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The Pacific Rim Film Festival fast-tracks viewers to another reality p13 Prop. Endorsements p9 | The Exhibitionist p23 | The Morning Benders Go Long p25


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Contents. P OSTS

p4

CURRENTS

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COVER STORY

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S TA G E , A R T & EVENTS A&E

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p25

B E AT S C A P E CLUB GRID FILM

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ASTR OLOGY

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CLASSIFIEDS

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115 Cooper St, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831.457.9000 (phone) 831.457.5828 (fax) 831.457.8500 (classified) SCW@santacruz.com Santa Cruz Weekly, incorporating Metro Santa Cruz, is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the current issue of Santa Cruz Weekly may be purchased for $1, payable at the Santa Cruz Weekly office in advance. Santa Cruz Weekly may be distributed only by Santa Cruz Weekly’s authorized distributors. No person may, without permission of Metro Publishing, Inc., take more than one copy of each Santa Cruz Weekly issue. Subscriptions: $65/six months, $125/one year. Entire contents Š 2010 Metro Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form prohibited without publisher’s written permission. Unsolicited material should be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope; Santa Cruz Weekly is not responsible for the return of such submissions.


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Posts. P osts. Messages M essages &

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Send let letters teerrs ttoo Santa Santa Cruz Weekly, Weekly e y, let letters@santacruz.com teerrs@san s nttaacruz.com or ttoo A Attn: ttn: LLetters, ettteeerrs, 115 Co ett et C Cooper ooper e St., Sant San Santaa Cruz, uz 95060. 060. Inclu Include udee cit city ittyy and phone clarity inaccuracies known us. phone number number or email address. address. Submissions Subm missions mayy be be edited editteed for for or length, length cl le leng laritt y or or factual factual ac a inac a curacies racies know nown ttoo us s.

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A ACCOUNT CCOUNT EXECUTIVES EXECUTIVES /:713 1=:0G / :713 1=:0G (alice@santacruz.com) (alic e@santtaacruz.com) 8=13:G< ;/1<37: 8=13: :G< G ;/ /1<37: (jocelyn@santacruz.com) (jo celyn@santtac a ruz.com) 77:/</ @/C16 >/193@ :/</ @/C16 >/193@ (ilana@santacruz.com) (ilana@sant tac a ruz.com)

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4@=; B63 327B=@ 4 @=; B63 327B=@ Starting this Starting this week, week, SantaCruz.com SantaCruz.com will will be be ppublishing ublishing ‘‘Local Local Poets, Poets, Local Local Inspiration, Inspiration,’ the the fformerly ormerly monthly monthly print print feature feature edited edited by by poet poet R obert Sward, Sward, each each Wednesday Wednesday online. online. To To find find it, it, Robert ggoo ttoo www.santacruz.com, www.santacruz.com m,, click click oon n ‘‘News’ News’ aatt tthe he ttop op of of tthe he ppage, age, then then click click on on ‘‘Community. Communit y.’

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IIn n other other news, news, SSanta anta Cruz Cruz Weekly’s Weeklly’s aaward-winning ward-winning sstaff taff writer writer Curtis Curtis Cartier Cartier is is moving moving to to ppoints oints north north ttoo accept accept a staff staff position position with with the the Seattle Seattle Weekly. Weekly. G ood lluck, uck, C urtis. Your Your fans fans will will miss miss yyou. ou. Good Curtis.


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Statewide Ballot Initiatives Prop. 19

Prop. 21

Regulate and Tax Cannabis

Vehicle Fee for Parks

G3A

G3A

Thirty-eight years ago, in November 1972, there was a marijuana-legalization measure on the November ballot in California, also called Prop. 19. Strikingly similar to this year’s model, the proposition failed when 60 percent of Californians voted to keep pot illegal. Almost four decades later, marijuana is easier to find than it ever was, proving that the criminalization of marijuana does nothing to prevent its use. Meanwhile, drug crime has exploded—our prisons are packed and our streets are less safe. These are the direct results of this archaic law. The Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010 will provide the state with significant tax revenue. It is estimated that a $50-per-ounce levy has the potential to raise $1.4 billion a year—money which now winds up in the hands of drug traffickers and illegal gun dealers. It’s time for this foolish prohibition to be abolished.

Prop. 21, the Vehicle License Fee for Parks Act, is exactly what it sounds like: a fee ($18 per year) tacked on to the fees California drivers pay annually to the DMV. The roughly $500 million that the initiative would raise would go toward maintaining the state’s 278 parks, which are plagued by slashed budgets. Most California drivers would get free access to the parks, and $130 million would be directed to the cash-starved general fund. While any added fees imposed on residents should be treated with skepticism, there is no doubt that keeping state parks open is a worthy move—not only to attract the millions of tourists who routinely visit the state’s parks, but also to allow all Californians to share in the state’s rich natural heritage.

Prop. 20

<=

Congressional Redistricting

In the past year the Legislature, facing a horrendous deficit, has exercised its authority to take money from local redevelopment and transportation agencies in what is universally described as a “raid� on local funds. On its surface, this proposition, which would end that practice, seems to make sense. And were it proposed in a different year, in a different economy, and in more moderate form, it might well be worth recommending. But at a time when nearly every state in the nation—including California—is strained to the breaking point by the largest economic downturn in a century, it doesn’t make sense to pass a law that would prohibit even 1 cent of variation in shares of state and local revenue, even in the event of natural disasters. Among the many structural problems facing our state, one is the inflexibility forced on the Legislature because of “budgeting by ballot.� This proposition would make matters worse.

G3A This is inside politics that matters. For years, the boundaries of California’s Assembly and state Senate districts were drawn up, every 10 years, by the assemblymembers and senators themselves. That scheme had predictable results: The elected officials created districts that were favorable to themselves and their parties. Essentially, they were able to choose their own voters. And so we get districts that are “solidly Democratic� or “solidly Republican,� making political compromise unnecessary and gridlock inevitable. Two years ago, California voters did away with that system. With 2008’s Prop. 11, voters approved the creation of an independent citizens commission to take over the drawing of legislative districts. (For more on this, see Prop. 27 endorsement below.) Prop. 20 expands that commission’s mandate, empowering it to also draw U.S. congressional districts. It’s a good idea for the same reason Prop. 11 was a good idea: Many elected officials in Sacramento today hope to move on to jobs in D.C. someday, and they have their eyes on that prize when they draw congressional districts.

Prop. 22 Ban on State Borrowing From Local Governments

with the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020. Now that statewide unemployment is hovering around 12 percent, anti-regulation groups are targeting the climate change law and its objective, saying environmental regulations are the cause of the Golden State’s financial woes. If passed, the law would suspend most of the provisions of A.B. 32 until the state posts unemployment figures of 5.5 percent or lower for four straight quarters— something that has happened only three times since 1980. Curbing greenhouse gasses is a responsibility that runs deeper than the ebb and flow of unemployment figures, and the revenue generation estimated to be produced by axing the law is modest by nearly all accounts.

Prop. 24 Repeal of Corporate Tax Breaks G3A This proposition reverses three tax breaks, negotiated during the last two years’ state budget showdowns, which primarily benefit multinational businesses. They represent about $1.3 billion a year in lost revenue to the state. A yes vote will ensure that money stays in state coffers rather than going to a few well-lined pockets. One of the breaks lets interstate businesses pick their in-state share of business taxes from a menu: choosing whether to pay on the property they occupy, their payroll value or sales. The second allows distribution of tax credits to affiliates—a game that some companies have gotten too good at playing. And the third allows corporations to collect refunds of past taxes during years in which they’ve shown net losses. The California Chamber of Commerce has labeled this prop a “jobs tax,� claiming that it will reduce new hiring. It’s the tired old trickle-down argument. Don’t buy it.

Prop. 25 Majority Rules on Budget G3A

Prop. 23 Suspend A.B. 32, the Global Warming Act <= California’s landmark anti–global warming legislation, A.B. 32, was passed in 2006

In some ways, this is the only proposition that matters. California currently requires the approval of two-thirds of both legislative houses to pass a budget, a threshold shared only by Arkansas and Rhode Island (the other 47 states require simple majorities). The result, here in the

eighth largest economy in the world, is budgets that are almost always late, a fixed system of minority rule with a legacy of intense gerrymandering to maintain it, suspended services and a credit rating nestled snugly between those of the Czech Republic and Greece. Opponents say that if passed, Prop. 25 will allow lawmakers to raise taxes with only a majority vote. That’s false. State law will continue to require a two-thirds vote in the Legislature to raise taxes. What Prop. 25 will do is set the conditions for a realistic public conversation about spending and revenue in California to take place—and that is a necessary first step to recovery.

Prop. 26 Supermajority Rules <= The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association is sponsoring this initiative. If it passes, its primary funders, Chevron and Occidental, as well as MillerCoors and AnhueserBusch, will get their way, as all levels of government, from city councils to the state Legislature, will have to achieve two-thirds vote thresholds to raise any fee for any activity or any levy for violating any law. That includes environmental law, which is where this prop got its nickname: The Polluter Protection Act. This proposition is corporate cynicism at its worst.

Prop. 27 ‘Incumbent Protection Act’ <=

The sponsors of this measure, a group of Democratic incumbents (many of whom we generally support) have named it the Financial Accountability in Redistricting Act. They claim its intent is to save money, because the state cannot afford to pay a small citizens commission to handle the chore of drawing legislative districts. Its true intent is to make it easier for them to keep their jobs. Prop. 27 would repeal the voter-approved Proposition 11, which authorized the creation of the commission, and return that responsibility to the Legislature itself, where it would no doubt result in more gerrymandering. Voters in Santa Cruz County have a stake in the outcome of this decision. In the last round of redistricting, parts of the county were included in a Senate district that stretches down to Santa Maria, ensuring that nobody from our part of California will ever win that seat. A citizens commission will almost certainly redraw this district more fairly. If Prop. 27 passes, they won’t get the chance to do that.


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Catalyzed by Katrina ‘A Village Called Versailles,’ part of the Pacific Rim Film Festival, shows how an embattled community of Vietnamese fought off the city of New Orleans 0G @716/@2 D=< 0CA/19

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ANY IMMIGRANTS to the United States have had the experience of not understanding that they were really and truly American until that moment when someone suggested otherwise. Such a moment might be seen at the end of Leo Chiang’s documentary A Village Called Versailles, one of the highlights of this year’s Pacific Rim Film Festival. Six months after Hurricane Katrina, a small, insular community of Vietnamese immigrants

has emerged to protest a 90-foot mountain of toxic garbage planned for the edge of their neighborhood. As they gather to picket at the gate, a dump security guard tells them, “This is not Vietnamese [sic], this is America . . .� as if sticking up for your rights was only allowed elsewhere. When Katrina struck, one district of New Orleans flooded out was the community of Versailles. Technically called Village de l’Est, the hamlet was nicknamed after a low-income apartment complex called the Versailles Arms

where a few families settled in the late 1970s. They were Vietnamese Catholic refugees who had been kept after arrival at Fort Chaffey, Ark. You could name a dozen Vietnamese enclaves in bigger cities, from San Jose to Falls Church, Va., to the central part of Orange County. But Chiang found in Versailles something different: a particularly tight, traditional and unassimilated town with roots in the old country. They survived by fishing in the swamps—“They didn’t need English to be fishermen,â€? says one observer. ¨

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A Village Called Versailles has some 1970s news footage of Plaquemines parish party boss Chalin Perez on television denouncing the Vietnamese fishermen as people who didn’t understand the ways of the locals. To contextualize for a second, Chalin was the son of the infamous political boss Leander Perez, notorious for public pronouncements like “Don’t wait for your daughter to be raped by those Congolese.� By “Congolese,� the elder Perez referred to those black Louisiana citizens who wanted to integrate in the 1960s. Aside from this and other frictions, Versailles grew on the edge of New Orleans East into a village that was a kind of cross between Vietnam and America. The American-born children went to school and then returned to traditional homes; they shopped at a public Saturday market and attended mass at Mary Queen of Vietnam Catholic Church. When Katrina struck and the levees broke, Versailles was hit hard. Some of the locals actually took refuge at Fort Chaffey, where they’d been billeted 30 years previously. When they returned, they went through the whole sad business of salvaging and fungiciding their homes. The film underscores the sadness: these were people forcibly uprooted twice before, not just in the 1970s when they fled the Communists by boat, but before that from the villages

in the north of Vietnam, where they fled after the U.N. partition in 1954.

