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KITSAP SUN

Friday 2.6.15

A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

Wachowskis

descending Directors’‘JupiterAscending’ isemptysci-fieyecandy. Page 7


2 » Friday, February 6, 2015 » K I T S A P

S U N . A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

Movies KITSAP ’S PREMIER LIVE ENTER TAINMENT VENUE K E AT THE SOURCE

BLUEGRASS BAND RURAL DELIVERY

SHOW 7 P.M.

Friday, February 6, 2015 The Source is the Admiral Theatre’s 70-seat venue, located around the corner on 5th Street from the Main Theatre entrance.

JIM HENSON’S

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS

DINOSAUR TRAIN LIVE

RAYTHEON MUSIC SERIES

JESSE COOK

DINNER 6 P.M. SHOW 7:30 P.M.

Saturday, February 7, 2015 Sponsored by Bob & Pam Battin Caffe Cocina, Sharon, Ken & Eric Mahler Kitsap Clinic of Natural Medicine - Dr. Katherine Barkshire Linda Reed

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Bremerton native Aaron Drane wrote and produced “Fear Clinic,” which was screened at last fall’s ScreamFest genre film festival in Los Angeles and will be available for purchase beginning Feb. 10.

Bremerton native’s indie film ‘Clinic’ ■ Aaron Drane’s feature

unleashed on mass audience

SHOW 6:30 P.M.

By Michael C. Moore mmoore@kitsapsun.com 360-792-9218

Lots of Bremertonians have connections to Kane Hodder. But Aaron Drane goes all of them one better. When he talks about Kane Hodder, he’s not talking about the late, lamented Bremerton rock band who commandeered the name; he’s talking about the real deal. “Kane Hodder has choked me several times,” Drane said matter-of-factly during a recent phone conversation from Los Angeles, where he works as a screenwriter. “He likes to choke people, I found out.” Drane, a 1981 Bremerton High School graduate, found out that little-known but not-very-surprising fact about Hodder — the hulking actor who turned himself into horror-show institution by playing hockeymasked Jason Voorhies in the “Friday the 13th” franchise — when Hodder worked on Drane’s five-episode Internet series “Fear Clinic.” The 2009 series, which also boasted the participation of Robert “Freddy Kreuger” Englund, was, according to Drane, “outted by FearNet (the cable outlet that originally aired it) as the most-watched Internet horror series.” Just like Freddy (“A Nightmare on Elm Street”) and Jason, who resurfaced for

Friday, February 13, 2015 Hill Moving Services Family Series Sponsored by Anonymous Donor Councilman Greg Wheeler & Sunny Wheeler

DINNER 6:30 P.M. CASABLANCA 8 P.M.

Saturday, February 14, 2015 Caffé Perfetto & Huddleston, McKenzie & Assosicates Admiral Film Series Sponsored by Captain Bobby Baker & Patsy Baker Captains Earle & Sandra Smith

CLINT BLACK

CALL FOR TICKETS 360.373.6743 OR SHOW 8 P.M.

Thursday, February 19, 2015 Sponsored by Kitsap Sun Fab 6 Captains Earle & Sandra Smith

Aaron Drane as he looked as a Bremerton High School senior in 1981.

scquel after lucrative sequel, “Fear Clinic” has proven resilient. See DRANE, 3

GET TICKETS ONLINE ADMIRALTHEATRE.ORG


A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T . K I T S A P S U N

« Friday, February 6, 2015 « 3

For delivery concerns, call 360-792-9225 or email suncirculation@kitsapsun.com. LISTINGS INFO Kitsap Arts & Entertainment is published every Friday in the Kitsap Sun. The deadline for entertainment listings is 5 p.m. Friday. The listing will run in the following Friday’s issue.

To submit listings, email entertainment@kitsapsun.com. Be sure to include all pertinent information (i.e. event time, admission charge if any, etc.). Also, include a contact number for public use. A&E INFO Kitsap Arts & Entertainment www.kitsapsun.com

REPORTER, CALENDARS: Michael C. Moore DESIGN EDITOR: Grant Purdum Phone: 360-792-9218 Fax: 360-415-2681 Email: mmoore@kitsapsun.com Mail: Kitsap A&E, P.O. Box 259 Bremerton, WA 98337 INSIDE

Movies 2, 3, 7-11 Local Theater 4 Music 5 Art 6 Kitsap Calendar 12-14 ON THE COVER KITSAP SUN

Friday 2.6.15

A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

Wachowskis

descending Directors’‘JupiterAscending’ isemptysci-fieyecandy. Page 7

Channing Tatum and Mila Kunis star in “Jupiter Ascending,” which opens on Feb. 6 at multiplexes everywhere.

IMAGE COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES

ANCHOR BAY ENTERTAINMENT

Dr. Andover (Robert Englund) puts Sara (Feona Dourif) in the fear chamber.

DRANE from 2

A feature-film reboot, written and produced by Drane and starring Englund, goes on sale Feb. 10 at Best Buy, WalMart and Target stores, which could be just the beginning of its second life, what with the potential for Internet streaming and pay-perview. “My producing partner (Mark B. Johnson) and I got back with the director (Robert Green Hall, who shares writing credit on the feature), and we re-imagined the entire thing in feature form,” said Drane, who headed for Washington State University following his BHS graduation, then did a stint in the Navy aboard the USS Enterprise before landing at the UCLA film school to do graduate studies. “We wanted to make it stand alone. If anything we wanted the Web series to be like a prequel.” “Fear Clinic” is the continuing saga of Dr. Andover

(Englund), who has created the “fear chamber” to help patients rid themselves of trauma-induced phobias by making them deal with their deepest fears. The cast also includes Thomas Dekker (TV’s “Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles,” the 2010 remake of “Nightmare on Elm Street” and the current Rainn Wilson series “Backstrom”), Feona Dourif (the daughter of Brad Dourif, the title voice of the “Chucky” franchise) and Cory Taylor (the front man of the shock-rock band Slipknot, making his film debut). “It’s a great cast,” he said. “We were so lucky to

get Cory. And what do you say about Robert Englund? He’s the Vincent Price of his time.” Drane said the concept for “Fear Clinic” first came to him somewhere on the L.A. freeway system back in 2003. He was “listening to the news, hearing all the stories about all this horrible stuff, and I started thinking that terrorism was turning us into a society of phobics. The thought I had was, ‘We need a fear clinic.’ The fear chamber was the first concept, designed by a doctor who had aspirations of curing the incurable.”

