4 ARTS ho Michigan Daily Wednesday, September 18, 1985 Page 6 Fasten your seatbelts for visual evening 4 By David Schwenk UT ON YOUR cinematic safety belts this weekend and travel through the infinite galaxy of ex- rirmental cinema. The Performance Network will be presenting 90 minutes of new ex- perimental films from the No Nothing Cinema of San Francisco this Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. The films range in form from the absurd and comical to the completely bizarre. They differ in style from pixilated live action to lyrical picture shows. Whatever their statements may be, the films promise one thing - diver- sity. Fast-paced, dream-like, and visually poetical, the films appeal to a wide variety of emotions. Take, for instance, the scratch film "True Lies." It opens with blobs of blue, red, and green color shifting erratically about on the screen. Run- ning lines curl and zigzag across the oval-shaped figures like the scratch- marks of a child's handwriting, or like gazing through a broken kaleidescope. For some reason this film insults me. I look around for the freshman art student who slipped this experimental film into the collection, when a voice suddenly booms from the speakers - menacing and loud. "I am angry !" the voice whines. "I am sad. I am angry because..." The colors continue their metamorphosis on the screen. The voice continues: "I am cool." The screen mixes into dif- ferent shades of blue. Gee, I get it! Cool - blue; red (angry) - hot. Wow! Haven't these guys producing the scratch films seen each other's work in the last 20 years? There's only so many ways you can express yourself by scratching the surface of color film. "Brown Eyed Girls" makes up for what "True Lies" lacks in visual en- tertainment. Visions of brown-eyed girls overlap in a dreamscape of pink lingerie, satin sheets, and plush green fields flowing with wild flowers. Filmmaker Dean Snider effectively uses color, motion, and editing techniques to complement the pace and mood of Van Morrison's famous song, "Brown-Eyed Girls." Nothing has a stronger emotional impact than a moving song coupled with fantastic images. One easily falls into the visual fantasy portrayed on screen. This short certainly isn't from MTV. Now for the comical and truly bizarre, topped off with a touch of the absurd. Rock Ross's film "Just Another Girl" is not about just another girl. It's a live action film of drag queens preparing for a night on the town. As the men transform themselves into ladies, placing makeup and wigs on one another, they move absurdly about within the frame through rapid pixilation. The editing has a lively tempo, and my eyes had trouble following who moved where. Strange music with a hypnotic beat accom- panies the film. The overall effect produces feelings of confusion and chaos. Watching the men zoom around the room leaves you a bit dazed in the head - Ross creates a surreal world in the dressing room of the drag queens. The last work of this 11-film series, George Kuchar's "The Xtras," could be called a parable on aliens and sex, or a comic satire on sci-fi films. A comical narrative pieces together the unusual occurrences in the life of Rourk, who is a young man in search of the "Men In Black." Kuchar makes good use of camera angles and left me with many lasting impressions. You'll see Kuchar as the French waiter in the film. That's just a glimpse at the new and mostly original experimental films from the No Nothing Cinema. Some of the other films include portrayals of paranoid schizophrenics who have ob- sessive fears and preoccupations with death. Many of these filmmakers have had their works shown at the Ann Arbor 16mm Film Festival, in- cluding Dean Snider, Michael Rud- nick, Marian Wallace, Sam Giam- mona (1985 Tom Berman Award win- ner), and George Kuchar. Don't wait for the Film Festival to get your dose of new experimental films. Take advantage of this rare op- portunity to see the latest works of the avant-garde filmmakers and escape- on a visual journey. Remember, fasten your seatbelt. It's a bizarre galaxy. 