.tARTS______ The Michigan Daily Wednesday, November 11, 1981 Pa 5 " wyv .r, 'Southern Comfort' Dixie ripoff By Adam Knee "NTOT SINCE Deliverance','claim the , 'advertisements for Walter Hill's Southern Comfort. Although the literal meaning of this phrase is abstruse, one thing is certainly clear: Southern Com- fort has been designed to do no more than to cash in on the popularity of the earlier movie. As is usually the case with a com- mercial film built around a specific gimmick or selling point, it is hopelessly empty and not in the least entertaining. Southern Comfort is about a groupof National Guardsmen, who, on a routine military exercise in a Louisiana bayou, run into trouble with some less-than- friendly Cajun natives. The guardsmen decide to "borrow" a few Cajun-owned canoes, an act which serves to have the sergeant's head blown open. As they continue their maneuvers, members of the ranks are picked off with guns or traps, or they drown in the bogs, or they go crazy. We are expected to wonder why they are set upon so, and who will get out alive. Yet we are not truly concerned about the Guardsmen. Hill, who helped write the screenplay, depicts them as a pret- ty nasty bunch. Dialogue is almost completely in shouts and curses. The men torture a prisoner and blow up his house. They even attack each other. The import of these actions is hard to divine. One can't be sure what Hill is, aiming at, and one can't held but suspect that he's not aiming at anything. The plot flows' randomly, with as little clear order as the bayou setting. In keeping with the quality of the. screen play, the characters are neither believable nor interesting. Two Guar- dsmen are singled out as being more in- telligent and somehwat less brutal than the others, but even they lack appeal. Another Guardsman, a high school football coach and history teacher when not on duty, strangely decides to stop talking in the middle of the film-a move of rare ingenuity on the writers' parts. The acting does not help matters much. Most of the performers show lit- tle talent, and even the better ones, such as Keith Carradine and Powers Records Boothe look like they'd rather be anywhere but in Southern Comfort. Hill the director only manages to aggravate the problems of 'Hill the writer. Camera coverage varies tiringly little as the Guardsmen trudge through endless swamps. He repeatedly uses fades to end a sequence when he can think of nothing else to do. Most of the shootings-or, more ac- curately, most of the woundings-are filmed in a gimmicky and inap- propriate slow motion. Form proves as haphazard as content. Southern Comfort does have one commendable aspect; eerie music composed and performed by Ry- Cooder. But it is bogged down; even the best frosting can't save a cake made with swamp water. A NN a ,R 3 tNDIVIDUAL THEATRES 0 I h S a.c r ,tbe,, e701-9tO ENDS THURSi JACQUELINE BISSEt s CANIDICE BERGEN " RICH and . . FAMOUS1R, * DAILY-7:20, 9:40 _ WED-:20,3:40,7:20,9:40 $S With this entire ad, . 5o one ticket only) $1.50, Mon thru GOOD THRU 1/12/81 "M" ThugEve.0 0 "GLORIOUS!" -GENESHALIT * TheJfll/ MERYL STREEP 0 DAILY-7:00, 9:25 WED-1, 3:25, 0 7:00, 9:VSs Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS Kathy Devecke, Elizabeth James, Adrienne Thompson; and Wendy Wright: 'Ladies at the Alamo' 'Ladies ' Futile attempt to fus tragedy/cr -edy By Gail Negbaur H jOMOSEXUALITY, promiscu- .L ity, alcoholism, death,' woman's role: ih society, mental health, and, operating a theater. "What's left?" is the only question an audience can ask ~ifter sitting through Ladies at the Aamo, playing tomorrow through Sun- day at the Canterbury Loft. Paul Zindel's comedy/tragedy is about running The Alamo, a theater in Texas. The theater's benefactor Joanne Remington (Kathy Devecka), is'trying to get rid of the director, Dede Cooper (Elizabeth Jahnke). Cooper has eviden- tly been too generous with the operating budget, spending it on things like a new set of teeth for a technician and'a badly needed singles' cruise for someone else. 1The dramatic conflict would seem to te between this kind, generous soul. and the tyrannical benefactor. But Cooper'is just as mean and~tough as Remington. She fights for her theater in the most unscrupulous ways possible, while insisting that she is really good on the inside. It is hard for one's sympathies to lie with a character whose actions contradict her words. But it is obvious that this is what *indel expects from the audience. In the middle of the last act, all five characters give some revealing con- fessions. We find out that Cooper's beloved best frienid, Bella has had sexual relations with Mr. Cooper; Remington's secretary, Suits (Melissa Berger) has had a lesbian affair with the intended new director, Shirley Fuller (Adrienne Thompson); and Remington herself had been taught how bad it is to be a woman. This excess information serves only to make the play confusing. Cooper does finally get to keep her theater, but she has to threaten Remington with a toy hammer first. One walks away after the play ,relieved that the chaos is finished. Why has the Canterbury Loft chosen to produce this play? Maybe beacuse there are five women's roles, or because the actors are required to exhibit every motion in the book. While it might be a good acting exercise, Ladies is not good theater. However, interspersed among the many melodramatic themes in the play are some truly funny lines. Although they tend to be somewhat crude, Zin- del's one-liners are all that keeps the play going. The best of these lineseare delivered by Bella (Wendy Wright). Wright is funny and enjoyable to watch; she has a good voice that carries well. But, like 2indel's other characters, the different aspects of Bella's personality do not fit well together. Bella is supposed to be an alcoholic and quite drunk throughout the play, but at the same time Cooper is constah- tly calling for her emotional support. Evidently, Bella