ARTS Wednesday, December 3, 1986 The Michigan Daily 'I Page 5 Star Trek IV: Aimless fun By Eileen Kane Star Trek went on the air the year I was born, 1966. Saved from television oblivion by fan letter- writing campaigns,Saturday Night Live tributes,and syndication, Star Trek can almost be considered an American institution. In the late nineteen-sixties, its multi-racial and multi-national cast was controver- sial and daring. Today, Star Trek is Paramount's guarantee for movie ticket sales. Although the first Star Trek movie, Star Trek: The Motion Pict- ure was not a complete financial failure, it was a critical disap- pointment. The second Star Trek movie, The Wrath Of Khan avoided the first film's mistaken reliance on special effects instead of characterization. Perhaps its suc- cess comes from its relationship with the Star Trek TV series. It was a sequel to the episodeSpace Seed, and followed in the true spirit of the television series. Star Trek III: The Search For Spock was in desperate search for a plot, and instead served simply to ressurect Spock and give Leonard Nimoy his directing debut. Nimoy also directs Star Trek IV. The Yoyage Home. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) has his brain back, Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley) has his brain to himself again, and Admiral Kirk (William Shatner), along with the crew that mutinied with him in the last film; Uhura, Sulu, Checkov, and Scottie, are sent back to Earth to be court martialed. They cannot go back to Earth. An alien probe has come calling on the whales of Earth, and because whales are extinct in the 23rd century and the probe isn't getting so much as a busy signal, the Earth is getting trashed. Of couse Kirk and Co. have the answer - they go back to San Francisco 1986 to get a pair of whales to bring to the 23rd century to answer the probe. Here's where the movie becomes a co- medy. The 23rd century meets the 20th century and it is funny. Uhura and Checkov are sent to find a nuclear reactor in order to trap energy particles to re-power the ship. Checkov asks passersby in his thick Russian accent, "Excuse me, where are the nuclear wessels." Upon being captured aboard the aircraft carrier Enterprise, Checkov presents his Starfleet ID in hopes it will solve everything. It is also at this point that the film falters. Though Scottie (James Doohan) is given his moment to shine by impersonating a professor in order to obtain a tank for the whales, Uhura (Nichelle Nichols) and Sulu (George Takei) are given virtually nothing to do. Credits appear for old series characters, Commander (formerly Nurse) Chap- ple and (Yoeman) Janice Rand, but they really have nothing to do. Catherine Hicks as the whale ex- pert, Gillian Taylor, is a pleasantly agressive female, decisive, instead of dogging Kirk. Unfortunately, while having to establish the probe's danger, the time travel and this new character, Nimoy also has to resolve the plot elements left over from Star Trek III. To com- plete the voyage home, Spock , McCoy, and Kirk must be restored to their former selves. Though a fun film, Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, ends up right where it all started in 1966. Kirk is "demoted" to captain and given the command of a new Enterprise. My trouble with the film is that no one and nothing changes. It is as if all four films tripped over thcir own and each other's plot in order to arrive at the most entertaining and comfortable spot - the television series. Nimoy's direction has improved over Star Trek III. His influence is less obvious, flowing instead of clumsy. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home is not a "must see," but a "fun see." Eileen Kane last reviewed 52 Pick-Up, where she was incorrectly identified as Eileen Kahn. Desi Arnaz: Dead at 69 Bragg Art Daily Photo by DEAN RANDAZZO Billy Bragg gave a dazzling performance to a packed Nectarine Ballroom on Monday night. Bragg was the highlight of Ann Arbor's version of the 'Secret Policeman's Ball,' a benefit concert which also featured Map Of The World and Scruffy The Cat. The concert was the only one of it's kind in America, and raised money for Amnesty International and AAMISTAD. Billy can brag about his Nectarine gig Los Angeles (AP) -- Television legend Desi Arnaz died early yesterday of cancer. He was 69. Reports that Arnaz was ser- iously ill had circulated since 1981, when he was hospitalized for what his wife, Edie, said was a flareup of diverculitis, an inflammation of the intertinal tract for which he had re- ceived four operations in 1969 and 1970. Arnaz was best known to hundreds of millions of TV viewers worldwide as the long-suffering Ricky Ricardo, husband of the wacky Lucy, on one of TV's most beloved and longest-running shows, I Love Lucy. Through their Desilu company, Arnaz and Miss Ball also had produced the show - one of the first television programs to move its production facilities from New York to Hollywood. Arnaz pioneered the three-camera filming technique that is widespread today in which three cameras simultaneously filmed the Lucy show from different angles, with a final program combined later. Arnaz was born Desiderio Alber- to Arnaz y de Acha III on March 2, 1917, in Santiago, Cuba, as the son of a politician land-owner. His familu emigrated to the United States after the 1933 Cuban revo - lution, and at age 