a ARTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, February 17, 1985 Page 5 "Fields' full of m By Byron L. Bull ' n the spring of 1975 the American I backed Lon Nol government of Cam- bodia was toppled by the communist Khmer Rouge revolutionary army in a genocidal purge that left three million of the country's seven million people dead from starvation or outright mur- der. The Killing Fields tries to examine the horrors of that holocaust by looking at it through the eyes of two men, an American journalist and his Cam- bodian assistant. It is a well produced, conscientious film that takes to its sub- ject with an earnest intensity, but is un- dermined by its weak narrative and an inability to focus clearly on even one idea. Directed by Rolan Joffe from a screenplay by Bruce Robinson, The Killing Fields is a conventionally plot- ted docudrama based on the experien- ces of New York Times correspondent Sydney Schanberg - who was stationed in the country from 1972 to 1975. Schanberg, as played by Sam Water- son, is a driven workaholic who is so caught up in his work he loses sight of the human tragedy underneath what he's reporting. Pran though, despite his serious desires to emulate Schan- berg and to become a journalist in his own right, can't help but see the horrors and the waste of the fighting because it's not happening in some foreign land to him, it's in his own backyard. Pran is so loyal to Schanberg, and so intent on becoming his equal, that when the Khmer Rouge begin to break through the capital city of Phnom Penh's last defenses, Pran elects to stay behind with his boss to cover the takeover. Shanberg manages to secure passage for Pran's family on the American embassy's airlifts, and as the two men stand in the mid'dle of the em- bassy grounds, watching the last helicopters ascending into the dark gray skies, there's a terrible, resoun- ding finality to the moment, as if a great steel cell door was clanging shut. Director Joffe, here directing his first feature, takes the first hour of the film and allows the tension to build like a tightly wound steel spring that snaps in your face. When the revolutionaries en- ter the city, they're driven by a fanaticism that's a bloodthirsty mad- ness. Anyone whom the troops even suspect of being a member of the government, or of having any connec- tion with westerners, they execute on the spot. The whole population of the city is routed out into the counrtyside and organized into reeducation-labor camps in the Khmer Rouge's drive to return the country to a pure peasant state. Schanberg and the small group of European reporters who've stayed to, cover the takeover are arrested, and saved from summary execution only because Pran manages to convince their guards that the men are neutral French journalists. They are im- prisoned for a while within the French embassy, and eventually allowed to leave the country. But Pran, whose association with them makes him a marked man, has to be first handed over. Pran is sent to one of the Khmer Rouge's. camps, where famine torture, and dehumanization are the daily lifestyle. Pran passes himself off as a taxidriver and keeps his educated background a secret - that fact alone would warrant his death because the Khmer Rouge openly exterminate any "intellectual" they find - and endures the constant beatings and intimidations with complete passivity. As the film centers on Pran's struggle to survive and to maintain his sense of dignity, it becomes a somber tribute to the imperishability of the human spirit. Pran is dragged down to the absolute onotony lowest depths of existance - he's so starved he has to resort to sneaking into the animal pens at night where he cuts gashes in the hides of the oxen and sucks out their blood - without ever relinquishing hopes. Pran endures, and silently, patiently waits for an oppor- tunity to escape to arise. There's an undeniable power to many of the films scenes, which Joffe and cinematographer Chris Menges - for- mer documentary film-maker - cap- ture with a stark,.vivid clarity free of any distracting stylistic touches. His mistake, however, is in not conceiving of the picture as one whole piece. The film is one long string of seperate sequences, some of them extremely well crafted, but they are never connec- ted with any regard to rhythm. The Killing Fields is like one long, even- tually monotonous mural that just keeps rolling by. It gets so tedious that even the horrific imagery, the countless corpses and dismembered wounded, loses its effectiveness