dorkdom—gets a hyper-kinetic reboot from “Lost” co-creator J.J. Abrams, with stars Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Winona Ryder, Simon Pegg, Eric Bana and others. Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Playing at Regal Seminole Square 4

State of Play (PG-13, 118 minutes) A shaggy muckracking journalist (Russell Crowe), on orders from his take-no-prisoners editor (Helen Mirren), investigates a dapper presidential candidate (Ben Affleck) whose mistress’ murder might point to a political cover-up. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

The Taking of Pelham 123 (R, 93 minutes) Director Tony Scott remakes the 1974 film of the John Godey novel, in this case as a creative-facial-hair duel between Denzel Washington, playin a New York City subway dispatcher, and John Travolta, playing a crazed but calculating hijacker. Opening Friday

Terminator Salvation (PG-13, 115 minutes) In the fourth big-screen chapter of this beloved franchise, set in a post-apocalyptic 2018, Christian Bale leads the human resistance to machine domination. Sam Worthington plays a cyborg who thinks he’s human and Anton Yelchin plays a young version of the man who will go back in time and become the Bale character’s father. Hey, you had to be there. Playing at Regal Downtown Mall 6

Up (PG, 89 minutes) Disney-Pixar’s latest is the 3D animated tale of an old geezer (voiced by Ed Asner) who decides to leave city living behind by tying many balloons to his house and floating away from it all. Christopher Plummer, John Ratzenberger, Delroy Lindo and Jordan Nagai co-star. Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

X-Men Origins: Wolverine (PG-13, 107 minutes) Hugh Jackman stars in the back-story of Marvel Comics’ razor-clawed mutant badass. Liev Schreiber co-stars. Playing at Carmike Cinema 6

Categories
News

Sylvia Plachy describes the photographer's art of imposing on her subjects

Journalistically speaking, I came of age with the Village Voice. From that paper I came up with some notion of  how I wanted to do my life’s work. And that’s something, maybe the only thing, that Sylvia Plachy and I have in common. Plachy, who is a featured artist at this year’s Festival of the Photograph, shot pictures for the Voice for close to 30 years, starting in the late 1970s. Just as the Voice, in its heyday, was a hybrid of the personal, political, social and comical all wrapped up in what might be called the “new journalism,” so does Plachy make pictures that criss-cross many genres and points of view.

“Mermaid on Coney Island, 1995” by Sylvia Plachy at McGuffey Art Center

Yet always, no matter what the subject—a singing zoo bear, a sex worker with her hand far up some guy’s nether regions, an Oscar-winning actor who happens to be her son on a movie set—Plachy expresses an awkward intimacy through her lens. It’s the gaze of a shy but profoundly curious person; fittingly, in Czech, her surname means “shy.” When I met with Plachy a couple of months ago as she was mapping out her LOOK3 show in a small studio in the McGuffey Art Center on a glorious Saturday morning, she credited the Voice, in the first 10 years of her tenure there, with helping her develop her eye. “They were giving freedom to the writers, to the photographers and everybody, to interpret the world in their own way. And that doesn’t happen that many places,” she said.

Plachy emigrated to this country from Communist Hungary after several years in Austria and at the age of 20 she became an American citizen. She made her first pictures during that refugee period; her formal studies include a degree from the Pratt Institute. Among her books: Signs & Relics, Self Portrait with Cows Going Home, and Red Light: Inside the Sex Industry.

I intended, in the McGuffey interview, to engage Plachy (pronounced Plah-hee) in discussion of her process. How does an artist get work done? How does she keep her craft spontaneous yet masterful? She was witty, cautious, open, particular—in short, Plachy the conversationalist is much like Plachy the photographer.

Plachy’s show, “Waiting,” is on display through June 28 at McGuffey. The reception for the show, on June 11 at 9pm, follows a stage interview with her, to be conducted by Aperture Magazine’s Melissa Harris, at 7pm on June 11 at The Paramount Theater.

