ARTS 'The Michigan Daily Hollywoodrns burns Monday, November 12, 1990 Page 5 l e correctly To Sleep With Anger dir. Charles Burnett by David Lubliner o Sleep With Anger begins with a startling image of fire. Gideon (Paul Butler) sits calmly in his house vhile flames emerge from his shoes and from the basket of fruit next to him, beginning to engulf his entire r body. The piercing sound of a trumpet, being played by a small boy, can be heard from outside the house. The other kids in the street wince and cover their ears. Gideon's fire rages from within and from the conflicts that are de- stroying his family. As the fire ccdn- sumes Gideon's world, an old friend Harry M of the family named Harry Mention To Sleek suddenly appears on his doorstep. film de Beneath his cool exterior, it is obvi- divide g ous that Harry is there for more than common a visit. He is a trickster and a man one's pa devoted to superstition. As he walks Desp in the front door, he fears being roots, G scraped by the whisk of a broom be- tradition cause it portends bad luck, per day The excellent cast of unknowns Lumbly brings to life a world that is foreign howeve to most of us. Different than the (Richar * usual Hollywood production, To of the Sleep With Anger puts Black actors drives a in the forefront, rather than relegat- ably in ing them to secondary roles. Director Black 1 Charles Burnett's respectful portrayal known of a Black American family is hon- new gen est and refreshing. While the film is ipate in low on action, its character exposi- cial mai tion and ongoing dialogue between Cont the family members draw us in. The Harry re Atomic Dog:' by Forrest Green 11 I wa ention's (Danny Glover) corn whiskey provides his friends with a taste of the old South in the new film p With Anger. Jves into the problems that enerations and expresses the n fear of losing touch with ast. perately clutching to his ideon strives to retain the ns of his Southern sharecrop- ys. His son Junior (Carl ) identifies with that past, r his sibling, Babe Brother d Brooks), strives for a piece modern American pie. He fancy car and lives comfort- Los Angeles with other Urban Professionals (also as Buppies). He represents a eration of Blacks who partic- America's financial and so- nstreams. rary to the Buppie attitude, vels in resurrecting the folk- lore of the old South. He drinks from a jug of corn whiskey and re- counts mystical tales. Harry recreates the communal feeling that existed in the past but is now lacking in mod- ern urban life. Danny Glover, best known for his roles opposite Mel Gibson in the Lethal Weapon movies, is captivating in the role of Harry. Every one of his mannerisms conveys tension and mystery. Although the source of his powers is never fully explained, the uncertainty makes the film and his character all the more involving. As Harry says to Junior's wife, "You can never really tell what's in the heart." The longer he lives in Gideon's house however, the more intense the anger between the family members becomes. Babe Brother's rift with his father widens and Gideon is struck down by a mysterious termi- nal sickness. While the film moves along at a somber pace, Harry's mystic qualities heighten the ten- sion, pushing the story and Gideon's family eventually over the brink. In the film's most haunting scene, Gideon and Harry take a walk down by the railroad tracks. Gideon admires the work that went into the construction of these tracks and for a few seconds, imagines Black slaves working in the twilight, laying down the iron for the tracks. This powerful moment accurately ex- presses the film's lingering quality: the ambivalence we all feel between clinging to the past and breaking from it forever. SLEEPis showing at the Ann Arbor. Now I know how Joan of Arc felt Armed with a historical play that transcends its own genre by reaching beyond past events into a fundamen- tally human struggle, the RC Play- ers' production of Jean Anouilh's The Lark this weekend was a seam- less and impressive mixture of excel- lent acting, costume design and set. The key to the emotion and vital- ity of the RC Players' production centered on the wonderfully genuine acting job by the protagonist Joan of Arc (Amy Freedman). She took a challenging role with many difficult displays of emotions, including ex- plosively tearful monologues, and moved from one mood to the next with a fluidity that drove the play forward. Her performance was intrin- sic to the play's success. Because most viewers are somewhat familiar with the Joan of Arc legend and know what is going to happen, there must be other elements of interest besides plot development. The most important aspect of the play is Joan's spirit, her character develop- ment; Freedman's performance was honest and unforced. Warwick (Matt Rains) added a wonderfully comic touch to. the drama, as a well-bred society charac- ter. "If you go on at this rate," stated Warwick with an absurdly aristo- cratic impatience,"we shall never get to the trail, never have her burnt, never get anywhere." Clearly there's more than a small element