WI FILM I VINYL Jones hits with a slice of 'Island Life' Sexism still prevalent in '80s mox G-- _t _- __ 2T m ( h fa p c a wi th be su is hi he st F m a cu a th p to G a wi w tr to g ar ha m N th il d to S to d s to Grace Jones-Island Life - this earnest Brit trio who are so Island) very fond of the old Motown groove. But unlike most of their contem- Grace Jones is not normal; neither is poraries - who will be better left un- er music. For the listener who is un- named-this outfit, founded by amiliar with her, Island Life is the (English) Beat alumni David Steele erfect introduction, and Andy Cox is not as interested in It is a 3-D sonic vibe so strong you retro-fashionability as it is in an see it. It is both emotional and adhering to the school of craftman- loof. It is microwave cooking ship associated with the early '60s 'ithout heat, yet she will fry you, all soul era. The results on this debut he same. She can simultaneously album are perhaps a little less stellar owl you over with frankness and than their aspirations, but at least ubtlety at the same time. Island Life personable and pleasant enough to a remixed collection of her greatest bring a slight smile to the faces of its, from the exotic jungle of disco to those of us more than a little tired of er own unique and austere new wave the indulgences of the Anglo pop tyle. scene. "La Vie en Rose" is a very melodic No drippy, pseudo poetics here. The rench song, and if you played it for Cannibals cut compact, catchy soul- 4om, she might wonder where you tinged pop numbers that try to cap- cquired a taste for European ture the simple eloquent honesty of ulture. Play "I Need A Man" for her, the old masters like Smokey Robinson nd she will think you sank back into and the Holland-Dozier-Holland he late '70s disco craze, and if you team. The writing is lean and clean, lay "Slave to the Rhythm," you will and even if the little variations on the )tally blow her away. "My Jamaican timeless boy/girl theme fall short of uy" has a very strong reggae beat, inspired-tunes like "Funny How nd like all of Miss Jones' songs, you Love Is" don't deliver the ironic in- ill catch yourself tapping your foot sight they allude to-they at least hether you are aware of it or not, maintain an honest purity. And By now you will wonder if Grace is Roland Gift's sweet vocals-imagine rying out everything in the book just a younger, more anxious Otis Red- o show off, or to find the perfect ding-give enough added weight to enre for herself. She is doing both, carry the trick off. nd succeeding phenomenally. She On the more "socially conscious" as dabbled and impressed in so songs, like the single "Johnny Come aany types of music that it is hard to Home" or "Move To Work" the em- ay exactly what her best form is."I phasis is on capturing the tragedy of [eed a Man" is the disco anthem of something like a runaway adolescent e time, and "Private Life" as it affects one individual, rather lustrates the apex of new wave chic. than in making some great, hazy, In short, it does not matter how you ideologically fucked commentary a la efine her music, she is indeed a slave Paul Weller. the rhythm, and not the definition. This is a very pleasant record, the ;he is the Black Venus with a license tunes are catchy, Steele and Cox have okill, and her music is as a rhythmic knack, and there are langerously strong as her per- enough hooks to keep your ears onality. Buy this record and fall in cocked to the speaker. But a little ove with her. spontanaityand roughness wouldn't hurt. The album is a little bit too cool. --Mike Frank and jazzy and smooth in a way that sometimes leans toward-but never [he Fine Young Cannibals- sinks to-Sade like cocktail lounge [he Fine Young Cannibals muzak, and the glossy, spotless 'I.RS.)production doesn't help by further draining away any warmth. They call themselves, with The Cannibals are then more a efreshing candidness and self- band of potential than they are one of eflation, The Fine Young Cannibals accomplishment, but you can tell G RA CE J ON E S / I S L A N D L I F E (kA 1 By Leslie Eringaard SEXISM IS STILL a force to be reckoned with in the media - especially in movie theaters. The danger of this is that motion pictures are highly influential in the way people perceive the world. Often, the sexual stereotypes portrayed on film are readily assigned to women in their daily lives, with little regard for the consequences. There are many movies on the market where women are portrayed as sexual objects. As objects, there women provide comic relief or romantic interest, but they are rarely defined with regard to anything other than their sexuality. Oc- cassionally, women have minor sup- porting roles in which they are seen as nearly asexual. Common to this category are the stereotyped roles of harried wife an mother-in-law. One reason why these one- dimensional characters are prevalent on film is that many of the movies produced today are essentially mid- dle-aged male fantasies. (The people who write and produce most of the screenplays are, of course, middle aged white males). Such productions include such psuedo-comedies as Blame it on Rio, starring Michael Caine, and The Woman in Red, with Gene Wilder. Unfortunately