Lying Chief Work went fast, and locals were ready to celebrate the Tet Festival in February 2006. Thousands showed up; New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was invited to the fest but stayed away. The locals found out why later that February: Nagin overrode his city council and decided to put a massive dump of Katrina wreckage right next to Versailles. The mountain of garbage would contain an unknown quantity of toxins, stashed right over some soft waterfront soil just right for leaching. The dump was to be named after nearby Chef Menteur Highway. Perhaps some of the elder Vietnamese had enough French to know that name meant “lying chief;â€? the story goes that some Indian chief in the area used to mislead the settlers. Considering the actions of New Orleans’ chief Nagin, it was a well-picked name for the Chef Menteur dump. The community had to face down the possibility of being polluted out of their homes and gardens. In its concise and well-researched 68 minutes, A Village Called Versailles follows how they rose up. We learn how the effort to fight the dump knitted together the young people who were looking forward with the elders who looked back in the past. The effort to remove the dump involved ¨ $


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African American New Orleans City Councilwoman Cynthia Willard-Lewis. Vietnamese-American TV journalist Mimi Nguyen joined in too, since she had come to New Orleans to translate for FEMA. (She tells Chiang’s camera that she was as surprised as anyone to hear there were Vietnamese in New Orleans.) Chiang, a San Francisco–based documentary maker, heard the story of Versailles village from a friend who was a professor in Arizona. “She had been down in New Orleans to study the recovery after Katrina of different communities of color,� he told me by phone. “That’s where I also heard about what Father Vien Nguyen was doing, leading the fight against the dumping site. The more I listened, the more I liked, so I tagged along with her and did some research.� As one can guess from seeing eight translators credited in the film, Chiang doesn’t speak Vietnamese. “Actually, that’s the beauty of doing documentaries, going into communities you don’t know about and finding out about them,� he says. “Anyone can relate to what the people of the town went through—the displacement and the sense of longing for home.� And yet Chiang was still an outsider. “By the time I got there,� Chiang explains, “they had realized that they had to talk to the outside world to achieve their goals and get their story heard. They were already talking to CNN and other major news outlets. In some ways, it was helpful to be Asian American—it made for a little bit closer of a connection. Of course, it’s one of those communities where if the leadership thinks you’re OK, everyone cooperates, and Father Nguyen gave me some help here.�

A Real Career Versailles’ recovery now is mostly complete, in contrast to the majority of New Orleans East and the Ninth Ward. Chiang and his crew arrived a year or so after the storm. “We were there a year after—a lot of the footage we used was from other folks, we actually weren’t there when Katrina hit or right afterwards. To find the footage and acquire it took a year.� Chiang was born and raised in Taiwan. His family immigrated to San Jose (“I used to go over the hill to Santa Cruz in the summers,� he adds). He studied electrical engineering at UC–Santa Barbara and then worked for Apple for a few years.

“It didn’t stoke my passion, working there. I was fascinated with films and film watching. But being an immigrant from Asia, film didn’t seem to be an acceptable career path. It wasn’t that my folks were against it, it’s just that I kind of internalized the idea that it wouldn’t work as a real career.â€? Eventually, Chiang attended USC film school. “I studied both fiction and nonfiction filmmaking, but I focused on documentaries, mainly because I don’t have the patience to do the writing and the money raising. With documentaries you can just pick up the camera and go. I enjoy traveling and meeting people and studying the anthropological differences between us.â€? With the help of the Center for AsianAmerican Media, a San Francisco–based organization that funds and distributes films, Chiang will be commencing his next film about a man mentioned in passing here: Anh “Josephâ€? Cao, the first Vietnamese-American congressman. Cao is a surprising character: he was elected in a primarily African American district in New Orleans, and he’s a pro-health care, global-warmingacknowledging Republican in a district that had been going Democrat for 110 years. Cao recently did something that could only be described as delightful. Lamar McKay, the resigned BP exec, turned up at Congress to explain himself last June. Cao had some words for McKay. Back in Asia where he came from, Cao noted, “We do things differently. During the samurai days, we’d just give you the knife and ask you to commit hara-kiri. My constituents are still debating on what they want me to ask you to do.â€? This was controversial, as well as unfairly baroque; likely most local fantasies had been simpler, something like the Mark Wahlberg torture scene in Three Kings. Drink up, boys! “I heard that Spike Lee just gave Cao a samurai sword as a gift,â€? Chiang notes. “I’ll be following him through the election. Hopefully I’ll be done next spring for TV broadcast, and maybe the San Francisco Asian American Film Festival if I can get it done in time.â€? A VILLAGE CALLED VERSAILLES (Unrated; 68 min.) screens Saturday, Oct. 16, at 4pm at the Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz and Tuesday, Oct. 19, at the Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz, as part of the Pacific Rim Film Festival. Filmmaker Leo Chiang will attend the Saturday screening. Free. www.pacrimfilmfestival.org. ¨

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october 13-20, 2010

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october 13-20, 2010 SANTACRUZ.COM


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ACUPUNCTURE

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Invest in your future. Find out more about our Master’s Degree program at the Five Branches University Open House

On Guam and the Marianas is some of the nicest property the U.S. government ever colonized

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Santa Cruz Campus Thursday October 21, 6:00–8:00pm I

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Five BraNches university Graduate School of Traditional Chinese Medicine 200 7th Avenue, Santa Cruz (831) 476-9424 3031 Tisch Way, San Jose (408) 260-0208

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OR YEARS, the relationship between the United States and the Mariana Islands could be called “give and take�; the islanders gave and the United States took. Vanessa Warheit’s The Insular Empire: America in the Mariana Islands is an exploration, among other things, of what the U.N. describes as “The Guam Question.� This Stanford-educated filmmaker, now a Vancouver resident, sums up the last few decades since these islands ended up in our domain. Guam itself was a spoil of the Spanish-American war. The northern Marianas were taken from Imperial Japan and given to the U.N., but they’re so firmly in the U.S. domain that this legal status is almost fictional: we don’t test many

H-bombs on much of the U.N.’s other protectorates. The islands are subject to a bewildering patchwork of legal statuses, which Warheit explains quite adequately. In small, we see some of the history of Hawaii repeated here, including the efforts to wipe out of the native language and to use the terrain for military purposes. Considering the previous management by the Spaniards, Guam is estimated as the longest continually occupied colony in the world. In some respects, the citizens of Guam are more American than the Americans, if one cites their contribution to the U.S. wars. The islands’ sons become Uncle Sam’s soldiers; their casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan alone are far out of proportion to the size of the local population. ¨

Bring Your Fashion SANTA CRUZ: 811 pacific av. 831.458.0555 SAN JOSE: 1959 w. san carlos 408.292.6100 SAN JOSE: blossom hill rd. 408.269.1000 www.crossroadstrading.com


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:7AB G=C@ :=1/: 3D3<B 7< B63 1/:3<2/@ Email it to calendar@santacruz.com, fax it to 831.457.5828, or drop it by our office. Events need to be received a week prior to publication and placement cannot be guaranteed.

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1:=A7<5 <756B =4 B63 >/17471 @7; 47:; 43AB7D/: The weeklong Pacific Rim Film Festival concludes with a screening of Those Who Came Before about the cultural legacy of Hawaiian music. Director (and ukulele virtuoso) Eddie Kamae will be performing live with the Keiki Palaka Band, and there will be a hula exhibition by the Te Hau Nui dance group. Wednesday, Oct. 20, 7pm. Tickets $15. Rio Theater, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz.

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B@7AB3 B@=>71A Colonialism is always ambiguous, as Warheit explains, and it goes beyond an appreciation for Coca-Cola and ice cream. The biggest national holiday in the Marianas is the military parade in honor of the liberation from the Japanese. And the northern Marianas are still considered sacred places in U.S. Marine military history: ask a leatherneck about the islands of Saipan and Tinian. Despite all this, Guam and the Marianas remain without adequate political representation. The people have U.S. passports but a distinctly secondclass citizenship. Liberation in World War II ended with the military seizing lands that were paved over with airstrips or used as CIA, Navy or Marine bases. What Warheit doesn’t report on here, likely because of the lack of cooperation from the local military commanders, is the even worse news to come. Ecologically disastrous plans are being drawn up for the as-yet-untouched parts of Guam, such as a proposal to smash a coral reef to make a port for nuclear aircraft carriers. Koohan Paik’s article in The Nation this April, “Living at ‘The Tip of the Spear,� outlines some of the plans; director Warheit mentions these troubles only in passing, essentially as a huge increase of population as U.S. soldiers arrive to man newly built bases. And then there’s the matter of the Marianas’ more recent notoriety as a floating sweatshop, where slave-labor made clothes were branded “Made in USA�—see Alex Gibney’s documentary Casino Jack and the United States of Money for that sordid tale. The future of these islands is discussed with locally famed politicians and activists. One is former Miss Guam, ex-senator and current Chamorrolanguage revivalist Hope Cristobal, whose namesake daughter is continuing to petition for Guam’s rights at the U.N.. And after years of political activism, Saipan’s Lino Olopai is now trying to keep alive maybe the most amazing cultural achievement of the people of the South Seas. This itself is a subject perfect for a film festival dedicated to the Pacific Rim: namely, the art of celestial navigation, which enabled the Polynesians to throw a civilization over the vastest spaces on earth. THE INSULAR EMPIRE: AMERICA IN THE MARIANA ISLANDS (Unrated; 60 min.) screens Tuesday, Oct. 19, at 5pm at the Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. Free. For full schedule see program or visit www.pacrimfilmfestival.org

october 13-20, 2010

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““Where Where w ater m eets lland, and,� W elsh w rites, ““is is w here tthe he k nown water meets Welsh writes, where known m eets tthe he u nknown,� ccreating reating ““aa ssense ense o onging, vvulnerability, ulnerability, meets unknown, off llonging, aanxiety. nxiety.� A llongtime ongtime ssurfer, urfer, W elsh sspends pends m any h ours w ith Welsh many hours with h is b ack tto o tthe he lland, an nd, llooking ooking w ith aanticipation nticipation iinto nto tthe he w atery his back with watery d istance. IIn n tthis his eexhibition, xhibition, W elsh fforces orces tthe he vviewer iewer iinto nto tthat hat distance. Welsh ssame ame p erspective. perspective. E ach w ork iiss a ccomposite omposite o east ttwo wo rrectangular ectan ngular iimages: magges: a Each work off aatt lleast llarge arge ssteel-framed teel-framed p hotograph o orizonless b ody o ater an nd photograph off a h horizonless body off w water and a ssheet heet o rainy p lywood p erhaps sstained tained w ith cclay, lay, ccoated oated w ith off ggrainy plywood perhaps with with sshiny hiny b lacck p aint o overed w ith ggold old lleaf. eaf. N arrrow ssteel teel sshelves helves black paint orr ccovered with Narrow eemerge merge ffrom rom tthe he rrectangles, ectangles, ssupporting upporting o ne o ore eevocative vocative one orr m more ffigures igures o ed cclay lay o orcelaiin. A ffew ew ffound ound o bjects aappear. ppear. F rom off rred orr p porcelain. objects From tthese hese eelements lements aand nd ttheir heir rrelationships, elationships, W elsh cconjures onjures a w orld o Welsh world off m ean ning aand nd m etaphor. meaning metaphor. A ssubstantial, ubstan ntiall, ffirmly irmly k notted rrope ope d angles ffrom rom a h orizontall knotted dangles horizontal p lywood p anel jjoined oined tto o a ssame-sized ame-sized photograph photograph below. below. At At plywood panel tthe he b ase o he p hotograph, sstanding tanding o n a ssmall mall ssteel teel sshelf, helf, base off tthe photograph, on a sstylized tylized tterra erra ccotta otta ffigure igure o oman n iin n a sshawl hawl tturns urns h er off a w woman her b eau utiful fface ace aaway way ffrom rom tthe he vviewer iewer tto o ggaze azze w ith iintensity ntensity aatt beautiful with tthe he w ater. LLife ife LLine ine uses uses the the interaction interaction of of these these four four elements elements water. tto o cconsider onsider tthe he rrelationship elationship o umans aand nd tthe he ssea, ea, tthe he k notted off h humans knotted rrope ope ssuggesting uggesting tthe he eefficiency ff iciency aand nd vvulnerability ulnerab bility o he m ariner; off tthe mariner; tthe he p lywood ggrain rain ssuggests uggests a tturbulent urbu ent ssky, ky tthe he w oman s ggaze aze a plywood woman’s ssense ense o oss aand nd llonging. onging. W here iss tthis h s lifeline? e ne? off lloss Where IIn n Mustang, Mustangg,, completed completed during during the the recent recent Gulf Gu spill, sp a familiar am ar hood hood o rnam ment ggallops allops o ver a p hotograp ph o sten ng w ater N ext tto o ornament over photograph of gglistening water. Next tthis, his, a p anel o ense o ily b lack rreflects e ects a sstanding tand ng figure gure o he panel off d dense oily black of tthe p urest w hite, fface ace ccompletely omplete y ccovered: overed u nsu ed b ut impotent. mpotent IIn n purest white, unsullied but P ilgrim, a ccalf allf o utlined iin n ggold o d rrests ests o nap recarr ous ledge edge d ang ng Pilgrim, outlined on precarious dangling o ver tthe he oc ean. S uch an nima s aand nd b rds rrepresent epresent tto oW e sh ““lost ost over ocean. Such animals birds Welsh aand nd w eary r ttravelers ravelers iin naw or d h ard tto on av gate � w h eh uman weary world hard navigate, while human ffigures igures llike ike tthe he ttrio rio o lowns aand nd d unces in nR endevous sseem eem off cclowns dunces Rendevous cconsistently onsistently llost, ost, d istraccted cclueless. ue ess ((Maureen Maureen D av dson) distracted, Davidson) SSTAN TAN W ELSH O N LLAND—ON AND— ON W ATER ccontinues on nues through hrough N ov 2 8 WELSH: ON WATER Nov. 28 aat T r on M useum oof A r 11505 505 W arbur on A ve SSanta an a C ara Triton Museum Art, Warburton Ave.,. Clara; 4 08 247 3754 R ead m ore oof T he EExhibitionist xh b on s aat K USP org 408.247.3754. Read more The KUSP.org. B63 3F6 0 B =< AB A 4C<232 < >/@B 0G / 5@/<B 4@=; B63 3F6707B7=<7AB 7A 4C<232 7< >/@B 0G / 5@/<B 4@=; B63 1C:BC@/: 1=C<17: =4 A/<B/ 1@CH 1=C<BG B 63 1C:BC@/: 1=C<1 : =4 A/<B/ 1@CH 1=C<BG


