The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 26, 1990 - Page 9 GUILD Continued from page 8 Warrior Review and in her own book of poetry, Lucky Sleep. Her imagination blossoms when touched with the light of other disciplines, shown by her translation into poetry of her husband's "calling," mathe- matics. "I used to find papers with equations all over them, and I love them they looked like cave draw- ings," she says. REVIEW Continued from page 8 footlights as the high families of the town bear down on the two landowners who are to become the scapegoats for their abasements of the past 24 hours, the ugly -side of the corruption seemed thrown into relief. There were some good perfor- mances, particularly James Ludwig as Khlestakov, the young man mis- taken for the inspector, and his manservant Osip (Christopher Pent- zell), who in contrast to the rest of the cast actually seemed somewhat real, albeit frivolous. By and large the rest of the cast excessively over- Octed parts that were supposed to be merely overacted, such that the hu- mor began to wear out in the second act. Khlestakov was enjoyably naive and flippant, making his character consistently vain and silly through- Out a play whose other performances which waxed and waned. Pentzell got a slow start, but became witty in the second act as he knocked down his master's pretenses left and right. It was upsetting that the script Klautsch used was altered to use modern vocabulary, because the orig- inal is fine as it is. Frequently in modern plays profanity of varying orders is used in order to shock or to represent "real" life. In the case of The Inspector General, it was ab- solutely unnecessary; the modern modes of speaking came off like bad acting. The script should have been left alone. -Beth Colquitt Ministry doesn't #sell out First of all, there was the ticket problem. Something somewhere went wrong and the whole ticket- selling system thought the show was sold out by Thursday. How- ever, this wasn't quite the case - there were at least 200 tickets left as of Friday afternoon. Then there was the weather. A bunch of snow dumped on us Friday night which made driving (and walking) on Sat- urday difficult, if not impossible. Nonetheless, the show went on. The chain link fence which was part of the stage set-up cane down early. Although it remained up for most of KMFDM's set, stagedivers (or rather, "fencedivers") were having a ball with it. By the time Ministry took the stage, all that remained were two support poles. The fence- divers made do with what they had and became poledivers, creating a steady stream of falling bodies throughout the show. The stage took up most of the dance floor,even without the cauldrons of fire or any video screens. Oh well, no big deal - the music was still great. KMFDM's hour-long set com- manded attention from the crowd. Unlike most opening bands, KMFDM proved to be a match for the headliner. The music was tight, driving and powerful. The band seems to have a sharper sound on- stage than on record; some of their songs, such as "Disgust,"awere played so fast they became almost unrecognizable. Still, this is a minor complaint as the band turned in a good performance. After a huge array of equipment was lugged onstage, Ministry began their two-hour set. For the most part, the eight members stayed on- stage with only a few changes. The material focused on the two latest records and included songs such as Burning Inside," "Thieves" (which seemed like it would never end), and an inspired version of "Stigmata." The band also played a few songs by Pailhead and The Revolting Cocks; however, their reading of Skinny Puppy's "Smothered Hope" was too hurried and sloppy to do the song justice. Overall though, the set was great as the band turned in ferocious versions of its songs. The audience responded with a frenzy. Although the open space left on the floor was too small to get a * astipg slam pit started, the crowd sure tried. Poledivers rained down Halgren uses the past tense to de- scribe her poetic "inspiration" be- cause she has traveled from the Oldsmobile-littered, ever-changing landscape of her poetry, to her cur- rent mode of expression, fiction. "Certain parts of life fit (better) into fiction than into poetry," says Hal- gren, who reads from both genres tonight. While Halgren was taking in in- terdisciplinary, scenic views on this side of the world, Richard Terrill was. on the other side gathering material for his recently-published Saturday Night in Baoding: A China Memoir, which won the Associate Writing Program's Non-Fiction Award. Terrill, who also graduated from the University of Arizona's M.F.A. poetry writing program, found teach- ing English and American Literature in the China's "gray and brown... repressive system" heartbreaking, wonderful, and critically challenging, in a "small city of half a million." Terrill portrays the natural land- scapes, and their effects on an ob- server from a different culture, in his descriptions of Baoding. He reveals the joys and sorrows of befriending Chinese students whose "fates