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    animal world avengers

    New Houston Museum of Natural Science exhibit celebrates extraordinary animals

    Jef Rouner
    May 23, 2025 | 9:00 am

    The Houston Museum of Natural Science's new exhibit Extreme Animals Alive brings a group of super heroes to the museum's basement. It's made up entirely of animals with extraordinary abilities, and some of them are truly remarkable.

    Consider the humble sea cucumber, which can be seen in the museum's touch tank. The tank is so massive that it has to reside in the basement in order not to damage the floor. At first glance, sea cucumbers are not particularly interesting, looking like, well, cucumbers.

    However, under the presentation of Nicole Temple, the museum's vice president of youth education, these echinoderms become alien anti-heroes worthy of a Marvel movie. Did you know that they are untraceable? If a scientist tries to implant a tracking device, dye, or any other monitoring the technology, the cucumber will simply expel it within hours. Also, if they can't find any food to eat with their suddenly-appearing Lovecraftian tentacles, they will start eating their own brain until another meal comes along.

    That's just one example of why Temple frames her menagerie as a kind of educational Avengers. Each animal is presented with a massive, brightly-colored poster that resembles a comic book cover. Temple wrote all the captions, including several jokes, such as saying an animal's likes include harassing keepers and eating sand.

    "I find that, if you approach things with grace and humor, it works better than just screaming facts at people," she said in an interview during a press preview. "The more people know about the natural world, the more likely they are to protect it. We want to make sure that people see the animals that are affected by cutting down trees and leaving plastic everywhere."

    Extreme Animals Alive opens Friday, May 23, and will run for several months. However, it won't be a part of the permanent collection and requires an additional entrance fee between $20 and $35.

    Currently, the entire basement area is being reconfigured into a child care center with an ocean theme that will host visitors from toddlers to grade schoolers. Eventually, it will include the space currently being utilized by the exhibit. Ultimately, the touch tank will remain, but there will also be craft labs and other places for younger visitors to learn and enjoy the museum.

    Houston Museum of Natural Science Extreme Animals Alive

    Photo by Mike Rathke

    Meet Eustace, a six-banded armadillo.

    Until then, Extreme Animals Alive is a great chance to learn about the bioluminescence of the opossum, watch the frantic antics of fennec foxes, or try to spot all six of the mossy frogs camouflaged in their habitat. As the comic book aesthetic says, some of the ways animals have adapted are marvelous, from axolotls' regrowing limbs to the nigh-invincibility of the cockroach. It's a lighthearted, living tribute to overcoming nature's odds that should be fun for everyone.

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    Movie Review

    Sheriff Bob Odenkirk is back in over-the-top new action movie 'Normal'

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 17, 2026 | 2:30 pm
    Bob Odenkirk in Normal
    Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures
    Bob Odenkirk in Normal.

    Screenwriter Derek Kolstad, who wrote the first three John Wick movies, has essentially had a blank check to do what he wants in the movie landscape since 2014. In recent years that has meant writing the action series Nobody for Bob Odenkirk, who has turned from a comedian into an unlikely action star in his sixties. Kolstad and Odenkirk are teaming up again in Normal.

    A film that tries to evoke Fargo in multiple ways, Normal finds Ulysses Richardson (Odenkirk) serving as a temporary sheriff for the small town of Normal, Minnesota after the previous sheriff died. Knowing he’s just a steward until a new sheriff is elected, Ulysses takes a live-and-let-live approach to the job, letting the deputies (Ryan Allen and Billy MacLellan) do the grunt work and trying to stay out of everyone’s way, including Mayor Kibner (Henry Winkler).

    A bank robbery attempt by two non-citizens upsets his best-laid plans in more ways than he can imagine. Not only is he forced to confront a crime not often seen in a town like Normal, but the robbery uncovers secrets that turn the film into an all-out bloodbath. Soon, almost everyone in town becomes involved in what comes to resemble a war, along with — you guessed it — Yakuza henchmen from Japan.

    Directed by Ben Wheatley and written by Kolstad, the film is a slight twist on the everyman-turned-hero character Odenkirk played in the two Nobody films. While Ulysses is in law enforcement, he prefers to use words instead of weapons, and it’s only when he’s pushed to the brink that he crosses that line. Naturally, his skills are beyond what anyone would expect of him, allowing him to match up well with people half his age.

    The film is not a comedy in the traditional sense, but instead aims for laughs by catching the audience off-guard with its ultraviolence. Some characters are dispatched in shockingly unexpected ways, with one of the only natural reactions to the jarring nature of their deaths being laughter. That’s not necessarily the case for other killings, which range from blasé to sadistic, and the only reason they count as entertainment is because the filmmakers have primed the audience to accept them as such.

    After a relatively solid setup, where Wheatley and Kolstad seem to take their time getting to know the main characters, the second half of the film is pure action that dispenses with good storytelling. Like many action movies, there are double crosses, surprise revelations, and more, but the filmmakers don’t seem to care about making sense of any character arcs. All they care about is delivering mayhem, and they succeed on that front.

    Odenkirk has perfected the mild-yet-intimidating nature of his action characters, and it is satisfying to see him get the better of those who have done him wrong. He doesn’t run or jump like fellow 63-year-old Tom Cruise, but — with the help of fast-paced editing — he still makes for a credible action hero. The only other actors of any note in the film are Winkler, who’s a nice presence with his sardonic personality, and Lena Headey, whose small role doesn't match up with her experience.

    You have to have a certain mindset to enjoy a film like Normal, but if you can abide its over-the-top bloodiness, it’s a serviceable action film. Few would have expected Odenkirk to take on these kinds of roles at this late stage of his career, but he’s making the most of his opportunities.

    ---

    Normal opens in theaters on April 17.

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