Wednesday, 02 October 2024

Arts & Life

COBB, Calif. – The Cobb Mountain Artists’ second Wednesday “Artist Presents” series will be held Aug. 14.

The forum will begin at 7 p.m. at The Artisan Realm, 16365 Highway 175, Cobb.

The event is free and open to the public.

This month’s feature in the series will be a forum on taking pictures of art.

Some successful artists spend more time with marketing than making their art. Good photos of your work are critical.

Are you perplexed? Do your results end up misrepresenting the quality of your work?

They will discuss various elements of taking a good shot and what type of photos are required or expected for various press efforts. These standards and expectations are not the same for every venue.

Are slides still important for gallery viewings? What's typical for the Internet? Newspapers? It can be very confusing. One thing is certain, and that is the importance of the best photos to represent your work.

Come and join the monthly series, share your ideas and listen to what has worked for others.

For more information contact Glenneth Lambert, telephone 707-295-6934 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

LOWER LAKE, Calif. – The Lake Community Pride Foundation will present a concert by the duo “Flashback!” on Saturday, Aug. 10.

The concert will take place from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Lower Lake High School Little Theater, located at 9430 Lake St. Doors open at 6:30 p.m.

“Flashback!” is the duo of Moe Sampson and Hilarie Wilt, who play classic American music. Sampson performs on his 12-string guitar and Wilt plays a six-string guitar, with both doing vocals with harmonies.

All proceeds go to support youth performing arts in Lake County.

Tickets cost $10 at the door.

For tickets and information visit www.aneveningwith.org or call 707-701-3838. 

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LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Arts Council's Main Street Gallery is featuring a window display of painted saw blades by artists from the Konocti Art Society.

These saw blades will be on display at the gallery through August and then the show will move to WestAmerica Bank in Kelseyville for the Kelseyville Pear Festival, where buyers can purchase a raffle ticket to win the blade of their choice. Proceeds will be donated to a local charity.

Also on display in August are interesting large canvas oils with a distinctive view by artist Jay Glimme.

The Linda Carpenter Gallery is featuring various photography entries depicting agriculture throughout Lake County.

The Main Street Gallery is located at 325 N. Main St., Lakeport, telephone 707-263-6658.

Visit the gallery online at http://www.lakecountyartscouncil.com/ .

LUCERNE, Calif. – The Lucerne Alpine Senior Center will host its monthly open mic night from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 10.

The center is located at 3985 Country Club Drive.

Looking for an opportunity to perform?  Got talent? Music, comedy, mime – any other activity that is family-oriented will be appreciated. 

If you have no special talent, be audience member, come join the fun. Room is available for dancing and relaxing. There is no charge for attendance. 

“We had a fabulous time last month and are looking forward to the great music,” said Executive Director Rae Eby-Carl.

For those wishing to have dinner, spaghetti with beverage, salad and garlic bread will be available for purchase at $7 per plate for adults and $5 for children under twelve.

This is a monthly event which will switch in September to the third Saturday of every month. 

Bands are already signing up for August including house band FOGG. More signups will open at 5 p.m. Saturday night. You can call 707-245-4612 or 707-274-8779 to sign up or ask questions.

All proceeds from the meal benefit the Lucerne Alpine Senior Center.  This nonprofit serves the senior populations on the Northshore with lunches on site and Meals on Wheels.

For more information call Lucerne Alpine Senior Center at 707-274-8779.

THE WOLVERINE (Rated PG-13)

Hugh Jackman returns as the mutant hero, the titular character in “The Wolverine.” The movie raises two questions: Why is he in Japan? Why does he still sport mutton chops?

When he’s not baring his adamantium claws, Jackman’s Wolverine is known as Logan. In what is the sixth film (counting spinoffs) of the franchise, Logan is first spotted looking like a homeless mountain man in the Alaskan wild, or maybe it’s the Yukon. Whatever, it’s some place cold and uninviting.

Living like a recluse in a cave, Logan communes with nature, even managing a peaceful coexistence with a grizzly bear companion. His solitary existence is disturbed by the appearance of reckless hunters bent on snagging a large, shaggy-haired ursine trophy.

