t ARTS Tuesday, November 15, 1988 The Michigan Daily Page 7 Film fails Without a plot BY ANDREA GACKI What if... Sherlock Holmes' jovial but deductively inept sidekick, Dr. John Watson, had actually been *the sleuth who solved all of those mysteries? What if Holmes was actually a fake, a ruse concocted by Watson so that the doctor could retain the respect of the medical com- munity while investigating crimes in London and penning the "Sherlock Holmes" mysteries? And what if Watson finally decided that he deserved some of the glory for his hard work and tried to fire Sherlock Holmes? The result would be havoc at 221- B Baker Street and Thom Eberhardt's film,Without A Clue. What if... Ben Kingsley (Gandhi, Pascali's Island) consented to play Watson, and Michael Caine (everything) acted the role of Holmes? What if Caine took the character of Reginald Kincaid, a mediocre stage actor who rarely got through the third act without being pelted by tomatoes, and created through him the bawdy, drunken, altogether stupid persona of Sherlock Holmes, a rendition completely for- eign to Basil Rathbone? And what if Kingsley, as the unusually perspi- cacious and spry Watson, perfectly complemented Caine's mania, thus creating a genuinely extraordinary rapport between the two actors, a combination worth repeating? What if... Without A Clue acquired a great supporting cast, such as Jeffrey Jones (who played the buffoonish Emperor Josef II in A madeus and the buffoonish principal in Ferris Bueller's Day Off) as the, um, buffoonish Inspector Lestrade of Scotland Yard? Or Paul Freeman as the dastardly Professor Moriarty, Holmes' arch-enemy who devises a scheme to destroy the British Empire by counterfeiting five pound notes? Or the hilarious Peter Cook as Watson's disgruntled publi- sher, outraged at Watson's desire to share in Holmes' purloined glory by becoming the Crime Doctor (or Dentist, or whatever)? The consequence would be a rather charming film. What if... there had been a little less slapstick, however? What if the chase scenes hadn't seemed so end- less, and what if the humor hadn't so often relied upon Caine's facial expressions? What if an eternity wasn't spent showing Holmes hang- ing suspended from a railing by his Inverness cape and sloppily fencing with Moriarty? What if... screenwriters Gary Murphy and Larry Strawther had paid more attention to that admittedly elusive entity called a plot? What if almost every event in Without A Clue hadn't been obscured by the powerful and engaging premise of the film? What if one could have viewed a real mystery along with the film's novel approach to the Sherlock Holmes myth? The result would have been a better film. - T LiT7!.. A £11. - A~nio WITHOUT A CLUE Briarwood. is showing at In wUout A uue mcna Reginald Kincaid who gets Holmes. Caine plays out-of-work actor roped into playing Sherlock They Live, but audience dies in BY BRENT EDWARDS Ever wonder why sometimes peo- ple "Don't Think"? Why they "Accept Authority"? Why they seem to just want to "Marry and Repro- duce," and "Watch TV" even though nothing is on but garbage? Director John Carpenter has seriously pon- dered these questions, and in They Live he lets us know that it's an alien plot to enslave humanity using the abovementioned subliminal slo- gans - and only professional wrestler "Rowdy" Roddy Piper can possibly headlock the aliens into surrender. Roddy the Wrestler, who's had plenty of acting experience with the PASS IT AROUND! Share the. news, at'g "1 ? .arpenter's World Wrestling Federation, trades in team p; his tights for tight jeans to play a aliens t blue collar worker in Los Angeles. only gc At the beginning, Roddy the Philo- which i sopher ponders the amount of in a ba poverty in the country. The cause, is comple apparently aliens (the outer space an enjo kind), who have infiltrated our soci- for Pipe ety. By means of a mind-altering inspire broadcast signal, the aliens mask althoug their robo-skull faces and use writera subliminal messages to reduce hu- actly mans to complacent servants, en- ("Life', abling themselves to thrive as the into he wealthiest people in the country. similar Roddy the Investigator finds a pair of cape F sunglasses that allows him to see the much n hidden messages and the aliens' true Carf faces, and Roddy the Exterminator ence fic decides they're so ugly he's just got but fail to blow them away. tion is Keith David plays Piper's tag- latest artner who helps him pin the o the mat. David provides the ood performance in the movie, s unfortunate - had he turned d performance it would have mented Piper's to make this yably stupid action movie. As er himself, his body-slams are d but his acting is not. And gh obviously first-time