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    on view now

    The jury's in: Big art show reveals bold new winners, including a stunned 15-year-old

    Tyler Rudick
    Jul 13, 2013 | 2:39 pm

    The Lawndale Art Center revealed the winners of its annual Big Show, anointing three new visual artists in what has become a sort of Hall of Fame for regional talent.

    Perry Chandler, Avril Falgout and Bryan Forrester — a painter, sculptor and photographer/video artist, respectively — officially join the ranks of past champs like Texas Prize recipient Eileen Maxson and Whitney Biennial participant Robert Pruitt, who kicks off a solo exhibit at New York's Studio Museum Harlem this month.

    Selected by guest juror Duncan Mackenzie, co-founder of Chicago's Bad at Sports art blog and podcast, the trio of inductees were culled from a group of 366 artists who collectively submitted nearly 1,000 works to the 2013 competition.

    "I've been making images non-stop for the past decade — first as more of a commercial filmmaker and, in recent years, as an artist," Forrester told CultureMap after Friday night's announcement at the Big Show opening. His Imogene photo-print earned him one of the three $1,000 cash prizes.

    "Getting recognition like this is exciting and feels hugely validating," Forrester says.

    "Getting recognition like this is exciting and feels hugely validating."

    Beaumont-area native Avril Falgout has only recently found herself in the art world . . . mainly because she's still in high school. Her life-sized papier-mâchéhomage to the Hollywood glam-punk band Black Veil Brides holds court at the center of the Lawndale's main gallery.

    "I'm only 15, so I've just gotten into doing this. The Brides are actually the first large piece I've done," she laughed, still somewhat stunned from the award.

    Chandler's painting Scene 74 - Fear through the Eyes of Madness finished up the winner's circle. The captivating image features two disembodied male heads staring each other down amidst a sea of smeared paint and carefully-crafted geometric shapes.

    Other entries to this year's Big Show demonstrate a rather interesting preoccupation with animals, covering everything from household pets, as in Bradley Kerl'sFish Tank and Sarah Hamilton's cat portrait Waiting, to comically surreal human hybrids like Kari Breitigam'sHorn Head.

    The Big Show is on view at the Lawndale Art Center (4912 Main) through Aug. 10.

    Bryan Forrester, Imogene, 2012, C-Print, 24'' x 36''.

      
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    Movie Review

    Video game-inspired 'Minecraft Movie' ventures into glorious absurdity

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 4, 2025 | 12:28 pm
    Jack Black, Jason Momoa, and Sebastian Hansen in A Minecraft Movie
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
    Jack Black, Jason Momoa, and Sebastian Hansen in A Minecraft Movie.

    One reason the majority of movies based on video games have failed is because their filmmakers didn’t understand how to translate the appeal of the game to the relatively-limited storytelling ability of film. Players can often spend hundreds of hours in the world of a video game, and trying to condense that experience down into 90-120 minutes is close to an impossible task.

    Minecraft, a sandbox adventure game which contains countless possibilities for its players, turns out to be the exact right type of game to turn into a movie, at least in the proper hands. A Minecraft Movie is completely and gloriously ridiculous from beginning to end, with the filmmakers - led by director Jared Hess - understanding that to make a movie about a game in which (almost) anything can happen, you have to match that energy.

    And so they tell an uproarious story in which Steve (Jack Black) is a miner on Earth who discovers a portal to the Overworld (aka the world of Minecraft) where everything from animals to plants to food is made up of blocks. After getting trapped in the Nether, a dangerous, hell-like dimension, he sends his trusty dog back to Earth with the cube that opens the portal between Earth and the Overworld.

    Through a hilarious series of events too detailed to properly explain here, the cube falls into the hands of ‘80s video game legend Garett Garrison (Jason Momoa). When Henry (Sebastian Hansen), a 14-year-old who’s just moved to town with his sister, Natalie (Emma Myers), discovers the cube at Garett’s store, the two of them - along with Natalie and local realtor Dawn (Danielle Brooks) - get pulled into the Overworld as well.

    Usually when a film is written by a team of five writers, as is the case here, it’s a sign that the screenplay will be less than cohesive. While they didn’t manage to come up with a comprehensible story, they do fill the running time with as many gags as possible, a strategy that pays off handsomely. Taking the creative ethos of Minecraft and amplifying it immeasurably, the film features too many off-the-wall jokes to know where to begin.

    The connections between the human characters are about as random as can be, and yet due to the nature of the “throw everything at the wall and see what sticks” approach, they develop a strong bond nonetheless. Steve and Garett are both pompous characters whose egos are the sources for much of their humor. Henry and Natalie bring the heart, while Dawn complements the group well despite not really fitting in with everyone else.

    Of course, the whole point of making A Minecraft Movie is to pay tribute to the game, and they are able to throw plenty of bones to the gamers while still entertaining anyone who’s never played it. They incorporate the essentials of the game like building massive structures, crafting items, and interacting with creatures (aka mobs), but in such a fun and engaging way that it doesn’t really matter if a lot of it doesn’t make complete sense.

    Black’s style of acting is one you either love or hate, and this might be the epitome of a Jack Black performance. He dials up virtually every line he delivers, a manic tour-de-force that sets the tone for everyone and everything else in the film. Momoa is also great, delving into comedy in a way he rarely has before and succeeding mightily. Hansen and Myers both work well, giving the film the youthful feel it required, and while Brooks is mostly along for the ride, she gets in a few good scenes of her own.

    Could A Minecraft Movie now take the throne as the best adaptation of a video game ever? That’s purely subjective, but the way Hess and his team put the pedal to the metal from minute one and never let up, it certainly deserves to be part of the conversation. It’s a silly, fast-moving romp that works both as an homage to the game and as a stand-alone movie.

    ---

    A Minecraft Movie opens in theaters on April 4.

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