The Michigan Daily-Weekend etc. March 12,1992 Page 1 All sold out and no place to go n'91's best jam, the transatlantic rhymekickin' "Can't Truss It," Chuck D. decried the disintegration of Black unity all by itself, just as much as the external destroyers of that love. Even more dramatic and encompassing than the paradigmatic "Who Stole The Soul?" from PE's Fear OfaBlackPlanet, "Can'tTruss It" deconstructs the mythology of the Black experience like no other. Ponderous in its might and elu- sivein its swiftness,"Can'tTruss It" moves us from the coasts of Goree Island and Sierra Leone to the trad- ing blocks of Jamestown, Va., to the street corners of Inner City, America with a disturbing ease. Chuck begins and ends his tale "Kickin' chief 'cause we had a big beef / Because of that now I grit my teeth," in themeantime finding him- self "smacked in the back / For the other man to mack," and bridges the tragedy of the African holocaust in the harshest, most soulless terms possible. Rightfully, Chuck erodes the Black-white line of demarcation which keeps the struggle so simple to so many. He reminds us, as with the deaths of Huey Newton and El- Hajj MalikEl-Shabazz in "Welcome To the Terrordome," that "Every brother ain't a brother." Where's your soul? he asks Black people all over the world, shifting his shaky ground from revolutionary leader to hip-hop griot because it's the best he can do. Like the practice of socialism, I realized that soul must exist every- where at the same time to work effectively. If not, the people with soul will be drained and rendered as inhuman as their soulless surround- ings. And then it occurred to me that a Black college would've only fore- stalled the soullessness of this Uni- versity. I wanted to go to Morehouse College in Atlanta, Ga., not the Uni- versity of Michigan, in the home of coffee and tie-dyed t-shirts, Michi- gan. I'd hoped to go someplace where the Black community, the soul, would be so great I could do nothing but belong. Then I learned that the frigid Michigan airs so prevalent here al- most pale in comparison to what's lurking beyond the Howard Univer- sities and Morris-Browns, just after the Morehouses and Spelmans. "It's a good experience,:'my el- ders told me. "You'll learn how to deal with white folks." Four years later, all the natives ask, "Say, man, you know we got to stick together, man. What's the mat- ter with you? Where's your soul, sucka?" I don't know. Actually, I do. It rots unheeded on lavatory floors all over the campus, under the heading Notes From Underground. It molders within stacks of drop/add forms in the basement of Angell Hall. My soul hides under the veneer of urban alienation, wizened by the knowledge that anyone who calls me "bougee" has gotta be pretty "bougee" his or her damn self. It hears a Black guy walking with a girl of another skin color, accused by frustrated people of being a "sell- out," and knows both sides all too .-11 For weeks, eyes looking like unhatted Resi- dents have been staring at passers-by from kiosks, shop windows, telephone poles. These handbilled eyes have been announcing the imminent arrival of the celebration of the Ann Arbor Film Festival's 30th Anniversary, a once-in- a-lifetime opportunity to catch a few of the many great films screened at the festival during the past three decades. Besides a seven hour-plus chronological retrospective of some of the films that have won at the festival during the past 30 years, the AAFF has organized a series of workshops, individual showings and panel discussions which begin on Friday morning and continue through Monday evening, the day before the Festival begins. Participating in the conference, titled 'Thirty Years and Beyond: Celebrating the IndependentFilmmaker," will be many major indepen- dent filmmakers such as Kenneth Anger, Barbara Hammer and George Kuchar. Since its founding by George Manupelli and the Once Group cultural organization in 1963, the Ann Arbor Film Festival has been one of the most powerful forces in making Ann Arbor a cultural mecca. It has also allowed filmmakers to have their films presented to large public audiences. Far from the mainstream, the festival has always heralded the achievements of many differ- ent members of the avant garde, from the work of Anger and Larry Jordan in the '60s to the achievements of Ayoka Chenzira and Hammer today. Festival director Vicki Honeyman calls the festival "the vanguard in independent and experimental film exhibition." films run the gamut from documentary to ani- mation, lyrical abstract to narrative. Natives by Scott Stertling and Jesse Lerner of Los Angeles is a docu- mentary about anti-immigration sentiment in Encitas, California, a black and white piece distinguished by the elegance of its composi- tion and by the symbolic, non-narrative foot- age that punctuates the interviews. Economi- cal editing captures the irony and sympathy behind often incendiary talk. Geometria by Jane Milroy of Vancouver turns to the abstract in a collage of colors and images and sounds, bookended by an altered representational image of an accordion player. Faith and Patience by Sheila M. Sofian of Newhall, California, combines animation with live action in an endearingly unfocused discus- sion with a little girl about her doll and her new baby sister. The simplistic Tr H iE SAC H IE 1D Iu IL IE: March 13-16 Thirty Years and Beyond: Celebrating the Independent Filmmaker Four days of workshops. March 14, 7:30, 9:30 & 12 The AAFF Retrospective Three different shows of films from the past 29 years. March 17-22 (see Weekend etc. List for showtimes) The 30th Ann Arbor Film Festival r%^_r E1lTO riting about a film festival V consisting of around 80 films from a sample group of 10 can't be as difficult as choosing the 10 that will accurately and enticingly represent the festival in its entirety. Such is the task of the selec- ' ' palette of the animation, tion com- mittee of the Ann Ar- bor Film Festival, which also chooses films from the mitted. Over the Projecting success for the '92 fest set to an atonal rendition of "Twinkle TwinkleLittle Star,"serves to communi- cate the uncertainty of childhood, while the child's discussion with her mother renders her safe. Tales From My Child- hood by Francisca Duran orinro about 80 280 subm Manupelli, who actually ran the festival from his residence in Canada for a few years in the'70s, will provide opening remarks at the Retrospective. He explained, "I defined the Film Festival as servicing the collaboration between filmmakers and audiences. They seem to have kept it alive." It's probably easy for the local resident to take the Film Festival for granted, just because it has been a local fixture for so long. But as the founder of the Festival, Manupelli remembers a time when chal- lenging, experimental, independent film was even more difficult to see in public showings than it is course of the Festival, win- B '! EN B II of Toronto tells, retrospec- ners will be chosen in vari- tively, the stories of achild ous categories by the Festival's judges in war-torn Chile after Allende's assassina- (filmmakers, critics and educators) and tion. It's a pastiched memoir of disparate st6- still more films will be selected to travel ries, held together by themes of a childhood around the country in the Festival's na- unconscious. tional incarnation. Submission, selection, Madcap by Phillip Denslow of Venice, narrowing down, judgment, disappoint- California uses abstract images and whimsy to ment, acclaim: the cycles of life. make a statement about bureaucracy and art, If these films even approximate the punctuating his "animated improvisation" with festival as a whole, this year's showings darkly ironic lettered warnings that "opinions should not be missed. Vicki Honeyman, expressed in this film are not necessarily those director of the Festival, says that this of the filmmaker" and do not "represent the year's submissions were some of the best budget constraints on arts funding" nor do they she's seen in the 15 years that she's been offer "an endorsement of Western Civiliza- f hMO WI ecause 1th New Y ork audiences liked a narticular ____