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    Rodeo Nights

    Blige kicks country's behind: The first sellout & real buzz of RodeoHouston allMary

    Michael D. Clark
    Mar 6, 2010 | 5:15 am

    The sold-out Mary J. Blige show at RodeoHouston brought a different vibe than most rodeo concerts. It was clear the annual Black Heritage Celebration at the rodeo was going to be special before I even got I-610 at Main Street.

    Bobbing and weaving through the traffic headed for Reliant Stadium, I noticed that there was an anxiousness to the aggressive driving on all sides of me. There was a panic to the driving that I had not seen at the other rodeo shows this week.

    As I inched slowly toward the stadium and watched the clock tick toward concert time, I began to understand what was on all these drivers minds.

    Mary J. Blige is singing and I'll be damned if I'm going to miss it!

    Suddenly I was one of them.

    Blige has official ascended to the rarified air beyond celebrity. She is an icon and the buzz emitted from her performance was the rare rodeo performance that could be called historic.

    Forget country. Sometimes country music is overpowered. It took Blige to bring 72,511 crammed-in souls - and a real buzz - to the rodeo.

    She opened with a medley of her earliest hip-hop singles, including "Real Love" and "Love No Limit," from her 1992 debut album "What's the 411?"

    By wrapping up the first half of her career in 15 minutes the message to the audience was clear: "That was the young Mary J. Blige. Let me introduce you to the sophisticated woman I have become."

    From the soulful new big band arrangement of "Sweet Thing," to the gospel-inspired message of self-worth preached on her new song "I Am," Blige doesn't sing a song without instilling a message.

    Her reworking of U2's "One," turned a spare ballad into a choral spiritual and "Be Without You" pulsed with anger, love and sorrow.

    The one-time, rough-and -tough Blige has cleaned up well and settled into a very manicured middle-age (she's 39). Dressed in a slick black waist coat and tights tucked into knee-high boots, the only remnant of the younger, tussled, hip-hop Blige was a punky streak of red under her perfectly styled hair.

    With the same stage, lighting, video board and overall look night after night, an uninspired rodeo shows can have a deja vu effect.

    Blige is that rare rodeo performer who can get up on an unfamiliar stage at RodeoHouston and own it.

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    Movie Review

    Meta-comedy remake Anaconda coils itself into an unfunny mess

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 26, 2025 | 2:30 pm
    Jack Black and Paul Rudd in Anaconda
    Photo by Matt Grace
    Jack Black and Paul Rudd in Anaconda.

    In Hollywood’s never-ending quest to take advantage of existing intellectual property, seemingly no older movie is off limits, even if the original was not well-regarded. That’s certainly the case with 1997’s Anaconda, which is best known for being a lesser entry on the filmography of Ice Cube and Jennifer Lopez, as well as some horrendous accent work by Jon Voight.

    The idea behind the new meta-sequel Anaconda is arguably a good one. Four friends — Doug (Jack Black), Griff (Paul Rudd), Claire (Thandiwe Newton), and Kenny (Steve Zahn) — who made homemade movies when they were teenagers decide to remake Anaconda on a shoestring budget. Egged on by Griff, an actor who can’t catch a break, the four of them pull together enough money to fly down to Brazil, hire a boat, and film a script written by Doug.

    Naturally, almost nothing goes as planned in the Amazon, including losing their trained snake and running headlong into a criminal enterprise. Soon enough, everything else takes second place to the presence of a giant anaconda that is stalking them and anyone else who crosses its path.

    Written and directed by Tom Gormican, with help from co-writer Kevin Etten, the film is designed to be an outrageous comedy peppered with laugh-out-loud moments that cover up the fact that there’s really no story. That would be all well and good … if anything the film had to offer was truly funny. Only a few scenes elicit any honest laughter, and so instead the audience is fed half-baked jokes, a story with no focus, and actors who ham it up to get any kind of reaction.

    The biggest problem is that the meta-ness of the film goes too far. None of the core four characters possess any interesting traits, and their blandness is transferred over to the actors playing them. And so even as they face some harrowing situations or ones that could be funny, it’s difficult to care about anything they do since the filmmakers never make the basic effort of making the audience care about them.

    It’s weird to say in a movie called Anaconda, but it becomes much too focused on the snake in the second half of the film. If the goal is to be a straight-up comedy, then everything up to and including the snake attacks should be serving that objective. But most of the time the attacks are either random or moments when the characters are already scared, and so any humor that could be mined all but disappears.

    Black and Rudd are comedy all-stars who can typically be counted on to elevate even subpar material. That’s not the case here, as each only scores on a few occasions, with Black’s physicality being the funniest thing in the movie. Newton is not a good fit with this type of movie, and she isn’t done any favors by some seriously bad wigs. Zahn used to be the go-to guy for funny sidekicks, but he brings little to the table in this role.

    Any attempt at rebooting/remaking an old piece of IP should make a concerted effort to differentiate itself from the original, and in that way, the new Anaconda succeeds. Unfortunately, that’s its only success, as the filmmakers can never find the right balance to turn it into the bawdy comedy they seemed to want.

    ---

    Anaconda is now playing in theaters.

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