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    Day For Night Highlights

    Day For Night wows with Kendrick Lamar, New Order, Philip Glass, trippy art and hip designer

    Elizabeth Rhodes
    Dec 21, 2015 | 2:30 pm

    Day For Night, the inaugural Free Press Houston winter art and music festival, had Houstonians' heads spinning with so many exciting musical acts and mind-boggling visual installations presented over the weekend. Held in and around Silver Street Studios, it featured three massive stages and acres of immersive installations, leaving festival goers perpetually entertained.

    Delivering on its promise to provide Houston with an exciting new winter festival in addition to the organization's popular Free Press Summer Fest, the weekend-long event drew thousands of art and music fans, leaving them intrigued to see what next year's event will bring.

    Here are some of my favorite moments:

    Kendrick Lamar gets some help from the audience

    As the last performance of the festival, superstar hip-hop artist Kendrick Lamar wowed a crowd of thousands with a performance that rivaled (or even topped) any headliner from Free Press Summer Fest. The 28-year-old sensation — nominated for more 2016 Grammy Awards than any other performer — drove the sea of fans wild as he walked on stage before launching into "For Free?" from To Pimp A Butterfly, an album that has repeatedly been deemed as the best of the year.

    Jazzed by a live band that featured electric guitars, the crowd hung on Lamar's every rhyme and danced vigorously during his performances of chart-topping tracks like "Alright" and "King Kunta." Only a minute or so into "m.A.A.d. city," he decided to show some Houston love and get help from the audience, bringing up several fans to perform the song along with him.

    Before exiting the stage, Lamar led the crowd in chanting, "I will be back." Given his stellar performance, I certainly hope so.

    New Order gets some help from Alexander Wang

    The Saturday night performance by New Order was surrounded with hype as it was the first Houston performance by the famed English rockers since they performed at AstroWorld's Southern Star Amphitheater in 1989. As it was the band's only tour stop in North America, even hip designer Alexander Wang was drawn to Houston to watch the legendary group perform. Wang was spotted backstage casually attired in Converse tennis shoes.

    As the more pop-influenced reincarnation of '80s post-punk band Joy Division, New Order has fans that span generations, leading to an older crowd than one would expect to find at a Free Press Summer Fest headlining show. While the band played a number of songs from their recently released album Music Complete, fans of their classic hits were delighted to hear songs like "Bizarre Love Triangle" and "Temptation."

    As the final act of the night on Saturday, fans cheered riotously for an encore after the two-hour set, leading to a powerful version of Joy Division's "Love Will Tear Us Apart" before the electrifying performance's finale of the 1983 hit "Blue Monday."

    The Infinity Room makes everyone feel a little trippy

    A huge line of festival goers could be seen throughout the weekend as they waited patiently to experience Turkish artist Refik Anadol's immersive installation, "The Infinity Room." With swirling visual projections reflected by a mirrored floor and ceiling, visitors felt as if they were surrounded by an infinite abyss seething with white light. In spite of the long line that had visitors waiting up to an hour, people were still clamoring to experience the installation and take photos inside.

    Whether you found the experience to be soothingly meditative or even a bit disorienting, there's no question that "The Infinity Room" was one of the most exciting and unique offerings.

    Philip Glass draws the most diverse crowd

    In spite of an early time slot on Saturday, the Philip Glass Ensemble drew one of the largest crowds of the festival for their afternoon performance on the Green stage inside Silver Street Studios. As one of the most influential musicians and composers of the late 20th century and known for his signature minimal repetitive stylings, Glass performed on keyboard with the ensemble that he founded in 1968. The ensemble — composed of Glass and six other talented musicians — performed six of his compositions in front of an incredibly excited and diverse crowd that ranged in age from 16 to 65.

    Perhaps the most notable — and recognizable — piece the group performed was "The Grid" from Glass' score for the 1982 experimental film Koyaanisqatsi, which had the enormous crowd rapt with attention. As the only orchestral group at Day For Night, the immersive performance was quite a departure from many other artists at the festival.

    Nonotak is Strobe City

    As one of several international visual artists presenting works at the festival, Paris-based artists Nonotak created "Volume," a massive light and sound installation that occupied the entirety of an expansive warehouse across from Silver Street Studios. With bright strobe lights mounted on a maze of scaffolding, the lights flashed in the darkness to create a 'zooming' effect as they turned on and off around the vast structure. Visitors were able to walk through the scaffolding of the installation, which also featured a rather ominous droning sound accompanying the lights, creating a truly unique experiential environment.