Of all of his writing (Drane has sold several other screenplays during his time in L.A., the first when he was still studying at UCLA), “Fear Clinic” is the only horror piece he’s ever penned. He said his first — appropriately, given his Navy experience and Bremerton upbringing — was “a big action piece about a Navy ship. “(Horror is) a really easy, approachable genre, and there are lots of opportunities to break in,” he added. “But I’ve always been a horror film fan.” Drane still has deep roots in Kitsap (his mother still lives in the East Bremerton

house where he grew up, and he cut his teeth making movies in middle school and the video yearbook for BHS), and said one of his biggest aspirations is to show “Fear Clinic” to his old home town. “I’ve been in L.A. for 25 years, but I still come up there as much as possible,” he said. “I spend my summers up there as much as possible. “Since I was 12, I’ve always wanted to show a movie of mine at the Admiral,” he said. “I’d love to be able to bring this movie up there and show it to everybody.” Not that there won’t be ample opportunity to see and support it. Besides the DVD/Bluray release on Feb. 10, “Fear Clinic” will be available on Xbox Live, iTunes and the Chiller Channel, among others, beginning on Feb. 6. “We’ve got a lot of content out there,” he said, pointing out that the online trailer has had more than 400,000 views. “We had a lot of fans for the TV series, and I think people are excited for this.”


4 Âť Friday, February 6, 2015 Âť K I T S A P

S U N . A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

Theater

If it seems all wrong, then it’s done all right ■BCT’s slapstick

murder mystery should be ‘Drop Dead!’ funny By Michael C. Moore mmoore@kitsapsun.com 360-792-9218

BREMERTON— There’s a challenge for any community theater company when it tackles Billy Van Zandt and Jane Milmore’s “Drop Dead!â€? “It’s a play within a play,â€? said Linda Jensen, who’s directing Bremerton Community Theatre’s production which opens on Feb. 6. “And the play within the play has a bunch of bad actors.â€? Therein lies the challenge: Community actors striving to be the best they can be ... and in this case, that means being the worst they can be. “We used the worst ats we could ďŹ nd (to build the set),â€? Jensen said, “because it’s supposed to look secondrate and cheesy. “The actors are having a lot of fun with it,â€? she added, “but it’s a ďŹ ne line.â€? In the play, a cast of hasbeens and never-weres are attempting to pull their respective careers out of the dumper by staging a murder mystery in an “off-off-offoff-Broadwayâ€? theater. But then a genuine murder mystery breaks out, saving their

PREVIEW ‘DROP DEAD!’

Who: Bremerton Community Theatre What: Comedy by Billy Van Zandt and Jane Milmore Where: BCT’s Montgomery Auditorium, 599 Lebo Blvd., Bremerton When: Feb. 6-March 1; 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays Tickets: $15-$8 Information: 360-373-5152, bremertoncommunitytheatre.org

careers takes a back seat to saving their lives. It’s all written with tongue ďŹ rmly in cheek, as evidenced by character names like Victor LePewe (the director), Alabama Miller (the playwright), Candy Apples (the ex-porn star trying to go legit) and Sol Weisenheimer (the producer). There’s even a character whose brother is ďŹ lm critic Gene Shalit. “It’s all just fun,â€? said Jensen, who directed another play-within-a-playfarce,“The Game’s Afoot (or Holmes for the Holidays)â€? last fall at the Jewel Box. “There’s no moral, no message. It’s just silly.â€? Jensen directed the piece yearsagoforthelatePerformingArtsGuildofSouthKitsap, albeit reluctantly at ďŹ rst. “I wanted to do ‘Glengarry Glen Ross,’â€? she said, “but theycountedtheswearwords and decided there were too many. Debbie Phares brought methisscript,butatďŹ rstIwas still made and refused to read it. When I ďŹ nally did, it was so silly I laughed out loud.â€?

ForBCT’sproduction,LePewe will be played by Jim Bailey, a veteran of many shows at Gig Harbor’s Paradise Theatre making his BCT debut. Another newcomer, Gail Dilling, take the role of Mona. Most of the cast, though, will be familiar to BCT audiences, including Robin Abille (as Alabama), Andy Baker (as Chaz, the apprentice), Jeff Chamberlain (as the stage manager), Elizabeth Dangelo (as Candy), Chris Dolan (as actor Brent Reynolds), Barbara Miller (as actress Constance), Richard Mozingo (as Dick Shalit) and Bruce Waterbury (as Sol). The set, constructed by Jerry Smith and painted (right down to the furniture on the walls and the rug on the oor) by Laurel Spitzer, is both attractive by BCT standards and evocative of a theater where the standards are much lower. That’s the trick to “Drop Dead!â€? — if the play within your play is so bad that it’s good, you’ve done your job.

PHOTOS BY STEVE ZUGSCHWERDT | FOR KITSAP A&E

Chaz (Andy Baker, left) and Sol (Bruce Waterbury) prepare to mix it up as Candy (Elizabeth Dangelo) reacts.

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Music BOB DYLAN

works hard to do justice to the songs and setting. Don’t toss your Sinatra discs aside. By the time Dylan reaches for the last line in album closer, “That Lucky Old Sun,” you’re rooting for him to nail it. He does. The disc is consistent with Dylan’s later-period emphasis on classic American songcraft and material that evokes mortality. It is very specific in its appeal. Yet when it’s time to turn down the lights and pick up a tumbler, you could do far worse.

‘SHADOWS IN THE NIGHT’ Columbia Bob Dylan has never called “Shadows in the Night” a Frank Sinatra tribute album. The idea seems nuts: one of the last century’s greatest songwriters challenging perhaps its greatest voice, on Sinatra’s turf. No wonder it was the butt of jokes before anyone heard a note. The fact remains that each of the 10 standards here, written between 1923 and 1963, was recorded by Sinatra. Some, like “Some Enchanted Evening” or “That Lucky Old Sun,” are fairly well known, others more obscure. Dylan closed his last few concerts with one of them, “Stay With Me.” The precise, and even more intimidating, comparison is Sinatra’s superb 1955 concept disc, “In the Wee Small Hours.” For these are all songs that come to mind when the night gets long, when missed opportunities, regrets and lost loves come to mind. They’re the songs you’d expect the 73-year-old man sitting at the end of the bar to request. Here they are performed in muted fashion, not with

A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T . K I T S A P S U N

David Bauder, Associated Press

“Shadows in the Night,” by Bob Dylan an orchestra, but with Dylan’s band, supplemented by a mournful pedal steel guitar and the occasional subtle horn. The hushed arrangements put even more emphasis on a voice that, let’s face it, was never considered classic even before being ravaged by age. The remarkable thing is that he pulls it off, with crooning you’ve heard from Dylan before. Unlike his holiday album from a few years back, where his croak played like unintentional comedy at times, he