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october 13-20, 2010 SANTACRUZ.COM


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NE O NE OF F the the ttruisms ruisms o off the the IInternet nternet eera ra is is tthat hat the the ttraditional raditional aalbum lbum iiss dead: dead: piracy tthanks hanks to to iTunes, iTu unes, p iracy MP3 blogs, we’ve become aand nd M P3 b loggs, w e’ve b ecome a ssinglesingleswithout patience ccrazed razed cculture ulture w ithout tthe he p atience ffor or a 60-minute ssustained ustained 6 0-minute llistening istening eexperience. xperience. Sales bear out. S ales ffigures igures b ear tthis his ttheory heory o ut. Nevertheless, many N evertheless, m any aartists rtists ccontinue ontinue tto o quixotically q uixotically aadvocate dvocate ffor or tthe he aalbum lbum fform, orm, presenting off ssongs p resenting ccohesive ohesive ssets ets o ongs tthat hat ccan an only bee ttruly whole. o nly b ruly aappreciated ppreciated aass a w hole. The The Morning Morning Benders’ Benders’ Big Big Echo Echo is is one one of of the the year’s year’s most most persuasive persuasive arguments arguments for for the the continued continued relevance relevance of of the the album album form. form. An An ambitious ambitious collection collection of of thunderous thunderous indie indie rock, rock, contemplative contemplative folk folk and and ambient ambient soundscapes soundscapes that that would would sit sit comfortably comfortably with with many many ’70s’70sera era album-length album-length song song suites, suites, Big Big Echo Echo is is every every bit bit as as immense immense and and resonant resonant as as the the album album title title suggests. suggests. The The Bay Bay Area Area four-piece four-piece has has more more than than eclipsed eclipsed the the modest modest expectations expectations set set by by its its promisingpromisingyet-slight yet-slight debut debut Talking Talking Through Through Tin Tin Cans Cans and and turned turned in in one one of of the the year’s year’s most most realized realized statements statements of of purpose. purpose. While While Big Big Echo Echo feels feels like like a cohesive cohesive whole, whole, singer/songwriter singer/songwriter Chris Chris Chu Chu wrote wrote the the album album through through a painstaking, painstaking, piecemeal piecemeal process. process. What What sounds sounds ambitious on the record ambitious on the record was was in in reality reality carefully wrought of modest constitutive carefully wrought of modest constitutive parts. parts. “When “When the the songs songs were were first f irst written for Big Echo we knew written for Big Echo we knew we we were were

03/16 0=GA (Left 03/16 0=GA (Left to to right) right) Christopher Christopher Chu, Chu, Julian Julian Harmon, Harmon, Jonathan Jonathan Chu Chu and and Timothy Timothy Or Or ooff the the Morning Morning Benders Benders combine combine painstaking painstaking arrangements arrangements with with a laid-back laid-b ack Golden Golden State State vibe. vib e.

going to going to h have ave tto o open open up up our our ssonic onic palette off n new p alette aand nd ttry ry a llot ot o ew aapproaches, pproaches,� Chu. ssays ays C hu. ““It’s It’s aalways lways about about serving serving Making tthe he songs. songs. M aking sure sure tthe he ssongs ongs aare re proper ttreated reated correctly correctly aand nd ggiven iven tthe he p roper aarrangements rrangements to to llet et tthem hem speak speak as as powerful possible. cclearly learly and and p owerful aass p ossible.� As As a rresult, esult, disparate disparate ssongs ongs ttake ake on on tthe he ssweep weep off a tightly o tightly aarranged rranged ssong ong ccycle. ycle. ““When When way not yyou ou approach approach iitt iin n tthis his w ay iit’s t’s n ot rreally eally orr ssprawling, aabout bout being being aambitious mbitious o prawling,� Chu what’s C hu says, says, ““it’s it’s just just about about doing doing w hat’s aappropriate. ppropriate.� While While the the album album shares shares many many sonic sonic with ttouchstones ouchstones w ith ssimilarly imilarly aambitious mbitious Chu drew ’’70s 70s classic classic rrock ock song song ccycles, ycles, C hu d rew upon off u pon his his encyclopedic encyclopedic knowledge knowledge o pop dates rrock ock and and p op tthat hat d ates back back as as far far as as tthe he ’50s ’50s while while ccomposing omposing tthe he ssongs ongs for for Big B ig Echo. Echo. “We “We definitely def initely love love the the ’70s, ’70s, but but I wouldn’t wouldn’t aattach ttach aany ny more more importance importance tto o it it than than aany ny other other ttime ime period, period,� ssays ays Chu. C hu. “Big “Big Echo Echo was was all all about about taking taking pop pop music m usic ffrom rom aall ll eras, eras, the the ’50s, ’50s, ’’60s, 60s, ’’70s, 70s, ’80, what ’80, ’90s, ’90s, etc., etc., aand nd sseeing eeing w hat they they

sounded like like when when all all mixed mixed together. toggether.� sounded Despite having having been been born born from from a Despite painstaking approach approach to to arrangement arrangement painstaking that in in less less skilled skilled hands hands could could have have that been suffocating, suffocating, Big Big Echo Echo is is effortless effortless been and breezy, breezy, a testament testament to to the the band’s band’s and California provenance. provenance. “I “I do do think think California we we have have something something of of a Californian Californian approach approach to to making making music, music,� Chu Chu says. says. “We “We tend tend not not to to overthink overthink things, things, or or plan plan too too much. much. We We like like to to make make our our time time in in the the studio studio as as laid-back laid-back as as possible, possible, and and just just let let things things happen. happen.� That That tension tension between between a laid-back laid-back California California sensibility sensibility and and obsessively obsessively wrought wrought arrangements arrangements makes makes for for a compelling compelling listen. listen. Layered Layered multipart multipart vocal vocal harmonies harmonies buffer buffer interstellar interstellar folk folk jams, jams, which which give give way way to to thunderous thunderous drum drum breaks breaks and and resonant resonant distorted distorted guitar guitar chords. chords. Taken Taken as as a whole, whole, Big Big Echo Echo offers offers a sprawling sprawling excess excess of of riches riches that that is is stunning stunning in in its its dynamism. dynamism. And And while while sales sales figures figures may may point point the way to a future in which the the way to future in which the album album

fform orm is is solely solely tthe he d domain omain of of o obsessives bsessives aand nd ccompletists, ompletists, as as long long as as there there remain remain ssongwriters ongwriters ssuch uch as as Chu Chu who who value value tthe he form, form, it it will will n ever ggo o extinct. extinct. “The “The never IInternet nternet iiss probably probably destroying destroying the the aalbum, lbum,� ssays ays C hu, “but “but I tthink hink there there w ill Chu, will aalways lways b eople o ut tthere, here, like like me, me, that that bee p people out llove ove the the album album fformat. ormat. I w ant to to ccontinue ontinue want tto om ake music music ffor or those those p eople.� make people. Not that that the the Morning Morning Benders Benders are are Not ccontent ontent living living iin n tthe he p ast. “We “We can can still still past. p articipate iin, n, or or eeven ven eembrace mbrace what’s what’s participate ggoing oing o n in in the the digital digital music music aage ge b on byy rreleasing eleasing MP3s MP3s aand nd tthings, hings, but but w ill wee w will n ever rrelease elease a ccouple ouple ssingles ingles w ith eight eight never with ttracks racks o iller tto o make make aan n aalbum. lbum. W off ffiller Wee llove ove aalbums lbums ttoo oo m uch to to d o that. that.� much do

B 6 3 ; = @ < 7 < 5 0 3 < 2 3 @ A B63 ;=@<7<5 03<23@A Friday, F Friday y, Oct. 15, 8pm; Rio Theatre, Theatre, Soquel Ave., Santa 1 1205 So quel A ve., Sant ta Cruz. Tickets advance/$15 door; T icke i ets $12 adv ance/$15 do orr; www.riotheatre.com. 831.423.8209 or www w..riotheatre.com.


03/ /BA1/>3 o october c t o b e r 113-20, 3 -2 0, 2 2010 0 1 0 A/<B/1@CH 1=; A/<B/1@CH 1=; $ $ j 03/BA1/>3

Jazz Presenters since 1975

THURS. OCTOBER14 • 7 & 9 PM Experimental...bluegrass!

PUNCH BROTHERS FEATURING CHRIS THILE $22/Adv $25/Door No Jazztix/Comps

MON. OCTOBER 18 • 7 PM A blend of Cuban & Central African traditions!

RICARDO LEMVO & MAKINA LOCA Dance space! $20/Adv $23/Door

WED. OCTOBER 20 • 7 PM

MASTER CLASS SERIES RENATA BRATT Melodic Invention: Improvising Over Chord Changes FREE WORKSHOP FOR ALL INSTRUMENTS! THURS. OCTOBER 21 • 8 PM “They thrive on risk.â€? –DownBeat

JACOB FRED JAZZ ODYSSEY $15/Adv $18/Door

SAT. OCTOBER 23 • 5:30 PM

AUTUMN VINES Wine tasting, dinner & auction to support Kuumbwa Jazz • Call for info. MON. OCTOBER 25 •7 PM RISING STAR SAX LADY!

TIA FULLER QUARTET $20/Adv $23/Door

THURS. OCTOBER 28 • 7 PM

SCOTT AMENDOLA TRIO “Lift� CD Release Concert $12/Adv $15/Door Jazz & Dinner: $24.60/Adv

MON. NOVEMBER 1 • 7 & 9 PM

Vocal chameleon! NELLIE McKAY

$25/Adv $28/Door, No Jazztix/Comps Sponsored by Erik’s DeliCafÊ

THURS. NOVEMBER 4 • 7 PM

PAUL CONTOS QUARTET FEATURING MILTON FLETCHER, DAN ROBBINS, HAMIR ATWAL

03/B 53<3@/B7=< 0 3/ /B 53<3 3@/ /B7=< B The p political olitical

ppolyrhythms olyrhythms of Ozomatli

$12/Adv $15/Door Jazz & Dinner: $24.60/Adv MON. NOVEMBER 8 • 7 & 9 PM

THE JEFF LORBER FUSION

Jeff Lorber - keyboards, Eric Marienthal - saxophone, Jimmy Haslip - bass, Will Kennedy - drums $25/Adv $28/Door, No Jazztix/Comps 9 pm: 1/2 Price Night for Students

ON SALE OCT. 14 JOHN McLAUGHLIN AND THE 4TH DIMENSION Fri.December 10 @ the Rio Theatre

$40/Gold Circle $30/General, No Jazztix/Comps Sponsored by Fitz Fresh

ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL Sun.December 12 @ the Rio Theatre

$35/Gold Circle $25/General, No Jazztix/Comps Sponsored by Gayle’s Bakery & Rosticceria Dinner served Mondays & Thursdays beginning at 6pm, serving premium wines & microbrewed beers. Snacks & desserts available all other nights. All age venue.

