Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 21, 1986 4 Michael Apted's '28 Up' becomes the stale thing By Byron Bull The film is called 28 Up, a British documentary that tackles the very ambitious task of trying to track, and to some degree analyze, a generation from childhood to adulthood. The project first started just over 21 years ago with 7 Up, a short documentary that took a cross section of English boys and girls from various parts of the country and in- terviewed them, returning for another look. every seven years in successive films to find out where each subject has gone, and how much or little each one's attitudes had changed. The current release being the fourth segment of this series, directed by ANTIQUARIAN BOOKFAIR SUNDAY. MARCH 23, 10-5 50 Mid-West Dealers Mich. National Guard Armory 2500 S. Washington, LANSING. MI Free eInfo: Admission 517-332-0112 Michael Apted, focuses on its half- dozen or so subjects at age 28, and, by incorporating a great deal of footage from its predecessors, attempts to reach some sort of conclusion about these men and women. He tries to contrast their earlier dreams or frustrations with their eventual achievements and, to some extent it seems, reach something of an ar- bitrary conclusion about whose life is a failure and whose is a success. As a result, 28 Up isn't a true documentary, but rather an idiosyn- cratic, somewhat eccentric piece of filmmaking that fails as a com- prehensive study of human growth, yet still provides fascinating and sometimes very touching portraits of life as viewed through a distorted magnifying glass. Beyond the inherent limitations of the documentary form, 28 Up is limited in scope by the fact that it ex- plores its subjects almost solely through interviews. Thus the view we get is first tainted by the individual's own inevitable amount of subjective self-analysis, and by the filmmaker's often all too-obvious desire to dissect and neatly summarize an individual's entire life in ten or so minutes. There's no intimacy to 28 Up's vision; it lacks humanity. Though it is often interesting, there's little drama because Apted and Company sum up 'everyone's lives with such succinct tidiness. Take, for example, the life of Tom, who as a boy was a street-toughened, coolly armored fellow from the East End. He is all too aware of his lower- class status and the burden of pulling himself up from it against the severely suffocating British class system. Yet, at age 28 Tom is a reasonably suc- cessful cabdriver, able to support himself and his family in a level of comfort that seems to satisy him. More significantly, Tom is good natured, even jovial, a complete turn of the heart from his younger self, a change which Apted never seeks to uncover the source of, and quite probably the most significant factor in Tom' success. Even more interesting is the case of Suzi, who, as an adolescent, seemed terribly withdrawn, and at 21, wret- chedly cynical and unhappy, yet just seven years later she undergoes most mysterious and wonderful change into a woman, who now married and the mother of two, is aglow with warmth and apparent piece of mind. Suzi makes a passing comment during the course of the in- terview that part of the reason she was so miserable was that she didn't know what she was looking for. She makes some indication that she found it in her husband, though Apted lets the remark go right by without pur- suing it. Even if Suzi's husband is seen briefly, sitting off to the side during the interview, he is left out of the pic- ture, because 28 Up's most fatal fault is to refuse to examine its subject through the effect that other people might have on them, to ignore the other characters in their lives and treat them at best merely as part of the background. Another man, a teacher named Peter, who seems terribly embittered about the country's class system, is likewise rather casually profiled. He's interviewed for a few choice venemous bits of commentary on the Conservative government, but other- wise treated as something of a sad joke. When the interviewer asks Peter's wife what it was about her husband that made her fall in love with him, she replies curtly , "Who said love had anything to do with it?" The ensuing discussion paints an un- settling dispassionate, empty portrait of a relationship that is never sub- sequently explored. Apted doesn't go after the root of how these two terribly pathetic people evolved; he uses them for a cheap laugh and goes on. Apted doesn't seem to care really, and although the viewer may, the film has something of a numbing effect on the emotions. After awhile one starts to distance onesself from the picture. Eventually, 