ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, January 21, 1992 Page 5 NW . ....... .. The Cradle will fall ... Maternal psychopath runs amok in clichId thriller The Hand That Rocks The Cradle dir. Curtis Hanson by Jennifer Workman If The Hand That Rocks The Cradle is the hand that rules the world, then prepare yourself for clich&d movies about maternal psy- chopathic women. In the spirit of * the new machisma of the '90s, women are now duking it out in the nursery for control of the family. Domestic bliss couldn't be bet- ter for Claire Bartel (Annabella Sciorra), a happy homemaker with a sensitive husband, a well-behaved little girl and a blue-eyed baby boy. Of course, we know all of this will soon come crashing down after the arrival of Peyton (Rebecca DeMor- nay), the wonder-nanny who's se- cretly out to become queen bee. Everyone thinks Peyton' s great except Solomon (Ernie Hudson), the mentally disabled handyman, and the only one in the movie with enough brains to figure out that she's up to no good. Nobody listens to Solomon, and family trauma en- sues as Peyton weasels her way into the Bartels' lives. DeMornay's perfornance as Pey- ton is unnerving as we watch her dissect the family. Peyton has just lost her husband to suicide and her baby to miscarriage, and she desper- moments, all of these characters are just so unbelievably gullible that you actually hope Peyton does something creatively mean to them. The audience cheered for Peyton as she twisted the arm of a schoolyard bully who had been picking on Claire's daughter, Emma (Madeline Although Hand has its creepy moments, all of these characters are just so unbelievably gullible that you actually hope Peyton does something creatively mean to them. ately wants to replace her loss. So, she slowly drives herself between Claire and her family. Claire's perfect husband, Mi- chael (Matt McCoy) is completely oblivious to any problems that might be arising. He's too busy shrugging his shoulders and doing everything right. Claire, however, keeps messing up as the perfect mother. She is held 100 percent responsible for the fam- ily, while Michael merely comes home for dinner. Although Hand has its creepy Zima). But when she turns the violence on Claire, the mother is ready to de- fend her family. Unlike the heroines in Terminator II and Aliens, who de- fended their children from big scary monsters, Claire fights another woman -=- albeit a psychopathic one. It was disturbing, though, that Peyton went crazy, and that her in- sanity was justified by the loss of' her own husband and baby. Of course, I'm forgetting that without a family, women would surely dis- Evil nanny Rebecca DeMornay knits innocently while watching Annabella Sciorra's baby. integrate into loonies. And who will protect the children from these crazed baby snatchers? It's the, good mother, of course, who stays at home, builds a greenhouse and "love(s) growing things." The Hand That Rocks the Cradle is not quite as damaging as Fatal At- traction, in which a career woman was out to get the family she never had, but the film is still disturbing. Female fight scenes are a recent development in Hollywood, and they're probably here to stay. I'm not sure if director Curtis Hanson was out to make a movie with a feminist twist when he staged the nanny-mommy fight scene. I didn't want a sappy moral- ity play, though: I wanted to see Peyton sock it to the Bartels, the baby spitting up on somebody and Claire eating an entire bag of Dori- tos to comfort herself. THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE is playing at Showcase and Fox Village. Gorka's back, and he'sgot *guitar in hand by Andrew J. Cahn "I'm from New Jersey/I don't ex- pect too much," John Gorka sings in "I'm From New Jersey.- He just has a problem with peo- ple who find a car filled with his equipment and drive it away. That theft, which occurred last year, was even more frustrating for him since he had just bought a new Laribee acoustic guitar. Eventually, it was found in a pawn shop, but Gorka was not able to retrieve the names and addresses for the mailing list he had compiled at a recent Ann Arbor performance. He wanted the people on that list to know that he has not been ignoring them - for why would he want to alienate residents of the town which is home to his management, the Ark, and one of the nation's premier folk music festivals? On Saturday, Gorka will be mak- ing his second appearance at the Ann Arbor Folk Festival, but this time, he will be performing an entire set. Though he was not officially on the bill last year, he was in town and came on stage to sing his song, "Semper Fi," which he says is one of his most personal compositions. "It's a family history song," Gorka says. When his father, who served in the Marines, returned from World War II, he spent some time in an army hospital in San Francisco. One day, Eleanor Roosevelt came by with gifts for the wounded soldiers, and she gave his dad a blanket. In the closing verse of "Semper Fi," Gorka sings, "That blanket meant a lot to him/ My mother has it still/ Some forget the kindness/ That others Channel Z What to watch today: the Arts and Entertainment network. There's vintage Late Night with David Let- terman (7 p.m), a