Advance tickets at Logos Books & Records and online at kuumbwajazz.org Tickets subject to service charge and 5% S.C. City Admission Tax.

320-2 Cedar St • Sa nta C r u z 427-2227

kuumbwajazz.org

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When w When wielded ielded b byy a sseasoned easoned hand, hand, tthe he acoustic acoustic gguitar uitar is is aan n instrument instrument of of rromance, omance, w onder aand nd eeven ven mystery. mystery. wonder It talian-born gguitarist uitarist B eppe Gambetta Gambetta Italian-born Beppe iiss just just ssuch uch a p layer, a guitar guitar vvirtuoso irtuoso player, ffrom rom tthe he old old ccountry ountry w ho h as n ot who has not fforgotten orgotten tthe he eelusive lusive sensuality sensuality o off tthe he instrument. instrument. Gambetta Gambetta integrates integrates sstyles tyles from from both both continents continents iin n his his ccompositions, ompositions, b lending ccountry ountry blending m usic aand nd L igurian ffolk olk m usic aand nd music Ligurian music eemigrant migrant b allads. Music Music tthat hat could could ballads. b erely a h istorical aanachronism nachronism bee m merely historical p reserved iin n aamber mber iin no ther players’ players’ preserved other h ands iiss imbued imbued w ith llife ife and and vvitality itality hands with b Gambetta, who who channels channels centuries centuries byy Gambetta, o folk ttraditions raditions tthrough hrough his his sturdy sturdy off folk p erformances aand nd compelling compelling performances ccompositions. ompositions. D on Quixote’s; Quixote’s; $15; $15; Don 77:30pm. :30pm. ((Paul Paul M avis) M.. D Davis)

When tthe When he b band and ttakes akes tthe he sstage tage iit’s t’s llike ike ffitting itting a ssquare quare p eg iinto nto a ssquare quare peg h ole, h andily ssatisfying atisfy f ing tthe he aaudience’s udience’s hole, handily eexpectations xpectations o luegrass b and: off a b bluegrass band: ffiddle, iddle, b anjo, ssuspenders, uspenders, ccheck, heck, banjo, ccheck, heck, ccheck. heck. B ut tthe he P unch B rothers But Punch Brothers ttravel ravel u ndercover, aand nd ttheir heir ggenre enre undercover, o luegrass iiss m ore o uggestion. off b bluegrass more off a ssuggestion. Th hey p refer tto om ix m odern cclassical lassical They prefer mix modern w ith h oedown-worthy m elodies iinto nto with hoedown-worthy melodies ab and tthat hat fformed ormed o n tthe he b ack o band on back off ccreator reator C hris T hile’s h eartbreak aand nd Chris Thile’s heartbreak ssoul oul ssearches. earches. T he 112 2 aalbums lbums h e’s The he’s rrecorded ecorded ssince ince tthe he aage ge o ive h im off 5 ggive him tthe he sstatus tatus o andolin vvirtuoso, irtuoso, aand nd off m mandolin ccoupled oupled w ith ssoaring oaring ttalents alents llike ike G abe with Gabe W itcher aand nd N oam P ikelny, tthe he ggroup’s roup’s Witcher Noam Pikelny, ccompositions ompositions are are eexplications xplications o heir off ttheir o wn m usical ggenius. enius. K uumbwa; 77pm; pm; own musical Kuumbwa; $ 23.10. (Kate (Kate JJacobson) acobson) $23.10.

Just tthe Just he ffact act tthat hat tthis his S San an F Francisco rancisco aact’s ct’s ffrontman, rontman, C hris C hu, sshares hares a Chris Chu, p roduction ccredit redit w ith C hris T aylor production with Chris Taylor o rooklyn iindie ndie ggods ods G rizzly B ear off B Brooklyn Grizzly Bear sshould hould m ake aany ny m usic ffan an p erk u p make music perk up aand nd ssay ay ““Wha?� Wha?� T he ssimilarities imilarities d on’t The don’t eend nd tthere, here, eeither, ither, aass tthe he M orning Morning B enders h ave n ow m atured b eyond tthe he Benders have now matured beyond b oilerplate iindie ndie rrock ock tthat hat ggot ot tthem hem boilerplate tthrown hrown iinto nto tthe he k nock- off ccategory ategory knock-off aand nd d rew aaccusations ccusations o eing a p oor drew off b being poor m an’s S hins or or F leet F oxes. IIndeed, ndeed, man’s Shins Fleet Foxes. o n tthe he ggroup’s roup’s llatest atest d isc, Big Big Echo, Echo, on disc, tthe he q uartet p roduces ccomplex omplex aand nd llush ush quartet produces ssoundscapes oundscapes tthat hat rrecall ecall tthe he h armonic harmonic m astery o he aaforementioned forementioned mastery off tthe N ew Y ork rrock ock p ioneers. S ee sstory, tory, p age New York pioneers. See page 2 5. R io T heatre; $ 12 aadv/$15 dv/$15 d oor; 8pm. 8pm. 25. Rio Theatre; $12 door; ((Curtis Curtis C artier) Cartier)


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>/C: ; 2/D7A > /C : ; 2/ 2 D7A Some ffolks olks know P o Paul au ul M. Da Davis avvis as the ggravelly gra velly vvoiced oiced guit ocalist list guitarist arrist and vvocalist ffrom fr om m the the lo cal (now disbanded) d anded) alt disb llocal altccountry ountry act Mule Mu e Tra Tr ain. i O thers know Train. Others him as the razor -witteed scrib razor-witted scribee of music ffeatures eeatures in this vvery ery public p ation. W publication. Wee know him as a memb ber of the Santa Santta member Cruz W eeekly family. familyy. So o it’s it’s admittedly admittedly Weekly with a tinge of bias that th hat we plug Mr Mr.. Da avvis’ solo show at the th he Cr epe Place Place Davis’ Crepe this Friday. Fridaay. But even even if i yyou’ve ou’ve only used our rag to line yyour o marmot our ’s marmot’s ccage, age, you’d you’d still do we ell to catch catch the well singerr/songwriter lean and mean singer/songwriter b ellow out his plainspoken poken folk fo olk yarns plainsp bellow o ver a lukewarm lukewarm glasss of Midtown over absinthe epe Plac e $10 adv/ e; absinthe.. Cr Crepe Place; $12 door; door; 9pm. 9pm (CC) (CC)

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>6=A>6=@3A13<B >6=A>6=@3A13<B 6=E:7<¸ @/7< 6=E:7<¸ @/7< Matthew Houck appr Matthew approaches roaches ffolk olk o fr from om h same side id ways y dir di rection i that h ’6 ’’60s0sthe sideways direction yche bands lik era ps psyche likee the Grateful Dead and JJefferson efffeerson Airplan ne did. His band, Airplane Phosphor escent, is owever, armed Phosphorescent, is,, ho however, with the latest tricks of the trade in

term ms off mo m dern music pr p o oductio on and on, nd d the he terms modern production, rresult esu ult is a thick th and meat aty ste w off so oth ng othing meaty stew soothing dow wn-home m vvocals ocals and ambitious mbit and d heady heaa down-home iinstrumentation. inst nsttrument rume m ation. C ompleting the double bl bill il Completing with h Houck and C o. is the decided dly hea avvier Co. decidedly heavier S .F F. ps ych rrock ock headbangers Howli in’ Rain. ain S.F. psych Howlin’ L ed b arist and vvocalist ocalist Ethan n Miller r, Led byy guit guitarist Miller, who o appr opriately pr ovides the “H Howlin,’’� appropriately provides “Howlin,’� the band ccomes omes acr oss as a monso on storm across monsoon of or o gan and distor tion-rich rrock ock on o st age. organ distortion-rich stage. H Hen nry Miller Mill Librar Lib y, Big Bi Sur; S $18; 8; 7pm. Henry Library, (C C C) (CC)

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Ozomatli’s premier Ozomatli’s premier performance performance was was ffor or picketers picketers d uring a Los Los Angeles Angeles sstrike. trike. during Th he b and’s grass-roots grass-roots beginnings beginnings ssoon oon The band’s eevolved volved into into ssuccess uccess in in the the S oCal club club SoCal ccircuit, ircuit, b ut the the lyrical lyrical calls calls for for action action still still but fform orm the the constant constant for for a ggroup roup running running tthe he gamut gamut of of Latin-rock Latin-rock ggenres enres and and w hose list list of of past past members members outnumbers outnumbers whose tthat hat of of ttheir heir currents. currents. T he group group has has The ttoured oured internationally internationally at at the the behest behest of of tthe he U.S. U.S. S tate Department Department and and has has been been State p opping up up all all over over music music festivals festivals aand nd popping p ublications, keeping keeping close close to to aanti-war nti-war publications, ccommitments ommitments aand nd promoting promoting aims aims for for ssocial ocial justice. justice. C atalyst; 8 pm; $ 24 adv/ adv/ Catalyst; 8pm; $24 $ 28 d oor. (KJ) (KJ) $28 door.

Since forming Since forming ttwo wo d decades ecades aago, go, tthe he Mother has proven M other Hips Hips h as p roven to to be be one one of of Area’s tthe he Bay Bay A rea’s most most dependable dependable jamjamband b and exports. exports. The The band’s band’s amalgam amalgam off muscular wandering o muscular rrock ock aand nd w andering iinstrumental nstrumental excursions excursions appeals appeals head-trippers tto o rrockers ockers and and h ead-trippers alike, alike, Hips llending ending tthe he Mother Mother H ips a wide wide many aappeal ppeal tthat hat eludes eludes m any similar similar outfits. o utf its. With With the the guitar-and-vocals guitar-and-vocals duo duo Tim Loiacono up Ti im Bluhm Bluhm and and Greg Greg L oiacono u p on bass Mike ffront, ront, Isaac Isaac Parsons Parsons o nb ass and and M ike Wofchuck on drums, W ofchuck o n tthe he d rums, tthe he Mother Mother Hips H ips prove prove that that a band band can can mature mature without w ithout becoming becoming sstale tale or or repetitive. repetitive. Moe’s door; 9pm. M oe’s Alley; Alley; $15 $15 aadv/$20 dv/$20 d oor; 9 pm. ((PMD) PMD)

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1:/AA71/: 5@/AA 1 :/AA71/: 5@/AA The T Punch Brothers Brotherrs play Kuumbwa Ku uumbwa this Thursday. Thurrssday.

Though he Though he was was bo born orn iin n tthe he Democratic Democratic R epublic of of the the Congo, Congo, Ricardo Ricardo L emvo’s Republic Lemvo’s m usical inspiration inspiration ccame ame ffrom rom a place place musical ffar ar North: North: C uba. Lemvo Lemvo m oved tto o Cuba. moved tthe he States States in in 11972, 972, b ut iitt w asn’t u ntil but wasn’t until h ormed his his band band M akina L oca iin n hee fformed Makina Loca 11990 990 that that h is aamalgam malgam o frican his off A African ttraditional raditional forms forms and and C uban Latin Latin Cuban jjazz azz cohered cohered into into the the rich rich A fro-Cuban Afro-Cuban ssound ound he’s he’s known known for for today. today. B lending Blending C ongolese rumba rumba and and ssoukous, oukous, Cuban Cuban Congolese sson on montuno, montuno, Dominican Dominican m erengue, merengue, C olombian cumbia cumbia aand nd other other Latin Latin Colombian fforms, orms, Lemvo Lemvo and and M akina L oca p resent Makina Loca present d ance-f loor music music with with a ttruly ruly gglobal lobal dance-floor pe rspective, rrecontextualizing econtextualizing ffamiliar amiliar perspective, ssounds ounds in in new new and and ecstatic ecstatic ways. ways. K uumbwa; $20 $20 aadv/$23 dv/$23 d oor; 77pm. pm. Kuumbwa; door; ((PMD) PMD)


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Concert Sponsored by The Westcliff Foundation and Susan Cony

JON NAKAMATSU

A SPECIAL BENEFIT PIANO R ECITAL

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SYMPHONY Sa nt a Cr u z C ou nt y

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WITH SELECTIONS BY

CLEMENTI SCHUMANN BEETHOVEN LISZT CHOPIN es udes clud incl ing in atin seat emiiuum se prem 100 pr *$10 *$ h t i it w n eppttiioo eexxcclluussiivve rreecce and su an atsu at m a am k a ak N n o J Jo te. tate esta by es arby ar e n ne a t a at er nger rang ro Gra stro aest Mae

Tickets $25-100* plus service fees. Call 420-5260 or www.SantaCruzTickets.com www.SantaCruzSymphony.org Season Media Sponsor:

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Halloween Festival and Mask Making Workshop

FLOATER plus Ploughman PU (K] H[ [OL +Y ‹ +YZ ! W T :OV^ W T -YPKH` 6J[VILY ‹ AGES 16+

RJD2

VitalSC presents plus Eskmo also Minnesota and Vibrant Eyeris (K] +Y ‹ +YZ W T :OV^ W T -YPKH` 6J[VILY ‹ In the Atrium ‹ AGES 21+ FRIDAY NIGHT FUNCTION: DJ Aspect DJ Tone Sol, Nima Fadavi 56 *6=,9 ‹ W T W T

:H[\YKH` 6J[VILY ‹ AGES 21+

ozomat l i

(K] +Y ‹ +YZ VWLU W T :OV^ W T :H[\YKH` 6J[VILY ‹ In the Atrium ‹ AGES 21+

SOUTH 46 A tribute to the Allman Brothers PU (K] H[ [OL +YZ ‹ +VVYZ ! W T :OV^ W T

<USLZZ V[OLY^PZL UV[LK HSS ZOV^Z HYL KHUJL ZOV^Z ^P[O SPTP[LK ZLH[PUN Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 866-384-3060 & online

www.catalystclub.com

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;O\YZKH` 6J[VILY ‹ In the Atrium ‹ AGES 21+

6J[ Dubstep in the Lounge (Ages 21+) 6J[ Wiz Khalifa/ Yelawolf (Ages 16+) 6J[ Mishka/ White Buffalo (Ages 16+) 6J[ Mickey Avalon (Ages 16+) 6J[ The Chop Tops/ Riff Raff Atrium (Ages 21+) 6J[ Murs/ Moe Green (Ages 16+) 6J[ Wallpaper Atrium (Ages 16+) 6J[ Barrington Levy (Ages 16+) 6J[ Switchfoot (Ages 16+) 6J[ Halloween Costume Ball Sourgrass/ Wooster (Ages 21+) 5V] Steel Pulse (Ages 16+) 5V] Ghostland Observatory (Ages 16+) 5V] Sublime with Rome (Ages 21+) 5V] Sublime with Rome (Ages 16+) 5V] VitalSC: “Borgore� (Ages 16+) 5V] Alkaline Trio (Ages 16+)

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1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-423-1336

October 23, 2010 12:00 PM - 5:00 PM

FREE Louden Nelson Community Center 301 Center Street 420-6177 From mask-making and pumpkin decorating to creepy, crawly touch tanks and wacky relays, this annual event is a great way to get in the Halloween spirit. Come in costume and end the day with a parade through the park.

www.nelsoncenter.com

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307 CHURCH STREET SANTA CRUZ, CA 6:00PM DOORS · ALL AGES TICKETS AT ALL TICKETMASTER LOCATIONS CHARGE BY PHONE 831-420-5260

& &! $!! ! !& ! $!! ! !& & &! !

' ' % %'! '!

SUNDAY JAN 23 HERITAGE THEATRE

1 WEST CAMPBELL AVE · CAMPBELL, CA · 6:30PM DOORS · ALL AGES TICKETS AT HERITAGE THEATRE BOX OFFICE ONLINE AT WWW.CI.CAMPBELL.CA.US/HERITAGETHEATRE · CHARGE BY PHONE 408-866-2700

On Sale

FRI 10:00AM WWW.SQUAREPEGCONCERTS.COM


! j 47:; october 13-20, 2010 A/<B/1@CH 1=;

Film Capsules

SHOWTIMES FOR FRIDAY OCT 15 – THURSDAY OCT 21 “An electric, offbeat comedy with a fiercely poignant performance by Zach Galifianakis!� –Variety

<3E 1/>A

Keir Gilchrist Emma Roberts Zach Galifianakis FROM THE DIRECTORS OF

0 @ Japanese middle

‘HALF NELSON’

school students are sent to an island and forced into a war game, in which all but one will die, in this science fiction film. (Plays Fri-Sat midnight at Del Mar.)

(PG-13) Daily (2:30), (4:45), 7:15, 9:30 &

Sat, Sun (12:15)

“A memorably haunting sci-fi romance with stellar performances!� –Rolling Stone

Carey Mulligan Keira Knightly Charlotte Rampling

(R) Daily

B63 0@3/94/AB 1:C0 (1985) Eight

(2:15), (4:30), 7:00 & Sat, Sun (12 noon)

INCEPTION (PG-13)

Once Nightly: 9:10

(R)

ADVANCE MIDNIGHT SHOW THURS 10/21! Tickets On Sale Now! Regular Shows Start 10/22

hours in detention together and a high school athlete, a princess, a brain, a basket case and a bad boy realize that they have more in common than they thought—and are more willing to explore it than

any teenager has been since. Revelations and romances bust up cliques faster than a SWAT team, because detention has never been as revealing as it was in the ’80s. (Plays Thu at 8pm at Santa Cruz 9.) 2C19 A=C> A63 2=<3 67; E@=<5

(1933/1933) Duck Soup represents the acme of the Marx Brothers’ art. The film is a satire on the business of war, with profiteer Rufus T. Firefly (Groucho) seducing wealthy aristo Margaret Dumont; meanwhile intrepid

agents provocateurs Chico and Harpo keep hostilities boiling. As an antiwar film, it’s peerless, because it doesn’t give the nobility of war any room. Witness Groucho exulting, “Look at them! They’re fleeing like rats!� while machine-gunning his own advancing troops in the back. BILLED WITH She Done Him Wrong. “This 1933 ‘Don’t Care’ gal has personality-swinging hips, bedroom eyes and the throaty growl of an amorous cat—she just doesn’t give a damn!�— West, as summed up in

Movie reviews by Traci Hukill, Kate Jacobson, Tessa Stuart and Richard von Busack

an advertisement. This is her first important role. She plays a saloon owner with a thing for the Salvation Army minister next door (Cary Grant) while avoiding a mysterious police detective known only as “The Hawk.� (Plays Sat-Sun at 11am at Aptos.) (RvB)

rights. The magic of setting up a living room behind jet engines or bungee-ing while locked inside an outhouse stirs nothing but longing in the hearts of laymen. Why can’t we all have a crew to build us jet-ski ramps in duck ponds? (Opens Fri at Santa Cruz 9 and Green Valley.)

8/19/AA 7< ! 2 (R;

<=E63@3 0=G (R; 98 min.) John Lennon’s life wasn’t all glamour and Beatles, and once upon a time he was just a boy living in Liverpool. Examining his adolescent years finds a clashing relationship

93 min.) If “trained professional� means habitually doing stunts that take more time and money than the average person is possessed of, Johnny Knoxville and company have the title

with mother and aunt, the first meeting with Paul McCartney and the birth of the band that would evolve into the biggest rock sensation to roll stateside. Staring Aaron Johnson. (Opens Fri at the Nickelodeon Theater.) @32 (PG-13; 111 min.) Bruce Willis is a retired black-ops CIA agent at loose ends until a hightech assassin comes to pick him off, at which point he assembles his old team and gets the brass at Langley all in a tizzy. With Morgan Freeman, Helen Mirren,

Midnights @ The Del Mar

Tickets $6.50 Fun! Prizes! Survival!

B.R.

SHOWTIMES

Fri 10/15 & Sat 10/16 @ Midnight Next Fri: The Haunting Next Sat: The Shining

Online Ticketing Available @

www.thenick.com

Showtimes are for Wednesday, Oct. 13, through Wednesday, Oct. 20, unless otherwise indicated. Programs and showtimes are subject to change without notice.

/>B=A 17<3;/A

8OQYOaa 2 — (Opens Friday) Daily 1; 3:15; 5:35; 7:55; 10:20. @SR — (Opens Midnight Thursday) Daily 2:15; 4:50; 7:35; 10:15; plus Fri-Sun

@SR — (Opens Friday) 2:10; 4:30; 6:50; plus Sat-Sun 11:15am. ASQ`SbO`WOb — Daily 1:30; 4; 6:30; 9. BVS B]e\ — Wed-Thu 1:50; 4:20; 6:50; 9:20. 2cQY A]c^ AVS 2]\S 6W[ E`]\U 2]cPZS 0WZZ — Sat-Sun 11am.

1OaS !' — Wed-Thu 2:25; 5:00; 7:50; 10:20. 3Oag / — Wed-Thu 5:15; 7:35; 10; Fri-Wed 2:25; 4:45; 7:10; 9:25 plus Fri-Sun

" AB /D3<C3 17<3;/

:Sb ;S 7\ — Wed-Thu 1:15; 4:10; 7:15; 9:50. ;g A]cZ b] BOYS ! 2 — 2:40; 5:10; 7:45; 10:10 plus Fri-Sun 11:55am. ASQ`SbO`WOb — Wed-Thu 1:20; 4:15; 7:10 9:55; Fri-Wed 1:10; 3:55; 6:45 plus Fri- Wed 9:30. BVS A]QWOZ <Sbe]`Y — Wed-Thu 1; 1:35; 3:45; 4:25; 6:45; 7:25; 9:30; 10:10; Fri-

122 Rancho Del Mar Center, Aptos 831.688.6541 www.thenick.com

STARTS FRIDAY 10/15! “A powerful, passionate and potentially revolution-inducing documentary.�

12:05pm. :SUS\R ]T bVS 5cO`RWO\a( BVS =eZa ]T 5O¸6]]ZS ! 2 — Wed-Thu 2:05;

4:30; 7; 9:20; Fri-Wed 11:50; 2:10; 4:30; 7; plus Sun-Wed 9:20pm.

–Entertainment Weekly

(PG)

On 2 Screens! Daily: (1:40), (2:20), (3:50), (4:40),

1475 41st Ave., Capitola 831.479.3504 www.cineluxtheatres.com

6:00, 7:00, 8:10, 9:10 & Sat (11:30), Sun (12:10) STARTS FRIDAY 10/15! “A biopic about John Lennon’s early days ‌ free-spirited, insightful and moving!â€? –Entertainment Weekly

Kristin Scott Thomas

11:45am.

Aaron Johnson

:SUS\R ]T bVS 5cO`RWO\a( BVS =eZa ]T 5O¸6]]ZS ! 2 — Wed-Thu 11:30; 2; 4:20; 6:45. :WTS Oa ES 9\]e 7b — Wed-Thu 11:40; 2:10; 4:45; 7:20. BVS A]QWOZ <Sbe]`Y — Wed-Thu 11:30; 2; 4:30; 7:10; 9:45.

Wed 1:30; 4:25; 7:15; 10pm. BVS B]e\ — Wed-Thu 1:05; 4; 6:50; 9:40; Fri-Wed 1:15; 4; 6:50; 9:40pm. BVS 0`SOYTOab 1ZcP — Thu 8pm.

Call for Friday-Wednesday show times.

(R) Daily: (2:30), (4:30), 6:50, 9:00 &

>OQWTWQ @W[ 4WZ[ 4SabWdOZ — Fri-Sun; details at pacrimfilmfestival.org 0c`WSR — Wed-Thu 2:45; 5:00; 7:30; 9:45. 7\QS^bW]\ — Daily 9:10. 7b¸a 9W\R ]T O 4c\\g Ab]`g — Daily 2:30; 4:45; 7:15; 9:30 plus Sat-Sun 12:15pm. <SdS` :Sb ;S 5] — Daily 2:15; 4:30; 7:00; plus Wed-Thu 9:15; Sat-Sun 12pm. 0 @ — Fri & Sat midnight.

“Killer suspense with shocking secrets!� –Rolling Stone (PG-13)

FINAL WEEK!

Romain Duris

Vanessa Paradis

HEARTBREAKER

Daily: (5:00), 7:10 &

<7193:=23=<

Sat, Sun (12:50)

STARTS FRIDAY 10/15! “An amusing, light-footed caper ‌ irresistible!â€?

Bruce Willis

A1=BBA D/::3G 17<3;/

226 Mt. Hermon Rd., Scotts Valley 831.438.3260 www.cineluxtheatres.com :WTS Oa ES 9\]e 7b — Wed-Thu 2; 4:30; 7:10; 9:45. ASQ`SbO`WOb — Wed-Thu 1:40; 4:20; 7; 9:40. 3Oag / — Wed-Thu 11:55; 2:10; 4:20; 6:45; 9. :SUS\R ]T bVS 5cO`RWO\a( BVS =eZa ]T 5O¸6]]ZS ! 2 — Wed-Thu 1:30; 4;

6:30; 8:45. :Sb ;S 7\ — Wed-Thu 2:20; 4:45; 7:20; 9:55. BVS A]QWOZ <Sbe]`Y — Wed-Thu 2; 4:45; 7:30; 10:10. G]c /UOW\ — Wed-Thu 1:45; 4:10; 6:45; 9:10.

