RTS 0 'Gus' the dog and Astin can't rescue sorry 'Will' By ALEXANDRA TWIN DO NOT BE ALARMED. THIS IS ONLY A QUIZ. YOU ARE NOT BEING GRADED. WE ARE SIM- PLY CHECKING FOR SIGNS OF INTELLIGENT LIFE FORMS ON Iron Will Directed by Charles Haid; written by John Michael Hayes, Djordje Milicevic and Jeff Arch; with Mackenzie Astin THIS CAMPUS. WE ARE MORE THAN CONFIDENT THAT THEY EXIST. HOWEVER, AN ANSWER KEY HAS BEEN PROVIDED FOR YOUR USE. READ EACH QUES- TION CAREFULLY BEFORE AN- SWERING. YOU MAY BEGIN. 1. "Iron Will" is a) about a boy named Will, who has an iron deficiency problem and is cruelly mocked for it. b) actually not a film, but a highly informative infommercial about the positive effects of iron, as in "Iron will ... make you feel zesty." c) the story of a tenacious boy named Will, whose dreams of com- peting in the Iditarod, a dog sled race in Alaska, not only come true, but serve to make him a national hero. answer: C - Young Will Stoneman's dad dies tragically. In his desk drawer is found an ad for the Iditarod competition. It is circled. This prompts young Will to abandon his dreams of college in the hopes of entering and winning the race to save the farm. 2. The winner of the race receives a$10,000prize. This appeals to young Will because a) there are a couple of babes he knows of down in Reno. The sooner he gets the cash, the sooner he gets there. Party! b) his mom's been threatening to sell the family farm in order to pay off dead dad's debt. Not only would this be distressing to everyone, but there's a particular chicken whom young Will has grown attached to. c) his sister is dying of some rare, unidentifiable disease and her last request is to meet that red-headed guy from the Encyclopedia Brittanica commercials. Young Will is hoping to bribe him with the money. answer: B - There is always a farm to be lost and a hero to be made. At least at Disney. 3. We know that Will is a hick because a) before the race starts, he offers to milk anyone's cow if they'll lend him the $8 he needs for the entrance fee. b) He wears "Hick"jeans instead of Levi's. c) His best friend's name is Ward. answer: C - Anyone named Ward is a hick. Anyone who is friends with anyone named Ward is a hick. 4. Mackenzie Astin got the part of Will because a) the producers remembered him from his cheeky role of Andy, the orphan boy,on "The Facts of Life." b) he's the son of Patty Duke and the little brotherof Sean "Rudy" Astin. c) they couldn't get anyone else. Did we mention that he's Rudy's brother? answer: All three. Although the big appeal was definitely the "Rudy" factor. 5. The most intelligent character in this film is a) young Will b) that strange Indian guy who sporadically appears to offer advice and miscellaneous flashbacks when Will's trying to sled. c) Gus. answer: C - Unquestionably, it is Gus, Will's lead dog, who is the most intelligent. Not only did he spend the first half of the film trying to bite young Will, but he spent the second half of the film trying to act sorry about it . A sell-out? Not at all. Gus simply realized, "Hey. This is Disney. Why not save time? We're gonna be hugging each other, wailing "I love you, man!" by the end, anyway." 6. The # 1 bad guy who threatens Will's dream and gives the film its main source of conflict is a) Borg, a fierce, competing dog- sledder from Sweden, who talks like he's from Germany (or Sesame Street) and whose unrelenting evil eventu- ally does him in. b) actually, his mother. She al- ways resented that damn chicken. c) another "Iron Will," the afore- mentioned iron deficiency boy, who, upon seeing his name splashed across the front page of every newspaper in the country, became paranoid, think- ing that he was being mocked on a national level. He became enraged, vowing to take revenge on the other Will, the source of his pain. answer: A - Bad guys are al- ways from Sweden. Sweden is evil. Just think of the Swedish Chef on "The Muppet Show." 7. You should see this film be- No matter how cute the pooch looks, try to resist the diabolical urge to see "Iron Will." cause a) For all it's flaws, it's kinda sweet and rather uplifting, especially when the whole town starts whistling Will's special whistle as he crosses the finish line. b) you are an eight-year-old boy. c) you know, that guy knows Rudy. answer: We'll leave that one up to you. However, it may be worth it to note that when the lights came up in the theater, the reviewer and her friend were the only two people still there who could neither claim to be an eight-year-old boy, nor the unfortu- nate relative of any eight-year-old boy in the audience. They were also the only two people laughing. Go figure. IRON WILL is playing at Showcase and Briarwood. Seeing 'Wax' worse than a bee sting Blair's tour-de-ego is barely intelligible, hardly entertaining I By CAMILO FONTECILLA Many myths surround bees. Con- sidered one of the most intelligent species of insects, the complexity of their lifestyle has fascinated entomolo- Wax (or the Discovery of Television among the Bees) Written and directed by, and with David Blair gists from ancient times to the present. They have developed elaborate ritu- als for all aspects of their life; from mating to tracking down food, noth- ing is left to random behavior. And of course, the creation of one of nature's most astounding living quarters, the hive, is one of their creative trade- marks. David Blair, the mastermind be- hind this bizarrejourney into the mind of a man, exploits the