of cruelty here, but Rains played the dandy so well - with intermittent bursts of humanity - that one could only laugh at Warwick's hypocrisy. Rains' snide, conceited delivery was so good that he almost threatened the play's balance by stealing some of Freedman's thunder. The costumes were excellent. Like the play's action, they catered to no exact time period - just vaguely medieval, fitting perfectly with Anouilh's impressionistic style of drama. Further, the costumes matched the character's personalities: Jane was plain and naturally dressed in boy's clothing, while the Inquisi- tor and the Promoter were dressed in bright red and black. Jane looked very human and sensible. The In- quisitor looked demonic; his whited face pushing the image of the plas- tic, dogmatic establishment that he represents. The set was all black, and spare. In its blackness, the set served as a physical scaffolding for the stratifica- tion of the classes on stage. On the top of the three platforms which were set up, the inquisitor and pro- moter reigned, looking out over the audience from above, as though to more easily control them. They were not only above Joan of Arc class- wise, but they were above her physi- cally. Their almost constant presence there made for a chilling effect. The Lark presented by the RC Players will be performed again this Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. in the East Quad Auditorium. Tickets are $5. - Mike Kolody Reckless abandons focus Reckless, which was performed in the Arena Theater this weekend, ran for over two hours, and spanned approximately 15 years in the life of its main character, Rachel. She was forced to become a fugitive when her husband took out a contract on her life one Christmas Eve, and her plight takes her everywhere from p gas station to a game show to sev- eral psychiatrists' couches and fi- nally, Alaska. The play, under the direction of Jon Casson, was not as unconven- tional as one might have expected it to be. It was well acted, though - Jennifer Thompson was an energetic Rachel, Aaron Williams gave strong performances both as Rachel's hus- band and as her son; many of the other actors also executed their multiple roles well. The production design was strong; some interesting choices were made, which effectively set the play in a non-naturalistic ,space, although it sometimes tended toward an almost Chekhovian real- ism. The set, which primarily con- sisted of a long, raised platform cov- ered with white, satiny material, proved to be versatile, and the actors seemed to work comfortably with it. The lighting and costumes provided the dreamy, faintly surrealistic edge that the production seemed to strive for. But the play often had trouble sustaining this kind of feeling on an internal level. Some scenes, especially the ear- lier ones, had a genuine life and hu- mor to them, and achieved a kind of balance between the familiar and the extraordinary. But somewhere the production lost its focus and its rhythm. The game show sequence was somewhat intrusive, trying to be bigger than it was - whatever point it was attempting to make was overshadowed, or even lost, under- neath all the self-conscious hype. The later scenes, especially after the death of two of the more interesting characters, Tom an Pooty ( Williams and Elizabeth Keiser, respectively) often felt artificial. It was unclear if this was an intentional change of tone, in which case it wasn't taken far enough, or if things just started getting sloppy. There were an incredible number of scenes in this play, and some of them felt expository, as if they had no real reason to be there, and some of them didn't flow effortlessly enough. Overall, Reckless was am- bitious, but inconsistent. the ultimate homeboy song s 12 and in the seventh grade "D you promise to funk, the whole funk, nothin' but the funk? "Atomic Dog," the most relevant and powerful song ever created under the genre of funk, is *my anthem. It greets me when I wake and it sings to me when I go to bed. Its powers are undeniable and # irrevocable. By the time it was written, its creator, George Clinton, had already earned his calling as undeniably the most powerful lyricist in R&B - the established mad genius of funk while he helmed the psychedelic rock 1and Funkadelic and its loosely R&B counterpart Parliament. Classics such as "One Nation Under a Groove," "Flashlight," "Doctor Funkenstein" and "(Not Just) Knee Deep" had all come and gone, leaving every freak in America in a daze. By the time of Clinton's 1983 solo debut, Computer Games, it was Clinton's calculating finesse for couching social themes in clever mantra that created the ultimate homeboy song, "Atomic Dog." the concept of specially * designed afrenauts... was first laid on Manchild. when the uncanny "Atomic Dog" hit the airwaves. The song, laden with trademark P-Funk weirdness, took the then-open format Black radio by storm. Clinton's surreal video for "Atomic Dog" had me reeling with its layered imagery. A jit (now vaguely referred to as a homeboy) is enticed away from an arcade by a decidedly