-r ARTS Bitter 'Cup' tells truths of war a Get Slaughtered The RC Players are at it again. Their production of "The Slaughter- house," an absurdist drama about a young violinist who has some rather strange adventures. The fun begins tomorrow night at 9 p.m. If you're busy, you can catch it March 12-14. Admission is $5,$3 forstudents. Call 763-0176. Free Music The free stuff with the School of Music truly never stops. Tonight at 8 p.m. the University Choir and Cham- ber Choir combine for an interesting evening of vocal works. Jerry Blackstone and the great Paul Rardin conduct Brahms' "Lieder und Romanzen," Dvorak's "Moravian Duets,"Kodaly's "MissaBrevis"and more. Or if you're busy tonight try another combo, the Symphony and Concert Bands, Friday night at 8 at Hill. The program, mysteriously, has yet to be announced. Again, it's all free; for more information call 763- 4726. Read, Read, Read If you just can't get enough of those readings, here's another one for you. Sara Suleri is reading Friday afternoon at 4 p.m. from "Meatless Days," a series of essays about her youth in Pakistan and her later years abroad. Call 764-0352 to find out the locale. by Camilo Fontecilla In our comfortable culture, we find it much too easy to glamorize war. Events horrible beyond our worst nightmares are syruped into vehicles of entertainment. "Cup Final" adopts a tough, down-to-earth perspective that sheds all the extra layers which Hollywood considers essential to the war film (i.e. sentimentality and / or high-tech warfare technol- ogy), and portrays it with a sense of actual presence that hasn't been seen in the cinema for a long time. Cup Final Directed and written by Eran Riklis; with Moshe Igvi, Muhamad Bacri and Suheil Haddad. Unlike many other wars around the globe, the Israeli- Palestinian conflict has a blazing history that goes beyond the madness of political leaders. Such leaders have come and gone, but the hatred between the Israelis and the Palestinians has remained violently active throughout many decades. Riklis' script places us right in the heart of the conflict: June 1982, the invasion of Beirut by Israeli forces. Cohen (Moshe Igvi) is an unlikely Israeli soldier sent to serve his nation in Lebanon. There, his platoon is blown to bits by a small PLO guerrilla, and he and a friend remain as the only survivors. They are taken as hostages, hopefully to be exchanged in Beirut for PLO prisoners. Since his friend is gunned down when trying to escape, Cohen finds he has to turn to the Palestinians for the comfort of human company. He finds a path of connection through the common link of a love of sports. As Cohen laments his absence from the Spanish World Soccer Cup, for which he has tickets, he draws closer to his captors. For all of them it becomes almost as important to see the championship games as getting to Beirut. Televisions become one of their major requirements for plunder. Riklis traces their journey with an equanimity that be- comes the strongest asset of the film. There are no bad guys here, only a bunch of people fighting for what they truly believe in. The fierceness of their struggle is symbolized by the seriousness with which they play sports during their fleeting leisure times. Riklis focuses his moral message on these episodes, but he doesn't succeed entirely. The eager- ness to convey his anti-war ideas makes him stumble on the too blatant allegories he is creating. The best moments are the ones that are blunt. Riklis knows how to carry his cast through heart-slicing situations without unnecessarily evoking melodrama. As some PLO soldiers die one by one, the rest continue inexorably, like lemmings, to what will be their obvious doom. The scenes of combat are nerve-splittingly real, almost like documentaries pulled out of CNN archives. Men are killed in a split second, discarded instantly. There are no pathetic monologues spo- ken from dying lips. And once one of the Palestinians dies, he is never again mentioned by the small militia. These deaths only bring the group closer together. Once Cohen and Ziad (Muhamad Bacri), the guerrillas' leader, discover that their favorite team in the soccer championship is Italy, they slowly form a richly-layered relationship that under more peaceful circumstances would have made them steadfast friends. Instead, they develop a mutual understand- ing that allows them to read into the workings of the other's mind, although their difference in status is always present as an unspoken but unmistakable barrier. As they travel through a land ravaged by war, authentic in its entirety, the ridiculousness of their task becomes more and more apparent. What these men really want is to be left in peace. There is a sense of wasted time permeating the whole film. Cohen finds that he has to use some of his game tickets to wipe his bottom, in one of the more subtle meta- phors supplied by Riklis. Everyone knows how it's all going to end, but that's not important. Abunch of people who could be happy together can't because the war cries out louder. The cast is purposely varied in characterization, and the actors take their different personas to extremes. Cohen's naivetd is initially hard to believe. But even through the simplicity of their characters, the actors manage to pull off an amazing feat, becoming even more important than the vio- lent crossfire happening around them. And that's the issue at hand: the importance of the human being above the conflict. This can only be attributed to Riklis' direction, infinitely better than his semi-serious, but deadpan-serious-when- serious script. Juggling the two with the strong intention that drives him has produced a splendid work that surpasses any flaw it may have. It manages to stir up something authentic inside, in a gut too accustomed to reacting to the artificialities of banal cinema. In a time when the foreign film is emerging as the standard bearer of quality and substance, Riklis' film deserves to march among the best. CUP FINAL will be playing at Lorch Thursday at 7:30. "Cup Final," an Israeli film, doesn't gloss over harsh realities. Mick Jagger Wandering Spirit Atlantic Mick Jagger's first two solo albums were ripped apart in the press and on the charts. At