Here’s an edited transcript of my interview with Sylvia Plachy.—Cathy Harding


Cathy Harding: I’ve heard photographers use this phrase. So let’s start by asking you what it actually means to “make a picture” compared to, say, taking a picture.


Sylvia Plachy:
Aha. Who’s making it and who’s taking it? (Laughter)

“Adrien Brody as the character Richie Rude, 1998” by Sylvia Plachy at McGuffey Art Center

I don’t know the difference between making and taking a picture. I think you have to take it, and then you have to make it, and then you have to do other things with it, and then you create a picture out of the experience, then, that you’re in. But to be a photographer, it means to be able to be rude, to impose on people, and kind of stick your nose into other people’s business, and to do that, you have to be in a good position mentally. To go out there and allow yourself to be part of the world. But it’s a wonderful experience, because it means to step inside the circle of another.

It’s interesting to hear you talk about the rudeness and the imposingness. But I’m thinking right now of some of the pictures that don’t, in fact, include people. For instance, “Marika’s Apartment”—the snowflakes coming down on the TV, with the light coming through the curtains and the plant. There’s so much texture, almost gaiety and a little bit of melancholy in the picture. It strikes me that you’d have to be incredibly patient to wait for that.

Right. So that’s what this show is about. (Laughter) About how much photography is about waiting, and how much our lives are about waiting for the moment, or anything. You have to wait and wait and wait until something happens. And it is also, in a way, pushing yourself into the present, or pushing yourself into the texture of the room that you’re in, to understand the ghosts that speak to you from within. And that’s what I’m looking for.

How does your life as a refugee continue to inform what you see, and how you do your work?

Well, having been a refugee has informed who I am, and who you are as a photographer is very much in the photographs, and in how you work. It’s probably more so than in any other art form. So being a refugee has made me—I’ve always been shy—but it has made me even more shy, I guess. And made me deaf and dumb, in a way, because I couldn’t speak or understand what people were saying around me. And it made me aware how language matters, and that being a visual person is also speaking another language. Because I began to try to understand things like a deaf person would, without understanding what people were saying around me. So I really looked at everything. I remember knowing that this was my last day of my life, and I walked all over the streets, and I touched everything, and I looked at everything, and I went to visit my favorite friends, my great-aunt and my grandmother. Those were the first photographs. I don’t have them anywhere except in my head.

You had a long, established run with the Village Voice and now many newspapers are coming to a crashing halt. We know that people have changed the way they read. What about the way they perceive images?

Images are not good either. I think everything is being distilled into a sound bite or a photo bite or a picture bite, whatever those are. Even though we have access to all this information and everything, it’s too superficial. It’s too quick. It’s too much about catching it without thinking about it, without feeling it, without anything. It feels like boring information and I’m not interested in it.

“Torch Song, Budapest Zoo, 1993” by Sylvia Plachy at McGuffey Art Center

Your pictures have a very empathic quality, but you’re also the outsider to that experience. Some of the things you’ve taken pictures of seem like they’d be very traumatic to be part of. The Red Light book comes to mind.

Well, that’s the one I’m outside of. I think the other books I’m more inside. And that project was James Ridgeway’s idea. He had an intern who was into sex industries, so she became our guide into that world. We entered this world that I would not have dared to go in alone, without a Dante leading me. It was, in a way, a shocking experience. I tried to avoid the usual pictures of sex workers, which is too much in the direction of being titillating. I tried to be just as straightforward and get as close as I could. But I felt very saddened and it was a very interesting experience, because I discovered these people were like you and me after all, except with a little more guts, and craziness to take risks that I would never do.

It seems the people are having a grim experience.

You come from a small town, you come from maybe a family that you were abused in, and you have no other ideas of how to make an interesting life for yourself other than in working at a boring job. I think that’s a major sadness of the world—that we are limited in understanding what we could be, and we don’t see it. So they think that that is going to be fun. They jump into this world, and they get deeper and deeper and deeper, and they’re on drugs, a lot of them, and it’s a downhill—it’s not a pretty picture. I felt depressed for years after that.

