4 ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, February 21, 1986 Page 7 Saccharine By Byron Bull THE FILMMAKER is Terry Gilliam, the former Monty Python turned creator of the tainted fairy tales Jabberwocky and Time Bandits. The film is Brazil, his crazed, morbidly funny variation on 1984, (a book which he admits to never having gotten around to reading but which he - with typical Pythonian irreverance - feels no hesitation about uncourteously stealing a few ideas from.) Brazil is a seriocomic look at the classic dystopian model. The setting is a grim, Albert Speerian-metropolis "somewhere in the 20th century" and though the locale is obviously JEngland, it could just as easily be New York or any other large Western city. The government - a great, corrupted bureaucracy - manages the populace with a SWAT team policeforce that runs an interogation- torture division with the proficiency M of a slaughterhouse (though terrorism runs rampant). The sight of exploding storefronts and restaurants is so common that it barely raises an eyebrow except among the gover- -nment officials, who call is a "very unsportsman-like" thing to do. Enter. Sam Lowry (Johnathan Pryce), a meek, mild-mannered little clerk in the Ministry of Information, but comfortable enough thank you, when he can sneak away behind some corner desk and escape into one of his wonderful, vivid daydreams. Once he drifts off, he's a handsome Daedlus- winged warrior in silver armor, soaring among the clouds and cavor- ting with an angelic, flaxen-haired enchantress. The movie keeps slip- ping back and forth between Sam's eeriely beautiful dreams and the grim, realities of life in the real world. But one day, Sam spies his dream woman scross the street - a spunky, strong-spirited truck driver named Jill (Kim Greist). He begins a desperate affair which is curtailed when the omniscient goon squad comes exploding down through the ceiling to bag him and haul him away. Brazil is kind of a companion piece to the earlier Jabberwocky, where civilization is viewed as inherently decrepit and bound to fail. Gilliam takes many a wild and random shot at personal pet peeves (like plastic surgery and the habits of the bourgeoisie) such venomous disdain that Brazil often lunges into the deepest corners of gallows humor. But while the film suggests social decline is an inevitable, irreversible process - the film, slyly designed in a weird time-warped slant, clashes ar- atire chitecture and fashion styles of the 1940's and '80's to suggest that things are no better or worse now than they ever were-there are a few crumbs of hopefulness to be scrounged. Brazil also has a soft side too. It's infrequent, but nevertheless there in touching little throwaway scenes, like the awkward, desperate near-kiss between Sam and Jill that's as clum- sily beautiful as Woody Allen at his gentle best, and the inspired cameo of Robert DeNiro as Harry Tuttle, a swashbuckling, almost camp-heroic renegade air-conditioning repairman who swoops through Sam's life and enflames his rebelliousness. DeNiro's broadly played heroism is grand and stirring, and the very essence of the film. The film is inconsistent like a terrorist machine gun attack, with Gilliam madly splaying his ideas all over the place. A little more thought- fulness to structure and plotting would have helped immeasurably. Brazil heads off into a hundred dif- ferent directions at once: tragedy, absurdist comedy, black social satire. As ingenius as much of it is, it tends to feel disjointed, or at best hurriedly improvised. Gilliam ends up climaxing with an everything-but-the- kitchen-sink dream within a dream sequence. It is full of cheap comic in- dulgences such as a tacky "Odessa" Mrs. Lowry (Katherine Helmond) and her son Sam (Jonathon Pyrce) meeting for lunch in Terry Gilliam's "Brazil." parody, and some awfully unsubtle bits of symbolism, like the scene of Lowry scaling a mountain of techno- industrial-ideological debri - with a neon cross sticking out a little too conspicuously - that drains one more than it invigorates. In the end Brazil ends on the inevitable bleak note you expect a nightmare fantasy to end on - with its hero crucified and squashed by the state. But even in its pessimistic fatalism, Brazil offers a slim ray of redemption, with its hero, crushed but still triumphing in one very small and pathetic, yet ultimately glorious personal way. As Sam takes off into his final, grand flight of fantasy into the deepest, most limitless realm of his heart, you go soaring with him, and the moment is preciously thrilling. Brazil is a very off-the-wall, but very.special film. It deserves to be seen, felt, and savored. Books- Murder in Outline Ann Morice Bantam Books ,192 pages, $2.95 i Tessa Crichton does not have the orderly mind of Hercule Poirot, nor dioes she possess the charming deduc- ,ive powers of Miss Marple. But she can crack a murder case just as effec- tively as Agatha Christie's famed idetectives. She illustrates her ability In Murder in Outline, a" British ,mystery by Anne Morice, author of over 15 mystery novels. Miss Crichton is a popular British actress who practices amateur detec- tive work as a hobby. She appears nosy and inquisitive, arid elien *fnds are constantly referring to her an- noying habit of asking too many questions. It is just this habit, however, that helps her solve crimes. In