4 4 A PSYCHOLOGY & RELIGION PROGRAM Thursday, Sept. 19, 1985 First Meeting, 8:00p.m. (at Hillel) In its second year, Hillel's Psychology & Religion program is .establishing an on-going group to meet every other Thursday to explore the dimensions of spirituality, the connection between indi- vidual personality and religious experience. Issues of alienation and wholeness, action and faith, control and self-surrender will be ex- amined. Alice Brunner, a Clinical psychologist from the Office of Student Counseling Services, will help guide the group whose members may come from a variety of religious and nonreligious orientations. H For more information, call 663-3336. :1429 HILL STREET I I True story In soon-to-be released film called 'Eleni,' Kate Nelligan stars as a courageous woman who struggles to save the lives of her children during the Greek Civil War of 1948. The picture also stars John Malkovitch and Linda Hunt, and is directed by Peter Yates from a script by Steve Tesich (the same team that brought you 'Breaking Away') based on the books by Nicholas Gage. I- " l uI Wrh TeW A Records1 Orchestral the Dark - Manoeuvres Crush (A&M) in IN he ' S $233A MO. $1345* AMO. $1795' AMO. Originally conceived as the elec- tronic tape experiments of Liver- poolians Paul Humphreys and An- drew McCulskey, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark have, in recent years, creatively expanded in- to electo-pop dimensions while main- taining a crafty and inventive ap- proach. Their newest release, Crush, further confirms that this band is one of the most creative forces in that syn- thesizer-band genre of music that also includes the likes of Depeche Mode and Blancmange. OMD's style is that of a constant tease. Layering arrangement upon arrangement with sampled horn sounds, pianos, saxophones, guitars, real drums, and of course, a palette of synthesizer effects, OMD creates songs that constantly beckon the listener. Electronic voices flutter in and out of the pieces just as the in- struments do, almost mocking the songs themselves. Crush features two strong dance numbers - the somewhat Ultravox sounding "So in Love," and the playfully silly "Secret." "So in Love" has a well-blended aural texture and is quite a bit smoother than most of the other sounds of the new album or those of their last release, Monk Culture. The whole piece seems to whoosh, carrying away the saxophone parts. "Secret" is a witty, contrived little piece that highlights those teasing voices OMD often use; beckoning the" listener with the secret of the song. OMD seem rather observant of the ways of women on Crunch - the lyrical style of "Women III" echoes that of Squeeze: At last she has a home to share, a man who comes to do her hair, a garden with a patio, a place to have a barbeque. However, the, lyrics are not as tightly bound to theme music as those of Difford and: Tilbrook; instead, they ride over the"' aural texture of the song. t "Native Daughter of the Golden- West" finds OMD once again wat- ching women - and similarly focused&' on the priveledged life of Western culture. Radio is not ready for this song. "Native Daughter" is probably one of the most charging pieces OMD has produced; it has searing guitar leads and a pounding drum track. The~ whole song has an eerie, beautiful, sound. Terrific headphone material. "88 Seconds in Greensboro" i another departure from the fluffier,., lighter elements of the band's heavyr TV (4 $13.45 per month = $121.05. Based on 9 monthly payments. *Console TV @a $2335 per Based on 9 monthly STUDENT ID GETS YOU 10% OFF Now you can have a roommate you're guaranteed to get along with. And all you have to do is call Granada TV Rental. At Granada, companionship comes cheap. When you rent 'til the end of the school year, your student I.D. gets you a Magnavox, RCA or Hitachi color TV for as little as $13.45 to $23.35 a month. A VCR for as little as $17.95 to $22.95 a month. And our incredible combo offer-a TV VCR and stand-for just $29.95 a month. s month = $210.15. *VCR @ $17.95 per month = $161.55. payments. Based on 9 monthly payments. Make your payments with a major credit card, and you'll save another $3.00 a month. And, let's face it, you don't have to have a PhD in economics to realize they're the best deals around. What's more, our low rates also in- clude free service and repairs, usually within 24 hours. And if we can't fix it on the spot, we'll give you a free loaner. So give us a call today and let us set you up with an ideal roommate. Just think, if it ever gets on your nerves, you can simply shut it off. t i