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    Weekend Event Planner

    Blue Man Group and Ben Folds top best New Year's weekend events in Dallas

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 1, 2015 | 12:00 am

    It's a brand new year — happy 2015! — but a lot of the events this weekend focus on wrapping up the past rather than looking to the future. Among the things you can say goodbye to are local college football, holiday season events and possibly a historic Dallas theater.

    Below are the best options for your precious free time Thursday through Sunday. Don't like what you see? Lucky for you, we have a much longer list of the city's best events.

    Thursday, January 1

    Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic: Baylor vs. Michigan State
    The Big 12 conference got the raw end of the initial College Football Playoff; neither TCU nor Baylor made the final four despite stellar seasons. Baylor can try to exact a measure of revenge in the Cotton Bowl Classic at AT&T Stadium, in which they face off against a strong Michigan State team looking to end on a high note as well.

    AT&T Performing Arts Center presents Blue Man Group
    It's only been a couple of years since Blue Man Group paid a visit to Dallas, but they're always worth checking out again. Playing at Winspear Opera House through Sunday, they blend together performance art, rock music, comedy and audience participation for a unique show that can't help but make you smile.

    Dallas Theater Center presents The Book Club Play
    Dallas Theater Center is wasting no time continuing its 2014-2015 season, transitioning quickly from A Christmas Carol, which ended on December 27, to The Book Club Play at Kalita Humphreys Theater. The comedy is about, duh, a book club that becomes the subject of a film documentary, leading to some hilarious consequences. It runs through February 1.

    Friday, January 2

    Viva Dallas Burlesque presents DC vs Marvel
    It's going to be a Marvel-ous beginning to 2015 in Dallas-Fort Worth, with two different officially licensed comic-themed events coming to the area. This is not one of those, but Viva Dallas Burlesque's monthly show at Lakewood Theater is notable because it may very well be the last show of any kind the venue hosts. The new ownership wants to change it into something different, possibly restaurants. If you want to enjoy the Lakewood in its current configuration, this is your last chance.

    Pegasus Theatre presents Another Murder, Another Show!
    If you've never attended one of Pegasus Theatre's Living Black & White shows, you owe it to yourself to be wowed by what makeup and lighting can do. The latest, playing at Eisemann Center for the Performing Arts in Richardson through January 25, once again finds detective Harry Hunsacker trying to solve a murder, this time at a theater awards show.

    Saturday, January 3

    Ben Folds with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra
    Rock/pop singer Ben Folds is about to celebrate the 20th anniversary of his breakthrough in the music industry, which started with the self-titled Ben Folds Five album in 1995. Since then he's had success with both the numerically challenged group, which has only three members, and as a solo artist, a rich catalog he mines for this performance at Bass Performance Hall with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra.

    Theatre Three presents I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change
    Many theater companies have annual traditions, and for Theatre Three, it's staging I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change year after year. This is the 15th rendition of the musical revue that lets the actors sing and dance their way through all the phases of romance and marriage. Normally a Valentine's Day show, they're starting a bit earlier than usual, with the final show scheduled for February 15.

    Sunday, January 4

    Holiday show closings
    Much to many people's chagrin, the holiday season must come to an end at some point, and that point is this Sunday. This is your final chance to take in a slew of holiday-themed events, including 12 Days of Christmas at the Dallas Arboretum, the Trains at NorthPark and Sparkle! Christmas at the Anatole.

    Ben Folds plays with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra at Bass Performance Hall on January 3.

    Ben Folds
    Photo courtesy of Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra
    Ben Folds plays with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra at Bass Performance Hall on January 3.
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    Movie Review

    Glen Powell bumps off rich family in How to Make a Killing

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 19, 2026 | 12:45 pm
    Glen Powell in How to Make a Killing
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Glen Powell in How to Make a Killing.

    Becoming a star in Hollywood and maintaining that stardom are two very difficult things to achieve, but Glen Powell has been adept at doing so over the past few years. A key supporting role in Top Gun: Maverick led to lead parts in films like Hit Man, Anyone But You, Twisters, and The Running Man. Powell is looking to keep his star power shining in the new dark comedy/thriller, How to Make a Killing.

    He plays Beckett, an outcast member of the ultra-wealthy Redfellow clan. Struggling to get by in a menial job in New York City while still living in New Jersey, Beckett’s only smidgen of hope is that he remains an heir to the vast Redfellow fortune. The only trick? Every other remaining family member must die before he’ll see a dime of that money. When even that menial job goes away, Beckett indulges the fantasy of bumping off his familial competition.

    Among those standing in his way are cousins Taylor (Raff Law), a finance bro, Noah (Zach Woods), a pretentious artist, and Steven (Topher Grace), a celebrity pastor; Uncle Warren (Bill Camp) and Aunt Cassandra (Bianca Amato); and grandfather Whitelaw (Ed Harris). Complicating matters, however, are an old childhood friend, Julia (Margaret Qualley), who starts asking more of Beckett than he can give; and new flame Ruth (Jessica Henwick), who happens to be dating Noah when he meets her.

    Written and directed by John Patton Ford (Emily the Criminal), the film is a tale of two halves. Narrated by Beckett in the form of telling his story to a prison chaplain, the story plays with audience expectations on multiple occasions. As Beckett ramps up to detailing exactly how he got started down the road toward being a serial killer, the film has a fun-if-macabre vibe.

    Under normal circumstances Beckett would be someone to despise, but since he’s an underprivileged person who’s taking aim at people who (mostly) don’t seem to appreciate their good luck, it feels okay to cheer for him. This follows a recent trend in “eat the rich” films, one that’s been influenced by a turn against real-life billionaires. Ford plays heavily into the theme and it works for a good portion of the film.

    However, things get a little murky in the second half of the movie. A few of the planned killings get less attention than others, making their - pardon the pun - execution less interesting/fun than the others. Also, Ford does a poor job of indicating just how much weight should be put on Beckett’s relationship with Julia, someone with whom he only has occasional interactions for the bulk of the film.

    It’s difficult to know the exact right way to showcase Powell, but this film doesn’t seem to be the best fit. Whether it’s the odd hairstyle/wig he’s given, or the varying degrees of confidence his character shows, his performance is up and down. Qualley’s acting style is over-the-top, and she needed to dial it down in this particular role. Henwick and Camp are the grounding forces in the film, keeping the story somewhat tethered to reality while almost everyone else makes a meal of their scenes.

    How to Make a Killing is serviceable entertainment that gives viewers a decent number of laughs and thrills. But Ford can’t find a way to make the story work all the way through, and a so-so performance by Powell keeps the film from rising above its mediocre station.

    ---

    How to Make a Killing opens in theaters on February 20.

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