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    Sundance Faves

    Sundance shines: Four fave flicks from America's top film festival that you can watch at home

    Jane Howze
    Dec 26, 2015 | 9:30 am

    Christmas night begins one of the highest-grossing weeks of the year for movie theaters, but you won’t find me at the cineplex. I spend the week between Christmas and New Year’s at home catching some of the hidden gems that premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival last January and are just now making their way to video on demand.

    Although the festival didn’t produce any box office bonanzas like the 2014 Sundance hits Boyhood or Whiplash, here are two documentaries and two dramas that shouldn't be missed and will tide avid filmgoers over until my reports on the 2016 Sundance Film Festival next month.

    The Hunting Ground

    The Hunting Ground, one of the year’s most talked about documentaries, provides a shocking and brutal exposé of the epidemic of rapes at institutes of higher learning, which often discount, ignore, “blame-the victim,” or cover up the alleged crimes. The stories are interwoven with shocking statistics — one out of five women will be raped or sexually attacked during her college years.

    The Hunting Ground pulls no punches. Along with institutions such as Harvard, Notre Dame and the University of North Carolina, it takes on both the fraternity system and money-infested college sports programs, both of which the filmmakers believe foster a culture of rape.

    This powerful, sobering documentary received standing ovations and rave reviews from the Sundance crowd. It premiered on CNN last month to high ratings and criticism from universities and conservative groups. But it has illuminated a topic that is rarely talked about, and several colleges have now changed the way they deal with campus sexual assaults as a result.

    CNN will rebroadcast The Hunting Ground on Sunday December 27 at 10 pm. It has been named as one of 15 documentaries still in the running for the 2015 Academy Awards.

    Prophet’s Prey

    Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief was the topic of big buzz at Sundance, largely due to the titillation factor of church members Tom Cruise and John Travolta. But Prophet’s Prey was a much creepier and unsettling film in part because of its leader, Warren Jeffs, whose otherwordly hypnotic voice narrates part of the film. Jeffs, the polygamous leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) sexually abused and married dozens of young girls (90 wives at last count), some of whom were mere preteens.

    Jeffs was on the run for three years before being apprehended in Texas and sentenced to life in prison. Part of his conviction was based on a taped recording of him raping a 12-year-old on their “wedding night,” which is included in the film. The film also features parents whose daughter was kidnapped within 24 hours after she returned to them. She has disappeared and the family believes they will probably never see her again.

    Prophet’s Prey is especially heartbreaking because there is no petition to sign or cause to contribute to remedy the situation. All the viewer can do is feel hopeless. At the press conference following the film’s premiere, author Jon Krakauer, who wrote the book upon which the documentary is based, noted that Jeffs still controls his 10,000 followers from prison, which is even more unsettling than the film itself.

    Available on Showtime on Demand

    Me and Earl and the Dying Girl

    Winner of the 2015 Sundance Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl is the story of a dorky high school senior (Thomas Mann), whose mom forces him to spend time with a classmate (Olivia Cooke) who was just diagnosed with leukemia. Sounds terrible and depressing? Not really. Sure, you will need a handkerchief, but the laughs and the sheer magic of the film will outnumber the tears.

    Despite positive reviews, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl did not have the audience appeal of the similarly themed The Fault of our Stars, but in my opinion it is the more creative and original film.

    Available on VOD

    I’ll See You in My Dreams

    I’ll See You In My Dreams is the story of Carol, a 70-year-old widow (played by the talented Blythe Danner), who must decide how to keep going once her beloved dog dies — the first of several events to disrupt her predictable routine. The film is a wonderfully funny, touching and sad testament about relationships, pushing boundaries, aging and the choices one makes as a result of loss.

    In January, I wrote “this is one of those films I just want to shout from the roof tops about how poignant and good it is. And I want Danner to get the recognition she so richly deserves — if she is just peaking at age 71, a lot of the social security set are going to be inspired.”

    While early Oscar talk for Danner has died down—no doubt due to so little publicity for the movie—it still gets my vote for my favorite Sundance film of 2015.

    Available on VOD

    Olivia Cooke and Thomas Mann star in Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.

