a a w w w wV w w w MICH-ELLANY FILM Style triumphs over substance again in 'Ne One of the by-products of my decision to attend the University's Law School was a return to dormitory life. One of the by-prod- ucts of my return to dorm life is a chance to once again experience "the mixer." The mixer places hundreds of nervous, insecure people in close proximity to alcohol and strangers, even though most of the attendees are barely able to handle one of the two. The hour prior to the mixer is alwayc a fur one. First, I shower, taking special care to cleanse parts of my body which I didn't that morn- ing. Then, naked and dripping, I douse my body in various balms, ointments, perfumes, and deterrents, many of which would not have made it into my medicine cabinet were it not for Campus Voice's "Good Stuff for Men" free sample boxes. The inevitable sensory conse- quences of this cosmetic assault are sneezing and itching. So, still naked, but not dripping quite as much as I had been, I hurl myself onto my bedspread and do my best to remove the melange, leaving the bedspread damp, and smelling like I always imagined Ricardo Montalban would. Then it's time to choose my un- OFF THE WALL Jacob Holdt INTERVIEW derwear. Though in my heart of hearts I do know better. I find it's good for my self-image to convince myself that someone might actually see the underwear I select. I usually arrive at the most ludicrous boxer shorts available. M feeling is that if someone has actually gotten that far, she ought to have plenty of warning before she makes a mistake that she might well regret for the rest of her natural life. The rest of my ensemble is rela- tively easy to assemble. The pants and shirt don't really matter because I am the proud owner of one of the most bold, dramatic, most daring garments ever to leave Value Vil- lage, my smoking jacket. It's red. It's shiny. It's covered with little airplanes and islands. And when I wear it, I am smokin'. At this point I usually remember that I look much better without my glasses, so I juice up my contacts. SKETC4Ab Now I have never really gotten used to poking myself in the eye, and I generally have trouble with my lenses, but my clumsiness is expo- nentially increased when I'm wearing a smoking jacket with huge floppy sleeves. So I usually manage to drop a lens onto the carpet, step on it, lift it with the sole of my shoe, lose it, and eventually find it enmeshed in a dust gorilla (the mutant larger sib- ling of the dust-bunny.) Re-cleaning the lens makes me twenty minutes fashionably later than I had intended to be. Fven so, 1 inevitably arrive at a nearly empty room, where sad-look- ing people are wandering around, too shy to dance to the party tape which features music designed to please everyone. But no one is pleased be- cause Bruce Springsteen, Bronski Beat, Rick James, and Ritchie Valens don't belong on the same tape, and given the opportunity, they probably wouldn't want to jam with each other. So I drink. I bounce between the bars on ei- ther side of the room, alternating in the naive hope that each bar will as- sume I've had only half as many gin&tonics as I actuall shave. See LOGIE, p. 9 EZINN Danish vagabond created the stunning 'American Pictures,' showing America's ugly underside Jacob Holdt, a beard-braided Danish Vagabond, is the person behind American Pictures'. After feeling from Denmark's society in 1970, Holdt drifted through Canada for a year before venturing into America. While traveling through 48 states and 113,750 miles, he was shocked by the poverty, racism, sexism, and anti-semitism he found here. Holdt began to take pictures of this ugly side of America, and ended up with an enduring slideshow and diary of the oppression he found throughout the county. Since hisfirst presentation of 'American Pictures' last year, Holdt has won national acclaim with his moving, and often unsettling, depiction of our society. Film Editor John Shea spoke with Holdt while he was in Ann Arbor this week. Daily: You came to Canada from Denmark in 1970. Why did you come? Holdt: I was kicked out of high school and I had to work on a farm in Canada. I wanted to work on that farm just to run away from my own society. D: So you were fed up with Denmark? H: At the time I was, but basically I was a just a young person and just had to see the world. I was basically on my way to land in America. D: What for? H: In those days there were a lot of young people traveling all over the world. D: What compelled you to jump from Canada to the U.S.? H: I didn't. I was just going through it. It was a total mistake to end up here. I was just on my way to Canada when I got stuck here hitchhiking. D: What were your first impressions of America? H: I was shocked when I got here. The violence scared me, and I sensed it so much that when I came hitchhiking, I started to take the bus. But then later I was invited to 'a Black home in the south side of Chicago, and that is what started off this whole reaction. D: That's when you started to take pictures of everything? H: No, that didn't start until after I traveled for a year and a half. After then I took my first picture. It was not until I wrote these letters home about what I experienced, staying with Rockefeller and Ted Kennedy. Since my parents didn't really believe me, they wanted to see some proof. D: How did you get in the homes of Ted Kennedy and others? H: Just through hitchiking and being a vagabond. It's a long story. I have a whole chapter about it in my book, but it's just too detailed for See INTERVIEW, p.9 By John Shea THE FIRST IMPRESSION one gets from Near Dark is how slickly made it is. And if first impressions mean anything, that's good. Near Dark is so slickly made because first-time director Kathryn Bigelow was a long-time art student. Her years spent at the San Francisco Art Institute and New York's Art and Language Club have enabled her to develop