screen- Frank Armitage does not ex- give Piper the best lines s a bitch... and she's just gone eat"), Kurt Russell has done roles for Carpenter (as in Es- rom New York ) and has been more interesting. penter has done previous sci- ction films with some success, s with this one. The produc- low-budget, and the script, See They, Page 8 The Vandals Slippery When Ill ;estless Records This is the same band that paired up with DI five years ago to flaunt the meathead-hardcore image in Penelope Spheeris' film Suburbia. Since then they've ohanged their sound from stereotypical California punk rock to a country-influenced hardcore, but to sum things up, they were bad hardcore punk rockers then, and they're bad cow-punk rockers now.- The overwhelming country-style bass (a la Oak Ridge Boys), such as in "Shi'ite Punk," and the use of more cheesey-twang guitar than REM, ("Shi'ite Punk" and "Gator Hide") are going to keep this disc on the shelves about as long as Brady Brides lasted on TV before it's flung into the cut-out section between the soundtrack for Valley Girl and the complete Alan Vega collection. In contrast to the lame music, the lyrics are, at times, quite good. They tend to be predominantly in- fluenced by rap: "Freedom for my people, no reli- gious persecution / Give me this and there'll be no revolution," and they pull it off pretty well. It's un- fortunate that these infrequent garnishes, in the vein of Public Enemy/BDP, are the only flavor on this otherwise tasteless album, but even when they try to go all out on re-mix of their "(Illa Zilla) Lady Killa" they fall fearfully short of making a good song. It doesn't make much sense that they would com- pletely change their style and expect to do it well (which they don't), but it will be interesting to see what they do next. Dance maybe, or muzak... -Robert Flaggert See Records, Page 8 STUDY IN LONDON SUMMER, 1989 Comparative Health Care Systems: The British National Health Service Classroom, Field Trips, and Individualized Placements July 2-29, 1989 at The University of London 6 credits: undergraduate and graduate INFORMATION MEETING Wednesday November 16 7:30 pm r GE T iT! ", The Personal Column 5 -MICHIGANI DAILY CLASW1IIO ADS FREE, D SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR * STUDENTS WHO NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of 1 Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income. S * We have a data bank of over 200,000 listings of scholarships, 1 I I fellowships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion in private * Many scholarships are given to students based on their academic 1 interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence. 1 1 " There's money available for students who have been newspaper car. riers, grocery clerks, cheerleaders, non-smokers .. . etc. I " Results GUARANTEED. I IC ALL For A Free Brochure s ANYTIME (800) 346-6401 3jJ EVOLUTION-MICRO TO MACRO? "Limited changes and adaptation is proven. The large scale observations appear to conclude that everything is tied to basic singular ancestry. Physiology, adaptation, and fossil records indicate we humans have our origin in the lowest of animal kingdoms."(?) Problem: (1) Physiology is considered only on a basis of assump- tions, similarity of appearance does not prove ancestry. (2) No adaptation allows mixing and mingling of Families; strong deviations within Families are seen, but the identity of the Family remains intact. (3) Fossil records are jumbled, incomplete for any I Soup & Sandwich Lunch Special only $2.95 served Tuesday-Friday 11:30-2:00 338 S. State 996-9191 RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS International Center 603 E. Madison For more information Faculty: 593-5520; 996-4545 Overseas studies: 747-2299 THE WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL STUDIES CENTER STUDY IN OXFORD, ENGLAND Academic Program Several colleges of Oxford University have invited The washington International Studies Center (WISC) to recommend qualified students to study for one year or for one or two terms. Lower Junior status is required, and graduate study is available. Students are directly enrolled in their colleges and receive transcripts from their Oxford college; this is NOT a program conducted by a U.S. college in Oxford. Oxford colleges are accredited by the U.S. Dept. of Education to accept students with Guaranteed Student Loans. Multi-national student housing and social activities are offered, and cultural tours are conducted by WISC. A special summer session is directed by WISC. INTERN IN WASHINGTON, D.C. YOUR UNCLE WANTS TO PAY FOR COLLEGE. BUT ONLY IF YOU'RE GOOD ENOUGH. Army ROTC scholarships pay tuition and provide an allowance for fees and I