ARTS The Michigan Daily Monday, October 14, 1991 Page 5 The importance of being Ernestly stupid Ernest Scared Stupid dir. John Cherry By Mike Kuniavsky T he first mistake of Art is assume that it's serious. to -Lester Bangs What a career move! Eartha Kitt, once a Shakespearean actor, once a cabaret singer, once Orson Welles' lover (he called her "the most excit- ing woman in the world"), once Cat- woman, is now... Old Lady Hack- more, foil to Ernest P. (for "Po- wertools") Worrell. That sends my Chuck Taylors a-walkin' every time I think about it. Obviously, having done Cat- woman, Kitt doesn't take herself all that seriously, but wouldn't it be it's sometimes hard to tell if she's overacting or if she's acting like she's overacting. In any case, she's probably the second-best thing in this, the weakest installment of the Ernest series so far. The problem with the film is not the bad script or the bad acting - that's all to be expected as an impor- tant part of the series' character - but the fact that this time around, there was just too much money to work with. I presume that after the success of the previous films, the studio was willing to give John Cherry and Jim Varney a lot of money. Regrettably, now that they have it, they can't be as experimen- tal or as dumb as they have been in the past. This time, it seems, they have to include some socially re- deeming value. Fortunately, the socially redeem- movie. The third grader with whom I saw the film even realized this. Var- ney has really missed his mark. The previous installments of the series were more like Pee Wee's Big Adventure, in that they were stories about dumb adults full of in-jokes for smart adults. Now there's lots of stuff that's directly targeted toward a specific PG market, so when Ernest gets his head smashed by a troll trap (looking like a Brontosaurus-sized beartrap), all we see is his hat flying off. It's a shame, and it shackles the whole film to a boring PC level of wimpitude (cf. George Bush). The story itself is much more cli- chd than before and it (sigh) features a bunch of self-important, soon-to- be-has-been-coke-addict, overacting kids. They do what you expect kids in kid movies to do: love their parents, scream a lot and finally save the day. Regrettably, that's not what makes a good Ernest film. In a good Ernest film, Ernest has to screw something up terribly, misunder- stand what he's done, and, through the combined virtues of stupidity, naYvetd, and good-heartedness, fix it when all of the "normal" adults are paralyzed by their so-called maturity. In a way, Ernest does that here, too, but it's not the same thing be- cause the kids play way too big of a role for their respective humor con- tent (after all, they are "normal" kids, and anything "normal" just isn't funny.) The old Ernest was a loser who would win when the win- ners couldn't; the new Ernest is a lo- ser who wins, but only with the help of the winners, and so, really, he loses. This is not the kind of message we want to send to kids. But like I said before, the film isn't all bad, it's not even half-bad - it's actually pretty entertaining. The first third is the worst part, where the whole premise of the film (Ernest lets out trolls buried by his ancestors. They cause havoc) is built up, one boring monologue after an- other. After that, though, the film is consistently funny, because Cherry See ERNEST, Page 8 >L' ° Is Guarneri String Quartet cellist David Soyer (the guy in the front of the line) dead? Let's examine the facts. He looks kind of sad, doesn't he? And notice, only one of his arms is visible! And his shadow is in the shape of the Roman numeral "V," and if you add one to five, you get six, the number of the beast! Case closed. GuarneriString Quartet came together, carried that weight Hey kids, here's a fun activity for those boring Econ. 201 lectures. Cover the right side of Ernest's face with your hand. See nice normal Ernest. ' Now move your hand over to the left side. Laugh. Ha. Ha. Ha. Oh, by the way, the best part of the film's Chekhov-esque dialogue is, "How about a bumper sandwich, booger lips?" by Julie Komorn S ome things never change. The Guarneri String Quartet, for exam- ple, has kept its original players since its founding in 1964. Still go- ing strong, the members have re- turned for yet another performance - their 25th in Ann Arbor. Guest violinist Ida Kavafian will join the Quartet to kick off the 29th Annual Chamber Art Series of the University Musical Society. Violinists Arnold Steinhardt and John Dalley, violist Michael Tree, and cellist David Soyer will per- form Mozart's Quartet in F major K.168, Bart6k's Quartet No. 6 (1939), and Dvorik's String Quintet in E-Flat, Op. 97. By the end of last summer, the ensemble had given over 2,000 recitals, including numerous tours of Europe, Japan, South America and Australia. The Quartet has annual series in New York at the 92nd Street Y, Lincoln Center and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, along with various other regular performances. The members of the leaderless quartet don't seem very surprised by their long-lasting success. "How does a marriage last for so long?" asks Dalley. "There are many fac- tors that contribute. There is some luck involved, mutual