Page 8-The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 8, 1990 I pray the demon my soul not to keep Award-winning playwright visits Jacob's Ladder dir. Adrian Lyne by Jon Rosenthal Jacob's Ladder reaches out from the screen, takes the viewer's head in hand and shakes it like a maraca. A dark, existentialist tapestry, the film's complexity might aggravate the casual viewer but awards the more attentive by combining an intriguing intellectual puzzle with a visceral kaleidoscope. The camera follows Vietnam vet Jacob Singer, played by Tim Robbins, as he fights for his life against an unseen enemy and, in the process, tries to distinguish reality from illusion. Jacob becomes increasing alienated from his society as his inability to discover who or what is after him drives him deeper into madness. Intense and disturbing hallucinations force him to question his reality as the film constantly redefines it in the way dreams do, new realities appear abruptly but are accepted unquestioningly. A single thread binds all of these different realities - when he reaches for pleasure Jacob finds only pain, horror or emptiness. Adrian Lyne of Fatal Attraction fame directs the film with metro- nomic timing. He provides the audi- ence with a provoking and disturbing image and leaves it on the screen just long enough for the viewer to focus on its highlights but not long enough to view it completely. As Jacob's madness peaks at a disco party, he perceives Jezzie (Elizabeth Pefia), his lover, being fondled by a demonic figure. The viewer never sees the lizard-like beast in its en- tirety, only pieces of it emphasized by the flashes of a strobe light. Robbins convincingly handles Jacob's search for the truth behind his madness, communicating Jacob's uncertainty at the meaning of his visions through the desperate and manic tone of his voice as he explains these visions to Jezzie. Pefia elegantly provides her character with a stable element of continuity that lends credence to Jezzie's attempt to help Jacob even after her declaration that if he goes crazy, he'll go alone. The film's incredible depth allows for numerous interpretations of its action. It is full of visual symbols - fans, knives and baby carriages which, because they lack a single or simple definition, provide routes for different interpretations of the story. Another piece of the puzzle is the Biblical meaning of the characters' names - Jezebel, Jacob, Gabriel, Michael and Paul - but they do not conform to strict Biblical interpretation. Bruce Joel Rubin, the film's writer, inverts some of his symbolism suddenly, in a manner that plays off Jacob's search for comfort and his resultant pain as angels become demons and demons, angels. The film deserves careful observation; Lyne did not waste his by Debbie Siegel ~ S uzan-Lori Parks is at the be- ginning of a promising career. At age 27, Parks is the author of The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Wide World and has been called the most promis- ing playwright of the year by Mel Gussow in The New York Times. In 1989 Parks won an Obie Award for her play Imperceptible Mutabilities in the Third Kingdom. Parks will be visiting the campus today and tomorrow. Using powerful language and visual imagery, Parks writes about African-American experi- ences and the need for self-identi- fication. With startling stage language, she presents provoca- tive themes with allegorical im- plications. Her characters include slaves in middle passage, con- temporary Black women being spied on by a white naturalist, and a family awaiting their fa- ther's return from military duty. As Alisa Solomon told Theater magazine, "Parks reveals how deeply America sees in black and white." Yet Parks is reluc tant to be pegged as a "political" writer. Her works are political in a larger sense; they portray the universal need to be free from the traps of language and from the traps of history. In the interview with Solomon, Parks commented that "it's insulting when people say my plays are about what it's about to be black - as if that's all we think about, as if our life is about that. My life is not about race. It's about being alive." There will be a reception for SUZAN-LORI PARKS in the English Lounge (7th floor Haven Hall) today at 4 p.m. Members of KUUMBA, an African- American fine arts troupe, will be reading from Parks' Impercerptible Mutabilities in the Robert Hayden Lounge, 111 West Engineering today at 6 p.m. Parks will also be at a discussion of Imperceptible Mutabilites on Friday at 1 p.m. in 166 Frieze. 