Call for Friday-Wednesday show times.

Lincoln and Cedar streets, Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com

( ) = Bargain Shows Before 5:30pm

Helen Mirren

1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com

Sat, Sun (12:30)

FINAL WEEK!

Daily: (3:00), 9:20

23: ;/@

<]eVS`S 0]g — (Opens Friday) 2:30; 4:30; 6:50; 9; plus Sat-Sun 12:30pm. EOWbW\U T]` Ac^S`[O\ — (Opens Friday) 1:40; 2:20; 3:50; 4:40; 6; 7; 8:10; 9:10;

plus Sat 11:30 and Sun 12:10pm. 1ObTWaV — Wed-Thu 2:20; 8:50; Fri-Wed 3; 9:20. 6SO`bP`SOYS` — Wed-Thu 2:40; 4:50; 7:00; 9:15. Wed-Fri 5; 7:10; plus Sat-Sun 12:50pm. 7\QS^bW]\ — Wed-Thu 3:30; 8:15. 8OQY 5]Sa 0]ObW\U — Wed-Thu 2:50; 6:40. G]c /UOW\ — Wed-Thu 1:30; 6:15.

–Variety

Morgan Freeman

(PG-13) Daily: (2:10), (4:30), 6:50, 9:10 & Sat, Sun (11:15am)

“An incredible real-life saga of America’s greatest race horse!� –Variety

Diane Lane John Malkovich Daily: (1:30), (4:00), 6:30, 9:00

DOUBLE FEATURE! Sat 10/16 & Sun 10/17 @ 11:00am

Next Week: Annie Hall Children under 5 admitted only on Mondays & Weekend Matinees

1125 S. Green Valley Rd, Watsonville 831.761.8200 www.greenvalleycinema.com 8OQYOaa ! 2 — (Opens Friday) 1:25; 3:30; 5:30; 7:30; 9:35 plus Sat-Sun 11am. @SR — (Opens Friday) 1:25; 4:30; 7; 9:25 plus Sat-Sun 11:05am. ASQ`SbO`WOb — Daily 1:30; 4:30; 7:10; 9:30; plus Sat-Sun 11:00am. 1OaS !' — Daily 3:45; 9:30. 3Oag / — Wed-Thu1:05; 3:15; 5:20; 7:30; 9:30; Fri-Wed 1:30; 7 plus Sat-Sun 11am. :SUS\R ]T bVS 5cO`RWO\a( BVS =eZa ]T 5O¸6]]ZS ! 2 — Wed-Thu 1:05; 3:05;

5:05. :SUS\R ]T bVS 5cO`RWO\a( BVS =eZa ]T 5O¸6]]ZS 2 — Fri-Wed 1:20; 3:20;

@7D3@4@=<B AB/27C; BE7<

155 S. River St, Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1701 www.regmovies.com :WTS Oa ES 9\]e 7b — Daily 4; 7; 9:45 plus Fri-Sun 1pm. EOZZ Ab`SSb( ;]\Sg <SdS` AZSS^a — Daily 3:30; 6:30; 9:30 plus Fri-Sun 12:30pm

(PG)

CLASSICS Tickets $6 ON THE BIG SCREEN Duck Soup & She Done Him Wrong

5@33< D/::3G 17<3;/ &

A/<B/ 1@CH 17<3;/ '

1405 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1700 www.regmovies.com 8OQYOaa ! 2 — (Opens Midnight Thursday) Fri-Sun 12:10; 2:35; 5; 7:25; 9:50. Mon-Wed 2:35; 5; 7:25; 9:50.

5:20 plus Sat-Sun 11am. :Sb ;S 7\ — Wed-Thu 11:30; 4:30; 7:05; 9:30; Fri-Wed 11:00; 1:30; 4:30; 7:05; 9:30;

plus Sat-Sun 11am. :WTS Oa ES 9\]e 7b — Wed-Thu 1:30; 4:15; 7:05; 9:30; Fri-Wed 1:30; 4:15; 7:05; 9:30 plus Sat-Sun 11:05am. ;g A]cZ b] BOYS ! 2 — Wed-Thu 1:30; 4:25; 7:00; 9:25. ;g A]cZ b] BOYS !# ;; — Fri-Wed 1:30; 4:25; 7; 9:25 plus Sat-Sun 11:10am. BVS A]QWOZ <Sbe]`Y — Daily 1:30; 4:15; 7; 9:30; plus Sat-Sun 11am. BVS B]e\ — Daily 7; 9:30.


j !!

A/<B/1@CH 1=; october 13-20, 2010 47:;

E/7B7<5 4=@ AC>3@;/< (PG; 102

min.) The vast problems of the U.S. public school system distilled into a quick documentary. Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth) follows five young students as they try to get into private schools. (One is eighth-grader Emily of Redwood City, whose parents are concerned that she’ll be pushed onto a noncollege track.) It’s Guggenheim’s contention that school funding has doubled while test scores continue to descend. Guggenheim has a point: the dropout rate and the failing students are a hell of a problem. Yet this documentary has the kind of ideology even Meg Whitman can wrap herself around: you can watch it and come to the conclusion that privatization and union-busting is the answer—the same answer we’ve been given since the 1980s. This may not have been Guggenheim’s intention. But as always in this passionate-intensity style documentary, there’s the possibility of deliberate misreading, thanks to the lethal combo of stridency and slipperiness. (RvB)

@3D73EA 1/A3 !' (R; 109 min.)

Kindhearted social worker Emily Jenkins (RenĂŠe Zellweger) brings home an abused 10-yearold girl only to discover that her parents had several good reasons for trying to send her back to hell and that her baggage might be hard to handle without a few lakes of holy water. Jenkins turns out to be as determined as she is kind, and spends the rest of the film fighting to free her charge of demons. 1/B47A6 (PG-

13; 94 min.) The new documentary Catfish does for social networking what 1999’s Blair Witch Project did for hand-held film. It deals with the problem of the realer-than-real

illusion imparted by documentaries and social networking. The narrow field of vision and depth in portable cameras creates some haunting images: the Michigan town, under flat blue skies, is as empty as the plaza in a de Chirico painting. The sequence of the team exploring a deserted farmhouse, by the green light of night vision at 3am, creates stomach-turning tension. The payoff is diabolically plausible and definitely tragic: there’s true horror in such a pitiful need for recognition. And the culture of fame and the age of digital film is creating such horror stories by the dozen every day. (RvB) 3/AG / (PG-13; 95 min.)

High school girl Olive (Emma Stone) gets her reputation ruined and decides to revel in it, accessorizing her outfits with the scarlet A she just read about in Nathaniel Hawthorne in English class. An urbane and sly comedy, vastly superior to Juno; the appealing lead name-checks John Hughes films but this surpasses his conformist work, despite director Will Gluck’s tendency to shoot the exteriors of Ojai homes with Nancy Meyers–like fussiness. Good work by Patricia Clarkson and Stanley Tucci as Olive’s debonair parents; Scripter Bert V. Royal’s gags are almost syncopated—this isn’t relentless joke-joke-joke. The laughs come with the grace of a word to the wise, and the sense on how to emphasize sting at just the right time. (RvB) 63/@B0@3/93@

(PG-13; 105 minutes) A French romantic comedy about three people who make a business (literally) of breakingup other people’s relationships. Things go awry when they are hired by a rich man intent on preventing his daughter’s marriage to her true love. 7B¸A 97<2 =4 / 4C<<G AB=@G (PG-13;

101 minutes) Based on the novel by Ned Vizzini, about a depressed teenager (played by Keir Gilchrist) who checks himself into a psychiatric hospital.

7<13>B7=< (PG-13; 148 min.) The basic idea of Christopher Nolan’s film is simple. Led by Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio), a sort of Impossible Mission Force, working for a Japanese trillionaire (Ken Watanabe), descends into the sleeping subconscious of the plutocrat’s young rival (Cillian Murphy), using technology that allows them to design dreamscapes. Because of the complexity of this operation, the team s forced to create dreams within dreams, and each deeper dream takes place in an exponentially larger time frame. The film is audacious and frequently thrilling, especially when Nolan folds Paris in on itself and Escherizes interior spaces. It’s visionary filmmaking, uncommon at this scale. (RvB)

A3/< 2=<<3::G

Robert Dreyfuss, MaryLouise Parker and Karl Urban. (Opens Fri at Aptos, Santa Cruz 9 and Green Valley,)

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pg!uif!qvcmjd!fevdbujpo!tztufn!boe!qsftdsjcft!dibohft!jo!Ă•Xbjujoh!gps!Tvqfsnbo/Ă–

8/19 5=3A 0=/B7<5

(R; 97 min.) Philip Seymour Hoffman directs and stars in film about two workingclass New York City couples navigating the waters of intimacy, betrayal, friendship and forgiveness.

min.) A young owlet is kidnapped by older, evil birds and forced into the raptor equivalent of child military service until the wise old owls (stay with me here) who live on a mysterious island can be persuaded to come back and fight to liberate all owldom.

target for bullies. This is when Abby (Chloe Moretz) shows up. She’s a pale girl with dirty bare feet, and she only comes out at night. What Owen doesn’t know is that Abby’s father (Richard Jenkins) is a serial killer who ritually murders his victims, draining their blood into a jug. All in all, Reeves does a fine job of delivering the forlornness, solitude and shame of this story, which only uses the word “vampire� once: the focus is not on blood for blood’s sake but on the tragedy of inexplicable need. (RvB)

:3B ;3 7< (R; 115

;G A=C: B= B/93

:353<2 =4 B63 5C/@27/<A (PG; 97

min.) Director Matt (Cloverfield) Reeves’ respect for the original Swedish film, Let the Right One In, makes this an honorable and chilling movie about the uncanny. It has that element of pity that results in genuine horror, instead of a series of ever-noisier and yet ever-diminishing shocks. The action takes place in Los Alamos, N.M., in the winter of 1983. Raised by a drunken but pious single mom, Owen (Kodi Smit-McPhee) is getting to the stage where he’s less interested in candy and more interested in knives. Skinny, pale and with disturbingly wideset eyes, he is a natural

(R; 88 minutes) A 3-D horror film from director Wes Craven (A Nightmare on Elm Street; Scream). Local lore in the town of Riverton holds that the Ripper, a serial killer who terrorized the town 16 years before, will return to kill those who were born on the day he supposedly died. <3D3@ :3B ;3 5= (R; 103 min.) Keira Knightly, Andrew Garfield and Carey Mulligan star in a tale of three boarding school chums who face a “haunting reality� along with the general bummer of growing up. A31@3B/@7/B (PG; 116 minutes) Today’s riddle: When is a horse a bum

steer? I was ready to believe that Seabiscuit ended the Depression. You have to give a good film some slack. I was alive in 1973, the year Secretariat won the Triple Crown. I don’t recall his victory healing our divisions over the Vietnam War, though director Randall Wallace coaxes us to believe it’s true. Secretariat is inbred—the offspring of too many similar sports films. It’s relentlessly thick—custard-thick— and cheap-looking, too, and its story is as fishy as 3-day-old salmon; it tries to make an underhorse out of a very blueblooded steed. Diane Lane, ordinarily a fine actress, gets no help from the script which seems to be trying to make her an anti-heroine. Lane plays throughbred breeder Penny Chenery. Ultimately, Secretariat is more fundraising pitch than race track action. It is scenes of cold calling, scratching names off a list and fretting over the money more than the races. (RvB) B63 A=17/: <3BE=@9 (PG-13;

120 min.) Fiendishly clever and funny movie about the creation of an Internet monster. As Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Jesse Eisenberg gives a master

class on recessive acting: he’s beady eyed and covert, with the occasional pit-viper-like sway of a truculent, lowered forehead. It’s the kind of remorseless superiority that can only look comically childish and wounded onscreen. The film shuttles between the present-day deposition of the now arrogantly rich Zuckerberg, as he’s sued by a quartet of burned partners (among them his former best friend Eduardo, played by Andrew Garfield). In flashback, we see his own history—a Jewish student at WASP-ridden Harvard, a social reject whose grudge-hacking was his entry into fame. Later, Zuckerberg meets the founder of Napster, Sean Parker—played by Justin Timberlake, excellent as a happy wastrel. The Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross score is closer to the sinister Byrne and Eno we loved once than the flowery, love-struck Byrne and Eno in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps. Fincher regular cinematographer Jeff Cronenweth keeps us oriented by making the walnut-lined tombs of Harvard so different from the lambency of the sun in Palo Alto.

