0 .. U U THE GREAT WALL==_ RESTAURANT Specializing in - DINNERS & LUNCHES Szechuan, Hunan -CARRY-OUTS ' Rated Ann Arbor's best new restau- and Cantonese rant of 1988 and best oriental res- taurant of 1989 by The Michigan Daily Weekend Magazine. 747-7006 Monday--Sunday 1220 S. UNIVERSITY - AT S. FOREST - ANN ARBOR a- Beastie Boys rap rhapsodic on Paul's Boutique Two films with strong characters f: r w\ - - - - NEXT TO CITY PARKING STRUCTURE FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P.M. Johnny Handsome ends before answering, or even asking, the big questions U ______________________________________ I- woo AWFUL Y i00 D "1 EAL: 15% 0 A H.H.Brown footwear * in stock & special orders included plus ONE FREE LOB STER WITH EACH PAIR OF H.H. BROWN PURCHASED While supplies last. Fri., Oct. 6, 9am-7pm Sat., Oct 7, 9am-5:30pm Factory representative will be on hand to show the complete line. Beastie Boys Paul's Boutique Capitol Out of the blue, the Beastie Boys had the first rap album to go Num- ber One, Licence to Ill. The album went at least double platinum, and then the group vanished for three years. On their return album, Paul's Boutique, the Beastie Boys will have an even tougher time crossing over. In the last two years, more has been done to push rap in the militant direction than ever before: Public Enemy preached 'no sell out' and 'too black, too strong'; Schooly-D released "No More Rock and Roll"; and, in a bold move, NWA polarized the mentality of many a rap listener. The sentiments seem to be the same all over- no one wants to hear from these white rappers. Which is unfortunate, because Paul's Boutique is 'rope' (which means 'dope', which also means excellent'). Although crossing gen- res may one day kill rap (pop and R&B borrow from the form all the time), it's also known as creative progress. The Beasties have mellowed out over the years, as punks tend to do. The hard rock guitars that saturated the first record have been replaced with smooth chillin' funk. There's an overall sense here of 'live and let live', almost to the point of Beat poetry, rather than tales of unparal- leled carnage and destruction. For the most part, the Beasties have aban- doned the "I'm Bad" mentality of the rapper and gone almost post-mod- em (or is that post '60s revival?) The first single, "Hey Ladies," is a funky, skittering, silly, sexist col- lage of Beastie Logic, bouncing over a '70s style disco groove and chicken grease rhythm guitar. Samples of J.B. and Zapp swirl about in the mix. The three still have the same vocal method: M.C.A. sounds like the mafioso while Ad-Rock and Mike D sound all but indistinguish- able. But it's the interplay between the three that makes it work. The lyrics are still funny and they actu- ally approach a literary level, at times. Suggestive in a very subtle, funny way, the chorus "Hey ladies - get funky" is punctuated by a few taps on a cowbell. Judge for your- self. "Egg Man" is, well, brilliant. A bassline reminiscent of "Shaft" keeps the groove cooking while samples of themes from Psycho and Jaws chime together to describe the rampage of the three as psychopathic maniacs. Over tambourines and knife-slash sounds, Ad-Rock boasts "yeah, that's right, I'm the Egg man... walkin' around, burnin' the town... yeah - I'm the Egg Man." What a terrifying concept. The metaphors for egg become quite challenging at times. At one point, the rhyme goes "I pulled out the jammy/he thought it was a joke/the trigger I pulled/his face did yolk." Paul's Boutique is loaded with gems like that. One minute you're laughing, the next you're gaping. "The Sounds of Science" is particu- larly ingenious, to the point of hys- teria. It begins with the three Beast- ies dropping rhymes over a 'Sesame Street' style groove, dripping with silliness and self-parody. "Cause I been droppin' the new science/and I been kickin' the new ki-nowl- edge/M.C.s to a degree/that you can't get in college." Then there's a quick chorus, and BAM - the mu- sic begins to mutate, and the true groove kicks in, building up like a formula. It took me a while to real- ize that they were boasting about themselves throughout the piece, i.e.: "Time for money, girls covered with honey/you aspire in life/to be so cunning." "B-Boy Bouillabaisse" is a mix of rap snippets, like chapters, glued together with scratching and trans- forming by D.J. Hurricane. In one, "A Year and a Day," MCA wags his tongue like a double dutch jump rope. He has the best voice of the three, and he sounds like Melle Mel or "Fantastic Voyage" here. Your best bet would be to sit back and lis- ten; it's impossible to follow him. Paul's Boutique is knuckle- headed, hyperactive, philosophical and maniacal, with the extremist halves of an idiot-savant's con- sciousness. The music seldom stops changing, and it makes the debut al- bum reek in comparison. The album is a natural step in the evolution of rap. The Beasties drop names like a whole season of Entertainment Tonight and kick cultural motifs, symbols and standards about like an almanac. The point is, with all the clever sampling in this record through lyri- cal references and groove snatching, the Beasties deserve a place in the rap pantheon by way of innovation, somewhere near De La Soul. And there really isn't a bad tune on the record. It has healing powers. Hey, I'm gonna go home and crank it up now. -Forrest Green III By Brent Edwards Is an individual's behavior de- termined by such external factors as looks, and will his character be al- tered if his appearance is changed? John Sedley, cruelly nicknamed Johnny