as one grows desensitized to it all. The screenplay also makes the mistake of interrupting Pran's story, which is the part of the film with any focus, to keep crosscutting back to New York where Schanberg is wallowing in self-inflicted anguish over Pran's fate. But the screeplay never developed the two men's friendship to any detail - in fact, Pran is shown as little more than a manservant to Schanberg - that the crucial bond that is supposed to exist between the two seems artificial all the way through. The Killing Fields is a humanist film, but it lacks any characters of substan- ce. Joffe, who has spent most of his career directing for the stage and whom one would think would be best at bringing strong performances out in his cast, always keeps the characters and their feelings distant from us. His1 direction is detatched and vague, perhaps out of his desire to avoid This is not an actual photograph from Cambodia, but rather a still from 'The Killing Fields.' The movie is well-crafted, but became monotonous from its excessive violence. cheaply dramatizing the situations, and everyone in the film is so remote that one can't empathize with any of them for a second. Most of the characters are sloppily_ sketched, they're more like scenery than flesh and blood people, and not even the two principals are sufficiently developed to any degree. Haing S. Ngor, who has never acted prior to this picture, does have a very graceful, relaxed presence, but he can't project his feelings with any force so that as angelically pure as his character is, he's never realized enough to us to un- derstand or really care for. Sam Waterson's performance is even stranger, he plays'Schanberg in such a hazy, diffused manner that the charac- ter is devoid of any humanity and almost invisible. All of Schanberg's elaborate angst seems hollow and merely contrived. The Killing Fields could have been an important film, and it does have a few scattered, brilliant moments. But its muddled, incohesive storyline becomes so tiresome that by the time the film unwinds into its sentimental, morally thick conclusion - complete with John Lennon over the soundtrack - you feel only disappointment at having spent so much time with it for so meager a reward. mettrs1 & I2 5Eth ARB JO (... SAT. SU FIRTiSHW7ONY-$2 00 SAT., SUN. FIRST SHOW ONLY $2.00 = NEW TWILIGHT SHOWS MON. THRU FRI. $2.50 TIL 6 P.M. $4.n with t's entire ad$1.00 OFF 1 or 2 tickets. Good all fetues thru 2/21/85. "BEAUTIFUL AND B MOVING" - N.Y.TIMES .4l i )i WINNER BEST DIRECTOR BERTRAND TAVERNIER CANNES FILM FESTIVAL Sororal virtuosos duel on piano at Hill "By Neil Galan ter S HE SPEAKS SOFTLY and with a charmingly distinctive French ac- cent, but this was not the most un- derlying thing about our conversation. From a hotel room on the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Boston I spoke on the phone with Marielle Labeque; one 'half of the duo-phone team; Katia and Marielle. Labeque. The Labeques are sisters, French, pianists, and are rapidly becoming the most talked about piano duo around. They can be more than just "Talk",: as they will perform here in Ann Arbor, Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. at Rackham Auditorium in a most decisively juciy program of two-piano "meat" to include music of Gershwin, Ravel; Brahms and Stravinsky. The ~discussion could have been even better if I could've spoken to both halves'of the duo at the same time, but I h still learned a lot from Marielle, who generously gave me her time. The Labeque sisters received their first lessons at the keyboard from their Kmother, whom Marielle had the strongest feelings about with regards to a piano teacher: Then it was on to The famous Paris Conservatoire where both sisters studies and eventually received first prizes in piano performance. "After we both received the first prizes (separately) we decided to play together," remembered Marielle. . "Just to be together, it's wonderful to share the music with the people you like and love, and it's just a beautiful feeling:" These devoted and inspired feelings that Marielle and Katia have about each other is just one of the reasons that they have become so successful as a piano duo. They have worked hard too. In North America they have appeared with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, with Zubin Mebta and Michael Tilson- Thomas, and with The Montreal Sym- phony under Charles Dutoit. They have also made the rounds in Europe, having performed duos at Queen Elizabeth Hall, the