w w V t Am ,r .! m-lw w v , Mt0 V I E S hero as a gunfighter or knight, though he's far more the lover than the fighter. Keith Carradine fills the role like it o was tailor made, and in fact Rudolph says he wrote the role specifically with Carradine in mind. Carradine waltzes through the role, in touch with every lit- tle detail and nuance of his character, ch o ice and surmounts the difficult task of taking what at first appears to be a distant, unapproachable character and Choose Me eventually evolves him into quite a Directed by Alan Rudolph simple, uncluttered one. It's Starring Genevieve Bujold, Keith Carradine's presence that binds the Carradinev and Leslie Ann film together, that lets the fable unfold, r so that it can be both absurdly farfet- Warren ched, and touchingly honest. By Byron L. Bull As writer and director, Rudolph has created an amazingly well detailed, consistently surprising film. He IVEN Alan Rudolph's fashions a movie that is a technical inauspicious track record of films wonder for all its intricate plot con- like Roadie and Welcome to L.A., one is volutions, yet still squeezes in a wealth inclined to write his latest, Choose Me, of character details. off even before seeing it. That just He choreographs his sequences like a makes the surprise that this film is so dance, cutting back and forth between bright and uniquely funny all that much characters as they convey a wide more surprising. Though a self- variety of feelings with just one or two confessed contemporary adult comedy, subtle gestures. He pulls his cast Choose Me's smart script, sharp cast, together, and creates a chemistry and wonderfully convuluted, twisting Warren and Carradine: Stellar performances amongst them so strong that they move script show roots that clearly run back real character who's so starved for The third point on the triad is Mickey, around and react toward each other so to George Cukor's delightful screw-ball warmth that she'll even settle for who walks out of a mental institution at closely and precisely that you can comedies of the late thirties and early whatever she can pull out of a one night the films outset and sets out on what almost see the wires connecting them. forties. stand. essentially amounts to a mythic Choose Me is by no means a classic, though seldom well handled terrain of who's known as Dr. Nancy Love over a odyssey for a wife. He has a habit of but it is a very well made, affec- romatic comedy by capturing pointed radio call-in show called The Loveline. asking every woman he kisses to marry tionately crafted little film. For it's human observations in a refreshingly, Though Eve has conferred with Nancy him (though he insists he only kisses pure, simple pleasures, it's one of the witty slant. The film opens amidst the on the show before, they don't realize women hed marry, and is oddly quite year's best films and should by all tacky seediness of Los Angeles, with an they're living together because Nancy woman. He's been married twice, and assortment of oddball characters who, has been going by another in the midst of searching for the same name since she moved in. says that either marriage would have ih i os c gre masinahemoead can. leof been for life if outside circumstancesG thing, love, in their own weird ways, Compassionate, and capable of hadn't ruined them. SS1ES run into one another in the most ex- dispensing sound, common sense ad- traordinary ways. They're all long past vice to her rabid following of listeners, talking to her, and in short time is put- the accepted soloing age and face the Nancy's a basket case herself - so sex ting his cards on the table by asking her . oncoming later years with no small starved and lonely she's on the verge of to marry him. Though a bit put off by amount of trepidation. neurosis. She can only deal with her Mickey, Eve can't quite seem to get At the center of the story is Eve, a own analyst over the phone, and backs him out of her mind when he disappears WAYFAR ER OLYMPIAN r still very attractive prostitute, who off from the men Eve brings home in into the night. There's a nagging The original!eOur number Black frame with gold bar saved up her money and bought a small terrified apprehension. At night she suspicion in the back of her mind that black d hi Choose eatst style on bar in the seedy part of town. Though dresses up and sits down to elaborately somehow, by some twists of fate, toise-like frame. Save big! she now makes a living managing and prepared dinners with imaginary male Mickey might have been the man that List $40.00 $32 List $55. $39 tending the bar, she's still bedding guests, and seems to be moving closer she's always dreamed of. down with strange men as frequently as to the edge every day- Mickey seems like some sort of ever. Lesley Ann Warren, as Eve, gives Genevieve Bujold, long a neglected a virtuoso performance of a multi- presence, gives a solid, thoroughly she claims to have been a lot t CATS GLACIER layered woman, a cauldron of boiing fascinating performance as Nancy he aimstograver it, a spy, Newest look on the slopes. Leather side flaps protect feas nddram, asios nd with a touch more precise wit than and a photographer with covers on Black, brown or white with against glare. Nylon frame fears and dreams, passions and Warren. She moves around the story in Time and Esquire and insists flatly he gray lenses. Add $15 for Black, brown or blue with anxieties.y Ambermatic~ gray lenses. Add $15 arenes. th a mousey, nervous manner, in a won- never lies. Beyond that he's a card List $4 5 for Ambermatic. $34 Warren, with her arrestingly derfully rendered eccentric role that shark of no slight ability, and can see $34 beautiful black holes foreyes, mixes al most actresses would kill for the chance through the other characters in just a 0 . fEvscnrdity aesa to get glance. He's every bit as enigmatic a creates an affecting, quite intensely Am berm aticĀ® Change with the Weather! 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Guaranteed satisfaction. 