The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 24, 1983-Page 7 Besides B-Sides, there's Bebe By Larry Dean B EBE BUELL and the B-Sides are playing tonight at Joe's Star Lounge, with newcomers to the club scene Aluminum Beach opening. They're swinging through town as part of Joe Tiboni's attempts to bring some outside talent to Ann Arbor, and like the Dream Syndicate's recent stop here, it looks like it ought to be a lot of fun. Most people who saw the syndicate praised the earth on buckled knees that they had been so-graced. Personally, I thought their dissonant, droning music got frazzled by the so-so acoustics of the Star Lounge, and thusly, a lot of their potential power was lost. Such should not be the case with Buell. Most well-known for her modeling and subsequent marriage to popster Todd Rundgren, Buell emerged last year with an EP on the tiny Rhino Records label that received almost- unanimous critical accolades. With four songs that included everything from Iggy Pop and David Bowie's "Funtime" to Burt Bacharach's "My Little Red Book," and production credits by guitar whiz-kid Rick Derringer and the Cars' Ric Ocasek, Covers Girl surprised all the cynical rock-rag insiders who were ready to write Buell off with its catchy, pop- flavored tunes and Buell's surprisingly adept vocals. It wasn't enough that Covers Girl got accepted by the press, however. As a commercial product, the EP went vir- tually unnoticed. And being on a small label doesn't help, either. Enter the B-Sides: Jon Rousseau, drums; George Gordon, guitar and co- songwriting credits; and bassist Thomas Staunton. Although Buell doesn't have anything out on vinyl with them, they've recorded a demo tape produced by ex-hubby Rundgren that is making its way from A&R man to A&R man at most major labels. With luck and a little bit of chance-taking, something good might come of this new outfit. In the meantime, there's performing live and honing the material at hand. Buell says that people shouldn't expect a mere note-for-note retake of the EP when they come to see the B-Sides live. "The show is more powerful," she says. "It has more of an edge. I guess you would call us a good rock and roll band." Rousseau and Staunton are 21; Buell and Gordon are 28. Bebe sings lead vocals and is augmented live by Sakura Pinnette on back-up. For a relatively- young group-both age-wise and in terms of how long they have been playing together-the B-Sides are sup- posed to be quite hot on stage. "I just believe in entertainment and dynamics," explains Buell. "When people come to see a performance, they should get chills and all the stuff I got when I went to see shows when I was a kid. No gimmicks-just straight, pure, raw entertainment.'" Bebe Buell comes across as an honest, straightforward person who got pegged wrong a long time ago and still has some difficulty losing her image as a model and "companion to the stars." A recent big rumor had Buell married to Psychedelic Furs lead vocalist Richard Butler, but that's all it is-a rumor. Says Bebe: "I'm single as a slice of Kraft cheese. "I don't think anyone should be pin- pointed or locked into any one art," continues Buell. Being a past model and, at one time, a Playboy centerfold, has contributed to her downplaying by the music press. But what she says is true; and the music should do the talking. If Covers Girl and what the B-Sides aspire to do is any indication, tonight's show should be an energetic, rocking ex- perience. Starting time for Aluminum Beach is 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $3 and are available at the door. Eating too much Raoul can be frightening - it's not too good for your health, either. at ing out has never .'been so Cmuchfun! Aluminum Beach ... Bebe's foil IFLIPPER McGEE'S I B TOKENS for u & 2 with Student I.D. 1217 S. University ---rn--rn---- ------- ------rn--r By Malcolm Robinson T'S FAIRLY EASY to imagine the 1 reasoning - misguided though it ;may have been - that led not one or three but all of the big Hollywood -studios to decide to play it safe and not finance Paul Bartel's Eating Raoul. To be faithful and somewhat fair to that case, Bartel's newest is certainly not going to walk away with even a single, minor award nomination and its plot can't be described as teen-oriented or inspirational or filled with blood. Forget the possibility of the film being moral. Add to these debits an ensemble of non-bankable players plus a script that ambles leisurely from one absurd moment to the next, and all that's left is a rather small black comedy with seemingly little box office potential. No demographics, no project support money; cynical as it seems, it's as sim- ple as that. Perhaps this explains the distinct feeling that the film's production values are more than a bit n the cheap side and that its tone is too tackily, too garishly benign. Some facts will prove helpful here. It's true that Bartel (Private Par- te, Death Race 2000), didn't need to mortgage his home in order to make his motion picture, unlike Francis Ford Coppola with Apocalypse Now. But Bartel did, for example, somehow per- suade his parents to sell one of theirs (their favorite one, he says) and he did manage to cast all of the minor roles with his friends, i.e. people who would work for next to nothing. Eating Raoul cost only a mere million dollars to make, a pittance. Yet it's hard to shake the thought that the sheer tawdriness of the film is by design and, hence, the only quality more money Ymight have bought it is a more sophisticated brand of crassness. The film, it might as well be revealed, really has only a single joke to tell; more it's a joke that's recycled over and over - a joke that isn't about can- nibalism, at least not in any obvious sense. This is the story of Paul and 5 MAry Bland, an American couple with a dream. Paul and Mary want to own their own gourmet restaurant (the "Country Kitchen") but they simply do not have enough money to buy a location. For Paul has just gotten laid off from his job and Mary was sexually harassed trying to obtain a loan. Which brings their second, and just as brothersome problem into focus: the Blands are a decent, cuddly couple but they appear to be the last people in Hollywood unscathed by the sexual revolution. The two are surrounded by swingers; and if that isn't bad enough, the swingers soon enter their private lives. How a large number of them exit, and they do exit, and how the Blands end up buying their restaurant is the process, the joke that gives this film its apt and descriptive title. Eating Raoul, though, never does quite live up to the expec- tations its name seems to imply and that's all for the good; this is a sur- prisingly gentle even charming motion picture and it's sad that more people won't see it. The fact that it's turned a nice profit will have to suffice. That doesn't mean it's a film without problems. The action drags just a bit towards the end as Paul and Mary and, yes, Raoul (well played by newcomer Robert Beltran) affirm that constancy in relationships can be a viable alter- native to swingerhood. And Bartel, as Paul Bland, is perhaps too limited in the fussbudgetyness of his performan- ce. Happily for all concerned, Mary Woronov as his wife more than makes up for him. In fact, it is precisely because of her ability to exude such a good natured sexuality that Eating Raoul fails to degenerate into scatter- shot satire. As such, it's a surprisingly effective performance in what proves to be a decidedly civilized entertain- ment. Cottage INN 10 PM to 1 AM Sunday thru Thursday HAPPY HOURS I DRINKS 2 fort What if .. . .. - the average lifespan of a wombat exceeded that .of a Milky Way bar, carefully wrapped and stored in an air- tight freezer? " Basil Rathbone, star of many-a Sherlock Holmes film, relied entirely on the whims of his clairvoyant mother to beam his dialogue to him from her mobile home in Talahassee, Florida? . .. actress Brooke Shields had no real ambition in life other than to read every book ever written by James Mitchner in their Spanish translated-editions? ... the White House was originally painted an off-maroon until a troupe of professional certified public ac- countants donated time and energy to repainting the dilapidated building in 1951? .. . songster Barry Manilow, writer of such hit singles as "Copacabana" and "Mandy," had an artificial nose composed of indestructable metal alloys and polyester byproducts? IT'S HEALTHY TO CARE... BUT SOMETIMES HARD TO DO BY YOURSELF... HELP IS AVAILABLE When you need help with a personal problem, or when you need consultation about someone you know who seems troubled, the following resources are available: for mental health emergencies - Psych. Emergency, U. 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