almost mystical nature of bees to create an allegory on war, hatred, religion, death ... and television.To dispel any possible con- fusion, the 'television' alluded to here is not the kind we are accustomed to. It is a communicative form of the spirit of the bees, the world seen through the eyes of these insects, a world different from ours, one in which the dead are plainly visible. David Blair is Jacob Maker, a NASA employee who in his spare time takes care of a hive left him by his grandfather. Early in the movie we are given the history of these bees, which were imported from Mesopotamia early in the century. The bees have esoteric powers brought University of Michigan School of Music over from the land of the Old Testa- ment, and instill in Maker the power to see the dead; in other words, they give him the gift of the Bee Televi- sion. The images and voices inside his head, provided by the Bee T.V., im- pel him to seek out a victim in the World below ours. You see, he is Cain, and the Bee T.V. is the mark of Cain. He therefore needs a victim to fulfill his new life. He treks through miles of atomic weapon testing grounds near Alamogordo, New Mexico, until he finds the entrance to this underground world, in which he will find the Tower of Babel and in it his victim. Along the way, he is given glimpses of the dead in the form of computer-generated letters, who lead him on the way to his goal. Sound ludicrous? It is. In the worst of early MTV styles, Blair's barely understandable musings in voice-over (the only voice in the film) mesh with wildly agitated images that bounce around the screen in hopeless attempts at sophisticated editing. It is under- standable that with a low budget the effects would be simple, but Blair is not even able to control what little he has. The images get the best of him, and become the only bearable aspect of this fantasy. But after having seen the Bee Television a few times (rep- resented by a rotating dodecahedron with images on each of its sides), even that becomes stale. The story is immensely far- fetched, and somewhat interesting from a philosophic-metaphysical point of view. But it is not, as Blair has very effectively shown, particu- larly stimulating movie material. When Maker becomes aware of -a darkness around him, the screen ac- quires a black frame created simply by reducing the size of the current * image. This is an example of a recur- ring problem in the film: whatever message is supposed to come across gets drowned in the 'kitsch' quality of the visuals. If one can get beyond the simplic- ity and insistent repetition of the im- ages of the film, it still seems unlikely that one could be enthralled by Blair's somewhat hallucinogenic ideas. The monotone of his voice does not help, and he just manages to look funny but not funny enough in his bee-sting protecting outfit walking through the desert whilst thinking "The dead want me but the suit will protect me." There is abriefcameo by William Burroughs as Maker's grandfather, but not quite worth the trip to the Michigan in this sub-freeze temperature. For fanatics of wax figures, computer generated geometry and stalactites only. WAX is playing at the Michigan Theater. Friday, January 21 Collage Concert 60 minutes of uninterrupted short pieces showcasing the School of Music's large ensembles, chamber groups, and soloists Contrasting works by Dukas, Rush, Saint-Satns, Vivaldi, Morrison, Shostakovich, Peck, Brahms, Adams, Wagner, Santos, Sarath, Bhatia, Butler, Doppman, Loesser, Takemitsu, and Walton Hill Auditorium, 8:15 p.m., free-doors open to the public at 7:55 Friday-Saturday, January 21-22 49th Annual Midwestern Conference on School Vocal and Instrumental Music Concerts by participating school groups throughout the day Hill Auditorium; also Rackham Auditorium, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, First Congregational Church, Power Center; free For session information, call 763-3333 Wednesday, January 26 Faculty Recital Martha Sheil, soprano (winner, 1989 American Wagner Association Prize); Martin Katz, piano Songs by R. Strauss, Beethoven, Copland, Britten, and Debussy Rackham Auditorium, 8 p.m., free University Dance Company Lecture/Demonstration Demonstration of dance pieces from the upcoming performance In the Spirit of Diaghilev, with a joint lecture by U-M Dance faculty Studio A Theater, Dance Building, 8 p.m., free Thursday, January 27 Second Annual Mozart Birthday Celebration Concert University Symphony Orchestra Gustav Meier, conductor; School of Music faculty soloists " Flute Concerto No. 1 in G, K. 313 (Leone Buyse) " Piano Concerto No. 15 in B-flat, K. 450 (Penelope Crawford) " Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat, K. 364 (Andrew Jennings, violin; Yizhak Schotten, viola) Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m., free SHIER, STARK TERROR GRIPS YOU IN U NDERWATER... , II! 'ul The Office o f ,lcaaeric}'vulticul tura I Initiatives is now taking applications for Student Leader positions for the Kingle3haveziParks college Day Spring Visitation program Application deadline is panuary 28 1994 Student leaders accompany visiting middle school students throughout the day serving as guides and role models while providing information about the college experience. Student leaders usually work in teams of three. They should be fairly out- going individuals and have a keen interest in and to-... ..a- 4..-. L . ..h...n -4..J,..n...' r i.,A rlrvv me nalno II PD~eAYIIDE. 11