this particular case, Crichton is invited to return to her alma mater, The Waterside School, as a judge for an annual drama competition. The. school specializes in dance and theatre, limiting its student body to only wealthy, talented girls. Unfor- tunately, one of these girls is mur- dered during the competition, and Tessa sets out to find the killer. She decides to stay in the vicinity of "the murder, and moves in with her old friend, who is now a dance teacher at the school. With the help of her Scotland Yard husband she quickly unravels the twisted plot, and -discovers that everyone has a secret. -to hide. Her methods seem haphazard at imes, and she does seem to have ,more than her share of good luck. In some instances the reader is baffled by her thought processes. She seems to arrive at a conclusion with infor- (mation not offered in the text. Even :with these faults, however, the Racial sins remembered mystery is a joy to read, and Tessa Crichton is a delightfully original detective. -By Lisa Berkowitz The Wabash Factor By E. V. Cunningham Delacorte Press 256 pages, $14.95 Read this book only if you have a high tolerance for intricate plots played out by well-defined charac- ters. The Wabash Factor is a conspiracy novel, and therefore follows a predic- ted pattern; the heroes, who seem to be the only people awre of what's really going on, are up against a gigantic, faceless organization that's determined to kill everybody that gets in the way. The intensely complicated plot begins with the deaths of two prominent politicians. Both men died from strokes and both men were against further aid of any kind to the (fictional) Central American country of Santa Marina. When New York Police Lieutenant Golding begins an investigation, he finds that these deaths are the tip of an iceberg that consists of more deaths and bloodshed. The link in all the slaughters are international financial dealings concerning Santa Marina. From the beginning Golding is up against impossible odds. The op- position first tries to frighten him off, then his apartment and car are bugged so they can anticipate his every move. Forcednto flee for their lives, Golding and his wife are han- dicapped by concern for their children, whom they send to Ireland in hopes of getting them beyond the reach of the enemy. When the opposition frames Golding for theft, he is suspended from the police force and this is where the plot goes totally haywire. Suffice it to say - when a David goes up against Goliath it's difficult to believe that David could make mistakes and still win the battle. Plus, the happenstance of having Golding revealed to be an expert marksman near the end of the book was too much to believe. The saving grace of the book was Cunningham's deft characterizations, Golding is a real person, a.happily married man who happens to be a Jewish cop married to an Irish Catholic woman. Golding's wife Fran, is no part of a stereotypical "Bridget Loves Bernie" scenario but. is rather a college teacher and mother of two children. -By Mickey Brumm By David Turner I T IS somehow appropriate that Ann Arbor Civic Theater's production of James Baldwin's Blues For Mister Charlie, has fallen into their chronogically ordered season when it has, during Black History Month. Baldwin's play stands as a monumen- tal work in Black Theater, and those who remain in town next week should make an effort to get to the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater to see this production. Baldwin's play, written in 1965, recalls the story of Emmet Till, a black Mississippi youth who was mur dered by two whites in 1955. The murderers were later acquitted, and subsequently admitted their crime, justifying it by the claim that the four- teen-year-old Till had whistled at one of their wives. The enthusiastic director of this production is Lundeanna Thomas, a Phd. student who heads the Univer- sity's Black Theater Workshop. She is full of praise for her young, energetic cast of twenty-six which includes several untried players and three students from her workshop. Thomas promises that this show will offer heightened entertainment for all, with a very real lesson thrown in. She is hoping to simultaneously CONSIDERING AN ABORTION? Complete Confidential Information Pregnancy Counseling Center 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (any time) show her audience how far we have Day. She is hoping that her show will come since the events which Baldwin emphasize King's belief that whites describes, and also how far we still shouldn't discriminate, and blacks have to go. The story of systematic shouldn't hate. ihaJustice and racial bigotry will shed Also important is the ability this light both on the events in South production to explain the huge impact Africa and those closer to home. As that the Till Tcase had on the nation an example, Thomas mentions last thirty years ago.. Thomas remembers year's protest at Ypsilanti High reading about Emmet Till in Jet School where studentswere given magazine as a youngster, and hopes failures for a day's work when they that the discovery or re-discovery of protested the school's failure to this horrible injustice will be part of a acknowledge Martin Luther King truly rewarding theatrical experien- ce. ---... - .- -- -.-..-.-.--- . -...-....... 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