are decided " by their party leader. Fasci- nated by these people, Terrill is a modern Ulysses, opening himself up to the heartbreak of being limited in his ability to help students suffering from the "lack of motivation" caused by the totalitarian society. But Ter- rill refuses to let his memoir range close to the epic because of his un- willingness to make judgements typ- ical of many Chinese narratives. "It's inevitable that we're going to... see things through American eyes," says Terrill, who allows for cultural differences in his work. However, he affirms that "human na- ture precedes culture - if I hit you in the face it's going to hurt." Terrill, also a poet at heart, im- plicates his love for language in the memoir. He will also read both po- etry and fiction this evening. STEPHANIE HALGREN and RICHARD TERRILL will read at Guild House, 802 Monroe at 8:30 p.m. Nghtbreed:iterally scary Nightbreed dir. Clive Barker by Mike Kuniavsky It's been a while since horror film has had anything to say other than "Bang! You're dead!" (or "Crunch! You're dead!" or "Slice! You're dead!"). In the tradition of literary horror rather than its film equivalent, Clive Barker's horror doesn't confront the viewer with disconnected, untouch- able, supernatural events. His is the realm where the supernatural is just that: nature taken to extremes. In the same vein as Lovecraft's dream-like horrors, Barker's characters embody catalyzes the final revolt against humanity (and, contrary to what you'd expect from the standard ro- man numeral flicks, she doesn't have to be rescued from anything). Fi- nally, Nightbreed tells our story, the story of our hatred for what is different and strange. In the end, that lack of understanding will doom not only that which we do not under- stand, but, finally, ourselves. Adapted from a long book, the film suffers many of the problems that such conversions face, espe- cially when the original author with his single perspective also writes and directs. The film tends to concentrate on plot exposition, and winds up be- ing a little incoherent because the film has no time for much of the Altered States) plays the sadistic sheriff of the town near Midian, the leader of the good ol' boys. He sums up his philosophy with the chilling, "Whether it's commies, freaks or third-world Y-chromosome mutants, we are there: the sons of the free." Unfortunately, it's not just the hicks. If we look at today's Soviet Union, at India, and at our own backyard, we see that he is right. We are there. Nightbreed is playing at Fox Vil- lage and Showcase. Nightbreed tells our story, the story of our hatred for what is different and strange. In the end, that lack of understanding will doom not only that which we do not understand, but, finally, ourselves. the dark parts of our psyche - what we fear in ourselves. On this philosophical framework hangs Nightbreed's complicated plot. Based on Barker's novel Cabal, the film tells several stories but fin- ishes none. Primarily, it's the story of Boone (Craig Sheffer) who, like his namesake at the Alamo, leaves our "Natural" world for the under- ground city of Midian. There he meets the Nightbreed - a nightmare team of immortal outcasts from hu- manity living in mockery of the aboveground world. After becoming one of the Nightbreed, he must ul- timately rally his fellow freaks in a final battle against the true evil - the blind hatred of good ol' boys with shotguns and flame throwers. Also the story of Lori (Anne Bobby), Boone's girlfriend, Night- breed follows her as she pursues him into Midian. She ultimately book's textual description. But these two factors don't prevent it from be- ing cohesive, inspiring many levels of interpretation. Surprisingly, chief bad guy Dr. Decker, psychiatrist, is played by David Cronenberg in his first non- cameo screen appearance. You may remember Cronenberg as the writer/ director of such demented and metaphorical films as Scanners, Videodrome, Dead Ringers and The Fly. As Decker, he's the most evil thing in the film although we never see him commit any crimes. He's the epitome of our post-Reagan so- ciety: cynical, calculating, cruel, heartless, uncatchable and unstop- pable. When he says "I was born to destroy the Nightbreed," we hear the squish of dioxins sinking into the earth and smoke rising in the air. Charles Haid (Hill Street Blues, David Cronenberg is simply damn cool. Not only is he an amazingly demented writer/director , but he's bringing his inhrent creepiness onscreen as well with his acting debut in Clive Barker's Nightbreed. Only for student American Express" CardmCmbcrs. Apply for the American Express' Card. Then get ready to take off. In search of adventure, action-or just simply to escape. American Express and Northwest Airlines have arranged these extraordinary travel privileges on Northwest-exclusively for student Cardmembers: CERTIFICATES VALID FOR THE PURCHASE OF TWO $118 ROUNDTRIP TICKETS-to many of the more than 180 cities in the 48 contig- uous United States served by Northwest. 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