Most Popular
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Swingtown
Local swingers think life is a bowl of cherries, but Duncanville wants to spit out the Pit
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Deep Ellum LIVES!
Scott Beck's about to buy 14 acres in the"heart" of Deep Ellum. What then?
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Un-Super Size Me: One Week of Eating Local
One mans attempt at slow food living in the Dallas metroplex
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Toll You So
The Trinity River Project should be floating right along. Instead it's sinking under the weight of its own folly.
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Six Pac
The Cowboys are counting on NFL outlaw Pacman Jones to pop the top on their sixth Super Bowl.
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In the Heat of the Knight
Summer '08: Batman saved the season, while a little Sex went a long way and the indies went south
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Intolerable Cruelty
Remarkably consistent, the Coens make another mockery with Burn After Reading
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Miracle at Santa Anna
No matter the runtime and budget, Spike Lee's World War II drama is an epic bore
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Your Friends & Neighbors
Racial tension, above and below the surface, in Neil LaBute's Lakeview Terrace
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Choke
Palahniuk adaptation needs the Heimlich
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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Jim Schutze
Teachers get axed and parents fret as Dallas' school leaders scramble to cover a budget hole
Two mediocre adaptations by two directors who really should have known better
Palahniuk adaptation needs the Heimlich
And they bring him to life in Ghost Town
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Village Voice
Subjected to the light of day, Sarah Palin doesn't look like a maverick at all.
By Wayne Barrett
SF Weekly
Exposing a construction-site scam only a San Francisco cop could love.
By Joe Eskenazi
Houston Press
Ronald Taylor is one of perhaps hundreds of innocent people Harris County has put in prison.
By Randall Patterson
Westword
Sloppy U.S. government paperwork is putting the lives of asylum seekers at risk.
By Lisa Rab
On Trek
Nemesis goes where many have gone before
Published on December 12, 2002
The 10th Trek film, ostensibly the last featuring the Next Generation crew (or any other, c'mon), plays like a greatest-hits remix; like Die Another Day, it's bent on resurrecting a moribund franchise by recalling all the things you used to love about it till you grew into big-boy pants. And so the geek weenie tingles at the mere mention of Kirk and Tholians, at the sight of Whoopi Goldberg and Kate Mulgrew, at the conjuring of oldies-but-goodies Romulans as the enemies at long last; plenty of pointy ears to go around this go-round. But more than anything, this epic (two hours, and you feel every last second) plays like a Wrath of Khan remake, down to the near-destruction of the U.S.S. Enterprise and the, ahem, death of a key crew member. Instead of Kirk and Khan, we get Captain Picard (Patrick Stewart) dueling in a space cloud with his cloned "brother" Shinzon (Tom Hardy), who intends on leading the Romulans against the Federation using a weapon that a bit too closely promises the wholesale destruction delivered by Khan's Genesis device. (There's also plenty of Undiscovered Country here, for those keeping score.) For a while the movie is fun and not a little funky; there's the promise of a space nudist colony, which is perhaps better left unseen (make your own Klingon joke, though preferably not in Klingon). Questions abound, though, such as when did the transporter get replaced by a dune buggy? And why do wedding bands in the future still sound like they did in 1978? And why does Brent Spiner insist on singing whenever possible? In all, the fifth-best Trek film. If I have to tell you the other four, you've no business reading this at all.