But maybe I’ve been depressed all my life. If you really look at everything in the world, it makes you very sad.

Have you ever made a photo that really surprised you?

I am in favor of accidents when you take pictures, and I put myself in a position to have accidents happen. I think it’s always a surprise when it’s a great picture—when it’s a picture that you would want to keep forever. That picture is always a surprise, because it’s very easy to take a regular, nice picture, but to have a picture that you can look at, and still like, and find joy in it week after week, or you could stick it on your wall, that’s a surprise. It’s grace, from heaven.

As you say that, the picture that springs to my mind is that bear.

The bear I saw. The bear was crying, and singing…

It really came out of nowhere as I was going through the Self Portrait book.

Well, that was a surprise for you, but I saw it! (Laughter)

What do you think is a commonly misunderstood thing about photography?

I think most people think they can take a good picture. And those people can’t. To be a photographer, you have to devote your whole life to it. And that’s a whole other thing. And it might be that you have nothing on your rolls that you like for the next, I don’t know, weeks and weeks and weeks on end. I’m saying: Anybody can get a good picture, especially with digital and everything else, but what it takes to be a photographer—you have to put yourself into it.

Well, what is your typical day like?

I don’t have a typical day. I don’t.

What’s your favorite day like?

(Laughter) My favorite day is kind of like today. It’s a very nice day, I woke up early, I walked out and there was all these lovely people in a fruit market, in the Saturday market you have here, and the sun was shining, and I couldn’t have my breakfast, so I thought, “Oh, they weren’t ready,” so I went out for a walk, and it was wonderful. So my favorite day is actually to feel the day. And I had an hour and a half to go feel the day, and I was in a mood to talk to them, and take pictures. Because it really takes an effort, and there are many times that I’m not in the mood to talk to you or anybody else. I was happy to talk to them, and then I came here and I’m working on my other pictures.

Do you shoot pictures every day?

I don’t have a rule. I have my cameras with me, but I don’t take pictures every day.

Categories
News

Design for new Crozet Library approved, breaks ground no sooner than 2011

The County Board of Supervisors approved last Wednesday, the initial design for the new library for Downtown Crozet.

In December 2004, the Board adopted the Crozet Master Plan and in it, a new and larger library was approved to give the community a focal point for the redevelopment of Downtown Crozet. Bill Letteri, director of the county’s Office of Facilities Development, said that the design was a “collaborative” effort among the Crozet Library Steering Committee—which included Supervisors Ann Mallek representing White Hall and Sally Thomas representing Samuel Miller—the public and stakeholders. “We listened, we compromised, we balanced,” he told the supervisors.

The new 18,000-square-foot, two-story Crozet Library will replace the smalle and existing 1,900-square-foot building.

The design calls for 18,000 square feet of library space with an additional shelf space of around 5,000 square feet, a much larger facility compared to the 1,900-square-foot existing library.

Melanie Hennigan, principal architect with Grimm + Parker, told the Supervisors that the new design is one “that is very specifically tailored to Crozet and its specific situation,” she said. “We are excited. It’s a delightful site and it’s going to be a place where when people visit this library, they are going to want to come back time and again.”

Chairman David Slutzky agreed. “It’s a beautiful building,” he said. “I think your design efforts and the community’s design efforts have resulted in a terrific amenity to Downtown Crozet. This is going to be a successful anchor.”

 The two-story building will feature three entrances: the main entrance on Crozet Avenue, one on the new Main Street and one from the parking lot. Most of the activity will occur on the first floor and, as Hennigan explained, 4,700 or 6,000 square feet in the lower level could be prepped for future expansion.

The design features a study room for teenagers and adults, a meeting room that can be used as a children’s reading area, computers, a general reading area and a fireplace.