a very sensitive feel for sounds and images. Whatever she has learned, she throws at you, holding nothing back. The script is pretty free- wheeling, too. This exotic, off-beat thriller is centered around a group of modern-day vampires who roam the night highways in search of blood. Near Dark is a cross between an old-fashioned, shoot-em-up Western and a high-class horror film. Don't expect to see fangs, garlic salt or holy water because they won't be there. The vampire mythology is gone. These people bear a closer resemblance to motorcycle punks than anything else. Time still doesn't mean anything to them; they just keep living on and on forever, as long as they're home by sunrise. Mae (Jenny Wright, Pink Floyd-The Wall), belongs to this blood-thirsty crew, and senses she has an easy prey when she's picked up by a naive farmboy, Caleb (Adrian Pasdar, Top Gun). Caleb is smitten for Mae, and Mae likes him, too; so much so, she just can't bring herself to kill him. She just gives him a hickey and runs away. He disappointment over Mae running away turns to horror as hair starts to grow on his arms and face. This is a real concern for Jesse (Lance Henrikson, Aliens, Prince of the City) as well. He's the leader of the drifters, and to insure their preservation, he can't let the boy go free. They catch up to him and abduct him. But they give him a choice: become one of the clan and kill for your food--every night--for the rest of eternity, or get a sunburn even Solorcaine wouldn't help in the morning. Vampire initiations are tough. You've got to slit throats and blow heads off with sawed-off shotguns and noteven think twice about it. And then you've got to lick up what sprouts out on the floor for dinner. Caleb's heart just isn't in it, and the rest of group is quickly losing patience with him. Except for Mae... The camera work and the images in this film are remarkable. Bigelow and cinematographer Adam Greenberg (The Terminator) capture the essence of night on film. They have created a very seductive mood where the camera becomes our eye and the images that flash before it are very intense. Never has a sunrise looked more frightening; never have a group of thugs looking over their prey at the top of the hill looked more angelic. We sense the cool distance of the sky, and yet one can almost hear the stars coo like a mistress. "Come closer," they seem to say. Just try not leaning towards the screen during the first twenty minutes. It is what Bigelow and co- screenwriter Eric Red (The Hitcher) do during the last seventy minutes that is disappointing. Bigelow effectively lures us in with her visual magic but then leaves us with little. A shallowness hangs over the project.-The characters aren't as well-defined as they could be, and the story itself--while in a new setting--is as old as vampires themselves. Near Dark is part perverse erotica and part gore-fest, neither one of which is very appealing. It's hard to get turned on by watching a male lustfully suck a woman's slashed wrist. And it's harder yet to watch several throats get slit open, only to hear the drifters joke about how good blood "on tap" is. What you hear now is not the voice of disdain, but disappointment. Yes, there are some good scares and a fair sprinkling of black humor. And for what it's worth, Near Dark is a great visual piece. But that's all it is. The heart beating beneath this picture is an aesthetic one. People take a back seat to shadows and lights; substance to high-gloss and style. When you leave the theatre, you can't help but think of how special this might have been. It's not that Bigelow doesn't try or settles for less. She just has enormous aspirations that never really materialize. So the last impression of this film is the same as the first one. Near Dark is a slickly made film. And that's too bad. These grisly vampires roam the highways and byways of the Great Plains in .. We are here (living) God exists. Is there scientific evidence? What about evolution? Evolutionists are those who let their environment rule them. As opposed to the theologists who let imaginary gods rule them. Revolt -Angell Hall It's the end of the world as we know it (but I feel fine). -the UGLI I love Daryl (5x) I need Daryl I miss Daryl Unreciprocated love is j us t infatuation. Don' tflatter yourself. Daryl is out getting Mlaid while you're here scribbling on desk tops. -Angell Hall I'm a grad and I'm not too bright But I'm in the Business School and I do all right I never study but I get Bs And I'm always ready to drop to my knees... -Angell Hall Avoid the virus- Get married right away. - the UGLI 4LWORY RIlvTh1tA,5: ,. .j,i Hill Street Forum Dennis Wolf berg Comedian Sunday November 15 8pm MainStreet Comedy Showcase Celebration David Broza Willy Folk Singer Jewi Wednesday Satur January 20 Febru 8pm 8pm Lydia Mendelsohn Theatre Michi AGAN 1GKT O~ ON b.1 NOW G~IVFV C 3. 012 W'LL&WOU ArYu . Dennis W olfberg is one of the finest comic i nnerI ofsrael'si Kigs D ov talents performing today. He has appeared mae voolist and perform on The Tonight Show, Late Night with David Hebrew. English and Spa letterman and at some of the top comedy Hbrehtihim adfora' clubs on both coasts. it will be a screamingly ghthim back for all funny evening of Jewish humor. halents again. Order Form ' her, and guitarist. vid Award for best once, Broza sings in inish. We have who want to enjoy Singing playing offer c from th shephe mystics .... - M . Celebration I ' Please send me: Return to Hill Street Forum-Hillel, 339 E. Liberty, Ann Arbor, Mi 48104 Make checks payable to Hill Street Forum. Name Address I I e IN ASS v Phone Check No. Date Visa . MasterCard Exp. Date I- ', (circle one) x $2 series tickets x y student tickets I would also like to be $2 $5 Signature Name to appear in program u -1 - I Z I pt9 , n y a PAGE 8 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 2,1987. WEEKEND/OCTOBER 2, 1987