    Flying Lotus creates a dazzling visual display

    As one of the last performances of the weekend-long festival, experimental artist Steven Ellison — known by his stage name Flying Lotus — knew he really had to impress the crowd, and he certainly followed through. With a multi-genre style that often blends hip-hop and electronic music, he sat behind a projection scrim, allowing the audience to see Ellison through a dazzling visual display. With chill electronic jams like "Zodiac Shit" and "Massage Situation," his set was the perfect calm-before-the-storm needed prior to the high energy set by Kendrick Lamar, with whom Ellison recently collaborated on his 2014 album You're Dead.

    "The Infinity Room" by Refik Anadol.

    Day For Night The Infinity Room
      
    Photo by Julian Bajsel
    "The Infinity Room" by Refik Anadol.
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    Movie Review

    How to Train Your Dragon remake puts a fresh twist on the original

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 12, 2025 | 4:14 pm
    Toothless and Mason Thames in How to Train Your Dragon
    Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures
    Toothless and Mason Thames in How to Train Your Dragon.

    Let’s get it out of the way right at the top: The new live-action How to Train Your Dragon, coming a mere 15 years after the original animated film, serves no real purpose other than to make more money for Universal Pictures and Dreamworks Pictures. However, unlike Disney’s approach toward remaking their animated movies, this attempt manages to succeed on its own merits instead of being a half-baked vessel for nostalgia.

    As fans will remember, Hiccup (Mason Thames) lives in Berk, a town on a remote island populated by Vikings who constantly have to defend themselves against rampaging dragons. Hiccup’s dad, Stoick (Gerard Butler), is the community’s vaunted leader, with a legacy that seems impossible for Hiccup to measure up to, especially since he’s stuck in the armory alongside Gobber (Nick Frost).

    But Hiccup has a knack for inventions, and his use of one new weapon during a dragon attack takes down a feared Night Fury. Finding the wounded dragon deep in the forest, Hiccup decides against killing it, leading to an unexpected bond between the two of them. Most of the film shows Hiccup trying to prove himself to his townspeople, including the fierce Astrid (Nico Parker), while also nursing the dragon he dubs Toothless back to health with the help of another one of his ingenious creations.

    Written and directed by Dean DeBlois (who’s had the same roles on all four HTTYD films), the film is most notable for how engaging it is despite it retelling a story many already know and love. The biggest reason for this is a pivot away from telling a story mainly for kids toward one that feels like an extremely light version of Game of Thrones. Almost right away, there are real stakes for the people in the film, and the way DeBlois and his team stage the scenes, the danger can be felt by the audience.

    This sense of “realness” comes through especially well in the scenes between Hiccup and Toothless. The design of Toothless is faithful to the original, but the CGI makes the dragon feel amazingly believable. And when they start flying, the film literally and metaphorically takes off. At multiple points, the camera seems to have trouble keeping them in frame, a smart move toward verisimilitude when the filmmakers clearly could have made it an overly smooth watching experience.

    Even though it’s more serious than the original, the film still has plenty of fun to offer. Characters like Gobber (who replaces his two missing limbs with odd contraptions) and the ragtag group of teenagers who come to be in awe of Hiccup’s skills at taming dragons provide more than a few laughs. Hiccup isn’t quite as goofy as he was when voiced by Jay Baruchel, which turns out to be a good thing as his sense of purpose amps up the drama of the story.

    Thames’ performance gets better and better as the film goes along, as Hiccup goes from town whipping boy toward hero. He really shines in the last act when he’s given a few scenes that show off his acting range. Parker is equally good, demonstrating the girl power needed for the role, but also the softness of a potential love interest. Butler, the only actor reprising their voice role, is a great presence who sells the outsized personality of Stoick.

    Against the odds, this new version of How to Train Your Dragon is equal to the success of the first film, accomplishing the goal of making it feel like you’re watching the story for the first time. If live-action remakes are going to continue to come out, future filmmakers should study this film for how to respect both the history of the franchise and the audience paying good money to be entertained.

    ---

    How to Train Your Dragon opens in theaters on June 13.

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