| 
| 
| Dr. Bronner's Magic Soap BoxSort of like a soap opera July 24,
 2007 5:28:56 PM 
| VIDEO: Watch the trailer for Dr. Bronner's Magic Soapbox.
 |  Use Dr. Bronner’s Magic Peppermint Soap to wash your body, shampoo your hair, brush your teeth, deterge your clothes, and swab the kitchen counter. Once the suds of choice for dirty hippies, Dr. Bronner’s is now a staple of the Whole Foods set, and Sara Lamm’s engaging documentary looks at the infamous Dr. B, his “All One God Faith” mission, and the way he sacrificed his family — leaving his sons in orphanages and foster homes — in the name of “uniting this spaceship earth.” His son Ralph still runs the environmentally responsible business, spreading soap — and his father’s gospel — across the land. (He also hugs people a lot, and a run-in with a skateboarder pianist is a bizarre and moving scene.) Bronner came to America from Germany, got tossed in the loony bin, escaped, set up shop in California, and fancied himself a prophet. The curious film mixes rah-rah responsible business practices, a portrait of a man committed to his ideals, and the results it had on his family.
 |  | 
	
		|  
 |  
		| 
				
					
					
							 Our critics pick the 14 producers with the fattest, meanest beats
  Steve Albini speaks
  In his bid for re-election, city councilor Stephen Murphy has collected a combustible group of allies, from Dapper to Deval
  If a third candidate crowds the 2008 presidential election, the GOP will have effectively handed the election to Hillary
  Never mind its tough-girl alt-porn feminism: SuicideGirls has already moved on to a new generation
  Covering all the bases with first-class Albanian and more
 
				
					
					
							 Evangelicals are speaking in bubbles — and fighting God’s war on pop culture
  Lessons from the build-them-up, tear-them-down Boston firefighter backlash
  Kick him when he's down
  Peruko Ccopacatty’s fresh perspective
  Ben is back with Gone Baby Gone
  The real significance of hired guns in Iraq. Plus, combating Ann Coulter.
 |  
 
 |  
												On a diabetic throne 
												A documentary of differences 
												Andre Dubus’s unending gifts 
												Artful and satisfying, if overlong 
												Unfamiliarizing the most familiar 
												A classic slasher eye roller 
												Isolation in the swollen seas 
												The reader’s guide to intoxicating literature 
												Terror on repeat
 | 
  
 | Resolutely weirdOn a diabetic throneMichael Caine remaking Michael CaineThe Honda Accord of moviesUnintentional sports comedyHaunting agony and angstHoary high-camp clichésAnother African-American life lessonWry desperation in Buenos AiresBen is back with Gone Baby Gone
 | 
 
 | 
 | 
 |