0! Jacob Singer (Tim Robbins) has finally lost it. Are the demons he's seeing real or imagined? You decide. shots, each one provides a clue to the movie's solution. The shot 6f the advertising on the subway - one labeled "Ecstasy," for example, connects to a preceding sign about drug abuse and hints at the importance of drugs in the film. The movie's twists and turns make it more interactive than usual, demanding - and rewarding - the viewer's full attention. JACOB'S LADDER is playing at Briarwood and Showcase. QUINCY Continued from page 5 over and informed him that the line was for credit card holders only. Un- fortunately, Kane's story was spoiled a bit when, before he finished talk- ing, Weissbrod cut to Bobby McFer- rin playing his chest. "He's like a spray gun of love. It goes flying out like shrapnel in all directions, and if you're lucky, you'll get caught by some." -director of E.T. Steven Spiel- berg on, you guessed it, Quincy Jones (who scored another Spielberg film, The Color Purple) It is a sad comment when what is and should have been a truly com- pelling story has to be reduced to SENSORY OVERLOAD in an attempt to hold the interest of a brain-fried video generation with a collective attention span of an in- sect. Trying to make nothing into something that looks and sounds PROFOUND or COOL might work if you are selling blue jeans, but does Quincy Jones a gross injustice. FRENCH Continued from page 7 paper. Charles-Francois Daubigny's Sunrise is a glorious example of the landscape's picturesque beauty that was often overlooked due to the pre- occupation with industrialization. A cow herder stands with his cows as the shades of light emanate their fresh glow on the hills surrounding him. As timeless as the scenes of the country may be, the works also con- tain an element of fascination with the liveliness of the developing city of Paris. The process of reconstruc- tion opened up the city to commerce and trade. Various prints such as Pierre Bonnard's The Boulevard and Henri-Edmond Cross' On the Champs Elysees spotlight the allure that Paris' new admirers had for the city and its new appearance. Enter- tainment also became a new subject for artists to use in their medium. Gustave Dore's Rats (of the Opera) displays a spectator gawking at the sight .of ballerinas as they scuttle across a stage. In the age of conser- vatism and long skirts, a display of legs was fashionable and the artist's portrayal of this allowed him to mock his conservative surroundings. The striking contrast between the country and the city was not the only effect produced by the artists. A merging of the two came about with the construction of parks, squares and gardens in Paris. Meticulous planning went into creating an illu- sion of the zountry within the city and these areas were known as man- made countrysides. Felix Bracque- monds' The Bois de Boulogne demonstrawcs how Parisians took these artificial pieces of nature as re- ality. These woods were a strolling ground for thousands of city dwellers and they offered an escape into the less often visited rural areas. CITY AND COUNTRY IN FRENCH PRINTS is on display at the Museum of Art through Dec. 23. LISTEN UP: THE QUINCY JONES is Showcase. LIVES OF playing at November 7~11 99 Color Copies kinko'5s the copy center Open 24 Hours 540 E. Liberty r 761-4539 Open 24 Hours 1220 S. University Open 7 Days 747-9070 Michigan Union 662-1222 2W' price is for black & white, 8hi x 11, autofed copies on 20# bond 99s copies are 8h x 11, Canon laser copies. Exercise Your Rights... . MSA Elections i f Black Box Everybody Everybody (12") MCA James Brown's legendary "eee- owww!" has been sampled to death, but thank god almighty someone has finally gotten around to giving flattop funkmeister Larry Blackmon his due. Here, the Cameo man's fuller, rounder "Oww" is sampled to wonderful effect. Mr. Blackmon is just another el- ement of the revolutionary fervor and ideological soundness that makes "Everybody Everybody" the second best dance record of 1990 (number one being Adamski's "Killer"). The sexual/racial/gender politics - "Set me Free!" - and deconstructive power of the mix make this the finest Utopian dance record since Rockers Revenge's "Walkin' On Sunshine." Black Box hail from Italia. "Everybody Everybody" was recorded in Milan or some other such urban hotbed of house beats. In a country where an ex-pomo queen can become a national politician, disco can work for social change. I'm sure that the faceless producers behind Black Box are Italian communists who have re- alized the need for entryism into the' showbiz sphere. Taking a leaf out of one of compatriot Antonio Gramsci's prison notebooks, Black Box subverts from within the indus- try. The androgynous voices of the chorus ("Everybody! Everybody!") invite workers, students and of course, dancers to join in the strug- gle. Righteous! -Nabeel Mustafa Zuberi November 14 and 15 In conjunction with LSA Student Government elections and Engineering Student Government elections. Paid for by MSA Elections, 3909 Michigan Union j ~ls it 0 a FOR JUNIOR NURSING STUDENTS A SUMMER STUDENT NURSING EXPERIENCE AT MAYO FOUNDATION HOSPITALS Here is your opportunity to work at Mayo Medical Center for the summer. Summer IlI is a paid, supervised hospital work experience at Saint Marys Hospital and Rochester Methodist Hospital, both part of Mayo Medical Center in Rochester, Minnesota. You are eligible for Summer Ill after your junior year of a four year baccalaureate nursing program. It includes experience on medical and surgical nursing units or in operating rooms. JUICE AT THE I-CTO11111 9" i Application Deadline: I Benefits include: December 1,1990 " Hourly salary of $8.45 " Differentials of $.50/hour for evenings, $.60/hour for nights " Subsidized apartment living " Orientation, tours, discussion groups 1 I