Aaron Sorkin’s wild, witty script hands out punishment that goes beyond the financial penalties: this is a comedy in the Balzac sense, a balancing act; the mockery and the disgust for greed matches the essential lightness of the situation. It’s only Facebook, after all. (RvB) B63 B=E< (R; 125 min.) Routine plotting, if some rousing action sequences, in this Boston crime drama with Ben Affleck, a hunk-sized hole in the screen. It’s the old twobrothers plot, foster brothers though they be: Affleck as criminal paragon and his younger nutty-buddy Jim (Jeremy Renner of The Hurt Locker) ready to lash out and hurt someone. We keep waiting for Jon Hamm’s unshaven FBI agent Frawley to rattle the cages. It’s Blake Lively, as an Oxycontin-fancying tramp, who gets the brunt of Hamm’s power; she does some excellent reacting to a little bar-side lecture Hamm gives about a $20 bill. Rebecca Hall has too much presence to be just the girl whose entry into the plot causes friction between the two main thieves.

The much-rewritten script is choppy and undermotivated, though Chris Cooper and Pete Postlethwaite are outstanding in tiny roles. (RvB) E/:: AB@33B( ;=<3G <3D3@ A:33>A (PG-13; 133

min.) The film starts with a critique of capitalism that doesn’t really want to critique capitalism and keeps going. Shia LeBeouf plays Jake Moore, who is busting his figs on the Street to finance his pet project, described as “that little energy company in California.� Turns out that his girlfriend is Gordon Gekko’s estranged daughter Winnie (Carey Mulligan). As Gekko, Michael Douglas is just about completely mush. He’s reformed, written a book called Is Greed Good? and is blatting out platitudes. Director Oliver Stone’s well-known immunity to shame flabbergasts you anew. The world has changed since the 1987 original (documentaries now give us a better idea of how the Wall Street mess hit the fan). Here, it’s the stale breath of melodrama that overwhelms you, not the breathtaking qualities of the barbs aimed at the master class. (RvB)


!" j 27<3@¸A 5C723 october 13-20, 2010 A/<B/1@CH 1=;

Diner’s Guide

Our selective list of area restaurants includes those that have been favorably reviewed in print by Santa Cruz Weekly food critics and others that have been sampled but not reviewed in print. All visits by our writers are made anonymously, and all expenses are paid by Metro Santa Cruz. AG;0=:A ;/23 A7;>:3( + C\RS` + # + $ + O\R c^

Price Ranges based on average cost of dinner entree and salad, excluding alcoholic beverages

/>B=A $$ Aptos

/;0@=A7/ 7<27/ 07AB@=

$$ Aptos

0@7B/<<7/ /@;A

$$$ Aptos $$$ Aptos

$$ Aptos

207 Searidge Rd, 831.685.0610

8017 Soquel Dr, 831.688.1233 :/ 03::/ D7B/ 07AB@=

257 Center Ave, 831.685.8111 A3D3@7<=¸A 5@7::

7500 Old Dominion Ct, 831.688.8987

Indian. Authentic Indian dishes and specialties served in a comfortable dining room. Lunch buffet daily 11:30am-2:30pm; dinner daily 5pm to close. www.ambrosiaib.com. American and specialty dishes from the British and Emerald Isles. Full bar. Children welcome. Happy hour Mon-Fri 2-6pm. Open daily 11am to 2am. Italian. Ambience reminiscent of a small trattoria in the streets of Italy, serving handmade lasagna, pasta dishes, gnocchi and fresh fish. Wed-Sun, lunch 11am-2pm, dinner 5-9pm. Continental California cuisine. Breakfast all week 6:30-11am, lunch all week 11am-2pm; dinner Fri-Sat 5-10pm, Sun-Thu 5-9pm. www.seacliffinn.com.

H/;33< ;327B3@@/<3/< Middle Eastern/Mediterranean. Fresh, fast, flavorful. Gourmet

7528 Soquel Dr, 831.688.4465

meat and vegetarian kebabs, gyros, falafel, healthy salads and Mediterranean flatbread pizzas. Beer and wine. Dine in or take out. Tue-Sun 11am-8pm.

1/>7B=:/ $ Capitola

Capitola

1/43 D7=:3BB3

104 Stockton Ave, 831.479.8888

All day breakfast. Burgers, gyros, sandwiches and 45 flavors of Marianne’s and Polar Bear ice cream. Open 8am daily.

>/@/27A3 ACA67 Japanese. This pretty and welcoming sushi bar serves superfresh 200 Monterey Ave, 831.464.3328 fish in unusual but well-executed sushi combinations. Wed-Mon 11:30am-9pm.

California Continental. Swordfish and other seafood specials. Dinner Mon-Thu 5:30-9:30pm; Fri 5-10pm; Sat 4-10:30pm; Sun 4-9pm.

A6/2=E0@==9

Capitola

1750 Wharf Rd, 831.475.1511

AB=19B=< 0@7253 5@7::3 Mediterranean tapas. Innovative menu, full-service bar,

Capitola

231 Esplanade, 831.464.1933

international wine list and outdoor dining with terrific views in the heart of Capitola Village. Open daily.

$$$ Capitola

H3:2/¸A

203 Esplanade, 831.475.4900

California cuisine. Nightly specials include prime rib and lobster. Daily 7am-2am.

A/<B/ 1@CH $$ Santa Cruz

/1/>C:1=

$ Santa Cruz

16/@:73 6=<5 9=<5

$$ Santa Cruz

1116 Pacific Ave, 831. 426.7588

1141 Soquel Ave, 831. 426.5664

1:=C2A

110 Church St, 831.429.2000

$$ Santa Cruz

B63 1@3>3 >:/13

1@=E¸A <3AB

Santa Cruz

2218 East Cliff Dr, 831.476.4560

$ Santa Cruz

460 Seventh Ave, 831.477.2908

1134 Soquel Ave, 831.429.6994

4/<2/<5= ;3F71/<

$$ Santa Cruz

67<2?C/@B3@

$$ Santa Cruz

6=44;/<¸A

303 Soquel Ave, 831.426.7770

1102 Pacific Ave, 837.420.0135

Mexican/Seafood/American. Traditional Mexican favorites. Best fajitas, chicken mole, coconut prawns, blackened prime rib! Fresh seafood. Over 50 premium tequilas, daily happy hour w/ half-price appetizers. Sun-Thu 11am-10pm, Fri-Sat 11am-11pm. California organic meets Southeast Asian street food. Organic noodle & rice bowls, vegan menu, fish & meat options, Vietnamese-style sandwiches, eat-in or to-go. Consistent winner “Best Cheap Eats.� Open daily 11am-11pm. American, California-style. With a great bar scene, casually glamorous setting and attentive waitstaff. Full bar. Mon-Sat 11:30am-10pm, Sun 1-10pm. Crepes and more. Featuring the spinach crepe and Tunisian donut. Full bar. Mon-Thu 11am-midnight, Fri 11am-1am, Sat 10am-1am, Sun 10am-midnight. Seafood. Fresh seafood, shellfish, Midwestern aged beef, pasta specialties, abundant salad bar. Kids menu and nightly entertainment. Harbor and Bay views. Lunch and dinner daily. Mexican. Serving breakfast all day. Popular for our street tacos and handmade Salvadoran pupusas. Vegetarian options made w/ local fresh vegetables & organic tofu. Daily 9: 30am-9:30pm. Americana. Ribs, steaks and burgers are definitely the stars. Full bar. Lunch Mon-Sat 11:30am-2:30pm; dinner Sun-Thu 5:30-9:30pm, Fri-Sat 5:30-10pm. California/full-service bakery. Breakfast, lunch, dinner. “Best Eggs Benedict in Town.� Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-6pm. Halfprice appetizers; wines by the glass. Daily 8am-9pm.


SANTACRUZ.COM

october 13-20, 2010

| 35

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!$ j /AB@=:=5G october 13-20, 2010 A/<B/1@CH 1=;

Astrology Free Will

By Rob Brezsny

For the week of October 13 /@73A (March 21–April 19): Until recently, no cricket had ever been observed pollinating a f lower. All the evidence showed, in fact, that crickets don’t help f lowers—they devour them. Then one night last January on the island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean, researchers discovered that the species known as the raspy cricket was responsible for pollinating wild orchids. They even caught the magic act on film. I regard this turn of events as akin to an upcoming development in your life: Someone or something that you’ve never thought of as a fertilizing force for you will become one. B/C@CA (April 20–May 20): My date and I decided to go see the film You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger. As we entered the theater, we passed a short, elderly Chinese woman in a brown uniform. She was bent over sweeping the f loor. Suddenly she stood up straight, looked me in the eye, and extended her left hand toward me. Confused, I reached out toward her. She quickly pressed something in my hand, then returned to her sweeping. As I walked on, I unrolled the small paper scroll she had given me. It read, “Tell your Taurus readers they should be alert for helpful messages coming from sources they would usually ignore or neglect.� I’m doing what she suggested.

53;7<7 (May 21–June 20): Of all the signs in the zodiac, you are currently the best at carrying out the following activities: gliding, flowing, leaping, skipping, twirling, undulating, reverberating, galloping, and rub-a-dub-dubbing. I suspect that you will also excel at rumbling, romping, rollicking, cavorting, and zip-a-dap-doodling. If all goes well, Gemini—which is to say you show how much you love your body and throw off any inhibitions you might have about celebrating your instinctual nature—then you will be at the low end of the scale in performing these activities: shuffling, drooping, mumbling, wallowing, pigeonholing, and pussyfooting. 1/<13@ (June 21–July 22): A reader wrote to

Santa Cruz Veterinary Hospital Serving you with thorough and compassionate care for more than 45 years

me bemoaning the fact that her new Cancerian boyfriend is addicted to safety. She speculated that since he is a member of an astrological sign renowned for its timidity, she should probably either get used to the suffocating lack of action or else bolt from the relationship now. In reply, I sent her a quote from one of the most heroic Cancerians of the 20th century, Helen Keller: “Life is either a daring adventure or nothing. Security does not exist in nature, nor do the children of men as a whole experience it. Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than exposure.� Moral of the story: It’s a ripe time for you to rise up and refute the people in your life who think you’re a brooding wallf lower.

:3= (July 23–Aug. 22): Helping your fellow humans

Should your pet see a board-certiďŹ ed surgeon? On-site CT Scan, Laparoscopic Spay, Arthroscopy, Thoracoscopy, Cruciate repair (TPLO), Trauma/Fracture repair, 24 hour On-site Intensive Care for post surgical recovery & pain management, Access to your pet’s surgeon for any questions during recovery period

Our specialists’ promise: Your pet will receive the most complete, safe, compassionate and individual care. For more information about board certiďŹ ed specialists, contact your regular veterinarian and visit our website

can literally enhance your strength. A Harvard study (tinyurl.com/BeExtraNice) proved that people who did good deeds or even visualized themselves doing good deeds had increased physical endurance and willpower. Unfortunately, the study showed that those who harbor nefarious intentions are also able to draw on extra fortitude. In other words, you can boost your energy by either being compassionate or evil. I highly recommend the former over the latter, Leo, especially now that you’re entering a phase when it makes a lot of spiritual sense to build your courage, vigor, and tonicity.

D7@5= (Aug. 23–Sept. 22): “The art of medicine consists of amusing the patient while nature cures the disease,� said French philosopher Voltaire. With this in mind, let’s evaluate your current discomfort. From what I can tell, healing forces beyond your control and outside of your awareness are going to be working their mojo to chip away at your problem. But it will still be wise for you to occupy yourself in activities that you think will expedite the fix. Doing so will minimize your anxieties, allowing nature to do what it does best. :70@/ (Sept. 23–Oct. 22): Usually you specialize in having a light touch. You’d rather nudge than push. Nimble harmony is more interesting to you than brute force. You prefer your inf luence on people to be appreciated, not begrudgingly respected. And I certainly don’t want you to forsake any of those inclinations. But I would love to see you add a dash of aggressiveness and a pinch of vehemence to your repertoire in the coming week. I’d be thrilled if you raised your voice a bit and gesticulated more vigorously and projected your confidence with

an elevated intensity. According to my reading of the astrological omens, your refined approach will benefit from a dose of subliminal thunder.