the same time, Keith Richards' three solo albums were greeted with open arms, causing some critics to dis- miss Jagger. Jagger has never been one to suffer such humiliation and he has retaliated with "Wandering Spirit," eas- ily the best of his three solo efforts. Jagger clearly wants "Wandering Spirit" to sell as well as a Stones record. He's been mercilessly promoting himself; last month alone he was the subject of 245 magazine stories. Rick Rubin, the producer behind Red Hot Chili Pep- pers' "Blood SugarSexMagik"andco- founder of Def Jam Records, was brought into make Jagger appeal to 90s teenagers. Top studio musicians and big-name guest stars formed Jagger's backing band. All the effort has resulted in an ambitious, stylistically diverse album that appeals to a wide audience, even though it's not likely to top the charts. The record buying public seems to only accept Jagger as aRolling Stone, no matter how hard he tries to win them over. And he tries hard. "Wired All Night," a standard Stones rocker, and the first single, "Sweet Thing," a virtual rewrite of "Miss You," are designed to capture an audience that never was en- amored with his previous conscious departures from the Stones. For the alternative crowd, Lenny Kravitz is brought in for a useless cover of Bill Withers' "Use Me." Metalheads can savor the hyper-adrenalized remake of James Brown's "Think." None of these potential singles carrymuch weight and sound calculated for mass success. Throughout the restof the album Jagger sounds more committed than he has in a decade, and it works. The musical inventiveness of the best Stones albums appears on "Wandering Spirit"; the gos- pel-tinged "Out of Focus" and "Wan- dering Spirit," the straight country of "Evening Gown" and "Hang On To Me Tonight," and the traditional British folk song "Handsome Molly" are terrific, easily the best material on the album. Anyone who has loved the Stones throughout the years will find "Wander- ing Spirit" a welcome return to form for Jagger. -Torn Erlewine Green Jello Cereal Killer Zoo Entertainment Yes. The world's first "video only band." It's bizarre, it's homemade. And their whole theme song admits that they suck. On first viewing, you wonder, "Ifthey think they suck, how in hell did this thing ever get made?" Green Jello's "history" (free with the ghastly videocassette) says it all: "At our first practice we discovered that none of us had any talent, so we decided to become the world's worst band." If you want a real reason to get drunk, this is it. No, really, this tape is far too stupid to be seen sober. Even on the side of the tape, "Nutritional Informa- tion" is listed, and the "stupidity" per- centage is 100, both sober and with 72 A A 5TH AVE AT LIBERTY_______ ____ 761-9700 H DAILY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM $3.25 ALL DAY TUESDAY' -excepvon STUDENT WITH I.D.$3.50 HOWARD'S END (PG) GROUNDHOG DAY (PG) Present This Coupon When Purchasing A Large Popcorn & Receive One EXP70E 3/1IM9 EXPIRES 3118/93 oz beer. Why bother? In one "Cereal Killer" hour, you can: " SEE videos involving the prolific "Shitman"and the vengeful "Cowgod." " WITNESS an awfully exact clone ofAnthony Kiedis in "Trippin' onXTC". " BASH MTV with "Club Jell-o". " VIEW the effervescent Sadistica playing adrmwithFlintstone-erabones or eyeballs attached to her chest. Don't say you weren't warned. -Jeff Rosenberg Michael Nyman The Essential Michael Nyman Band Argo British minimalist composer Michael Nyman has gained deserved attention for his work on the films of Peter Greenaway such as "The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover." But don't worry, Nyman doesn't churn out movie mood music; Greenaway actually cuts his films with Nyman's already composed pieces in mind. Like Philip Glass, Nyman his own house band to perform all of his difficult works. With orchestrations dominated by saxophones and an irresistible rhyth- mic drive, Nyman's music also pos- sesses an appealing expressivity rarely associated with minimalism. For those whohavenoticedhismusic in Greenaway films, this is the compila- tion to buy. It's Nyman's greatest hits, sampling works from all the major Greenaway films except "Belly of an Architect." Though 70 uninterrupted minutes of minimalism can be a bit much, in small doses pieces like the "Memorial" funeral march from "The Cook, the Thief' are exciting and mov- ing. - Michael John Wilson Yellow Magic Orchestra Long before Mad Cobra flexed, Shabba Ranks got Xtra naked, or that bozo Snow was even born, there was Yellowman, the true king of dancehall reggae. Toasting (aka rapping) since the early Seventies, Yellowman rose to prominence as a deejay for the Aces sound system in Jamaica . Known for his explicit, boastful style of toasting (dubbed "slackness"), Yellowman has been the influence for current popular dancehall artists. Yellowman was also the pioneer of alternating toasting with singing, which has been copied by virtually everyone since. But of course, the first isn't always the one to reap the rewards. While imitators of his style sell records by the boatload, Yellowman has yet to score a "hit" outside of his homeland. But dispite his unfortunate absence on the charts, he still packs a house like nobody's business. His show last summer at the State Theater on their immensely popular Reggae Night was a smash; Over 2,000 lucky folks were treated to one killer night of beat crazy dub. Tonight , Yellowman and the Sagitarius Band bring their Jamaican stylings to the Blind Pig (208 S. First) at 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $12.50 (in advance), probably a little more at the door. Score a bag, bring a friend and get lost in the musical sunsplash. WIE WILL ON MARCH 15TH! School of Business Payton Acct. Center, Room 1016, 5:00 p.m. SUMMER JOBS DCC WAREHOUSE OUTLET CO M PU T ER SP EC IA L ' iI" 1,T '" L nder l Qualifications: employment period - June 1 to August 13 *at least sophomore standing at time of application must be available two week-day mornings each .experience with workshop presentations, teaching week during spring and summer terms. -part-time postitions available as -co-facilitate discussion groups for incoming i + A nnl a Mar TTev I I I i i