In keeping with the county’s green trend, the building will have an energy efficient roof and other environmentally friendly features. The north wall of the building will feature large windows that will catch the day’s direct sunlight.

Originally, construction was supposed to begin in the next couple of months, but the Board voted to delay the project until 2011 due to the recession. Yet, both Letteri and Hennigan pointed out that the current bid market is so favorable that the savings could be as high as 20 percent. “If you can save a substantial amount on the bid amount it would enable you to have less debt service over the course of time,” Letteri told C-VILLE.

“There is real value out there right now,” said Hennigan.

The total budget for the project is $9.8 million, with $6 million going to construction only.

Slutzky, however, said that although the savings on the ground floor of the new library could be reallocated to other under funded projects in the county, it would be unrealistic to rethink the construction schedule and go to bid next month.

At the meeting, the Board also gave the green light for the Old Crozet School Arts and the Field School to lease the vacant Old Crozet Elementary School.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

Categories
Uncategorized

NEW C-VILLE COVER STORY: A closer LOOK3

As you plan your Festival of the Photograph itinerary, let us be your guide. Read this week’s cover story for a schedule of the event, plus an exclusive interview with photography Sylvia Plachy. Don’t forget to leave comments (and don’t forget to attend the Festival!).

Initial county voter turnout is 2 percent

The first glimpse of how many people already voted this morning is out.

The Albemarle County Department of Voter Registration & Elections is reporting that as of 9am, 2 percent, or 1,407, of the registered voters in the county went to the polls and cast their votes in the Democratic primaries.

The next report will be released at 1pm.

 

Luck goes to Easter Island, Pavement goes to Ikea, KISS comes here?

Remember that scene in National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation when Clark Griswold gets locked in the attic and passes his time watching films of old family vacations? Neither do I. Instead, I choose to remember the finer Griswold family outings—the summer trip to Europe, and that fateful trip to Wally World, journeys that remind you of…

You know what? Those didn’t end too well. But let’s channel Clark W. Griswold’s spirit from the comfort of home with a bit of summer vacation voyeurism. Tonight, for starters, the National Geographic Channel’s "Explorer" series premieres a documentary about Easter Island by our own Geoff Luck, a filmmaker based in town who previously traveled to Galápagos Island for a Geographic doc on Darwin. Watch a trailer for Luck’s film below:

For those of you who are loyal followers of Charlottesville’s second (or first? Third? Fifth?) most famous rock act, Matador Records recently held a contest to send a fan on a date to Ikea with a member of Pavement. (Get it?) Watch as Bob Nastanovich praises the furniture store’s fine Swedish craftsmanship and the ideals of a founder he calls "Hans Christian Ikea."

Last, John Paul Jones Arena recently sent an e-mail to its mailing list about an upcoming, "fan-routed" KISS tour. The e-mail includes a link to a site where members of the KISS Army can vote to bring Gene Simmons and company to their city (or, collectively punk KISS and send the band to Delaware). As the recent owner of a remastered copy of Love Gun, I’m all in favor of bringing the band to town. Why travel to Detroit when you can bring "Detroit Rock City" here?

So, tell me—would you rather buy a bed with Bob Nastanovitch, tour Easter Island with a gifted documentary filmmaker, or have your face painted to look like a cat?

How to make driving slightly less evil

If there’s one environmental sin of which I am heinously guilty, it is driving. I have a long commute. I won’t try to excuse or explain it here, because the bottom line remains the same: We are burning some gas.

But I have eased my darkened conscience a little bit (only a little) by dropping out of AAA and getting into the Better World Club instead. You’ll have to overcome two things to get on board with me here, people. The first is the admittedly cheesy name of the group. Just ignore it. The second is this episode of "Curb Your Enthusiasm," in which Cheryl axes Larry’s AAA membership and he ends up begging strangers on the street to change his flat tire.