respect... it's never really been an issue." The four musicians have cer- tainly not been shy around the me- dia. The Quartet has many record- ings (on RCA Red Seal and Philips), some of which have received inter- national awards. The group has also been featured on many television and radio specials in North America and abroad, and has also been the subject for several books, including Helen Drees Ruttencutter's Quartet and David Blum's The Art of Quartet Playing: The Guarneri in Conversation with David Blum. The Quartet even made a film in 1988, High Fidelity, directed by Alan Miller. "We interjected a lit- tle bit," says Dalley on the making of the film. "We let Alan Miller do what he wanted to do and stayed out." The film, which was shown yesterday at the MLB, portrays the dynamics and relationships within the Quartet. See QUARTET, Page 8 great if more so-called serious stars slummed in cheesy roles instead of making big, dumb, so-called serious films (cf. Deceived)? Picture Sly Stallone as a drunken waiter in a second-rate John Landis film, or Har- rison Ford and William Hurt as a pair of wacky pastry chefs - now that'd be something. Kitt's not bad in her role, though ing values that they put in are pretty superficial, and the main one - that drinking milk is good - obviously mocks the whole idea. Nevertheless, the sheer fact that they attempt some kind of message really waters down many of the potentially goofiest scenes. Also, adding to the watered- downness, Ernest Scared Stupid is now directly targeted as a "little kid" Foxx dead at 68 Most people only knew the late Redd Foxx from the classic '70s sitcom Sanford and Son. But the raunchy Foxx, born John Sanford (his brother's name was Fred), was a blue stand-up comedian when Andrew "Dice" Clay was just a sperm. Paving the way for such creatively vulgar comics as Richard Pryor and Eddie Murphy, Foxx eventually went on to create the unforgettable Fred Sanford. Who could forget those constant jabs at Aunt Esther? ("They could take raw dough, slam your face in it and make gorilla cookies!") Or how about Lamont's back-to- Africa phase? Fred was pissed! Or how about when he set up a church in the living room to avoid paying taxes? Remember when he snuck into Lena Horne's dressing room, or when he tried to get on The Gong Show? Foxx was on the set of his new CBS sitcom, The Royal Family, when he died of a heart attack. An 'industrial band' that reads! by Kristen Knudsen The Ellen James Society. With no one in the band named Ellen James, I was inclined to ask why. "We named ourselves that, not so much because of the Ellen Jamesians themselves (from John Irving's novel The World According to Garp ), but because it's, like, an Irving reference that people would recog- nize," says Chris McGuire, lead vo- calist and guitarist of the band. "More about Irving's sense of the tragic being comic and the comic be- ing tragic." Whatever their intentions may be, the Ellen James Society - com- posed of two women, McGuire and co-vocalist/guitarist Cooper Seay, and two men, bassist Bryan Lilje and drummer Scott Bland -produces an original blend of intense music that is not easy to classify. McGuire doesn't mitd being compared to other bands, like R.E.M., early U2 and Patty Smith, however untrue those comparisons may be. "I think that people are in- evitably going to compare you to somebody. People go 'What do you sound like?' and what they mean is 'Who do you sound like?"'says Mc- Guire. "I think it's a tool that any- body, or most writers, use to let the audience have an idea of what they're going to be hearing, even if you don't sound anything like that. "I mean, I don't really get the R.E.M. comparison, but perhaps that we're both Southern bands. I don't know. You never know what some- body hears when they listen to a band or what they're paying atten- tion to. Maybe it has more to do with that R.E.M. isn't a straightfor- ward band. Their songs are not straightforwardly presented and we don't do that either." McGuire is at a loss when asked to describe her band's sound more specifically. "Oh, I hate that," she winces. "I'll tell you a funny story and this'll give you an idea of how difficult that question is. We are up for these... awards in the New South Music Awards this year, and See ELLEN , Page 8 i . ___ _ U I From the Kingdom of Nepal LOST HORIZONS brings you: a Grraduate Nurses... What are you looking for in a nursing career? IfStrong encouragement and support for your goals VThorough orientation, geared to your own education and experience ViMembership on one of the world's most respected medical teams Patient and family oriented practice VOn-site and off-site continuing education VWorld-class challenges M The possibility to grow whether in clinical practice, management, research or education IeFlexible scheduling N(Competitive salary & benefits NfProgressive technology NDiverse range of clinical specialities What are you looking for in a place to live? 9A beautiful midwestern city of 70,000 C'A community of professionals VRecreational and cultural opportunities for all seasons M"Cosmopol itan atmosphere in an internationally known medical center * beautiful handknit sweaters * hats . gloves October 14th - 18th Ground Floor Mall of the Michigan Union