Minnesota's Tim Pawlenty grooms himself for vice-presidential consideration--by being a jerk.
Our reporter sets out in search of a naked lunch.
Before swinging a bat in a lesbian softball league, pick a side: gay or straight?
At JFK, Erhan Yildirim clears corpses for takeoff.
The Other Side of the Mirror (Columbia)
It's subtitled "Bob Dylan Live at the Newport Folk Festival 1963-1965," which, yeah, pretty much sums it up: Dylan performing some 17 songs as he slowly morphs from a sincere young comer dressed in field-hand rags to an electrified rocker swaddled in leather and irony. Some of this footage has surfaced elsewhere: in Martin Scorsese's hypnotic made-for-PBS doc and Murray Lerner's Festival. But bereft of commentary and color, this is raw Bob at the beginning and the beginning of the end, at least for those who booed his "Maggie's Farm" on July 25, 1965, as he plugged in and tuned out the naysayers who wanted more of them pissed-off protest anthems. As testament to the brilliance of the packaging — and performer — this essential Dylan disc ends with "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue."
Talk to Me (Universal)
Talk to Me barely registered at the box office this summer, which was a damned shame; director Kasi Lemmons' limber retelling of Ralph Waldo "Petey" Greene Jr.'s tale ranks among the year's finest and funniest, at least till it sinks toward inevitable tragedy by movie's end. Don Cheadle, usually cut loose only in the margins, is allowed free rein to rant and rave as the real-life Washington, D.C. ex-con radio host who cajoled and calmed "Chocolate City" in the 1960s and '70s. It's among his finest performances — definitely his funkiest, as he glides through the DJ booth beneath a skyscraper 'fro and caterpillar 'stache. Sadly, the extras promise history lessons they don't deliver: The "Who Is Petey Greene?" doc's nothing more than a flashy making-of, sans a single pic of the real Greene.