101 West Liberty Street, Ann Arbor MI residents add 4% sates tax. Send 50 for catalog. ____________________________________________________________________Hakosphere Enterprises P.. Box 1461 Royal Oak, M48068 10 Weekend/Friday, November 9, 1984 a u, ., 3 C 0 V E A foreign view By Lisa Oram "If you forget your home, your coun- try, you can become like the Americans and fit right in. If you stick strongly to your identity you must sometimes sacrifice in your social life." So said Kwon Seok Woo, a fresh- person from South Korea, and one of our 2,000 foreign students at the University. "There is a lot of good here in a material sense and if you give up your identity because you are getting material benefits, you are betraying the expectations of your country to study hard in America and then contribute to your home. You must at least never forget where you came from," Kwon said. Kwon said he feels very strongly about his identity but emphasizes "I really love Americans!" He is a tran- sfer student from University of Southern California where he studies for two semesters before coming to the University of Michigan. He said he wanted to study in America because of the "fresh insight" he hopes to acquire and return to his home country with. "America," he said, "is a model of industrialization for the in- dustrialization of my own country". He claims to have chosen the Univer- sity because of its high academic reputation, hoping to study sociology and how it relates to political behavior. Pointing out one simple difference between himself and many American students, he said, "I stand in the cafeteria line at my dormitory with everyone else and make the choices for my meal. We all eat together and after dinner, take our trays to the garbage. I see whole meals, untouched, being thrown away. I think of the starving people in my and so many other coun- tries. Americans don't really under- stand a foreign student who has ex- perienced this kind of hardship and poverty because they have never ex- perienced it. They end up with an exaggerated optimism. They always see the bright side but don't really ap- preciate the other side." About the University, Kwon said, "In America everything is institutionalized to provide help and is very convenient. But, in the bureaucracy of an in- stitution, you don't always find the best way out of a problem. You may have to wander around but there is always somewhere to go. "For example," he added, "foreign students are required to take a language proficiency exam. Un- dergraduates must also take the required composition text. In these tests, we are expected to express our- selves in limited English about culturally bounded subjects such as politics or abortion rights. We are given the same amount of time as the American students. As a result of the tests Kwon was placed in a tutorial English Composition class. At the end of the session, he retook the test and was placed in a tutorial class for the second time, but is appealing the decision. "I can't get past freshman com- position but I got the best grade in my honors political science course," Kwon said laughing. A t the University there is an inter- national community of students from over 100 different countries. They along with the foreign faculty, visitors, and their families bring international diversity to Ann Arbor. Many of them say they are attracted to the University by its high academic reputation and the many programs that aren't available in their own countries. International students, dressed in American blue jeans, buying books at University Cellar, studying at the UGLI, and doing "the Wave" at football games, are in a constant process of in- terpreting American culture. The most mundane occurance in the life of an American student can take on great significance for a foreign student. Halloween parties, Ready Teller machines, and happy hours are all telling a cultural story being ready dif- ferently from east national perspective. Each foreign student's experience is shaped by what he is accustomed to in his own country. A Chinese student might find large dorm parties most shocking, a French student may be most surprised by American eating habits, an Israeli may be most im- pressed by the expansive library system. There is a strain, however, to being a foreigner entering a foreign country. The difficulties of becoming ac- customed to a foreign language and functioning in a competitive university can be frustrating. Many foreign students are im- mediately involved in research or teaching positions and have spouses or children to worry about The University responds to the needs of foreign students mostly through programs and counseling at the Inter- national Center. In the past couple years, however, foreign student leaders have complained that this help is not sufficient. Kwami Wampah, from the Republic of Togo in West Africa and current president of the International Student Affairs Committee (ISAC), is con- tinuing the work started by last year's committee in confronting the Univer- sity administration with the concerns and problems of international students. "International students do not feel the University gives their needs adequate attention." Wampah claims. The International Center, a quiet narrow corridor between Michigan Union and West Quad Dormitory, was first established in 1936 as a service for use by international students and faculty as well as Americans interested in overseas travel and education or domestic international experiences. The 1982-83 International Center Report commented about the delicacy of working with newly arrived foreign students. "Although most foreign students are mature professional people who can well manage their own lives without external assistance, some circumstances indicate the ap- propriateness of University aid. Much effort is put into helping newly arrived foreign people quickly and successfully get settled into the Ann Arbor com- munity and into the University. Assistance is provided for foreign student organizations and for in- dividuals who request help." One of the primary programs run by the International Center is a 3-week orientation for foreign students upon arrival in August. The orientation is designed to acquaint them with the culture and the university" said Aman- da Gordon, program director at the In- ternational Center. "We then try to mainstream the students and offer individual culture specific advising during the year," she added. There is, however, no organized followup, which according to Wampah is much needed. Upon arrival, he said, the main preoccuption is with program requirements and regiaration. He claimed a more gradual unfolding of in- formation would be more useful. Who can really concentrate on how to reserve a raquetball court at the CCRB when the most immediate concerns are language proficiency tests and CRISP? There is also a need for more com- plete and detailed pre-departure infor- mation, about clothes, and weather, etc." said Wampah. This year, current foreign students served as leaders in the orientation, a change which both Wampah and Gor- don hailed as an improvement. 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