28 Up emerges not so much as an exploration of people, as it was originally started, but merely a fulfillment of an obligation by the filmmakers. Whatever humanist in- terest sparked the inception of this series has long since evaporated, and this winding up feels disinterested, sometimes even resentful towards its subjects for having to follow them around. At times the film has callous, even malicious overtones. At one point, the interviewer is talking to Bruce, a man who has committed his Pho E Phone 764.0558 Records The Minutemen - 3-Way Tie for Last (SST) The Minutemen are dead. Or, specifically, D. Boon, the San Pedro, California trio's two-tons-of-kinetic jello guitarist/singer. Tragedy prevented the career of this ___j jazz/funk/thrash/metal/folk/what- ever-you-want-to-call-it outfit from slipping into their second half-decade as one of America's most important underground bands, when a vehicular mishap in late December '85 claimed the life and boundless spirit of their twenty-eight year old leader, the for- mer Dennes Dale Boon. The accident came at a time when the band was poised directly on the jaws of more widespread appeal. Not an appeal based on a more commer- cialized, mass-marketed approach, but as a response to the band's truly eclectic style. Much musical progress was evident throughout the band's prolific recording career, moving from minimalist primal-scream punk to full -blown production numbers (in- cluding trumper parts). Extensive touring, including last year's jaunt supporting R.E.M., exposed their music to a larger audience. Heck, they even appeared on MTV. Still, their approach to rock music through brief improvisational concepts was as radical as any band's. Ever. The final studio tracks from this amazing band came out simultaneously with the date of D.'s departure from terra firma to rock and roll heaven. The major differen- ce between 3-Way Tie for Last and the Minutemen's other vinyl offerings is the new LP's overtly political stance. The group is no Donny-the-punk- come-latelys to political music; Boon's lyrics consistently cham- pioned the plight of the little man as he struggled against the oppressive bureaucratic forces of our society. However, previous efforts found most of their protestations veiled by ab- stractions. Here, their views come directly to the fore, starting with the album's cover art. A painting by Boon, the jacket features portraits of the band members as an "anti-war sympathizer" (bassist Mike Watt), a "dude/Local 357" (drummer George Hurley), and a "singer/activist" (Boon), over the title caption that ironically sums up the position of those who stand up for what they believe in the U.S. - a 3-Way Tie for Last. Boon's lyrics go straight for the jugular of the military-industrial complex: "The Price of Paradise" attacks the injustice of the Vietnam War, while "The Big Stick" (Nicaragua and Guatemala) and "'Just Another Soldier" (Beirut) are exortations to prevent that type of imperialist mistake from occuring again. The words are earnest and heartfelt (though a bit heavy-handed on "Big Stick," where too many polysyllables are crammed into one line) and display a songwriting talent that could have developed into one of America's finest. On "Courage," slash and burn guitar pounds the way for Boon's story of a soldier's choice to serve in a song that would surely be a hit if radio wasn't entrenched in AOR dinosaur tracks. Watt writes his share of tunes as; well (mostly with ex-Black Flag bassist Kira), and a fair number of these rock like never before. "Political NIghtmare" is an exem- plary Minuteman cut, seguing back and forth from rib-thumping echo- laden metal to mellow bass and drum lines with characteristic ease through the transition of pulsing guitar, until all Hell breaks loose at the end, simulating Armageddon: Woke up screaming/someone had changed sides/ everyone was dying. /one too many votes: Satan won. "No One" also beats its earth-split- ting rhythm mercilessly on the listener through apocalyptic guitars and call-and-response vocals. "What Is It?," with its joyous up tempo stop/start structure, harkens back to the Minutemen's magnum opus, the Double Nickels on the Dime LP (as does the Spanish-flavored acoustic in- strumental "Hitting the Bong," which recalls Double Nickels' "Cohesion"). This song is just too much fun to define. "Stories," on the other hand, is a slow ballad, tinged with sadness within the context of Boon's death. His plaintive voice ironically sings of a situation not much different than this listener's reaction upon hearing of the song- writer's death. I heard one today about the one I love/I heard one today that shook me up./I heard one the other day, I can't believe that it's true. /I heard one by ac- cident, I wish I hadn't. Also featured on the album are a number of cover versions, including a life to teaching a racially mixed class. in a lower-class neighborhood and seems quite satisfied. Then he starts attacking Bruce's deeply personal religious beliefs, his private sense of idealisms, and finally coming right outt implying that he's a failure to be stuck in a school like this - when the clips of Bruce's life at work show him to be a highly competent, sensitive teacher absolutely invigorated by his work - in a moment of shocking viciousness. 