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    Weekend Event Planner

    These are the 13 best things to do in Dallas this weekend

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 7, 2021 | 6:00 am

    This weekend is a busy one. In addition to the penultimate weekend of the State Fair of Texas, there will be the return of a beloved film festival, two big concerts, a packed slate for the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, three new local theater productions, golf in a ballpark, a visit from a comedian-turned-senator-turned-comedian-again, and more.

    Below are the best ways to spend your precious free time this weekend.

    Thursday, October 7

    Modest Mouse in concert with Future Islands
    The career of Modest Mouse has been full of hits, best-selling albums, and long album titles. Best known for songs like "Float On," "Dashboard," and "Lampshades on Fire," the band has released such wordy albums as This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About, Good News for People Who Love Bad News, and We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank. They'll play at The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory in Irving in support of their latest album, The Golden Casket.

    Dallas Symphony Orchestra presents "Tribute to Ruth Bader Ginsburg"
    This concert will feature the world premiere of a new work by distinguished American composer Ellen Taaffe Zwilich paying homage to and remembering Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the first anniversary of her passing in September 2020. Other selections for the concert, taking place at Meyerson Symphony Center, will include Mozart's Overture to Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro), Jeffrey Biegel's Reflection of Justice: An Ode to Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Wagner's Overture to Der fliegende Holländer (The Flying Dutchman).

    The Firehouse Theatre presents In the Heights
    In the Heights tells the universal story of a vibrant community in New York’s Washington Heights neighborhood, a community on the brink of change, full of hopes, dreams, and pressures, where the biggest struggles can be deciding which traditions you take with you, and which ones you leave behind. The Tony Award-winning musical from Lin-Manuel Miranda and Quiara Alegría Hudes will take place outdoors at The Sound at Cypress Waters in Coppell through October 17.

    Kitchen Dog Theater presents Good Latimer
    Kitchen Dog Theater kicks off its 31st season with the world premiere of Good Latimer by Dallas native playwright Angela Hanks. Dallasites Ravinia and Good have reached a crossroad in their 35-year relationship. Ravinia has had a sudden epiphany: she is no longer in love with Good. And Good? Far from accepting his fate, he is determined to win her back, even if it means overcoming a sky that rains armadillos, a rare North Texas earthquake, and Dallas's maddeningly ever-evolving landscape. The production will run at Trinity River Arts Center through October 24.

    Friday, October 8

    Globe Life Field presents Stadiumlinks
    Baseball season may be over for the Texas Rangers, but their home stadium will transition to another sport — golf — for Stadiumlinks, a a one-of-a-kind, nine-hole golf experience. Tee times will be offered on both Friday and Saturday in both early morning and evening sessions, ending with the ballpark lights illuminating the entire course under the night sky.

    Dallas International Film Festival
    The Dallas International Film Festival has returned for a shortened version that will include more than 30 feature and short films over three days. Notable films at the festival include Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch; Belfast, directed by Kenneth Branagh; The Humans, starring Richard Jenkins, Amy Schumer, Steven Yeun, and more; and Mike Mills' C'mon, C'mon, starring Joaquin Phoenix. The festival will take place at Alamo Drafthouse - Cedars through Sunday.

    Chris Botti in Concert with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra
    For over two decades, Grammy Award-winning master trumpeter and composer Chris Botti has amassed a spectacular variety of honors, including multiple Gold and Platinum albums, to become the nation’s largest selling instrumental artist. He has performed with an array of legends, including Sting, Barbra Streisand, Tony Bennett, Yo-Yo Ma, Frank Sinatra, Paul Simon, and Andrea Bocelli. He'll perform with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra at the Meyerson Symphony Center through Sunday.

    Al Franken: The Only Former U.S. Senator Currently on Tour Tour
    As far as anyone knows, Al Franken is the only U.S. Senator who was also one of the original writers for Saturday Night Live. He’s the author of four No. 1 New York Times bestsellers, served Minnesota in the Senate from 2009-2018, and now hosts The Al Franken Podcast. He'll perform at Majestic Theatre on October 8.

    Theatre Three presents Little Shop of Horrors
    A deliciously devious Broadway and Hollywood sci-fi smash musical, Little Shop of Horrors has devoured the hearts of theatergoers for over 30 years. The meek floral assistant Seymour Krelborn stumbles across a new breed of plant they name "Audrey II" after their co-worker crush. As the plant grows, Seymour begins to realize how the plant that gave them everything desires to take everything (and everyone) in return. The production will be at Samuell-Grand Amphitheatre through October 31.

    Saturday, October 9

    Turtle Creek Chorale presents "Broadway's Back, Baby!"
    Turtle Creek Chorale will present "Broadway’s Back, Baby!," highlighting some of the best songs from Broadway’s rich musical history. The concert will feature two special guests: Major Attaway, known for his playing the Genie in Disney’s Aladdin on Broadway; and Patty Breckenridge, known for her role as Donna in the WaterTower Theatre production of Mamma Mia! and more. There will be two performances, one Saturday and one Sunday, at McFarlin Auditorium.