Roundhouse, St. John's Smith Square, and on BBC Television-and hat's their roster for England alone. this season will take the sisters to JOB OPPORTUNITY CAMPUS INFORMATION CENTER michigan union (313) 763-INFO The Campus Information Center is looking for a few qualified students to work as INFORMATION ASSISTANTS for the different people and different audiences, because each person comes for a different reason. Some like this music or that music, and we enjoy playing music and sharing it with people." Marielle's wish of sharing the music that she and her sister love and enjoy is sure to be fulfilled on Sunday at Rackham. Ticket sales have been going extraordinarily well and to ensure yourself a seat it would definitely be wise to call the University Musical Society at 665-3717 today for ticket in- formation and availability. The seats range in price from a very reasonable $5 to only $10 for the best seats. Without question, Brahms plus Ravel plus Stravinsky plus Gershwin with the Labeques each at a STEINWAY Grand is the formula to make your Sunday afternoon perfectly grand it- self. '7.00 HAIRCUTS WITH Valeri THROUGH MARCH 1, 1985 AVANTI HAIR FASHIONS 2040 Green Road 665.5433 :,. The multi-talented Labeque sisters bring their piano skill to Hill Auditorium tonight to play a wide variety of pieces. Holland, Belgium, Germany and Fran- ce where they have a very large following and are in constant demand. The siters like this style of life though. "Not just one concert makes you a star," commented Marielle. "You have to travel, do TV and radio, play lots of concerts, and talk about it. Perhaps because we are a piano duet is one reason why we have made such a big success. We are playing for a larger audience, and the repetoire is very unique and interesting." Marielle seems to just love the two-piano repetoire. She claimed that she had no real desire at this point in her life as a musician to play solo piano concerts, or solo piano repetoire. In- stead she came back to saying again that she "just would like to play the music she likes with the people she likes, and just share." The Labeque Sisters have done all the major two-piano repetoire and then some. "We have done work with com- posers of today also, such as Luciano Berio, Pierre Boulez, Oliver Messaien. And two composers are working on some two-piano pieces for us right now." Their Ann Arbor appearance will include Brahms, Variation of a Theme by Haydn, Ravel's Mother Goose Suite, Stravinsky's Concerto for Two Pianos, and Gershwin's American in Paris, refering to which Marielle said, "We just love the music of Gershwin!" The sisters have also recorded exten- sively and are able to boast an im- pressive list of record albums. On Philips they have done Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue" and "Concerto in F", which incidentally swept the record market and became a worldwide best- selling classical recording. Shortly thereafter came an equally successful recording of Gershwin songs with soprano Barbara Hendricks and then a disc of Brahms' spicy Hungarian Dan- ces. They recently signed a recording contract with EMI, and their first recordings of ragtime music has just been released as well as other albums featuring the music of Stravinsky, Saint-Saens, and Liszt. Although their recordings have done smashingly well, IMarielle seemed to prefer live performances to recorded ones. "There just isn't enough time to polish a recording when you are working (on the spot) with a particular orchestra or recording engineer, remarked Marielle. "There isn't enough time to do exactly as you want. It's a lot of pressure. We enjoy playing OTWE pipsMichigras OF E Og or. aspl".9 dance OF p~s Anoppoteniy fr oca cu ' .. Bt©Sdate, saccess aied a of Iv-g p5m ~take oP~arcA 1.a0e Ma p~as and atme a004a8 ?,vv ~$~ . (G) SUN. 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:45 MON. THRU THURS. 5:20, 7:20, 9:45 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS, Icil BEST PICTURE, BEST DIRECTOR, BEST ACTOR "AN EXTRAORDINARY MOVIE" THE _ NEWSWEEKi KIALINGM FIELDS WATERSON SORRY, NO TUES. DISCOUNT PRICE SUN. 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:35 MON. THRU THURS. 4:15, 7:00, 9:35 4~ri.~ oV tIP ,,,ore at ~63~ 107 Arthur Miller's 0 The Power Center The Students' RUSH TICKETS for THE ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Yehudi Menuhin, Conductor tr i nn Crucible February 20-23, 8:00 pm February 24, 2:00 pm The Professional Theatre Program Ticket Office: (313) 764-0450 U-M Department of Theatre and Drama