feline seductress. Subliminally loaded animation is combined with images of freakishly dressed dancers riding bizarre, abstract "joystick" apparatuses. Clinton smirked and wagged his tongue, almost drooling on the camera lens, confident of his transcendental power as the ultimate super freak, Doctor Funkenstein. The song's maniacal harmonies and perversion of standard R&B vocal arrangements caused me to writhe enthusiastically. Keyboardist Bernie Worrell sent penetrating vibes deep into my nervous system with his disarming synthesizer performance. Clinton's bizarre interpretation of Black sexuality became a separate world to itself with this enigmatic song and video. And what did the concept of an "Atomic Dog" mean to me in '83? Not a thing. Pledge your Groovallegiance to the Funk. It was July 1990 when Detroit's Electrifying Mojo kicked his radio show off with "Atomic Dog." I absolutely reeled in rapture. Over the last seven years, I realized, Clinton's song had worked itself into the collective mind and subculture of every Chocolate City in America. Talk about songs that stay with us. The panting sound-rhythms of "Atomic Dog" had been skillfully sampled, giving Public Enemy's "Brothers Gonna Work It Out" its street-corner urgency on Fear Of a Black Planet. The song was then further appropriated by militant rappers X-Clan and Ice Cube to great effect. The Bomb Squad production crew, like me, has a passion for "Atomic Dog." Yet "Brothers" and Ice Cube's "The Nigga Ya Love To Hate" sound completely dissimilar. These amazing references by rap only verify that Clinton and his band produced some of the most powerful rhythms that ever grooved Black America, no less influential or pervasive than J.B.'s "Funky Drummer." Hey little pussy, you sure look sweet, knockin' me off... my four feet. "Atomic Dog" has influenced not only the way we all think, but the way we all act, as well. Ever go to a movie or show and hear the Dog Bark? This show of applause, an essential part of every Arsenio Hall Show, can be attributed to Clinton as well. Whenever homeboys bark their approval for anything, this is directly derivative of the distinctive vocal performance from "Atomic Dog." Clinton's utterly ingenious appropriation of slang for sexuality, previously most notable on Parliament's "I Call My Baby Pussycat," also gripped the consciousness of an entire generation. The descent of his "futuristic bow-wow" can be traced up to Prince's "La, La, La, Hee, Hee, Hee." The explosively funky song also draws interesting parallels between men, women, dogs and cats: "Is it really worth one night of fun? You've got nine lives, I've only got one..." Time... Is education. Finally in 1990, the concept of "Atomic Dog" touches me. Actually, it grabs me by the collar and dangles me in midair. George Clinton was writing one of his most insightful explorations of self, an essential question of irrational sexual desire and lust. Now that I am a 19 year-old college student, the paradigmatic lyrics, "Why must I feel like that? Why must I chase the cat? It's the dog in me/ nothin' but the dog in me," cling to my subconscious like a second skin. Still, "Atomic Dog" tirelessly remains my favorite funk jam; the song's driving rhythms cleverly work on the same psychological energies that its lyrics are attempting to harness. Clinton recently tried to return to greatness with "Why Should I Dog U Out?" a reference to his magnum opus. His effort was basically for naught. From the appropriation of the term "rock 'n' roll" to the entire See ATOMIC, Page 7 Comedy full of it -Jill Robbing Co. humor, that is Chuckles, cackles and giggles were the predominant sounds heardI during The Sound of Big Show last weekend as the Comedy Company successfully performed their 11th seasonal show. Twenty-two sketches of silliness and fun were presented; some sketches were funnier than others. Most of the skits were See WEEKEND, Page 7 Did you miss f I Adam Ant Antics in the Forbidden Zone MCA When MTV was introduced in the * early '80s, the music video industry exploded and the world of music was changed forever. Consumers would no longer be content in simply hear- ,.., ing a song on the radio. Many bands were a product of MTV, and as the Buggles aptly coined, "Video Killed the Radio Star," Bands made up for their lack of musical talent by using their style and good looks to pro- mote their careers. One of the people who benefited from this trend toward videos was the original Prince Charming him- self, Adam Ant. His antics, style and pin-up looks made him a pop icon, a direct competitor with contempo- rary glam-os, Duran Duran. Now Mr. Ant has released a vol- ume of his greatest hits, Antics in the Forbidden Zone. This album samples all of the stages of his ca- reer, except (beneficently) his recent "Room at the Top" phase. We en- dure his punk stage in the first four tracks, and these are fairly hard on the ears, with the exception of See RECORDS, Page 7 -Mb 1 pmv -M .I tq,r-s Tf4 7 fin Poc-I-a~ira-n f- Spring Term " In New " Hampshire Well, we didn't. is a r0 fb A11 off~hj p n ' rn f th p