Handsome because his face resembles the Elephant Man's on a good day, becomes a test-case for this question in Walter Hill's latest film, Johnny Handsome. An uncharacteristically clean- shaven Mickey Rourke (9 1/2 Weeks, Barfly) plays Johnny, a paroled criminal who undergoes fa- cial surgery by a doctor who believes his patient has never had a chance at a normal life. Rourke, whose charac- ters have always been at least psy- chologically deformed, is intense as the reconstructed Johnny- who must not only deal with a past in which his one friend was murdered, but also, for the first time in his life, with a woman's love. This is possibly Rourke's best performance. His emotional portray- als range from a tearful first look at his new face to a cold determination in avenging his friend's death. The power of Rourke's portrayal makes the fact that this movie is a failure all the more disappointing. Hill, known for making fast- paced action movies (48 Hours, Red Heat) reveals a masterful touch in creating this noir piece. Set in the seedier parts of New Orleans, he cre- ates moody imagery which is atmo- spheric without being slick. With Hill's skillful direction and an incredibly talented supporting cast - Elizabeth McGovern, Ellen Barkin, Forest Whitaker, Morgan Freeman, and Lance Henriksen - it is the undeveloped script that ruins Mickey Rourke ugly the movie. The film runs for barely 90 minutes, spending far too much time in giving Johnny a new face and not enough exploring the poten- tially fascinating psychological aspects of his new life. His relation- ship with McGovern, who plays her meager role very strongly, is little more than atwalk through the park and a hop into bed. The relationship we see develop on screen does little to support the tense confrontation they have near the end. Given such a strong supporting cast it's a shame the characters are so one-dimensional. Freeman plays the obligatory unbelieving detective, ap- pearing every now and then to tell someone that he hasn't been fooled by Johnny's new face and that Johnny will never change. Barkin and Henriksen are the stereotypical nasties who killed Johnny's friend. Their actions are so cartoonish that when Barkin snarls a threat during the climactic finish, the audience laughs. These characters seem as un- realistic around Rourke and McGov- ern as Roger Rabbit did around Bob Hoskins. Will Johnny Handsome's crimi- nal nature be changed by his newly modified face? The movie answers this question, but it fails to examine why and how. This lack of depth dis- tances the tragic character of Johnny Handsome from the audience and prevents Johnny Handsome from becoming the great movie it could have been. U Johnny Handsome is playing at Fox Village Theaters. Bruce Willis and Emily Lloyd develop their characters 1 searching for a script in Norman Jewison's Vietnam Warfilm, In Country: Willis and co-st themselves in a film withot By Tony Silber Innovation and the popular cinema don't mix. Except on very rare occasions, it's easy for a critic to be a pessimist when reviewing popular motion pic- tures of the '80s. And when working within a popular genre such as the Vietnam War, it is even moreadiffi- cult to set out and tread new ground in filmmaking. In Country, the lat- est attempt in this genre, this time by long-established director Norman Jewison, does not earn the labels of "innovative" or "unique," but the film makes one think- a good start in those directions. A graduation scene at a Hopewell, Kentucky high school in 1989 would appear to be far-removed from the Vietnam War, but as a bearded, heavy-set drifter smokes Camels in the audience and listens to the prin- cipal speak, his mind rather unsur- prisingly drifts several thousand miles ande20 years off. Innovation Number One: give us a setting where we won't expect a Vietnam film. Bruce Willis, attempting to widen his horizons, has widened his belly and his southern drawl for the part of Emmett (no last name). Some may not recognize the Die Hard, Moon- lighting star, but it is indeed him. Emily Lloyd co-stars as Samantha Hughes, Emmett's free-spirited, cu- rious and naive niece. Lloyd is com- ing off a celebrated performance in the lackluster Cookie. These two are the main characters in a film without a story. In Coun- try is a character's film with no plot and no general direction. This cannot be faulted, but it is a homemade mi- croscopefor us to view the film (Innovation Number Two). The film is an American portrait of the war and its effects - 20 years later - through several distinctly different characters. The small town life magnifies the significance of the war for Sam as she lives two lives - one trying to raise herself out of a town "that's dead without a mall" and the other trying to come to some reasonable conclusion about the war. Aside from its innovations, In Country needs some genuinely stu- pendous acting to make this kind of film affect the way it was intended to. Willis is excellent most of the time. The unemployed drifter, both angry and disturbed and quiet and re- served, is played beautifully. But his zealous, vengeful vet is somewhat overdone. This is more the fault of the script than Willis. Emily Lloyd is generally quite believable. Her probing and indecisive nature deco- rate her role neatly, but often her hyper-naivete is noticeably bother- some. There are three leading figures in this film. Samantha, Emmett and Dwayne Hughes, the mythical father 0 b t 0 v c a a 1 i b f ) P t t c d e t is it n c n n r Mickey Rourke handsome Page 12 Weekend/October 6,1989 Weekend/October 6,1989