17, Arnaz sang in a Miami band. He met Miss Ball when, as a rumba star, he went to Hollywood to recreate a Broadway role for Too Many Girls, in which Miss Ball starred. In 1951, when CBS decided to move her radio series, My Favorite Husband, to television, Miss Ball insisted that Arnaz be her co-star. The network wasn't sure Arnaz would be a hit with the American public, but the couple went on a nationwide vaudeville tour and proved audiences would sit still to watch a leggy, blue-eyed comedian and a bandleader with a heavy accent. They also produced their own pilot episode, on bor- rowed money. CBS relented, and I Love Lucy, with Vivian Vance and William Frawley as co-stars, was an immediate success. The show ran from 1951-1961, and has since been in worldwide syndication. The couple developed Desilu into a major TV production company that in its prime produced at least 19 programs. "He was a great showman, a great business executive," Miss Ball told Ladies Home Journal in 1983. "I was very proud of him...I still am. He built an empire. It was unfortunate that he also liked to let things fall apart. But there are a lot of people like that. They build and they destroy." The I'Love' Lucy show was produced by the Desilu company which went on to pur- chase RKO studios and produce other programs; he sold Miss Ball his share after their divorce for three million dollars. By Danny Plotnick From the Buzzcocks, to Patsy Cline, to Nicaraguan folk songs, to 7-11's, to sperm doners, Billy Bragg did it all Monday night at the Nectarine Ballroom. Is Canada the 51st state? Is England the 51st state? If it is, does that mean we'll have a greater voter turnout at the next, Presidential election, or will we just have a better chance of winning the World Cup. Were the Diggers really called Diggers because they listened to jazz, and dug the likes of John Coltrane, and 4o we really need to be careful -about what we say around rednecks if we want to make it out of Texas alive? Maybe yes, maybe no-if you were lucky enough to be at the show Monday night you might h)ave some of the answers to these question-hell you might even have the answers to all the questions. Bragg played songs for those who lose sleep at night worrying about the inevitable Soviet invasion and he played songs for those who lose sleep at night worrying about the inevitable Yuppie invasion (Did you know that there is only one minority in Boulder, Colorado-people who don't own BMWs). He played songs for the folk fans, the country fans, the a cappella fans, the ska fans, the punk fans, the Jackson 5 fans, and his fans with Marx and Engels tattoed across the knuckles of their hands. Bragg's adoring fans learned that he buys lots of beer, not to prove his virility, or to make technicolor yawns, but to cry in. They learned that he met James Brown at Metro Airport, has a soft spot for Motown, and drove out of his way to get his picture taken in front of Hitsville U.S.A. They also learned that the Youth of America need to break out of their apathetic stupor and become more involved in the democratic process, and with causes that will help promote change and help shape or influence this contry's foreign policy. And finally, they learned that Billy Bragg failed all his exams, because on the day that he took his exams, he was in love. mmmq f WHAT'S THE SCOOP? 0 00 0, W LL t . "Study all day, In methodical way" And then... Put the books away! om check out The Michigan Daily and get a taste of all the flavors around campus U U I I THERES SILL TIME TO PREPARE CLASSES STARTING S . NOVEMBER & JANUARY 203 E. Hoover 662-3149 CALL DAYS, EVENINGS & WEEKENDS A Qe ji. KAPIAN EDUCATIENAL CENTER LTD. TEST PREPARATION SPECWIS1YS OCE 1935 r~ S Records Kitaro Tenku Geffen I send a message of sound Towards the sky Engulfing empty space Soaring far beyond grasp Space music of the '80s. A hybrid outgrowth of psychedelia and rnuzak, now favored not only by tofu-eaters and incense burners, but ilso by yuppies eager to avoid excesses of noise and jarring power guitars. Kitaro belongs to a growing set of composers whose aim is a quiet, marketable beauty which works in the background, unob - itr,civ i t z~h n irt.,aill, c.,,1rn.- University of Michigan Gilbert & Sullivan Society presents The Yeomen of the Guard Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre December 3-6 8:00pm, December 6-7 2:00pm SPECIAL STUDENT RUSH Wednesday Only - $2.00 Off any seat Call Mendelssohn Box Office 763-1085 V T UNIVERSIY OF MICHIGAN HOSPITALS 45L UNTEERS Ii Venture into High Tech and add to the Human Touch frequency and starship whooshes back down to a simpler mono - tonous lower register to-and-fro rhythm. Ostensibly, Tenku revolves around images and evocations of childhood, complete with a child's voice. Well, maybe. I own one other Kitaro album, Silver Cloud , a gift from a brother several years ago. To be honest, unless I concentrate hard (almost antiethical to the music's purpose), I am hard pressed to know which oeuvre I am hearing. This doesn't disturb me, for the effect is the same; a kind of enlightened sedation, comforting in its illusion. of the perpetuity of the stars and firmament, the mind, heart, and AO% 00 bo0 VC11x ~~a e.~) N) 1 .1 1. INO Help patients with the Healing Process Learn about the 150 rewarding volunteer opportunities RATION SESSION 00"'Z 40o41 Oo, y t -T I mW i Tr W r z,. A*~~w~