MARK RONSON ‘UPTOWN SPECIAL’

RCA Mark Ronson’s new album, “Uptown Special,” opens with such promising notes: Stevie Wonder’s harmonica, playing so soulful and slow that the listener can’t help but settle in, ready and waiting for what’s sure to be an exhilarating musical story. Sadly, you’ll be kept waiting. That’s not to say there isn’t some good music on Ronson’s fourth effort, because there is. But “Uptown

ll Be i W g n i Draw b 14th e F d l e H at 5pm

Special” feels chaotic, moving from sound to sound in a way that feels haphazard. The songs don’t hit the listener in a connected way, but as if Ronson just put together a bunch of tracks that sounded cool to him. That’s fine, but with a little more curation, the music might have been transcendent. There are undoubtedly songs the listener will want to hear again. The lead single, “Uptown Funk” with Bruno Mars, has taken over the charts with its catchy beat that almost dares you to stay still. “I Can’t Lose” is another one that gets your toes tapping, and “Leaving Los Feliz” has a sweet sway to it. Grammy-winning Ronson, who has produced for top-notch acts from Amy Winehouse to Adele to Paul McCartney, has an obvious affinity for old-school sounds. It’s just not enough to make this album special. Deepti Hajela, Associated Press

NE-YO

‘NON-FICTION’ Motown Ahh, Ne-Yo. So much talent — the

« Friday, February 6, 2015 « 5

voice, the songwriting. And yet, somehow, such a boring album. It’s a little crazy-making, truth be told. All the ingredients are here some hot beats; smooth, rich vocals; and the idea of an album as a whole concept rather than a collection of songs. So why isn’t it more interesting or compelling? Maybe because this album, his sixth, feels so one-dimensional. A song about a woman. Another song about a woman, this one using him for whatever celebrity swag she can get. Oh hey, a song about sex with a woman, or preferably two (which interestingly, has a beautiful melody). Aaaaannnd, another song about a woman, who decided to move on to someone else and Ne-Yo wishes her well. Ne-Yo says the songs came from stories, from his life and those of his fans, but they’re all saying the same thing. With his extensive vocal and musical skills, it would likely be fascinating to hear the outcome if Ne-Yo decided to broaden his musical conversation. Deepti Hajela, Associated Press

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6 » Friday, February 6, 2015 » K I T S A P

EDITOR’S NOTE: Calendars in the print version of Kitsap A&E have been edited for space and timeliness. Gallery openings and other events also are listed online at kitsapsun.com/ events.

ART WALKS Bainbridge Island: First Friday downtown art walk, 6-8 p.m. Bremerton: First Friday downtown art walk, 5-8 p.m. Gig Harbor: Second Thursday downtown during Thursday Night Out, 5-8 p.m. Port Gamble: First Fridays along Rainier Avenue, 4-7 p.m. Port Orchard: First Saturdays April-November, Bay Street and adjoining streets, 2-5 p.m. Port Townsend: First Saturday along Water Street and adjoining streets, 5-8 p.m. Poulsbo: Second Saturdays along Front Street, 5-8 p.m.

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND BAINBRIDGE ARTS AND CRAFTS 151 Winslow Way E, Bainbridge Island, 206-842-3132: Feb. 6-March 2: George Dennis, various works Feb. 6: Artist reception, 5 p.m. March 7: Gallery Talk with Duane Pasco, 12:30-1:30 p.m. March 8: An afternoon with Duane Pasco, 3 p.m. March 19: Carving and tools demonstration with Duane Pasco, 6 p.m.

S U N . A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

Fridays, plus one hour before BPA performances: Through February: Matt Pedersen, “Chicken Portraits”

GALLERY AT GRACE 8595 E Day Road, Bainbridge Island, 206-842-9997, gracehere.org; 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays, 8-11 a.m. Sundays Feb.1-March 31: Karen Chaussabel, “Exploring”

ROBY KING GALLERIES 176 Winslow Way E, Bainbridge Island, 206-842-2063, robykinggalleries.com: Feb. 6-28: Kathe Fraga, various works March 6-28: Drawing exhibition, “The Human Touch in Black & White” April 3-25: All gallery exhibition, “No Sales Tax”

BREMERTON COLLECTIVE VISIONS ART GALLERY 331 Pacific Ave., Bremerton, 360-377-8327, collectivevisions. com; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday,

Art

noon-4 p.m. Sunday: Jan. 24-Feb. 28: The CVG Show, statewide juried exhibit

Through February: Kathy Mitchell, various works

SOUTH KITSAP ISELLA SALON SPA

SIDNEY ART GALLERY

530 Fourth St., Bremerton, 360377-1113, isellasalonspa.com: Through Feburary: Michelle Purdue, photographic collage work

202 Sidney Avenue, Port Orchard, 360-876-7726, smaasidney@gmail.com; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday:

Kat power

JEFFERSON COUNTY TORO LOUNGE 315 Pacific Ave., Bremerton, 360813-1910, torolounge.com: Through February: various artists, Good Neighbors Show

NORTH KITSAP CHOCMO 19880 Seventh Ave. Suite 102, Poulsbo, 360-930-0283, chocmo. com; 10 a.m.-10 p.m. MondayThursday, 8 a.m.-11 p.m. FridaySaturday: Through February: John Abromowski, “Quiet Places”

VERKSTAD GALLERY 18937 Front St., Poulsbo, 360697-4470, verkstadgallery.com; 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. daily

New mixed media works by Kate DuBose are on display from Feb. 9 to March 9 at the Front Street Gallery, 18881 Front St. in downtown Poulsbo. An opening reception is 5-8 p.m. on Feb. 9, in conjunction with the monthly downtown Second Saturday art walk. Information: 360-598-6133, frontstreetgallerypoulsbo.com.