A1=@>7= (Oct. 23–Nov. 21): Time magazine created a list of the 50 worst inventions. Included among the most terrible creations that human ingenuity has ever come up with are plastic grocery bags, sub-prime mortgages, hydrogenated oils, and pop-up ads. Now let’s switch our attention to your personal equivalents of these monstrosities. To climax the atonement phase of your own astrological cycle, I recommend that you do the following: 1. Identify the three worst ideas you have taken seriously during the past decade. 2. Carry out one formal action to correct or make amends for the consequences of each bad idea. 3. Really, truly, forgive yourself as best as you can. A/57BB/@7CA (Nov. 22–Dec. 21): For your assignment this week, I have borrowed from a list of suggestions offered by Sagittarius poet Kenneth Patchen in his book The Journal of Albion Moonlight. Feel free to improvise as you carry out at least three. 1. Discourage all traces of shame. 2. Bear no cross. 3. Extend all boundaries. 4. Blush perpetually in gaping innocence. 5. Burrow beneath the subconscious. 6. Pass from one world to another in carefree devotion. 7. Exhaust the primitive. 8. Generate the free brain. 9. Forego no succulent filth. 10. Verify the irrational. 11. Acquire a sublime reputation. 12. Make one monster at least. 13. Multiply all opinions. 14. Inhabit everyone.

1/>@71=@< (Dec. 22–Jan. 19): Among Google searches starting with the phrase “who is,â€? the top-rated is “God,â€? while “Satanâ€? is a distant tenth. Running ahead of Satan but behind God are Lady Gaga and Justin Beiber. If I were you, Capricorn, I wouldn’t be Google-searching any bigger-than-life entities like those four in the coming week. The characters you need to research are non-divine, non-celebrity types who might bring interesting inf luences into your life—people who would have a direct inf luence on your access to resources and on your ability to call forth the best from yourself. /?C/@7CA (Jan. 20–Feb. 18): Explorers found a 30,000-year-old carved stone artifact in a German cave and brought it to the University of Tubingen for study. Experts there determined that it had a dual purpose for the ancient humans who made it. Phallic-shaped with rings around one end, it was obviously a sex toy. But other markings indicated it was also used to start fires by striking it against f lints. I’d like to make this power object your symbol of the week, Aquarius. You’re in a phase when you should be alert for ways to mix business with pleasure and practicality with adventure. >7A13A (Feb. 19–March 20): You’re not exceptionally scared of the dark, Pisces, but sometimes you seem to be intimidated by the light. You can summon the spunky courage to go crawling on your hands and knees through dank tunnels and spooky caves in quest of treasure that’s covered in primordial goo, but you may play hard to get when you’re offered the chance to unburden yourself of your cares in wide-open spaces. What’s up with that? Don’t get me wrong: I’m proud of your capacity to wrestle with the shadows in the land of the lost; I’m gratified by your willingness to work your karma to the bone. But I would also love you to get a share of rejuvenating rest and ease now and then. Do you think you could manage to have it both ways? I do. 6][Se]`Y( 4]` ]\S eSSY ^`SbS\R b] OZ`SORg PS a][SbVW\U g]c¸`S ]\ g]c` eOg b] PSQ][W\U @S^]`b g]c` `SacZba Pg U]W\U b] 4`SSeWZZOab`]Z]Ug Q][ O\R QZWQYW\U Âľ3[OWZ @]P Âś

Go to @3/:/AB@=:=5G 1=; to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone &%% &%! "&&& or 1.900.950.7700


S a n t a c r u z .co m October 13-20, 2010 C L ASS I F I E DS

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Mail to Santa Cruz Classifieds, 115 Cooper St, Santa Cruz, CA 95060.

classifieds@metronews.com Please include your Visa, MC, Discover or American Express number and expiration date for payment.

Employment Classes & Instruction Family Services Music Real Estate

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IN PERSON BY FAX Fax your ad to the Classified Department at 831.457.5828.

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Visit our offices Monday through Friday, 8.30am 115 Cooper St, Santa Cruz.

DEADLINES For copy, payment, space reservation or cancellation: Display ads: Friday 12 noon Line ads: Friday 3pm

Santa Cruz Weekly Classifieds 115 Cooper Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 Monday to Friday, 8.30am – 5pm Charge by phone, fax or email 24 hours a day ¬ 831.457.9000 PHONE

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Auto/Motorcycle Shop In Scotts Valley $10-$13/hr. Full time long term WordShip&USPS Intl E-mail/Phone Customers Resume Required KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 email: 1471@kellyservices.com *Never A Fee*

Production Workers Wanted!

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Food production in Watsonville Day and Swing Shifts Available Must have a flexible schedule Fluent in English required Must have reliable transportation & pass a drug test Temp-ToHire $8.50/hr. KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 email: 1471@kellyservices.com *Never A Fee*

Paid In Advance! f

Make $1000 a Week mailing brochures from home! Guaranteed Income! FREE Supplies! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.homemailerprogram.net (AAN CAN)

Bilingual Administrative Assistant 8am-5pm Monday-Friday In Santa Cruz $12 per hour Fluent Spanish/English Must know MS Word & Excel Excellent Customer Service Skills KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 email: 1471@kellyservices.com *Never A Fee*

Administrative Assistant II Front Desk Receptionist For Property Mgmt Co in Santa Cruz $16/hr. Full Time, Long Term Must know MS Word and Excel Professional Appearance Multi-Line Phones Pass Criminal Bckgrnd & Credit Check KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 mail: 1471@kellyservices.com *Never A Fee*

For Chiropractic Office In Soquel Part Time Long Term Tues & Thurs (maybe more) $10 per hour Word, Excel, Phones, Typing KELLY SERVICES, 425-0653 e-mail: 1471@kellyservices.com *Never A Fee*

Eco-Friendly Housekeeping position available. Full Time/ Permanent. Please visit www.christisgreencleaning.com to review job description and fill out an application.

gg Family Services

Single Services

Adoptions

Single Services

Pregnant? Considering Adoption? Talk with caring agency specializing in matching birthmothers with families nationwide. Living expenses paid. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866/4136293 (AAN CAN)

Interacial Dating Sign up NOW for FREE membership, to find that someone Special! Contact: interracialchristiandating.net

g g gg g g g g g g g

1-877-722-0087 Exchange/Browse Personal Messages 1-866-362-1311. Live adult casual conversations 1-877-599-8753 Meet on chat-lines. Local Singles 1-888-869-0491 (18+) New!! Talk Live!! 1-866-362-1311 (AAN CAN)

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MOVIE EXTRAS

earn up to $150/day to stand in backgrounds of major film. Experience not required. CALL NOW! 1-888-664-4621 (AAN CAN)

Classes & Instruction

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General Notices

Miscellaneous

Reach over 5 million young, educated readers for only $995 by advertising in 110 weekly newspapers like this one. Call Jason at 202-2898484. This is not a job offer. (AAN CAN)

Antiques

Music

Rehearsal/Recording

Stout Recording Studio.com

Recording, Mixing, Mastering 24 Track Analog, 24 Bit Digital Randy Burk, Producer/Session Drummer $35.00 an hour. Oakland 510-567-8572 Miscellaneous

Need Music? Got Music?

Check out the Santa Cruz Weekly’s music section. To advertise call 831.457.9000 Services

See ad at right

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38 |

C L ASS I F I E DS

October 13-20, 2010 S a n t a c r u z .co m

Homes Santa Cruz

g Home Services

Gardening/Landscaping

Garden and Yard Maintenance Gardening as you like it. Excellent local references. Gutter cleaning and sprinkler repair. Affordable - Reliable. Weekly, monthly or one time. Call Leigh 831/338-1860

g House Cleaning

Housecleaning Service Home, Office, Churches. Good References! Good Rates! Experienced! 408/529-5992

Terrific price on artistic home near beach with beautiful bonus room and meditation garden on the lower west side. Great location for home business! 2 br/1 ba with charming features! $599,000. www.west-santacruz.com Terry Cavanagh 831-345-2053 or Tammi Blake 831-345-9640

Prospect Heights Santa Cruz

Homes Under $600K

Boulder Creek

a beautiful building site in the sun. Half acre. Private gated road. Easy location. All utilities in place. Plans included, too. Excellent neighborhood. Owner financing. $249,000. Donner Land & Mortgage Co., Inc. www.donnerland.com 408-395-5754

Santa Cruz Charming cottage bungalow, 2 br / 1ba. Large corner lot, room for gardening. Hardwood floors, remodeled kitchen, close to UC. $489,000. www.1725bay.com. Call Terry at Pacific Sun Properties: 471-2424 x105 or Tammi Blake 345-9640.

3 br, 2 ba condo near UCSC. Private end unit with yards, 2 car attch garage, light, bright & spacious. $535,000. www.660Nobel.com. Call Terry at Pacific Sun Properties: 471-2424 x105 or Tammi Blake 345-9640.

Santa Cruz

Incredible new price! Peaceful beauty and comfortable living Amazing new price for this in Prospect Heights 3 br/ 2 ba beautiful home surrounded by upscale remodel & beautiful greenery in Prospect Heights. backyard. $579,000. 717park3 br, 2 ba, remodeled kitchen, way.com. Terry at Pacific Sun hardwood floors, spacious and Properties: 471-2424 x105 or elegant. $579,000. Listed by Tammi Blake 345-9640. Terry Cavanagh and Tammi Land Blake 831-471-2424.

Westside - Santa Cruz Sweet, charming bungalow with period charm on the upper west side on a large corner lot. 2 br, 1 ba, remodeled kitchen, hardwood floors. $489,000. Listed by Terry Cavanagh and Tammi Blake 831-471-2424.

gg Real Estate Sales

Reduced! Terrific West side location!

Homes

290 acres ! Run your dirt bikes or quads or take a hike and have a lot of fun on the 11 parcels ranging in size from 18- 40 acres. Santa Clara county. Sun, Views, Spring, Creek. Off grid. Excellent Owner financing. $1,150,000. Donner Land & Mortgage Co., Inc. www.donnerland.com 408-395-5754

Donner Land & Mortgage Co., Inc. www.donnerland.com 408-395-5754

Los Gatos Mountains 4 acres. A perfect spot for the home you have been dreaming of. Incredible view and Full Sun. Shared well. Power at lot line. Some reports. Paved access. Plans included. Owner financing. $450,000. Donner Land & Mortgage Co., Inc. 408-395-5754

Boulder Creek

gg COMING SOON

50 acres Ben Lomond. TPZ. Love Creek runs thru it. Donner Land & Mortgage Co., Inc. www.donnerland.com 408-395-5754

Boulder Creek 3+ acres. Sunny spot, good access. Power at lot line. Creek. Good location. Owner financing. $149,000.

10 acres. Ridge top. 3 mile private bumpy road leads to this quiet and serene site. Beautiful view and plenty of sun. Off grid. Owner Financing. $189,000.Donner Land & Mortgage Co., Inc. 408-395-5754 Investment Property

BUSINESS FOR SALE Coin Laundry - NEW - Santa Cruz. Great 2nd Income. Make money while you play. Ready to open. For info 650574-4848 or 415-516-3540. Donner Land & Mortgage Co., Inc. www.donnerland.com 408-395-5754

S.C.: Custom home! Stained glass & skylights throughout, lovely landscaping, two artists’ studios. 3 BR, 2 BA in convenient location $724,900. Terry Cavanagh at Pacific Sun Properties 831-471-2424 x105. Visit www.114sutphen.com.

ing Liv n le ow ab nt rd w fo o Af In D

AN EXPERIENCED

Live in the n of Santa Cruz Asking $135,000 • Co-op membership park • 1 Bedroom plus Large private garden • Beautiful paneling throughout • Go green, walk everywhere! • Spacious bath with custom vanity • BBQ area and equipped clubhouse Low income co-op park. Annual income requirements at time of purchase. Call for details.

Judy Ziegler ph: 831-429-8080 cell: 831-334-0257

www.cornucopia.com

TEAM

for buying, selling and managing property in Santa Cruz County

Town and Country Search the Entire MLS Just Like The Realtors Do!

Pacific Sun Properties 734 Chestnut Street Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831.471.2424 831.471.0888 Fax www.pacificsunproperties.com

Real Estate

www.santacruzrealestate.co Notice we’re now online at

.co

Helping Buyers and Sellers

ions sact n a r ss T

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Integrity Commitment erle Excellence Pap Serving all of Santa Cruz Co.(831)335-3200

Independently owned & operated by local Realtors


S a n t a c r u z .co m

Wheels

October 13-20, 2010 C L ASS I F I E DS

| 39


WAMM Opens Membership! Apply for membership to WAMM for Low cost Organic Medicine! Longest running MMJ Org. in Nation. Serving Santa Cruz for 17 years! WAMM.org, 831-425-0580. peace

Add a Touch of Color to Your Ads Make your ad stand out from the crowd! Ask your Santa Cruz Weekly salesperson about adding color to your ad. For advertising information call 831-457-9000.

TO ADVERTISE IN THE SANTA CRUZ WEEKLY CALL 831.457.9000


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