    Olivia Cooke and Thomas Mann in Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
    Photo by Anne Marie Fox
    Olivia Cooke and Thomas Mann star in Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.
    movies
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    Best January Art

    Blockbuster Frida Kahlo exhibit and 8 more new Houston art openings

    Tarra Gaines
    Jan 8, 2026 | 3:00 pm
    Nickolas Muray, Frida with her Pet Eagle, Coyoacán, 1939, printed 2024, inkjet print, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, gift of Nickolas Muray Photo Archives.
    Nickolas Muray, Frida with her Pet Eagle, Coyoacán, 1939, printed 2024, inkjet print, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, gift of Nickolas Muray Photo Archives.
    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents "Frida: The Making of an Icon

    The art world looks to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston this month as it unveils a monumental Frida Kahlo exhibition, but there’s many other shows around Houston opening this month, especially of contemporary and new art. From possible AI photographic futures to photo art that weaves the past and present together, from ceramics turned inside out to magic mirrors, and the art of agriculture, Houston museums and galleries bring us a very artful New Year.

    “Anachronous” at Holocaust Museum Houston (now through March 8)
    In this new exhibition of work from Argentinian photographer Cynthia Isakson, the artist has selected old family photos taken and kept over decades through war, displacement, and travels across continents. She then takes those images and incorporates them into her contemporary photography. Melded together, these layered images become new stories and expansive portraits of a family over many years.

    The 18 digital photographs in the exhibition were printed on fabric and thematically draw ties between the past and present, illustrating the family threads woven through time. Generations and place also become linked, as viewers witness the connections between Warsaw, Buenos Aires, and Houston through five generations of one family.

    “norMAL and unreMARKable” at Throughline (January 10-February 7)
    Featuring works by Heather L. Johnson and Henry G. Sanchez, this show of recent pieces explore how we define the “unusual” and “exceptional” in both psychological and sociological terms. Johnson works with embroidery and drawing to explore physical manifestations of environmental toxicity brought on by society’s technological dependence. After being diagnosed with cancer, Sanchez broke with his past social art practice to experiment with multimedia installations. He uses this work as a way to consider how that diagnosis has changed his artistic and personal mission. Taken together, these “norMAL and unreMARKable” pieces examine the fragility of contemporary life.

    “The Uncanny In-Between” at Blaffer Art Museum (January 10-March 14)
    This exhibition of ceramic work will showcase five acclaimed artists of Korean heritage who work across the U.S., including Audrey An (Philadelphia), Wansoo Kim (Clarksville), Hoon Lee (Allendale), Texan Hayun Surl, and Hae Won Sohn (Alfred, New York). Organized by Sso-Rha Kang, curator at the Carnegie in Covington, Kentucky, these ceramic pieces have subversive forms that weave together personal mythologies, traditional techniques, and technological interventions.

    At once an exhibition and also an archival project, the ceramic pieces will be shown beside high-resolution 3D digital renderings of the interiors of each artwork. These renderings allow Blaffer visitors to glimpse the interior of some of the pieces, viewing the art beyond the surface into their hidden depths.

    “End Cash Bail” at Lawndale Art Center (January 14-17)
    This limited-time exhibition centered on Texas prison systems brings together the visual and literary arts with works of poetry, paintings, collages, cyanotypes, photography, and more. Curated by KB Brookins, the ACLU of Texas artist-in-residence, Lawndale states that the exhibition is intentionally wide-spanning in perspective and art mediums and genre to show the extensive impact and responses to the Texas jail crisis.

    “Magic Mirrors” at Art League Houston (January 16-April 19)
    While the term probably conjures up vain queens in need of a beauty pep talk , magic mirrors are real historic pieces of art first invented in ancient China. When light hits the front of the “mirror,” an engraving on the back is projected onto an opposite surface. Interdisciplinary artist Jamie Ho began with the concept of a “magic mirror” to create art that explores how Chinese American women and their bodies have been depicted historically and in popular culture.

    Ho’s work uses GIFs, sculptures, new media, and installations to play with concepts of mirror images. As her sculptures reference historical and current Chinese diasporic objects, Ho also projects GIFs of her body onto the surfaces of some of her sculptures to create ghostly afterimages.