NORTHWIND ARTS CENTER 2409 Jefferson St., Port Townsend, 360-379-1086, northwindarts.org Feb. 6-March 1: Suzanne Lamon and Leslie Schnick, “Celestial Dreams and Terrestrial Abstractions”

SPECIAL EVENTS ADULT CLAY CLASS: Claywerks presents at Sheridan Park Community Center, 680 Lebo Blvd., Bremerton, 360-377-2354: 6-8 p.m. Tuesdays, Feb. 3-24; $105 IMAGING THE ARCTIC— COMMUNICATING CLIMATE SCIENCE THROUGH ART: Presentation by Dr. Kristin

CONTRIBUTED IMAGE

Laidre and expedientary artist Maria Coryell-Martin; The Chapel, Fort Worden State Park, 532 Battery Way, Port Townsend, ptmsc.org; Feb. 8, 3 p.m. BOOKSTORE ART CONTEST:

Kitsap kids can submit artwork of book characters for prizes and display; Button-Bright Books, 18850 Front St. NE Suite B, Poulsbo, 360-9300161, buttonbrightbooks.com; through Feb. 28

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND MUSEUM OF ART 550 Winslow Way E., Bainbridge Island, 206842-4451, 855-613-1342, biartmuseum.org; open daily 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; general admission free: Through Feb. 15: Rachel Feferman Retrospective, “A Hole in the Heart” Through Feb. 15: Larry “Ulaaq” Ahvakana, “Survey” Through Feb. 15: Harry Longstreet, “Photography” Through Feb. 15: Karen Hackenberg, “Watershed” Feb. 7: Trunk Show, Sally Prangley; noon-4 p.m.

BAINBRIDGE PERFORMING ARTS 200 Madison Ave. N, Bainbridge Island, 206-842-8569, bainbridgeperformingarts.org; open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays-

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A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T . K I T S A P S U N

« Friday, February 6, 2015 « 7

Movies

‘Jupiter’ is the nadir of the Wachowskis’ big budget career ■ Empty piece of sci-fi eye candy

asks, ‘Could this get any weirder?’ By Roger Moore Tribune News Service

The Wachowskis cash their last blank check from Warner Brothers with “Jupiter Ascending,” an excruciatingly empty chunk of eye candy that spends more than two hours trying to convince us they’re not ripping off “Dune.” It’s “Dune” without the desert, all exposition and back story and alternate history — as inconsequential as the weakest Young Adult sci-fi, but without the pretty young teens who populate those “Maze/Hunger/Giver/Divergent” casts. It’s not that the Wachowskis don’t reach for some Big Ideas here, the notion that “Time is the single most precious commodity in the universe,” that one thing the super-rich and entitled have over the rest of us. Time equates not just to faster travel and no waiting in line at the doctor’s office or DMV. It’s longevity, a near-immortality length and quality of life that the oligarchs of this universe are playing with. A seriously miscast Mila Kunis is this YA version of “The Chosen One,” a poor Russian emigre, daughter of an astronomer forced to clean toilets and change beds in Chicago. Aliens are looking for the woman her dad named Jupiter, seeing her as their reincarnated “Queen.” There are bad aliens, led by Balem (a whispering Eddie Redmayne), and possibly a good one, Caine (Channing Tatum) who comes to her rescue — in the nick of time, every time. And there are a lot of times. Watch the way Kunis minces through the complicated digital sets when she’s

REVIEW ★½ ‘JUPITER ASCENDING’

Rated: PG-13 (violence, sequences of sci-fi action, suggestive content, partial nudity) Running time: 2:07 Director-writers: Andy and Lana Wachowski Showing: Opens Feb. 6; call theaters

supposed to be running for her life. Even her stunt double looks bored. The endless chases and shootouts are about fetching her or killing Jupiter — the often-cloaked alien minions get mixed messages from their overlords. Jupiter is always falling — out of buildings, spaceships or, in from towers in the vast alien city complex hiding inside Jupiter. The pointyeared Caine has these neat hover-boots that make Tatum, frequently shirtless, look like Pan or a centaur as he skates through the futurescapes, dodging fire and falling debris, waving his digital shield, shooting to kill. Kunis is most at home in the film’s few flashes of humor, such as when Jupiter takes a shine to her protector, or when the queen-to-be deals with the Kafkaesque nightmare of the alien superrace’s bureaucracy. “I will never complain about the DMV again!” And she speaks for the audience when she later asks, “Could this get any weirder?” Sean Bean plays Stinger, a serious-minded ex-comrade of Caine’s (they’re both warriors who have lost their wings, literally). He takes over the endless explaining of exposition when Tatum’s Caine runs out of breath — something about the way

PHOTOS BY WARNER BROS. PICTURES | TNS

Mila Kunis (with Douglas Booth) minces her way through one of “Jupiter Ascending’s” digital sets.

aliens populated the universe, Earth being a genespliced colony. Stinger’s been hiding out on Earth in a ramshackle farmhouse honeycombed with bees. “Bees are genetically designed to recognize royalty,” Bean growls, offering the film’s first giggle. “Bees don’t lie.” Look for Gugu MbathaRaw, James D’Arcy and the eye-candy junkie Terry “Brazil” Gilliam in bit parts. If you didn’t catch on with the sell-out “Speed Racer” or the sugary idiocy of “Cloud

Atlas,” if you haven’t reconsidered your affection for the one decent installment in the murky “Matrix” trilogy before now, “Jupiter Ascending” should seal the deal. The Wachowskis — Andy and Lana — are trapped in their own matrix, burdened with inflated budgets and the need to visually try and top themselves, losing track of actors, story and emotions, all in pursuit of that next fanboy film fix. After “Jupiter Ascending,” Warners should put them into rehab. They need to quit this drug, cold turkey.

Gugu Mbatha-Raw dons Spock ears, and then some, for “Jupiter Ascending.”


8 » Friday, February 6, 2015 » K I T S A P ‘AMERICAN SNIPER’ A Navy S.E.A.L. (Bradley Cooper) recounts his military career, which includes more than 150 confirmed kills. R (strong and disturbing war violence, language including sexual references). 2:14. ★★★ Showing: Rose, See-Film, Uptown (GH); call other theaters

‘BIG HERO 6’ The special bond that develops between plus-sized inflatable robot Baymax, and prodigy Hiro Hamada, who team up with a group of friends to form a band of hightech heroes. PG (action and peril, rude humor, thematic elements). 1:42. ★★★ Showing: Dragonfly (Feb. 6-10)