Confronting the repugnant hunters at the town saloon, Logan reverts to his old superpowers to ward off his foes, drawing attention from the enigmatic Yukio (Rila Fukushima), who entices him to Japan. So we have the answer to the first question.

Memories of World War II are fresh in Logan’s mind, as he remembers, while interned in a POW camp, saving the life of a young Japanese soldier during the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, and thereby revealing his miraculous self-healing powers.

Shifting to the present day, Logan has not aged, but the soldier he rescued, Yashida (Haruhiko Yamanouchi), is an elderly, extremely wealthy industrialist, now confined to his deathbed, wistfully hoping for immortality.

Logan’s Wolverine, who does not age, possibly holds the key to a life without end, hence the interest by Yashida and assorted shadowy, mysterious figures, obviously connected to the Yakuza, to Logan’s secret.

Lured by the curious Yukio to Tokyo, Logan ends up getting a scrubbing and makeover from geisha girls, but he keeps the mutton-chopped sideburns. The answer to the second question remains elusive and unknowable.

Dutifully paying his respects to the dying Yashida, Logan discovers that the industrialist’s granddaughter Mariko (Tao Akamoto) stands to inherit his fortune, and as a result, her life is in serious danger.

For one thing, Mariko’s father is a ruthless tycoon who is apparently involved with sinister forces that seek to take control, by force if necessary, of the Yashida financial empire.

A spectacular fight sequence with ninja warriors at Yashida’s funeral service causes Logan and Mariko to go on the run, even hiding out for a time at a seedy hotel that caters to customers renting rooms by the hour.

Meanwhile, Logan is undergoing an existential crisis, evidenced by the frequent dream sequences in which his former lover, Jean Grey (Famke Janssen), a fellow mutant that he had to kill, reminds him of misfortune and tragedy.

More than troubling dreams are at work. Logan is also consumed with thoughts that his immortality is a curse and a burden that hinder his ability to live a normal life, a thought more pressing now that his romantic feelings for Mariko have taken hold.

Due to other strange things going on, Wolverine finds his physical strength ebbing away, his superpowers gradually dwindling and his immediate ability to heal from all wounds no longer a given.

But before falling into a state of impaired faculties, Wolverine manages a spectacular fight to the death on top of a speeding bullet train with a Yakuza assassin.

With the train hurtling along the tracks and through tunnels at a speed of 300 miles per hour, the rooftop battle is skillfully staged and stunning for its heart-pounding suspense. This could be the film’s best action moment.

Not so fine is the climactic battle scene inside Yashida’s mountainous lair, where Wolverine must fight a giant robot. We’ve seen enough of this in films like “Pacific Rim,” and, well, others I have already forgotten.

“The Wolverine” is filled with plenty of faceless villains, mostly ninja types who are fairly well disguised in their black robes and masks.

The most interesting bad guy is actually a femme fatale (Svetlana Khodchenkova), the blonde nurse who tends to Yashida but has a secret agenda. Though she is attractive, one would be advised not to kiss her.

Though it may not be saying much, “The Wolverine,” even when it falters at the end, is one of the better superhero movies of the summer. That’s mostly a credit to Hugh Jackman’s nuanced performance.

A word to the wise: Be sure to stay for the credits. The future of the franchise hangs in the balance with a breathless teaser.

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Arts Council hosts its First Friday Fling, a fun event to introduce the community to local artists.

The event will take place from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Aug. 2 at the Main Street Gallery, 325 N. Main St., Lakeport.

Join the arts council for an evening of art, wine and music.

Meet the artists and listen to the music by J. Williams.

Wine by Wildhurst Vineyards will be served along with finger food, and there will still be time to attend the Friday concert in Library Park.

For more information contact the Lake County Arts Council, 707-263-6658, or visit the arts council online at www.lakecountyartscouncil.com .

Upcoming Calendar

14Oct
14Oct
10.14.2024
Columbus Day
31Oct
10.31.2024
Halloween
3Nov
11Nov
11.11.2024
Veterans Day
28Nov
11.28.2024
Thanksgiving Day
29Nov
24Dec
12.24.2024
Christmas Eve

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