SXSW 2013: Robert Kelly’s Nasty Show with Aisha Tyler @ Esther’s Follies – Presented by TuneIn 03.12

SXSW 2013: Robert Kelly’s Nasty Show with Aisha Tyler @...
By

I recently overheard to a comedy podcast in the SLUG office called The Champs, and Aisha Tyler was a guest on it. She was fucking hilarious. When I heard she was going to be at SXSW, I knew I had to see her. … read more

SXSW 2013: The Very Best @ Club de Ville – Invisible Children Showcase 03.12

SXSW 2013: The Very Best @ Club de Ville –...
By

From the minute a tall, lanky African American man wearing a top hat and Mardi Gras beads stepped onto the stage to put some blow-up palm trees in the corner, I knew I was going to like The Very Best. … read more

SXSW 2013: The Geeks @ The Elysium K-Pop Night Out Showcase 03.12

SXSW 2013: The Geeks @ The Elysium K-Pop Night Out...
By

I entered The Elysium at dusk. The bar was dark and had great black-lighting. Although the crowd let me down, I was able to look past them and sense the genuineness that The Geeks offer, who got me pumped for the rest of my night. … read more

SXSW 2013: Dark Sky @ Club Barcelona – Surefire Agency Showcase 03.12

SXSW 2013: Dark Sky @ Club Barcelona – Surefire Agency...
By

I chose to see electronic DJ Dark Sky because I had some unexpected free time open up after walking out on Houston’s pop punk trio, Something Fierce. I was intrigued by the DJ group booked to play after Dark Sky (Jets, from Berlin) so I took another risk, rolled the dice and decided to hit up Club Barcelona a little early.   … read more

SXSW 2013: Mitzi @ Red 7 – Terrorbird Showcase 03.12

SXSW 2013: Mitzi @ Red 7 – Terrorbird Showcase 03.12
By

I can’t remember where I came across Mitzi, but they were the very first to go on my list of SXSW “must-sees,” which was fitting, because they were the first show I saw at the festival.  … read more

Slamdance Film Review: Vipaka

Slamdance Film Review: Vipaka
By

Former therapist/current life coach Thomas Carter (Anthony Mackie) has just released his self-help book and is on the road to success when his brother, Ben (Mike Epps), shows up and threatens to unearth haunting moments from Tommy’s past. In an attempt to make some quick cash to pay off his troubled brother, Tommy adds several additional days to his book tour and takes on a new client named Angel (Forest Whitaker).  … read more

Slamdance Film Review: Joy de V.

Slamdance Film Review: Joy de V.
By

In her debut feature film, Nadia Szold presents a nostalgic look back at the classic film noir period. Joy de V takes place in a version of New York heavily shrouded in organized crime, where Roman (Evan Louison), a small-time con-artist whose biggest scam is receiving disability checks by pretending to be crazy, and his seven-month-pregnant wife, Joy (Josephine de La Baume), live happily in a small apartment. 
… read more

Slamdance Film Review: Where I Am

Slamdance Film Review: Where I Am
By

In 1999, writer Robert Drake was brutally attacked by two local men and left for dead in Sligo, Ireland. The assault left Drake horribly crippled: unable to walk without a sense of balance, he is now confined to a wheelchair, and has difficulty speaking or paying attention for long periods of time. … read more

Slamdance Film Review: The Brotherhood of the Traveling Rants

Slamdance Film Review: The Brotherhood of the Traveling Rants
By

Opening with Gavin McInnes—the “Godfather of Hipsterdom” and one of the co-creators of Vice Magazine—going around and asking famous comedians how to be funny, The Brotherhood of the Traveling Rants is a lot of fun. After turning his book tour into a comedy tour, McInnes gets his BFF from high school, Steve Durand, drunk and takes advantage of him… I mean, gets him to agree to go on the tour with him… yeah, that’s it.  … read more

Slamdance Film Review: Domestic

Slamdance Film Review: Domestic
By

In this heartfelt film, Romanian director Adrian Sitaru takes us along on his investigation of humanity’s relationship with the animals we love, the animals we eat and the difference between the two. Focusing on the lives of a small, tight-knit Romanian community, Domestic is a charming examination of how relationships with animals can help us deal with life, and with death, without taking itself too seriously. … read more