such' movies sell. However, they rarely win Academy Awards. In The Woman in Red, a married man develops a crush on an attractive model-thin woman he sees standing over an air vent in the sidewalk. She is wearing a vivid red dress, and of course the dress flies up above her thighs. The women in red, enjoying the experience immensely - and perhaps thinking she is unobserved - moves her hips and legs sensually. The plot of The Woman in Red con- sists of Gene Wilder's foolish and un- successful attempts to get his love- interest to meet with him. His wife is a stolid and hardworking woman who cannot possibly compete with the 'glorious creature' her husband is ob- sessed with. However, the audience never gets a good sense of the woman in red's personality. She is there for decoration only. In the feature starring Michael Caine, the plot is similarly about a middle aged man who has fantasies about making love to another woman. The woman in this case is his best friend's teenage daughter, who flings herself at him constantly. They are on a tropical vacation which includes both families, minus the wives. Michael Caine is put in the untenable position of having to defend himself against this aggressive and nubile teenager he is attracted to. The situations in the movie are ridiculous and blatantly titillating; most of the movie is devoted to the teenager's attempts to seduce the older man, and expose herself in various stages of half-dress. The dialogue is extremely unconvincing and shallow. Why would she fall so hard for her father's best friend, who Merl Streep portrays Karen Dinesen as is her best friend's father? Assuming this is likely why would she be so blatant about seducing him while her own father is around? Michael Caine's morality in this situation is supposedly justified by his tem- porary estrangement from his wife, his initial attempts to remain true to her, and the natural rebellion of a teenager, who is possibly acting against her own father. Blatantly sexist movies are steadily losing popularity although movies often include sexist elements as a matter of course. One movie with a highly offensive sexist content lasted less than a week in the Ann Arbor area. The Longshot isn't about womener se. It is about four beer- guzzling, working-class guys who bet on horses. The movie is a so-called comedy starring Tim Conway and Harvey Korman. The most objec- tionable material in the movie is in the portrayal of the wives and one rich widow. Stella Stevens as Nikki Dixon is the "rich broad" who flaunts, her sexuality, and goes after Tim Conway courageous and able in 'Out of Africa. them and they keep telling you how good it will be when you're married. And so you marry them - and then what? Nothing." The movie seems designed to denigrate the lower mid- dle classes, though that is presumably the audience it is trying to attract. Fortunately the audience didn't bite. Most movies are geared to a young audience. The people who consisten- tly buy the most tickets are in the age range of 12 to 24 years. Repugnant movies such as Porky's I or II or Spring Break feature teenage boys experimenting with their sexuality in a crude and insensitive way. This adolescent fare does little to educate young men or women in the realities of a true romantic involvement. In many of the serial teen horror flicks, such as Friday the 13th, teenage girls are often slashed to death immediately after a scene in which they have removed most or all of their clothing, and engaged in sexual acts. This seems to imply a perverted type of morality. These young women are punished for beign sexual beings, and they meet their "just rewards." "The cover of Grace Jones' greatest-hits a/bum. r] d their hearts are in it. Unless I'm wrong and this is just another "hey- let's-form-a-band" venture this is a group to keep a tab on. Not a great record, but very a very nice one and that's certainly enough sometimes. -Byron Bull BURGER KING vit"Aren't ou Hungry?TM ' KING COMBO ANN ARBOR i Birwood Ml One Whopper, (nexto movie theatre) 1 ~ large order of french fries ANN ARBOR 1 and medium soft drink 725 Victors Way . Sfmoor only$2mf 39-- -- -- ---- - - - - -... - -. ..4 44\~v.?4} Plasticland Wonderful (Pink Dust) - Wonder Wonderland Gees, this is tiresome stuff. Gar- bled, over-serious psychedelia with leaden melodies and unintelligible pseudo-mystical lyrics. The entire disc seems entirely overblown, not unlike most of the stuff it takes its in- fluence from - post '67 psych, which largely fell victim to artsy, pretentious jamming and self- conscious mysticism. Typical of the problem with the disc is "Gloria Knight", a boring jam drained of its potential by drowning in droned lyrics and distracting noise. To make matters worse, the band sees it fit to reprise it on side two at near twice its original length. The remain- der of side one sticks. .pretty much to this kind of lame jamming, with the notable exceptions of "Fairytale Hysteria," which sounds a bit like Love; and the near-witty (although still wordy) lyrics of "Gingerbread House," which clearly indicates that Plasticland has indeed been indulging in a little sugarcube now and then. Side two thankfully lightens up a bit at its outset. "Flower Scene" is by far the