delightfully comedic Richard M. Nixon docu- mentary (8 p.m.), and the American TV premiere of John Eliot Gar- diner's conducting of Beethoven's sublime Mass in C. (9:30 p.m.). Robert Tear is among the featured soloists. What not to watch: the broad- cast TV premiere of Oliver Stone at Acclaimed poet Charles Simic dismantles the austere silence by Mark Binelli Whoever swings an ax Knows the body of man Will again be covered with fur. -Charles Simic, "Ax" "I have a dark, pessimistic view of history, which, I think, has been confirmed by recent events," says acclaimed poet Charles Simic. "People always say, 'You're too dark,' and I say, 'Oh, yeah?"' Simic, who will be delivering tonight's Hopwood Lecture, cer- tainly can't be called a romantic. With titles such as "Butcher Shop," "Gallows Etiquette" and "Spoons With Realistic Dead Flies On Them," Simic's poems often paint surreal, unsettling portraits of the modern world. Which is understandable. Born in Yugoslavia in 1938, the Pulitzer Prize-nominated poet grew up dur- ing the Second World War, "when all the fun was," he says. "Hitler, Stalin, civil war, being bombed, seeing peopl-e hanging from telephone poles ... " Simic's family escaped to France, and in 1954, he arrived in the United States, where his poetry was shaped by such diverse influences as jazz, the blues and American abstract painting. He also borrowed from European Surrealism and Dada, cre- ating a unique new poetic voice - a cross between Dali and Dickinson, William Carlos Williams and John Lee Hooker. Although Simic calls our age a "century of vileness" and remains unsurprised by the current state of affairs in Yugoslavia - "They're a bunch of dummies who can't wait to slaughter each other," he says - the poet shies away from "setting out to write a subject poem," political or otherwise, explaining that he of- ten tends to draw on "experiences and bits of language." For those unfamiliar with Simic's work, one of the best places to start is his Selected Poems, 1963-1983, which draws from many different collections, including Dismantling the Silence (1971), Return to a Place Lit by a Glass of Milk (1974) and Austeries (1982). Simic says that while his earlier work was "fairly impersonal," he has become "much more present in the poems." "There's a person, a sort of clear first-person pronoun," Simic ex- plains, "giving the illusion of auto- biography." Take, for instance, "Hurricane Season," from Austeries, which be- gins, "Just as the world was ending/ We fell in love,/ Immoderately. I had a pair of/ Blue pinstripe trousers/ Impeccably pressed/ Against misfortune ..." A kinder, gentler Charles Simic? Not a chance. CHARLES SIMIC gives the Hop- wood Poetry Lecture today at Rackham Auditorium at 3:30 p.m. Admission is free. My Weariness of Epic Proportions I like it when Achilles Gets killed And even his buddy Patroclus- And that hothead Hector - And the whole Greek and Trojan Jeunesse doree Is more or less Expertly slaughtered Sothere's finally Peace and quiet (The gods having momentarily Shut up) One can hear A bird sing And a daughter ask her mother Whether she can go to the well And of course she can By that lovely little path That winds through The olive orchard -Charles Simic John Gorka's got that casual Lee jeans look about him. Play it, Johnny! never will." Throughout the song, Gorka tells the story of his father's expe- rience in the war without being preachy or overly symbolic. Most of the material on his lat- est release, Jack's Crows, is about "the people and the places I'm Read more about the Fifteenth Annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival in this Thursday's Weekend etc., with profiles of featured artists like Odetta and Livingston Taylor. from," he says. This source is evident when lis- tening to him sing about the "girls with big hair" in the malls of New Jersey and the "houses in the fields" being built on the farmlands near his current home in eastern Penn- sylvania. Most of the pieces are sung in a relaxing, storytelling manner, but there are a few exceptions. The title song from Jack's Crows juxtaposes various connotations of both words in the title. "Jack" refers to Kennedy, Kerouac and Be Nimble, and "Crow" is used as "more than just the animal," Gorka says. "Like how Poe used in The Raven, it can mean something dark and evil." Another tune, "Where the Bot- ties Break," which is about the harms of "urban renewal" projects. Gorka sings "I just want to make enough/To buy this town and keep it rough" because "it's been gentri- fied/they turned biker bars into flower shops." He also makes a clever silent rhyme with the lines, "Money talks people jump/ Ask how high low life Donald what's his name." Gorka, however, is usually not that angry. He is actually a fairly peaceful and easy going guy. "If the world ended today," he sings on his record, "I would adjust." 1992 H 0 P W 0 0 D underclassmen AWARDS n rbof. Folkesti2val a fundraiser for the Ark Saturday, January 25, 1992 4:.nn ~- %% u11 AiA nr m Reading by Pulitzer Prize-Winning Poet CHARLES SIMIC Author of: Charon's Cosmology Classic Ballroom Dances Academy of American Poets Prize Bain-Swiggett Poetry Prize Michael R. Gutterman Poetry Award Roy W. Cowden Memorial Fellowship