Cheryl is right to complain about AAA—they do a lot of lobbying for more roads and fewer bike lanes—and those of us who want to see transportation get greener should not give them our money. But there’s no reason to leave yourself (or your social-nightmare spouse) in the lurch with a flat or a blown battery or whatever. [flight attendant voice]: Who wouldn’t want to join something called the Better World Club?

I have now been a member for a year and can report total satisfaction with the roadside service. It costs $119.95 a year (comparable AAA coverage would be $165.75) and works exactly like the AAA service I had for a long time. You get flat, you call club, they send big truck to make it all better.

Just like this.

Anyone else in the BWC? Want to report satisfaction, problems, etc.?

 

Bike Mentors program reaches out to Charlottesville city employees

Many City of Charlottesville employees brown-bagged their lunches Tuesday afternoon and gathered at the Pavilion to hear about the C-ville Bike Mentors program from bike mentors Shawn Strubbe and Marty Quinn, and avid biker City Councilor David Brown.

The program allows individuals to contact mentors to individually help a prospective cyclist find the right bike, helmet, lock and routes to work while teaching proper bike safety on the road.

Strubbe says the most valuable aspect of the program is the “individualized attention” people new to biking receive, because it allows them to feel more comfortable on the road.

“There’s someone there to hold your hand instead of saying, ‘You should automatically fit into this group [of experienced bikers],’” she says.

During the lunch, Brown and Quinn discussed how to fit and wear your helmet to the rules of safety on the road.

More after the photo.

City Councilor David Brown discussed the rules of biking in the city.

Both speakers stressed the importance of learning often-ignored rules such as “ride on the right side of the road, but not on the sidewalk,” says Quinn and mandatory city regulations such as having a flashing light on both the front and back of a bike.

“The problem is, in elementary school we teach the rules to flag football, but not biking on the road safely,” says Quinn.

Brown and Quinn also talked about some of the more dangerous intersections in Charlottesville for bikers such as Fifth and Ridge streets; the intersections on Main Street towards the Downtown Mall and Preston Avenue and McIntire Road.

Yet, both noted that cyclists should remember they have all the responsibilities of vehicles on the road and must observe all the same traffic laws.

 

Creigh Deeds wins Virginia Gubernatorial Democratic nomination

Senator Creigh Deeds is the winner of the Democratic Primaries for Governor of the Commonwealth, according to The Associated Press.

The Virginia State Board of Elections reports that with more than 99 percent precincts reporting, Deeds has won with just shy of 50 percent of the votes.

He is followed by Terry McAuliffe with 26.5 percent and Brian Moran with 24 percent.

Deeds will face Republican nominee Bob McDonnell on November 3.

In the county, the final turnout was 6,619, or 9.8 percent of registered voters. The breakdown of the voting in the county is as follows:

Deeds received 5,224 votes;

McAuliffe got 734 votes;

Moran got 645 votes.

 

 

UVA baseball heads to College World Series

UVA baseball will be heading to its first College World Series after defeating Ole Miss 5-1 this past Sunday in the NCAA Oxford Super Regional at the Oxford-University Stadium/Swayze Field.

The Rebels started the game off strong, bringing in one run in the first inning, but left the scoreboard empty for the next eight innings as the Cavaliers’ pitching managed to hold Ole Miss to one run and seven hits.

While sophomore pitcher Tyler Wilson mounted a strong defense after relieving senior Robert Poutier, UVA offense joined the Rebels on the scoreboard in the fourth inning. With sophomores Dan Grovatt on second and Phil Gosselin on third, freshman John Hicks hit a sacrifice fly to bring Gosselin home for the run.

The fifth inning saw three more Virginia runs by sophomore John Barr, junior Franco Valdes and freshman Steven Proscia.

To seal the win in the eight inning, UVA junior pitcher Matt Packer kept the Rebels off the scoreboard.

The Cavaliers now head to coach Brian O’Connor’s hometown of Omaha, Nebraska to face off against LSU for the title at Rosenblatt Stadium next weekend.