    “The River Entered My Home” at Art League Houston (January 16-April 19)
    Collaborating as Hammonds + West, Austin multimedia artist Hollis Hammonds and Austin poet and professor Sasha West interweave Morton’s drawings and West’s poetic text into multimedia installations and exhibits. The duo create work with an ecological and environmental focus on a personal and societal scale. Hammonds’ drawings depict the melancholy and darkness manifested in West’s poems, while West’s poems connect to Hammond’s visual landscapes which are often reflections on a fire that consumed her childhood home in Kentucky. As they collaborate across several different mediums, they blend sound with sculptural installation, video with drawings, and words with images.

    “Mud + Corn + Stone + Blue” at Blaffer Art Museum (January 17-March 14)
    Art, political history, and agriculture meet in this new exhibition organized by Blaffer chief curator Laura Augusta. Through the art works selected, the exhibition traces historical entanglements between the United States and Central America through the distinctive angle of U.S. agricultural policy.

    The show looks to be both expansive and personal as Augusta has drawn upon connections between her family’s history in the Great Plains and her relationships built through art in Guatemala. She notes the shared histories across the U.S. and Central America since the 1960s related to the corn industry. The artists showcased in “Mud + Corn + Stone + Blue” are from the U.S. Corn Belt, Guatemala, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Honduras, with the exhibition drawing links between these places to illustrate their connections that cross borders and time.

    “Frida: The Making of an Icon” at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (January 19-May 17)
    Fridamania will grip Houston this year, as the MFAH opens this brand new exhibition that they also organized. (Dance lovers should also look for the Houston Ballet to present Broken Wings, a ballet about the life of Kahlo in March.) What makes “Frida: The Making of an Icon” so different from most of the other surveys and retrospectives of Kahlo’s work around the world is this exhibition’s focus on how both her life and art inspired other artists over the many decades since her death.

    While the show will feature 35 masterpieces by Kahlo herself, it will also examine her great legacy and influence on other artists, including painters, sculptorsm and photographers, as well as activists and social communities. Organized thematically around some of those movements, like “Surrealism” and “Gendered Dialogues,” the show will also feature a special gallery of Frida related mass produced merchandise, as well as handcrafted tributes to her.

    “The exhibition reveals how the different facets of Kahlo’s complex persona(lity), which she so carefully crafted and projected, were adapted again and again over her decades-long transformation into an icon,” explains exhibition curator Mari Carmen Ramírez.

    “Imaging after Photography” at Rice’s Moody Center for the Arts (January 23-May 9)
    With the rise of AI as a tool to generate visual imaging, seeing may no longer be believing when it comes to the use of photography for documenting reality. As artists and photographers explore this new technology, they wrestle with how AI technology might reshape their art and how we see the world.

    Always on the vanguard of where art and science meet, the Moody Center presents this new exhibition of works by seven acclaimed national and international artists, including Nouf Aljowaysir, Refik Anadol, Grégory Chatonsky, Sofia Crespo, Joan Fontcuberta, Lisa Oppenheim, and Trevor Paglen. Though working in different photographic and video mediums, they all incorporate contemporary technologies into their practice in order to reflect on the history and future of photography. While their perspectives on a future where AI becomes a significant component of everyday life span a range from optimistic to pessimistic, these artists never shy from the complexity of those possibilities.

    “There are few topics as urgent as artificial intelligence and its impact on all facets of society,” describes Alison Weaver, Moody Center executive director and co-curator of the exhibition. “Through this presentation of works by some of today’s most thoughtful and visionary artists, we hope to inspire dialogue about the influence of new technologies on the images that populate our daily lives and shape our visual culture.”

    Nickolas Muray, Frida with her Pet Eagle, Coyoac\u00e1n, 1939, printed 2024, inkjet print, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, gift of Nickolas Muray Photo Archives.
    Nickolas Muray, Frida with her Pet Eagle, Coyoacán, 1939, printed 2024, inkjet print, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, gift of Nickolas Muray Photo Archives.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents "Frida: The Making of an Icon."

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