28 Up is part of a project that star- ted with so much initial promise and such possiblities that it's a shame to' see it mishandled in the end. It ex- ploits the very people it originally set. out to explore. Yet it is not a film without merits, for these people and their stories, what little is glimpsed of them make provocative insights into human nature, and if one can suffer 281 Up's disregard for them, one will find the experience rewarding. This film is worth seeking out. 28 Up will be presented this evening by Cinema M at Angell Hall, Aud. A. Times are 7 p.m. and 9p.m. Tickets are $2.50 at the door. t f { 4 $ gloriously straightforward rendition of Creedence Clearwater Revival's4 "Have You Ever Seen the Rain?" that rivals the original in excellence (no exaggeration). Also featured are a folksy version of the Meat Puppets' "Lost", a frenzie. runthrough of Blue Oyster Cult's (??!!) "The Red and the Black" which Hurley's frenetic drumwork keeps motoring as smoothly as a well-tuned V-6, and a churning burning 26 second sonic assault on the Urinals' "Ack Ack." Closing out the album (and most likely, their career as the Minutemen, save for posthumous releases) is at bizarre version of psychedelic mon- ster Roky Erickson's "Bermuda," recorded over the phone and sounding scratchier than a 4:00 am stubble. This song is so fuzzy and the connec tion so distant that it could have been phoned in from the Great Beyond as a last request from a fallen performer. A spooky final note, to be sure. Everything the Minutemen stood4 for can be summed up in the single line of 3-Way's "Situations at Hand:" there are still lofty dreams meager desires, and still sillyness The Minutemen were a band that aimed high, yet managed to keep their feet on the ground and thei sen- se of humor about them. Those of yo uninitiated in their musical magi would do well to begin your collection with 3-Way Tie for Last and then work your way back, for to ignore this band is to truly miss something special. IT know I miss 'em already. Mike Rubin a RUN FOR COVER! The original cast is coming to save their school... and it's open season on anyone who gets within range! e / Th Y S WARNER BROS. Presents A PAUL MASLANSKY PRODUCTION A JERRY PARIS Film "POLICE ACADEMY 3: BACK IN TRAINING" Starring STEVE GUTTENBERG - BUBBA SMITH - DAVID GRAF MICHAEL WINSLOW - MARION RAMSEY - LESLIE EASTERBROOK - ART METRANO - TIM KAZURINSKY BOBCAT GOLDTHWAIT as Zed and GEORGE GAYNES as Cmdt. Lassard Music Composed by ROBERT FOLK PG A sMSM Written by GENE QUINTANO Produce by PAUL MASLANSKY A RO WARNERCOBR~OuS.oa .JU . WAY - WY Y S .mf oll p D irected by JRYPRS A WRNE .O.U...~~ v &Vr w t% -ers r% AilRA A 1"1"'& A e. A ANSWERS TO AUTO QUIZ 1) Yes! All You Need Is Your Diploma. 2) Livonia VW-Mazda. only 20 minutes from Ann Arbor via M-14 call us collect at 425-5400 M= ~- I HOW TO PROPEL YOUR CAREER IN NUCLEAR PROPULSION TO THE TOP. Advancing your career in nuclear engineering means getting the most advanced training. Officers in today's Nuclear Navy get the most sophisticated training in the world. Nuclear Power officers are well rewarded for their exceptional talents. They receive big bonuses and a salary that can grow to $44,000 after four years. DON'T MISS THE NUCLEAR POWER VAN ON CAMPUS MARCH 27. 1986!! Friends yT & family (Continued from Page7) couldn't help seeing parallels to Mary: Tyler Moore's past television work.4 When she starred in the Mary Tyler Moore Show in the 70's, she set thes role for the modern career womau who worked in TV news. These# characteristics all fit Sandy, while; Mary plays the housewife who gavel up a career for a family. Something she admits to never regretting. Perhaps this film was a kind odJ catharsis for Moore because it deals,, with a character she was typecasts with for most of her career without,'I her actually playing that character. If you are looking for a film with; good acting, beautiful photography, and a plot both hilarious and sad, Just Between Friends is well worth your time and money. I t mad t j I Q o !!4v i 'm