is capable of giving this support no matter how drunk she is. Understandably, Wright has a dif- firult time conveying what Bella is all about. Most of the action in the play directly affects Dede Cooper (Elizabeth Jahnke), but the character is too loosely defined to hold the play together. In the first act Jahnke han- dles the burden of her character well, yet when the action becomes confused, she follows suit. The people at Canterbury Loft have their hands full with this production. Whatever the good intentions may have been, the play just doesn't work well. Cabaret Voltaire-'Three Crepuscule Tracks' (Rough Trade) This is a welcome change of pace from Cabaret Voltaire. On the highlight cut of this EP, "Sluggin' fer Jesus (part one)," Cabaret eschew their usual arhythmic, atonal, amelodic weir- dness-for-its-own-sake in favor of an ominously danceable bass riff and lif- ted, looped evangelist vocals designed to do Byrne and Eno's My Life in the Bush of Ghosts one better. The two cuts on the B side of this EP are much more typical Cabaret stuff, however. At best, it is interesting though uninvolving; at worst, it is gratingly self-indulgent. -Mark Dighton Cameo-'Knights of the Sound Table' (Chocolate City) Cameo are back to remind us once again that fun is a major part of funky. Unlike a lot of soul albums that feature a few cuts destined for airplay and are padded with just as much forgettable filler, Cameo prove capable of a con- sistently and stiltvaried funk attack. Of course, the highlights of Knights are the hyperactive hit "Freaky Dan- cin' " and Nona Hendryx's snide guest vocals on "Don't Be So Cool." But even the two ballads are fine pieces, with Larry Blackman's passionate vocals keeping them from slipping into a dispassionately endless groove.- This 10-piece range of talent (in- cluding head honcho Blackman) promises and delivers some of the most reliably substantial funk on record with Knights of the Sound Table. -M.D. Henry Badowski-'Life is a Grand ... ' (A&M) This Badowski guy is sure smart. By waiting until the creativity of anyone connected with Roxy Music was long dead and buried, he has made it easy to borrow liberally from their best moments without having to fear being labelled derivative. Roxy fans will be far too grateful for a real reminder of the band's past glories to quibble over questions of grave-robbing. In fact, this album should prove a complete embarrassment to the various Roxy musicians. By fusing some of the most basic Roxy elemen- ts--Phil Manzanera's artsy Spanish guitar, Andy Mackay's stylish '54s sax, and Paul Thompson's eloquently sim- ple drumming-to a refreshingly clever Europop sound, Badowski has quite clearly and simply shown the potential these ideas still carry to please and ex- cite. Indeed, it all of its well-behaved syn- thetic warmth, Life is a Grand.. comes closest, to Eno's sublimely -twisted pop sensibility circa somewhere between Taking Tiger Mountain and Another Green World. It's all here for the asking-the swarm of snake guitars, wryly deadpan vocals and lyrics, little-fishies synthesizers, and propulsive pop drumming. And if "Silver Trees" isn't a new chapter in the journey through Judy's Jungle, then I'll eat my copy of "The Seven Deadly Finns.'' In short, this is a far better album than any of the present or past mem- bers of Roxy Music have put out (and probably will put out) in any recognjzable span of time. And for now, I'm more than happy to make do with Henry Badowski. -M.D. Ragnar Kvaran-'Wrecked on Love' EP (A.T.C.) "Finally, some modern hometown music this city can be proud of. (Sure, I liked The Corvettes' album-a lot-but I'm not going to stick my neck out by championing it as more than a cute novelty piece. And I certainly won't mention The Looks' excuse for music./ The Destroy All Monsters singles?' Well, I still haven't made up my mind on those, so you could safely say I wasn't bowled over, I guess.) But that's not the point. The sound in question is Ragnar Kvaran's, and I'm generally pleased by what I hear on this six-cut EP. I've always liked Kvaran's live shows to one extent or another, but I think this vinyl catches them near their best. Kvaran's got a style that covers a lot of the popular basics (Chuck Berry, The Cars, and so on) in a way that always seems to put a fresh edge on them. And I've developed a real affec- tion for his rough twang of a voice, too. Not only has this EP inspired me to start going out of my way again to see him live, but I wouldn't be embarrassed to take this disc around to out-of- towners as an example of some of the finer music available around the Square. -M.D. EARTHWATCH A weekly series of environmental talks How Much is a Life Worth? THE HAZARDS OF COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS Sanford Lewis Wed., Nov. 11-7:40 p.m. Mason Hall, Rm. 443 Sponsors: Environmental Low Soci- ety, PIkGIA, MSA, LSA-SG, And LSSS. t° Help Prevent Birth Defects - The Nation's Number One Child Health Problem. Support the March of BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION This space contributed by the publisher "At this time I know ofrno other musical ensemble that combines, as these superlative musicians do, the deep concern, musical perception, and faultless realization of all they play.1 - The Washington Post Richard Stoltzman, clarinet Fred Sherry, cello Theodore A rm, violin and viola Ik-Hwan Bae, violin and viola Ida Kavafian, violin and viola a i 375 N. MAPLE ~t~fll~rn769-1300 MAPLE VILLAGE SHPG'R * 0 " MON FRI S2PI6PM SAT- SUNS2 t I 3PM } li ohn tleese *,W 'LDAM HURT Shelley Du~val! 1:45 K.AiHLEEN TURNER Se Connery 4:00, Katherine Helmond 7:001 L)UU 0 U David Warner 920 H C AT r Program Mozart: Divertimento for String Trio in E-flat major, K. 563 Husa: Evocation de Slovaquie Weber: Quintet for Clarinet and Strings in E-flat major, Op. 34 Suiiday, Noveniber.15, at 4:00 Tiaek la $ $udito.iu, , Tickets at $8.50, $7.00, $5.50 i t . 11 1, if