Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, January 11, 2012, Image 9
2011 ROUNDUP In 2010's year-end round-up, I wished for a French restaurant better street food and Greek cuisine. Two out of three's not so bad. The year 2011 brought us some lovely additions to the local scene, more franchises and a ridicu lous amount of yogurt... Heirloom Cafe and Fresh Market opened in a renovated gas station at'the corner of Chase and Boulevard, bringing new life to a lot that had been an eyesore for years. Its ambitions were large (to prepare foods and provide groceries on the side—all based on local, sustainable ingredients made with care), but many of them were fulfilled. Many of the dinner items are excellent-breakfast perhaps even more so because of the lower pricepoint. Lunch has nice sandwiches and pretty little side dishes. The people involved care about obscure grains, and they love vegetables. Ted's Most Best, the pizza place from Jessica Greene and Jay Totty (both of The Grit) in a gorgeously renovated industrial space, continues to charm thoroughly. Its pizza is simple and excellent. Its salads are enormous and beautiful. Its desserts are cute; its staff enthusiastic and friendly. Sakura Steak House is tucked away next to a dollar store, a computer repair shop and a sporting goods retailer that has a lot of hunt ing supplies, none of which would seem to bode well, but the sushi and all of the other offerings are prepared by serious, detail- oriented chefs. Kab&na, on TaUassee Road, is an endless source of frustration, with its inconsistent hours, weird service and so on, but'it is also worth the trouble, with wonderful Indian cui sine (both veg and non) and equally delicious Jamaican cooking. Etienne Brasserie, which replaced the Crtton Club downtown, is the French restaurant men tioned above. Not everything is executed to perfection, but many dishes are veiy good, and the pore mignon is more than that. Viva Argentine Cuisine, on the Eastside, is a funny little place with some things worth going a little out of your way for, like its Argentine cheesesteak, one of the best sand wiches in Athens, and its nicely cooked meats. Plus, its mini-cupcakes are super cute. The Georgia Theatre Restaurant, run by Ken Manring of White Tiger, that sits atop the Georgia Theatre, has a tiny menu, but every thing is well executed. It's a great place to get a vegetarian or BBQ sandwich and an amazing view of our town. Sr. Sol opened a second location, on Broad Street, in the former digs of El Patrqn, with food as good as and atmosphere more pleas ant than its original. Also expanding were Big Easy Caf*, with an Athens location on Baxter; Keba, with two new franchises; The Blind Pig, where McAlister's Deli had been, on Broad; Yoforia, with a new location in the downtown deck; Ike & Jane, with a mini-branch in the renovated Georgia Museum of Art (and soon to be running OK Coffee downtown); Donderos' Kitchen, which is now running the cate at the State Botanical Garden of Georgia; and Butt Hutt BBQ, which opened in the Macon Highway location of Jot 'Em Down at the very end of the year and should be finishing up its move down Baxter Street in March. In other yogurt news, YoDawgs on Baxter, Menchie's in Beechwood and Georgetown Square and Polarberry at Timothy and Atlanta Highway added more of the sweet stuff to our town, with more planned to open. George's Lowcountry Table and Sisters Creole Market served up their own versions of Low Country and Cajun cuisines. WatkinsviUe gained Kumquat Mae, a bakery and cate, Acapulco's Mexican Grill and Dominick's Italian Cuisine, a chain out of the Atlanta area. Stuffed Burger opened on Baxter in the former Falafel King, putting its toppings inside its patties and retailing awesome whoopie pies. The Dogg Pound took over Hollis Ribs on Broad, near Hancock, doing a kajillion different kinds of hot dogs with style. Team Biscuits and Burgers started a local drive- through on Danielsville Road, and Talk of the Town Country Cooking opened in what had been Gateway Cate for years, nearby. Farther afield, Big Al's BBQ Pit cooks up great ribs and good pork in Statham, Bubba's BBQ oper ates out of an auction house in Amoldsville, and Wok Star is about the only game in town in Winterville these days, doing some pretty good Chinese. • .. . Al's #1 Italian Beef and Gigi's Cupcakes opened franchises downtown. The Volstead put significant dollars into a bar and restau rant on Clayton downtown. The Local Jam took over the old Five Points Deli spot on Milledge, rolling a badass breakfast burrito. Honey B's Deli serves soul food and breakfast on Prince, Little Cuckoo Chocolates does sandwiches as well as sweets in the Chase Street Warehouses, and Yummy Bites cooks burgers and more on the Thomas Street end of Clayton. Also open in 2011i Sweet Pepper's Deli, China 1, Grilled Teriyaki and The Tap . Room in the Georgian. We Said Bye-Bye To: Wilson's Soul Food (sigh), Off the Hook Steak.and Seafood, Right Tapas and Bar, the Prince Avenue Huddle House, the Iron Grill (where Casa Mia is due to open), Marble Slab, Uncle Jerry's Biscuits and Burgers, Dari Delite, AUen's (again, sigh), Pupuseria El Coquito (replaced by The Food Palace), Reds, the Daily Neighborhood Deli, the European Deli, Totonno's Famous Meatballs, Toshiro and, at the end of the year, Black Forest Bakery. Farm 255 hired Whitney Otawka as its new chef, meaning a new menu. Fooks Foods moved across town to South Milledge. Doc Grey's became Chango's Noodle House and Espresso Royale Caffe turned into Jittery Joe's, with little changing apart from their names. White Tiger added Sunday brunch and dinner Thursday-Saturday. On the horizon in 2012 are a lot more fran chises, some in the deck and some not, but also Marker 7 Coastal Grill in Five Points, from the folks who brought you Hilltop Grille, which appears to have received its building