Pete's Popcorn Picks

Bob Dylan outtake,

07/25/08

Bob Dylan outtake, "New Danville Girl"

Just came across this cool Bob Dylan outtake from his 1987 album, Knocked Out Loaded. The album is widely considered one of Dylan's worst, but it did contain the standout track, Brownsville Girl, an epic, sprawling song that was also included on Dylan's Greatest Hits Volume 3. Apparently, the working title of the song was "New Danville Girl." Check it out!

Dylan's hero, Woody Guthrie, wrote a classic song named "Danville Girl." Don't know when Bob decided to change from the Woody homage to Brownsville, but I'll make sure to ask him if we run into one another.

Posted at 12:42 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

Beth Lisick & Tara Jepsen's new show: Getting in on the Ground Floor and Staying There

07/24/08

Beth Lisick & Tara Jepsen's new show: Getting in on the Ground Floor and Staying There

One of my favorite assignments this year was interviewing Beth Lisick, the hysterically funny Berkeley author and performance artist. If you haven't read her books Everybody Into The Pool and Helping Me Help Myself, pick them up—they are perfect summer reads. Beth just sent me a note that she and her friend Tara Jepsen are perfroming a comedy show in San Francisco, which kicks off tonight and runs through next weekend at the Center for Sex and Culture in San Francisco. Here's what Beth says about the show:

Tara  and I are gearing up for our show, Getting In On the Ground Floor and Staying There, a ten year retrospective of our comedic "career" together. We'll be doing bits from our lady duos Carole & Mitzi, Miriam & Helen, and...

Posted at 07:20 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

New season of Mad Men premieres July 27

07/24/08

New season of Mad Men premieres July 27

I'm halfway through season one of Mad Men on dvd, hoping to get through it before the premiere of season two this Sunday. Have you seen this show? It's amazing! It's like The Best of Everything, Twin Peaks, and The Sopranos wrapped up into one delicious hour. Big props to AMC for its foray into original programming. For the uninformed, Mad Men is about the world of early 1960s Madison Avenue advertsing executives, and features some of the coolest set decorations and art design I've ever seen on television. The melodramatic story arc involves ad exec Don Draper (Jon Hamm), his secret identity, the sinister side of the Leave it to Beaver suburbs, sexist office politics, three martini lunches, and oh, so much more. Here's

Posted at 12:13 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

07/23/08

Tri-Valley produced, star-studded film premieres in SF this weekend

Tri-Valley resident Donna Garrison just let me know that Full Grown Men, a new feature film she produced, is premiering this weekend at the lumiere Theater in San Francisco. While I haven't seen the film, I have to say I'm quite impressed by the cast—especially Debbie Harry, one of my fave divas and indie actresses of all time. Also, Judah Friedlander, so good on 30 Rock and in the brilliant American Splendor, is always watchable. Information about the opening below:

FULL GROWN MEN
The Sundance Channel Undiscovered Gems Audience Award-Winning Comedy
by local filmmakers
David Munro, Xandra Castleton, and Brian Benson
Starring Matt McGrath, Judah Friedlander, Alan Cumming, Amy Sedaris & Debbie Harry

San Francisco...

Posted at 02:46 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

07/23/08

The Daily Show in the East Bay

I'm watching much more TV content online these days than on the old fashioned boob tube. One of my favorite shows is the Daily Show, Comedy Central's brilliant news and politics satire. I missed this clip when it aired back in March, when the Daily Show sent a correspondant to cover the controversy at the Marine recruiting office in downtown Berkeley. Let's just say the clip doesn't help dissolve the stereotype about Berkeley's hippie population...very funny stuff!

Posted at 10:28 AM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

Fantastic French thriller: Tell No One

07/22/08

Fantastic French thriller: Tell No One

Everybody's all hyped up about Batman and rightfully so: The Dark Knight is the most spectacular big budget blockbuster to come around in a long, long time. But if you're a mystery lover like me, you'll want to check out the French thriller Tell No One, playing now at the Albany Cinema and the Embarcadero in San Francisco. Hopefully, it will come to the Orinda or the Pleasant Hill Cinearts soon, as a film this smart and entertaining will find an audience in CoCoCounty.

The movie is based on a novel by American author Harlan Coben, who collaborated on the screenplay with writer/director Guillaume Canet. The densely plotted story revolves around a doctor, whose wife was murdered...perhaps...eight years earlier. The doctor had been a suspect in his wife's murder,...

Posted at 11:27 AM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

Diablo gets the first look at The Dark Knight

07/17/08

Diablo gets the first look at The Dark Knight

Halfway through an early screening of the Dark Knight, the sensational new Batman movie by British director Christopher Nolan, the picture went dark and the film stopped. A half filled IMAX theater of critics and entertainment insiders booed and hissed the faux pas like a batch of petulant babies. But not me. I sat in the theater quietly, trying to absorb the 90 or so minutes of brilliance I had witnessed, when I realized that my heart was literally pounding from the suspense that Nolan had been cranking from the film's first scene.

This is not your typical summer blockbuster.

Dark, brooding, and best for adults (or older teens), The Dark Knight  feels more like A Clockwork Orange or Silence of the Lambs than it does  your...

Posted at 12:04 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

07/15/08

Fantastic new doc: Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson

Up until Friday, my favorite film of 2008 was WALL*E, without question. Then I saw the sensational new documentary, Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, which shot up my year's best list to the number one spot. (Since logging it, I've seen Hellboy 2 and The Dark Knight, and it will take me a little while to decompress these fantastic entertainment pieces). Gonzo focuses on Thompson's influence as a writer, then explores his place in larger popular culture. Particularly gripping is the content surrounding the creation of Thomspon's most "gonzo" works of journalism: The late 1960s book Hell's Angels, and the classics Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail '72....

Posted at 03:06 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

Cool Rolling Stones photo exhibit in San Francisco

07/10/08

Cool Rolling Stones photo exhibit in San Francisco

I'm a huge Stones fan, having seen countless stadium shows over the past 15 years. I'm also a huge fan of the documentary film Gimme Shelter, which follows the Stones on their 1969 concert tour, which ended badly (at least for some), when a Vallejo man was stabbed to death by Hell's Angels at a free concert at the Altamont Speedway in Livermore. Gimme Shelter is a must-see, particulalry fascinating from my perspective because the free concert at Altamont occurred when I was something like 14 days old, living in Lafayette. I always tell people, "I was going to go...but couldn't get a ride."

Anyway, the Stones are a treasure trove of rock history, which brings me to a fantastic photography exhibit that kicks off this weekend in San Francisco. Check out...

Posted at 03:59 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)

Chris Isaak at Wente Vineyards

07/09/08

Chris Isaak at Wente Vineyards

Chris Isaak's sold-out concert at Wente Vineyards was a treat from start to finish—this Stockton natve's annual pilgrimmage to this swanky Livermore concert venue has become one of the East Bay's most pleasant summer traditions. As Isaak took the stage, a sweltering sun mercifully set, and a balmy evening ensued. Dressed in a Nudie-esque blue suit (Isaak joked that he saw it on late night Mexican television and just had to have it) and accompanied by his longtime band, Isaak tore through a two hour set of his retro rockers and sad love songs, peppered with his trademark wiseguy humor. Isaak also played four new songs off an unreleased, upcoming album, all of which sounded great, particularly a Jackson Browne-sounding rocker that followed his biggest hit, "Wicked...

Posted at 04:55 PM in Pete's Popcorn Picks | Permalink | Comments (0)