best track. It's a nice poppy defense of the groovy underground to which Plasticland belongs, devoid of the self-serious attitude and empty jams which characterize the other tracks. "Process of the Silverness" is also lighter-handed, although lyrically garbled and therefore not particularly compelling. "Non-stop Kitchen" also nears swellness. It's a chaotic dada pop tune that advises "Don 't be attacked by the spoon ". Really. Must've been some trip. - The remainder of the tracks, which include the "Gloria Knight" reprise, the title track, and "Grassland of Reeds and Things" (Redundant, huh?), sink disappointingly into self- indlugent, unappealing jamming. Sure, Wonder Wonderful Won- derland succeeds at being very heavy and trippy and all, but completely lacks the coherence that would make it listenable and interesting. A little moderation next time out would do Plasticland some good. - Julie Jurrjens Classic Ruins - Lassie Kills Chickens (Throbbing Lobster) For all of you who are despairing over the Del Fuegos' new-found, big- time commercial success, the Boston scene has produced yet another good rock outfit to relieve you of those bar- band blues. Yes, Classic Ruins are here to help you through that bottle of beer - especially if it happens to be a Labatts (the title of one of their songs). On the whole, Lassie Kills Chickens is packed with average to above average rock and roll tunes, the playing - not songwriting - accoun- ting for that which is above. average. The Ruins are accomplished rockers. The jamming is tight, and guitar- noisy. "Geraldine I Need Money (more than I need you)" is perhaps the strongest cut. It writhes, squirms, and kicks its way off the vinyl. The only thing to hold it down are the vocals, which are a bit muddy at See VINYL, Page 5 Yentl was an extremely ambitious give project. It was directed, produced, H starred and sung in by Babra ties Streisand. The movie is a work Pur of art. It delves into the story of a unf Jewish woman who desires, above all unfc else, to study the Talmud - this something that was forbidden to her the as a woman in her time. After the Alic death of her father, Yentl disguises sitiA herself as a young man so that she can real become a scholar and study. The last sorr scene has Barbra as Yentl taking a trea boat to America where she feels she mai will be allowed to be both a scholar to t and a woman. den Although Swing Shift and Yentl are Pec both movies of high quality, they did diti not receive as many favorable cha reviews as Scarface and Cotton Club, The two extremely violent and macho ex- eno travaganzas. Evidently, some film the. critics and part of the movie-going rap public are uneasy about movies that gen contain feminist and progressive sub- wh( ject matter. They feel uncomfotable rev with movies which don't fit the stan- hur dard formulas, or contain elements ren that people have come to expect, no It matter how distasteful. This is in part con why Swing Shift, though by far a better sex movie did not get as much publicity or an praise as Scarface, and why Barbra exa Streisand got no Academy Award fen nominations for the movie she had a hand in every aspect of production of. tree Amy Irving did get nominated for pro Best Supporting Actress in Yentl and Ev( won. She was excellent in her role, in but she played a frail and ver har feminine woman who was taught to be tie( beautiful and please her man well. ma The most feminist movie out now, sys The Color Purple, is creating a tun backlash. Steven Speilberg, who took ma a chance on this novel project after cur such sensational fare as Raiders of be the Lost Ark, was snubbed in the rer Academy Award nominations. Ev Speilberg is generally out of favor in ce. Hollywood, although the movie is still ts i with a knife in a whirlpool. This scene has little or no relation to the plot of the movie and it only included for UMEROUS MOVIES that have titillation. One of the wives in Lonig come out in the '80's are not sexist, Shot is a thinnish shrew of a woman who constantly nags at her husbandl and wears curlers in her hair around the house. The other wife is por- trayed as a fat, dull-witted slob who serves her husband American food such as Wonderbread, some kind of .meat or beans, and instant chocolate pudding for desert - complete with an empty can of Dreamwhip. A third wife is mentioned in passing. She died when she stuck a fork in the toaster. Her husband mentioned her sen- timentally when he said she "lit up" his life. He also said he would never marry again: "All broads are alike," he complained. "When you're going out with them they won't let you touch and some have progressive content like Tootsie, Micki and Maude, The Breakfast Club, and even Deesperately Seeking Susan. A few of the movies that came out in the '80's are actually quite feminist. Two examples of movies that could be labeled as such are Swing Shift and Yentl. Goldie Hawn directed, produced. and starred in Swing Shift. This movie deals with the women who took on the traditionally masculine jobs in the factories during WWII. It is an en- tertaining movie, romantic and spunky, and generally enjoyed by its audiences - though perhaps not as enjoyed as much by the critics. 4 Weekend-March 7, 1986 {w