ARTS ,' The Michigan Daily Wednesday, October 19, 1988 Page 7 Y Year: BY ANDREA GACKI You're 15 years old, or there- abouts. As you struggle through the last painful jokes of puberty, you discover that you're in love. So consuming is this love that you're willing to employ some truly effec- tive means to insure success: fervent prayer, mental telepathy, or even hypnosis of that beloved individual. According to typical teenage love films, the logical conclusion would be eternal happiness. In reality, however, the experience would probably only result in stifled hor- monal impulses and a deepened knowledge of the occult sciences. The movie The Year My Voice Broke, winner of five Australian film awards, including best picture, depicts the genuine angst and petty tragedy of such events, and it depicts them with a compassion seldom seen in film. Writer and director John Duigan focuses on the tribula- tions of Danny, a young boy in love with his childhood friend Freia. While that section of the storyline is wonderful, certain aspects of the film can at best be called peripheral, and True to life teenage traumas Z at worst, distracting. Nevertheless, what remains is pretty near perfect. The setting is the Tablelands of New South Wales in 1962, and Danny (Noah Taylor) is the skinny little protagonist. Watch with dread as Danny's poetry is stolen and read aloud to the school; cringe as he's given a swirly in the school bath- room. His one true love, Freia (Loene Carmen), is an unhappy girl who matured a bit too swiftly. But she receives the attentions of Trevor (Ben Mendelsohn), the star football player kindly termed "hyperactive" but genuinely psychotic. Awaiting a chink in their relationship, Danny dolefully follows them around; in- stead of success, he's subjected to yet more humiliation. Besides Danny's plight, The Year My Voice Broke has a subplot in- volving a vague mystery concerning the relationship between a suppos- edly haunted house and Freia's true parentage; unfortunately, it occupies a decidedly obscure position in the story. In addition, Trevor's tragic end is just a little too pat. Although these events only serve to detract from the core of the storyline, the superb acting buoys the weak as- pects. Ben Mendelsohn gives the dense Trevor a great dumb laugh, and Noah Taylor portrays Dandy with just the right mixture of sensi- tivity and humor. Loene Carmen as Freia gives a magnificent perfor- mance as a simultaneously cruel and pitiful nymphet who ultimately manifests the strength to continue without Danny's or anyone else's aid. Set against a musical score of plaintive strings, these actors in en- semble evoke much sympathy. Rejection in young love is devastating, and although The Year My Voice Broke is painfully real, it's also very sweet. Underneath the clutter of peripheral happenings, this is a film that is ultimately true to its subject. THE YEAR MY VOICE BROKE is playing at the Ann Arbor Theatre. CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 Wasn't high school great? Danny (Noah Taylor) shows his and Freia (Loene Carmen) embrace. spirit as Trevor (Ben Mendelsohn) X000000 ---October 18-21: Auditions of Langston Hughes Black Nativity from 6-11 p.m. October 18 & 19; auditioners should be prepared to perform one gospel song of their choice. Dance auditions will take place Thursday, October 20, from 6-9 p.m.; no preparation neccessary. Call backs Friday, October 21, 6-11 p.m. Auditions and Opportunities runs each Wednesday in the Michigan Daily Arts section, and is seeking contributions. If you have information about any auditions or similar events and wish to publicize them, please contact Cherie Curry at 763-0379. Tangerine Dream Optical Race John Tesh Tour de France Private Music Here we have two new releases with sporting themes from the most pop-oriented of New Age labels, Private Music. But right to the big question - yes, this is the John Tesh from Entertainment Tonight. And he turns out to have been all the while sinking his day-job fortune into a formidable arsenal of state-of- the-art synthesizers and recording equipment, perhaps in vain hopes of getting a chance one day to interview himself about his new hit album. But it would be folly to prematurely write Tesh off as just another ego- tripping Hollywood music-dabbler; Tour de France, Tesh's Emmy- award-winning soundtrack to the CBS Sports coverage, reveals the noticeable technical talent of a man with accomplished classical training. "A Thousand Summers" displays the crisp digital sound and imagina- tive hand at orchestration with which Tesh covers familiar New Age/Instrumental ground. In particular, the drum programming here is exceptional, yielding exciting grooves, and at times Tesh can ma- nipulate his primo studio hook-up to squeeze out rich ambience and mem- orable themes ("Mike Mercuric," "Day One"). But instrumental tech- nique can only go so far in a sound- track without cinematic vision. All too often, Tesh's lust for high-tech leads him astray into annoying fu- sion-ish pseudo-funk: the Jan Ham- mer/Sanborn hybrid "That Old De- mon Meanness" or the sub-hip-hop spasms of "You Are Here." When Tesh tries to grab for the sublime gusto, he just can't summon the transcendent big-screen grandeur of a Vangelis or Jean-Michel Jarre; in- stead, he ends up with something closer to Europe's "The Final Countdown" than 2001. This territory he tests out here really belongs to German trio Tan- gerine Dream, who make their debut, Optical Race, on the label founded by former band member Peter Bau- mann. After 20-odd LP's of charting courses for the mind's eye, leader Edgar Froese can set into motion a train of hypnotic synthesizer rhythms that surges forward, its sense of motion reminiscent of countrymen Kraftwerk, with effort- less confidence. The pace can get a little pedes- trian at times. And although their keyboard samples and sequencing are still superb, the cutting-edge of the Tangerines' sound may have been TO ALL BLACK STUDENTS!. (...OF COURSE, YOU!) John Tesh Tesh leaves Mary Hart behind in "his move from the TV studio to the recording studio. overtaken by those artists influenced by of the band's own seminal elec- tronic designs. But what can't be duplicated is that lucid vision - that right stuff that cannot simply be ac- cessed by any switch on Mr. Tesh's Synclavier. - Michael Paul Fischer See Records, Page 8 Who works aslate as a you do? When you need copies after hours, depend on Kinko's. We're open late for your last minute emergencies. kinkO's- 540 E. Liberty 761-4539 1220 S. University 747-9070 Michigan Union 662-1222 TFhe next BLACK IivAo STUDENT UNION A A - r ",E J ,I N 0 will be held on: Wednesday, October 19, 1988 7:30 PM---SHARP! at the CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 I mIl. 'Trotter House 1443 Washtenaw Avenue. L YOU LLEREN'T THERE LRST TIME DON"T MISS OUT BECHUSE: I I I1 Stop studyin' and start laughin'! lAUG eRAC K ~Stand 111)Comnedy PRESENTS TIM LILLY With Student Comedians Jim Mercurio Erin Hartman and Jason Allington WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 19 .4f I rlA WE WILL ELECT CHAIRPERSONS... LIUSTEN TO A SPEECH BY STOKLEY... CARMICHAEL! * DISCUSS 'BLACK SOLIDARITY DAYI' PL ERSE CRL L 769--1024 FOR MORE INFO.! t es U. HOMECOMING 88 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20 9:00pm Kickoff Party at Good Time Charley's SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22 10:00am Mud Bowl: SAE vs Phi Delts 10:00am Go Blue Brunch in the' Track and Tennis Building 1:00pm MICHIGAN FOOTBALL: MCHIGANvs INDIANA HOOSIERS 9:00pm Victory Party at the U-Club ,t (, .. , i 4 . ,,,. 4" I FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 2-5:00pm Evans Scholars Car Bash on the Diag WHJAT'S A VNOO5IER Ii I I I1 I i