permit and should be something interesting. This year, I wish for Greek food (again), a Korean mega-grocery store like Super H or Assi (which could be a real alternative to Walmart), and an Athens location of Farm Burger. It . could happen! Hillary Brown food@fiagpole.com NEWS OF ATHENS Another One Down: I always feel like I'm making excuses when I assemble my year- end top-ten lists, apologizing—mostly to myself, probably—for not seeing all the new movies I'd have liked to over the previous 12 months. That's especially the case this time around: bringing a new human into the world, as Mrs. Film Notebook and I did in 2011, tends to reorganize your priorities in some delightfully disruptive ways. Even with a holiday-season push to catch up on the year's important releases, I still missed more than I can be happy about Certified Copy, Mysteries of Lisbon, Poetry, Cave of Forgotten Dreams and Weekend are among the new films I had the opportunity to see in 2011 and most regret missing (not counting end-of-the-year releases like Young Adult and Tintin), but I'll watch them soon. For now, forgive me, and keep in mind that my list might look different if I'd seen them. More than what we saw in 2011, the year's biggest story was how we see films, as digi tal projection all but completed its takeover of theatrical exhibition and online streaming made enormous strides toward replacing DVDs as the standard for home viewing. But that stuff is no fun to talk about when you're try ing to make a list; we'U get back to it later, along with bitching about Netflix, I'm sure. I should also mention that there were several 2010 releases that I didn't get to see until this past year which would surely be on this list if I counted them, like Carlos and True Grit And finally, Edward Yang's 1991 masterpiece A Brighter Summer Day, one of the best movies I have ever seen, had its first- ever (as yet, still extremely, limited) U.S. theatrical release last year. If I didn't think it was cheating, that would have topped my list. Here it is: 1. Melancholia Lars von Trier's majestic film proposes v/hat could be the director's signature joke: the apoca lypse as a cure for clinical depression. 2. The Tree of Life Terrence Malick's colossal autobiogra- phy-as-universal-origin-story captures memory's vivid com bination of vagueness and specificity more accurately— and beautifully—than any other film I've seen. 3. Meek's Cutoff A feminist revisionist western that interrogates America's Manifest Destiny with director Kelly Reichardt's charac teristic penetrating intelligence and sublime understatement. 4. Another Year This is sort of cheating: Mike Leigh's warm and funny drama about difficult friends and family was released the last week of 2010, but didn't play here until a month or two later. Whatever—it was one of my favorite films of the year. 5. Of Gods and Men Xavier Beauvois directed this beautifully observed story of a group of monks examining their motives and their faith as they approach their martyrdom in an Islamist uprising. 6. The Myth of the American Sleepover The debut feature from David Robert Mitchell is a wonderfully evocative and charmingly modest chronicle of teenage rites of passage, with rtui teenagers who act like kids instead of small adults. ' CINEMA SCENE 7. The Future Miranda July's second feature makes clear that the director/writer/performer has become one of the most original and com pelling voices in American film. 8. The Illusionist Sylvain Chomet's lovely and heartbreaking second full-length animated film, from an unproduced script by Jacques Tati, is even better than his feature debut, 2003's far more widely acclaimed The Triplets of Belleville. 9. Tuesday, After Christmas Radu Muntean's unblinking portrait of a middle- aged man in an extramarital affair is more evi dence of the vitality of the ongoing Romanian New Wave. 10. Le Quattro Volte I haven't had a chance to see The Artist yet, but it would have to be pretty great to top Michelangelo Frammartino's sweet and witty film as 2011's Best Picture with No Dialogue. 11. Super 8, War Horse I know: more cheating. But I couldn't let it go unacknowl edged that Super 8, JJ Abrams' homage/ pastiche/copy has more heart, sincerity and legitimate drama than any Spielberg film since Raiders of the Lost Ark. And so does War Horse. Honorable Mention: Beginners; Bridesmaids; Cedar Rapids; Cold Weather, Crazy, Stupid, Love; Margin Call; Midnight in Paris; Somewhere; Tiny Furniture; Unde Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives Y Take Note: I'm introducing the first film in CinS's Classic Film No1r Series, Howard Hawks' 1946 Raymond Chandler adaptation The Big Sleep. If you've never seen it, you have to: it's not an exaggeration to call it one of the most entertaining films of all time. And chances are, few of you have ever seen it screened in 35mm, as all the films in this series are being presented. It's only show ing one night: Wednesday, Jan. 18. Do not miss it... Athenians Kathy Prescott and Grady Thrasher have produced a documentary about the daring aeronautical exploits of Thrasher's forbears (which were recounted in his story in last yeaKs Slackpole). The film is called World's Smallest Airport: The True Story of The Thrasher Brothers' Aerial Circus, and it'll be playing at Cin§ Jan. 15-19, with a special 08.A with the filmmakers on the 16th. Get more details at www.athensdne.com, and check out the trailer at www.worldssmall- estairport.com... Finally, Beechwood Cinemas is pursuing a license to serve beer and wine. More on that as it develops... Dave Marr film@flagpole.com Humphrey Bogart-fendsoff a precocious Martha Vickers in The Big Sleep, Howard Hawks’ 1946 film also starring Lauren Bacall, which plays at Cin6 next Wednesday, Jan. 18 as part of the Film Noir Festival. JANUARY 11,2012 FlAGPOLE.COM 9 DIGITAL SCAN COURTESY WWW.DOCTORMACRO.COM