    Jackopierce in concert
    Jackopierce — a folk rock duo made up of Jack O'Neill and Cary Pierce — is a Dallas original, releasing their first album in 1990. Since then, they've gone through the usual ups-and-downs of a rock band, including breaking up for around five years to explore solo options. But they've always gravitated back to each other, with their latest album being 2018's Feel This Good. They'll play at The Kessler.

    Sunday, October 10

    Dallas Museum of Art presents "Pursuit of Beauty: The May Family Collection" opening day
    "Pursuit of Beauty: The May Family Collection" offers a look at the exemplary Dallas-based collection of American art that was built over nearly 60 years by Thomas and Eleanor May and their children Christopher, Sterling, Meredith, and Laura. The exhibition features 24 oil paintings, watercolors, and sculpture by influential artists, including Cecilia Beaux, William Merritt Chase, Winslow Homer, and John Singer Sargent. The exhibition will remain on display at the Dallas Museum of Art through January 9, 2022.

    Feed the Streetz Tour: The Living Legends
    The who's who of hip hop will come to Dallas as part of "Feed the Streetz" Tour. The night will feature performances by Rick Ross, Jeezy, Gucci Mane, 2 Chainz, Fabolous, Lil Kim, Boosie Badazz, DJ Drama, and other surprise guests. The concert will be at American Airlines Center.

    Dallas Symphony Orchestra presents "Tribute to Ruth Bader Ginsburg," starring Denyce Graves, on October 7 at the Meyerson.

    Denyce Graves, Ruth Bader Ginsburg memorial
      
    Getty Images
    Dallas Symphony Orchestra presents "Tribute to Ruth Bader Ginsburg," starring Denyce Graves, on October 7 at the Meyerson.
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    Movie Review

    Animated Disney film Elio is fun but falls short of Pixar top tier

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 19, 2025 | 1:22 pm
    Elio (Yonas Kibreab) and Glordon (Remy Edgerly) in Elio
    Photo courtesy of Pixar
    Elio (Yonas Kibreab) and Glordon (Remy Edgerly) in Elio.

    Pixar has done a ton of different things in the 28 feature films they’ve released over the past 30 years, but the one they’d never done is deal with aliens (and, no, the alien toys in Toy Story don’t count). Now they’re going where many storytellers have gone before, but in their own unique way, in the new film Elio.

    Elio (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) is a space fanatic who has recently lost both of his parents in an unnamed event. His Aunt Olga (Zoe Saldaña) is now his guardian, and because she happens to be a member of the U.S. Space Force, Elio finds himself tantalizingly close to communications from space. With a desire to be abducted by aliens for both curiosity and sentimental reasons, Elio sends a message into space, hoping for some kind of response.

    He gets that and more when a ship full of multiple types of beings takes him into space, believing him to be a leader instead of a child. An encounter with a hostile force led by Lord Grigon (Brad Garrett) gives Elio both a new friend, Grigon’s son Glordon (Remy Edgerly), and responsibility for maintaining peace during an unexpected galactic crisis.

    Pixar has not typically followed the route of many Disney movies of giving their child protagonist the trauma of dead parents, and doing so here is the first of a few minor missteps. Having Olga be his mom instead of his aunt would have altered their dynamic, but only slightly. While Elio is shown to miss his parents, his major focus is on making contact with aliens. Since the film only briefly deals with his grief, it would have been better served by excising it altogether.

    For the most part, the film is goofy, with Elio’s enthusiasm for aliens matched by the oddness of the creatures he meets in space. The filmmakers - there are three credited directors and three credited writers - seem to have taken inspiration from sea creatures and Pixar’s own history, as the main bad guy emulates Mike and Sully’s boss from Monsters, Inc. Almost every character in the film is heightened to a degree that makes for funny situations, but not as much sentimentality as other Pixar offerings.

    Surprisingly, especially since the film ends with a voiceover from notable astronomer Carl Sagan, the filmmakers play fast and loose with real-life science. Elio’s journeys to and from the alien spaceship are treated as close-to-instantaneous trips, even involving portals directly to Earth. The idea of the story doesn’t allow them to delve into things like relativistic time dilation, but there still could have been other scientific references to keep the story aboveboard.

    There are very few stars to be found among the film’s voice cast other than Saldaña and Garrett, who are each fine if unmemorable. Kibreab and Edgerly are given many more scenes than anyone else, and they each do a great job of bringing out both the joy and naivete of their characters. Some lesser-known actors like Jameela Jamil, Atsuko Okatsuka, and Brendan Hunt show up in minor roles, but they don’t stand out in any way.

    The story and characters in Elio are sweet and fun, but the film as a whole falls well short of the top tier Pixar movies. The filmmakers could have gone many different directions with a story about a boy who wants to be abducted by aliens, and the way they chose ended up being innocuous and less than compelling.

    ---

    Elio opens in theaters on June 20.

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