S U N . A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

THEATERS AND LOCATIONS Bainbridge Cinemas

Lynwood Theatre

Silverdale 4

403 Madison Ave. N, Bainbridge Island, 206-855-8173, farawayentertainment.com

4569 Lynwood Center Road, Bainbridge Island, 206-842-3080, 360-373-6282, lynwoodtheatre.com

9923 Poplars Ave., Silverdale, 360698-8634, regmovies.com

Dragonfly Cinema

Olympic Cinemas

822 Bay St., Port Orchard, 360-5194333, dragonflycinema.com

1520 NE Riddell Road, Bremerton, 360-475-8888, farawayentertainment.com

1435 Olney Ave. SE, Port Orchard, 360-871-2294, regmovies.com

Firehouse Theatre 11171 Highway 104, Kingston, 360297-4849, firehousetheatre.com

Grand Cinemas 606 S. Fawcett Ave., Tacoma, 253572-6062, grandcinema.com

Kitsap 8 10095 NW Kitsap Mall Blvd., Silverdale, 360-692-1023, amctheatres.com

Poulsbo Cinemas 750 NW Edvard St., Poulsbo, 360-6975642, regmovies.com

South Sound Uptown 10 4649 Point Fosdick Drive NW, Gig Harbor, 253-857-7469, galaxytheatres.com

Uptown Theatre

Rose Theatre

1120 Lawrence St., Port Townsend, 360-385-3883, uptowntheatre.com

235 Taylor St., Port Townsend, 360385-1089, rosetheatre.com

NOTE: Showtimes are subject to

SEE-Film Bremerton Cinema 655 Fourth St., Bremerton, 360-3624888, seefilm.net

change, and listings are the most recent available at press time. Call theaters to confirm showtimes.

‘BIRDMAN’ A washed up actor, who once played an iconic superhero, battles his ego and attempts to recover his family, his career and himself in the days leading up to the opening of a Broadway play. R (language, sexual content, violence). 1:59. ★★★ Showing: Firehouse, Rose; call other theaters

‘BLACKHAT’ A furloughed convict (Chris Hemsworth) and his American and Chinese partners hunt a high-level cybercrime network from Chicago to Los Angeles to Hong Kong to Jakarta. R (violence, language). Running time NA. ★★★ Showing: Call theaters

‘BLACK OR WHITE’ A grieving widower (Kevin Costner) is drawn into a custody battle over his granddaughter, whom he helped raise her entire life. PG-13 on appeal (language, thematic material including drug us and drinking, violence). Running time NA. Showing: Uptown (GH); call other theaters

‘BLACK SEA’ In order to make good with his former employers, a submarine captain (Jude Law) takes a job with a shadowy backer to search the depths of the Black Sea for a submarine rumored to be loaded with gold. R (language, graphic images, violence). 1:55. Showing: Call theaters

‘THE BOY NEXT DOOR’ Shortly after her divorce, a woman (Jennifer Lopez) falls for a younger man (Ryan Guzman) who just moved in across the street, though their torrid affair takes an obsessive, dangerous turn. R (violence, sexual content, nudity, language). Running time NA. ★½ Showing: See-Film; call other theaters

‘FOXCATCHER’ The greatest Olympic Wrestling Champion brother team (Channing Tatum, Mark Ruffalo) joins Team Foxcatcher led by multimillionaire

sponsor John E. du Pont (Steve Carell) as they train for the 1988 games in Seoul — a union that leads to unlikely circumstances. R (drug use, violence). 2:09. ★★★ Showing: See-Film; call other theaters

‘THE HOMESMAN’ Three women who have been driven mad by pioneer life are to be transported across the country by covered wagon by the pious, independent-minded Mary Bee Cuddy (Hilary Swank), who in turn employs low-life drifter George Briggs (Tommy Lee Jones) to assist her. R (violence, sexual content, disturbing behavior, nudity). 2:02. Showing: Rose; call other theaters

‘THE IMITATION GAME’ Based on the real life story of legendary cryptanalyst Alan Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch), the film portrays the nail-biting race against time by Turing and his brilliant team of code-breakers at Britain’s top-secret Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, during the darkest days of World War II. PG-13 (sexual references, mature thematic material, smoking). 1:54. ★★★ Showing: Rose, See-Film, Grand; call other theaters

suggestive material. 2:04. ★★½ Showing: Call theaters

Showing: Uptown (PT); call other theaters

‘JUPITER ASCENDING’

‘PROJECT ALMANAC’

In a bright and colorful future, a young destitute caretaker (Mila Kunis) gets targeted by a ruthless son of a powerful family that live on a planet in need of a new heir, so she travels with a genetically engineered warrior (Channing Tatum) to the planet in order to stop his tyrant reign. PG-13 (violence, sequences of sci-fi action, suggestive content, partial nudity). 2:07. Showing: Poulsbo, See-Film, South Sound, Uptown (GH); call other theaters

A group of teens discover secret plans of a time machine, and construct one. However, things start to get out of control. PG-13. 1:46. Showing: See-Film, Uptown (GH); call other theaters

‘THE LOFT’ Five married guys conspire to secretly share a penthouse loft in the city — a place where they can carry out hidden affairs and indulge in their deepest fantasies. But the fantasy becomes a nightmare when they discover the dead body of an unknown woman in the loft, and they realize one of the group must be involved. R (sexual content, nudity, bloody violence, language, drug use). 1:48. Showing: See-Film, Uptown (GH); call other theaters

‘MORTDECAI’ ‘INHERENT VICE’ During the psychedelic 60s and 70s Larry “Doc” Sportello (Joaquin Phoenix) is surprised by his former girlfriend and her plot for her billionaire boyfriend, his wife, and her boyfriend. A plan for kidnapping gets shaken up by the oddball characters entangled in this groovy kidnapping romp based upon the novel by Thomas Pynchon. R (drug use, sexual content, graphic nudity, language, violence). 2:28. Showing: See-Film; call other theaters

‘INTO THE WOODS’ A witch (Meryl Streep) tasks a childless baker and his wife (James Corden, Emily Blunt) with procuring magical items from classic fairy tales to reverse the curse put on their family tree. PG (thematic elements, fantasy action and peril,

Art dealer Charles Mortdecai (Johnny Depp) searches for a stolen painting that’s reportedly linked to a lost bank account filled with Nazi gold. R (language, sexual material). 1:46. ★★ Showing: Call theaters

‘PADDINGTON’ A young Peruvian bear with a passion for all things British (voiced by Ben Whishaw) travels to London in search of a home. Finding himself lost and alone at Paddington Station, he begins to realize that city life is not all he had imagined — until he meets the kindly Brown family, who read the label around his neck (‘Please look after this bear. Thank you.’) and offer him a temporary haven. PG (mild action, rude humor). 1:35. ★★★

‘SELMA’ A chronicle of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s (David Oyelowo) campaign to secure equal voting rights via an epic march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama in 1965. PG-13 (disturbing thematic elements, violence, a suggestive moment, language). 2:07. ★★★½ Showing: Grand; call other theaters

‘SEVENTH SON’ Young Thomas (Ben Barnes) is apprenticed to the local Spook to learn to fight evil spirits. His first great challenge comes when the powerful Mother Malkin (Julianne Moore) escapes her confinement while the Spook is away. PG-13 (intense fantasy violence and action, frightening images, language). 1:42. Showing: Poulsbo, See-Film, Silvedale, South Sound, Uptown (GH); call other theaters

‘THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUT OF WATER’ SpongeBob goes on a quest to discover a stolen recipe that takes him to our dimension, our world, where he tangles with a pirate (voiced by Antonio Banderas). PG. running time NA. Showing: Firehouse, Poulsbo, SeeFilm, Silverdale, South Sound, Uptown (GH); call other theaters

‘STRANGE MAGIC’ A madcap animated fairy tale musical inspired by “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Popular songs from the past six decades help tell the tale of a cast of goblins, elves, fairies and imps, and

their misadventures sparked by the battle over a powerful potion. PG (mild action, scary images). 1:39. ★★½ Showing: See-Film; call other theaters

‘TAKEN 3’ Ex-government operative Bryan Mills (Liam Neeson) is accused of a ruthless murder he never committed or witnessed. As he is tracked and pursued, Mills brings out his particular set of skills to find the true killer and clear his name. PG-13 (intense sequences of violence and action, language). 1:49. ★★ Showing: Call theaters

‘THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING’ A look at the relationship between the famous physicist Stephen Hawking (Eddie Redmayne) and his wife, Jane (Felicity Jones). PG-13 (thematic elements, suggestive material). 2:03. ★★★½ Showing: Firehouse; call other theaters

‘THE WEDDING RINGER’ Doug Harris (Josh Gad) is a loveable but socially awkward groom-to-be with a problem: he has no best man. With less than two weeks to go until he marries the girl of his dreams (Kaley CuocoSweeting), Doug is referred to Jimmy Callahan (Kevin Hart), owner and CEO of Best Man, Inc., a company that provides flattering best men for socially challenged guys in need. R (crude and sexual content, language, drug use, brief graphic nudity). 1:41. ★★½ Showing: See-Film; call other theaters

‘WHIPLASH’ A promising young drummer (Miles Teller) enrolls at a cutthroat music conservatory where his dreams of greatness are mentored by an instructor (J.K. Simmons) who will stop at nothing to realize a student’s potential. R (language including sexual references). 1:47. ★★★ Showing: Rose, See-Film; call other theaters

BANGOR CINEMA PLUS Admission ages 6 and older $5 for double features, $3 for single features, 5 and younger free. 360-535-5923: Feb. 6: Double feature — 6 p.m., “American Sniper” (R); 8:40 p.m., “The Imitation Game” (PG-13) Feb. 7: Free matinee — 1 p.m., “Big Hero 6” (PG); 6 p.m., “Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb” (PG); 8 p.m., “American Sniper” (R) Feb. 8: FREE SNEAK PREVIEW — 5 p.m., “McFarland, USA” (PG)

NAVAL BASE KITSAP Recreation Center, Building 502: All movies free; movies begin at 5:30 p.m. (unless otherwise noted): Feb. 6: NA Feb. 7: NA


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A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T . K I T S A P S U N

FOXCATCHER from 10

money to become a famous stamp collector and then, in his 50s, decided athletics was the next ďŹ eld he’d dabble in. He collected Olympic wrestlers and swimmers at his family’s Pennsylvania estate. He liked to change his sissy French middle name “Eleuthereâ€? to “Eagle,â€? and some of his lackeys bought into it. Steve Carell transforms himself into a esh-andblood version of his “Despicable Meâ€? super villain “Gruâ€? as du Pont, a beadyeyed, eagle-beaked, barrelchested man-child who lured Olympic wrestlerbrothers Mark (Channing Tatum) and David Schultz (Mark Ruffalo) to his stateof-the-art facilities, where he could wear tracksuits and kneepads and pretend to coach them (older brother Dave was a college coach and Olympic champion) and then bask in the glory of “hisâ€? achievement.

Carell’s thick-featured, 50ish du Pont doesn’t look like the bearded madman we saw on the evening news. But with every breath, every brown-toothed grimace of a smile, he lets us know this guy is “off.� And so is his “protege,� Mark Schultz. As Mark, Tatum juts his jaw and keeps his head down, covering ground in a muscle-bound simian stride. Always focused, Mark has an Olympic gold medal and a college degree, but he relies on his brother for training and access to the facilities where Dave is coach. Mark needs the tiny per diem schools pay him to speak to students and show his medal just to eat and gas up his cheap hatchback. When du Pont calls, offers to put him up, feed and pay him, it’s the answer to a prayer. It’s just that du Pont, assembling a crack Team Foxcatcher, wants Dave, too. And the wily older brother is slow to warm to the weirdo. “What’s he get out of

ÂŤ Friday, February 6, 2015 ÂŤ 11

Mark Ruffalo (left) and Steve Carell star in a scene from “Foxcatcher.� ASSOCIATED PRESS

all this?â€? A tug-of-war over the fragile Mark ensues between the brother-coach and the fellow whose family has been rich for so many decades that he ďŹ gures anything can be bought — including Olympic glory. Actor’s director Bennett Miller (“Capoteâ€?) introduces Ruffalo and Tatum in an almost dialogue-free opening — training, wrestling,

getting under each other’s skin and drawing blood. Their sibling connection can be read in Rufflalo’s eyes, in the way Tatum leans in to him, forehead on forehead, a wrestling posture that symbolizes their communication and closeness. It’s no stretch to see the beefy Tatum as an athlete, but he brings a sullen resentment to the role, an accomplished Olympian

stuck in his brother’s shadow. Ruffalo bulked up and mastered the physical shorthand of the sport for his part, and brings a regarding soulfulness to Dave. He watches this odd duck his brother has hooked up with, and worries. Carell, though, is the real shock to the system here. He is quirky, queer in the old fashioned sense,

and pathetically funny. His du Pont is a wannabe surrounding himself with real athletes. Carell makes you feel sorry for the lonely rich man, failing to impress his dowager mother (Vanessa Redgrave), collecting tanks, enjoying target practice with the local police on a range he has built on his family’s estate. It’s a life of impunity, isolation, drugs and a craving for accomplishment to match his legendary ancestors. Miller and his screenwriters toy with the time line of events — most of what is here happens around the Seoul Olympics of 1988, du Pont didn’t set up his training until the 1990s. But that doesn’t diminish or dilute the point of “Foxcatcher� — that to the moneyed classes which no “death tax� can touch, the rest of us are eternally “ungrateful.� And their contempt can have deadly consequences for people with so little regard for those they dare not call “the little people� except behind closed doors.

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12 » Friday, February 6, 2015 » K I T S A P

S U N . A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

Calendar EDITOR’S NOTE: Calendars in the print version of Kitsap A&E have been edited for space and timeliness. Events also are listed online at kitsapsun.com/ events.

comedy by Joe Pietro; Jan. 16-Feb. 8; 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays 2 p.m. Sundays; $16-$14. Brown Paper Tickets — 800-838-3006, brownpapertickets.com

FEBRUARY 6

‘SHAMELESS: THE ART OF DISABILITY ART’

‘DROP DEAD’

LIVE THEATER: Bremerton Community Theatre, 599 Lebo Blvd., Bremerton, 360-373-5152, bremertoncommunitytheatre. org: Feb. 6-March 1; 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays; $15-$12

‘FOOLS’ LIVE THEATER: Western Washington Center for the Arts, 521 Bay St., Port Orchard, 360769-7469, wwca.us: Comedy by Neil Simon; Jan. 23-Feb. 15; 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 5 p.m. Sundays except 3 p.m. Feb. 15; $17-$13.

‘OVER THE RIVER AND THROUGH THE WOODS’ LIVE THEATER: Jewel Box Theatre, 225 Iverson St., Poulsbo, 360-697-3183, jewelboxpoulsbo.org: Musical

LIVE MUSIC: Spacecraft, Rolling Bay Hall, 10598 NE Valley Road, Bainbridge Island, spacecraftpresents.org: A lot of fun with sounds from The Kinks to Paul McCartney; 7-10 p.m.; $12-10

HOUSE OF FLOYD LIVE MUSIC: The Point Casino,

LIVE MUSIC: The Charleston,333 N Callow Ave., Bremerton, 360-377-3360, thecharleston333.com: with Hold Fast, Jumping Fences and Sun Fix; 8 p.m.; $5

LIVE MUSIC: Olalla Community Club, 12970 Olalla Valley Road SE, Olalla, 253-439-0078, olallahouse. org: Touring in support of the album “Time Will Take You;” 7 p.m.; $20-$15

BEER! BRO! ZIP!

LIVE MUSIC: Clearwater Casino Resort, 15347 Suquamish Way NE, Suquamish: 9 p.m.

LIVE MUSIC: The Manette, 2113 East 11th St. Bremerton, themanette.com; 9 p.m.; $6

OLSON BROTHERS

MAIA SANTELL AND HOUSE BLEND

WEATHER MACHINE

IAN MCFERON BAND

DANA OSBORN AND THE MELLOW HEADS

FILM: Suquamish United Church of Christ, 18732 Division Ave., Suquamish, 360-297-3894, freerangefilmskitsap@gmail. com; 7 p.m.

LIVE MUSIC: Brother Don’s, 4200 Kitsap Way, Bremerton, 360-377-8442, brotherdons. com; 8-11 p.m.

NORTHSTATE

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Cookin’ on guitar

JESSE COOK

Guitar virtuoso Jesse Cook visits the Admiral Theatre, 515 Pacific Ave. in Bremerton, for a 7:30 p.m. concert on Feb. 7. Tickets range from $75-$19, and the top tier includes a reserved mainfloor seat and a catered dinner served at 6 p.m. Information: 360-373-6743, admiraltheatre.org. 7989 Salish Lane, Kingston, 360-297-0070, the-point-casino. com: Pink Floyd tribute and laser show; 8 p.m. (7 p.m. doors); $10 advance, $15 day of show

FEBRUARY 7

PAYDAY DADDY LIVE MUSIC: Everybody’s American Cookhouse & Sports Theater, 4215 SE Mile Hill Dr., Port Orchard, 360-443-2979, ebcookhouse.com

LIVE MUSIC: Admiral Theatre, 515 Pacific Ave., Bremerton, 360-373-6743, admiraltheatre. org: Guitar virtuoso; 7:30 p.m. (dinner with reservation served 6 p.m.); $75-$19

EDGE IMPROV LIVE THEATER: Bainbridge Performing Arts, 200 Madison Ave N, Bainbridge Island, 206-842-8569, bainbridgeperformingarts. org: Local performing improv troupe; 7:30 p.m.; $16-$12

LIVE MUSIC: McCloud’s Grill House, 2901 Perry Ave., Bremerton, 360-373-3093, mccloudsgrillhouse.com: Olympia-based country group; 9 p.m.

METAL MAYEM LIVE MUSIC: The Charleston,333 N Callow Ave., Bremerton, 360-377-3360, thecharleston333.com: with Hot Death, Thistopia, For the Likes of You and more; 8 p.m.; $5 See CALENDAR, 13

Taste the Elements of the Olympic Peninsula: Earth, Air, Water & Wine

OLYMPIC PENINSULA WINERIES

BREMERTON

GUN SHOW Kitsap County Fairgrounds # President’s Hall

Saturday, Feb 7 - 9am - 5pm Sunday, Feb 8 - 9am - 4pm Admission: $8.00

BUY • SELL • TRADE The Region’s Best Dealers! Over 50 Vendors! Offering $20 private party firearm transfers onsite.

Red Wine

& Chocolate

1. Harbinger Winery 2. Camaraderie Cellars 3. Olympic Cellars 4. Wind Rose Cellars 5. Eaglemount Wine & Cider

6. FairWinds Winery 7. Lullaby Winery 8. Marrowstone Vineyards 9. Finnriver Farm & Cidery

2015 WINE TOUR

Come enjoy our Delectable Red Wines paired with Delicious Chocolates. FEBRUARY 7, 8 & 14, 15, 16 • 11-5pm $30 ticket includes tasting fees & souvenir glass or $5 per winery tasting fee. Purchase tickets in advance online or at the door of participating wineries.

For more info: 206-753-7956

OlympicPeninsulaWineries.org


A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T . K I T S A P S U N

CHURCH OF THE HEARSE

CALENDAR

LIVE MUSIC: Mobster Mike’s, 602 Fourth St., Bremerton, 360204-3639; 8-11 p.m. TUESDAYS

from 12

MOTLEY CRUED

FEBRUARY 11

LIVE MUSIC: The Point Casino, 7989 Salish Lane, Kingston, 360-297-0070, thepoint-casino.com: Motley Crue tribute; 8 p.m. (7 p.m. doors); $10 advance, $15 day of show

‘SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN BROTHERS’

PAYDAY DADDY LIVE MUSIC: Casey’s Bar and Grill, 24090 Highway 3, Belfair, 360-275-6929, caseysbarandgrillwa.com

IGNITE

DOUG PLUMMER | CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

If it ain’t Baroque ...

LIVE THEATER: Admiral Theatre, 515 Pacific Ave., Bremerton, 360-373-6743, admiraltheatre.org: Touring company performs the musical comedy classic; 7 p.m. (dinner with reservation served 5:30 p.m.); $75-$20

BALLROOM/ FOXTROT CLASSES

The Baroque quartet Sound Counterpoint perform at 4 p.m. on Feb. 8 at the Bainbridge Island Waterfront Community Center, 370 Brien Drive. The quartet will play works by Bach, Vivaldi, Telemann, Fasch and Monteclair. Tickets are $20-$10, and are available through Brown Paper Tickets, 800-838-3006, brownpapertickets.com. Information: firstsundaysconcerts.org.

DANCE: Fairview Junior High School, 8107 Central Valley Road NW, Bremerton, 360-662-1638: Wednesdays Feb. 4-March 11; 7-8:30 p.m.; $75/couple, $40/ single; senior discount $65/ couple, $35/single

SOUND COUNTERPOINT

FEBRUARY 9

FEBRUARY 10

CELTIC JAM WITH RICK MAY

LIVE MUSIC: Waterfront Community Center, 370 Brien Dr., Bainbridge Island, firstsundayconcerts.org: part of First Sunday Concerts; 4 p.m.; $20-$10

LIVE MUSIC: The Global Bean, 2021 NW Myhre Road, Silverdale, 360-692-9582, theglobalbean.com: 7 p.m. MONDAYS

LIVE MUSIC: Cellar Door, 940 Water St., Port Townsend, 360-385-6959: Jazz vocalist accompanied by a quintet; 6-9 p.m.

LIVE MUSIC: Ozzie’s Place at All Star Lanes & Casino, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale, 360692-5760, playallstar.com: 8 p.m.-midnight

FEBRUARY 8

« Friday, February 6, 2015 « 13

‘JAM AT THE BEAN’

JENNY DAVIS

LIVE MUSIC: The Global Bean Coffee Traders, 2021 NW Myhre Road, Silverdale, 360-692-9582, theglobalbean.com: 7-9 p.m.

‘MUSIC TO OUR BEERS’ JAM

Complete Grooming & Hair Care for

Men

Boys

Walk-ins Welcome

19015 Front St., Poulsbo. WA

Tuesday-Friday - 8:00 to 6:00 Saturday - 8:00 to 4:00

Rural Delivery play a blend of bluegrass and folk music in concert at 7 p.m. on Feb. 6 at The Source, adjacent to the Admiral Theatre at 516 Fifth St. in Bremerton. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., and tickets are $16. Information: 360-373-6743, admiraltheatre.org. Brewery, 9415 Coppertop Loop, Bainbridge Island, 206-4514646, bainbridgebeer.com: Open band jam hosted by Ethan J. Perry and His Remedy Band; 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays; no cover

OPEN MIC WITH JACK PARKER LIVE MUSIC: The Manette, 2113 E. 11th St., Bremerton, 360-7920801, themanette. com: 9 p.m. to midnight, Wednesdays See CALENDAR, 14

MAKE THE HEALTHIER CHOICE! There are over 40 studies of e-cigarettes showing they pose little risk to consumers and no risk to bystanders (See CASAA.org for research links)

What are E-Cigarettes? •

Men's Haircuts

They deliver

LIVE MUSIC: Bainbridge Island

Barber Shop BAYSIDE Gene Bryant, Owner 35 Years of Experience

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

• • •

Safer replacement for tobacco cigarettes Nothing is burned - so they’re completely smoke free Vapor created with a non toxic glycol or glycerine solution No serious side effects

Premium Electronic Cigars, C Pipes & Pip igarettes, e Hookahs, Tobacco, S tarbuxx Shisha an d much mo re

BREMERTON KITSAP MALL

(360) 930-8792

(360) 479-1709

(360) 698-0211

3720 Kitsap Way, Suite AA

Silverdale

https://www.facebook.com/SmokersChoiceSilverdale


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A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T . K I T S A P S U N

« Friday, February 6, 2015 « 15


16 » Friday, February 6, 2015 » K I T S A P

S U N . A R T S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T

House of Floyd | Friday, February 6th A tribute to the music of Pink Floyd with laser show

BLUES POWER REVUE A Blues Brothers tribute Friday, February 20th | 10:00 PM

LUCKY FRIDAY THE 13TH

FRIHDE 1A3TYH

$1,300 PROGRESSIVE CASH GIVEAWAYS Friday, February 13th 6:00 PM - 10:00 PM $1,300 Cash Drawings randomly every 1/2-hour See the Wildcard Club for detail

T

Motley Crue’d | Saturday, February 7th A tribute to the music of Motley Crue Bikini Contest at 7:30 PM

The Long Run | Saturday, February 14th A tribute to the music of the Eagles

Mardi Gras Party | Friday, February 20th Burlesque, Costume Contest & Party Favors Blues Power Revue | The Boom Room | 10:00 PM

The Police Experience | Sat, February 21st A tribute to the music of The Police

GET A $100 PASS FOR ALL SHOWS! Tickets $10 advance | $15 day of show | 21 and over Doors 7:00 PM | Shows 8:00 PM

13TH BIRTHDAY CANDLE CASH BLOWOUT

| Full entertainment schedule online

Tuesdays, February 10th, 17th & 24th 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Thursdays, February 12th, 19th & 26th 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Sunday, February 22nd 12:00 PM - 6:30 PM Select cash prizes up to $1,000 plus Multiplier Bonus See the Wildcard Club for detail

Close to Home... Far From Ordinary.® Kingston, WA • www.the-point-casino.com • 1.866.547.6468 Tickets available now at these locations: In the gift shop | On our website For more information Call 866.547.6468 | Ages 21 and over The Point Casino is proudly owned and operated by The Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe. See the Wildcard Players Club for complete details. You must be a member of The Point Casino’s Wildcard Players Club to participate in some programs. Some restrictions may apply. Point Casino promotions, offers, coupons and/or specials may not be combined without marketing management approval. Management reserves all rights to alter or cancel without prior notice. You must be at least 21 years old to participate in gaming activities, to attend entertainment events and to enter lounge/bar areas. Knowing your limit is your best bet—get help at (800) 547-6133.


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