ENETIMN 0 You lkig 'bout my Shattering TheMyth a i generation?) The screenwriter, director and stars are all twentysomething. So how well does Reality Bites portray us *. D en director Ben UR NaStiller's Reality Bites made its debut at the Sundance Film festival in January, it was tout- ed as "the twentysomething film we've all been waiting for." Moviemakers had already decid- ed that this film should define the values, concerns, fears and ambitions of our age group. And the world waits... Fearing a backlash from the intended audience, Stiller and screenwriter Helen Childress have since played down the movie's generational implications. They maintain Reality Bites is a love story, and people our age will relate to the charac- ters. "We've been kind of shying away from calling it a generational movie; they're trying not to market it like that," says Helen Childress, the film's 23-year-old screenwriter. "The danger is you say you're doing one thing, and then you don't do it, and you're kind of busted." Reality Bites is a comedy and a love story about people in their 20s. The film's central character, Lelaina Pierce (Winona Ryder), and her close friends (Ethan Hawke, Janeane Garofalo and Steve Zahn) graduate from college as the film starts and are now caught up in the quest for a "real" job and economic independence. Only Lelaina's job (working at a television station) is mar- ginally career-oriented; her friends work at newsstands and at The Gap. The fact that Lelaina was valedictorian of her university is no help in employ- ment and, in one scene highlighted in the film's trailer, is regarded as a hin- drance. She and her friends wonder how to make it, how much of their pride they'll have to swallow, and what they should believe in. These characters are extrapolated from Childress' circle of friends at the U. of Southern California, where she attended the film school. After she applied everywhere (including Wendy's) for a job, and was turned down, Childress became frustrated when she learned her friends were being rejected as well. "We're intelligent, pretty well-edu- cated people," she shakes her head, "and we're not finding jobs anywhere." What had begun as a romantic come- dy began to take on generational impli- cations. "Articles started appearing and I realized more people were going through the same thing," Childress says. "I thought it would be great if this movie would validate people and make them feel like 'OK, I'm not alone."' Childress attributes her immediate success with her script to timeliness. "I think it was honestly right place, right time. Certain elements fell into place. Winona responded to the material." After the highly successful actress signed on, Childress found herself in the enviable position of working as a screenwriter for a major studio. "Getting a job, I wrote about not having one," she laughs. Some experiences in Reality Bites are easy for people our age to identify with and relate to. Characters in the film hang out watching syndicated reruns, deal with unstable relationships and eat by charging food to their parents' gas cards. Childress obviously identifies with most of these experi- ences, but a few she identifies with more than others. "I'm ashamed to say this, but [I identify most] with the scene where they're getting stoned, the conversa- tions, what they're talking about." The question remains whether the movie is the defining film of a genera- tion. The answer is a qualified no. While people of our age can recognize and relate to many of the characters' concerns and actions, inconsistencies pile up because the film exaggerates for laughs and stereotypes for brevity. Instead of playing up the more subtle aspects of being part of our generation, the film tends to lump us together as a directionless mass of freeloading fast- food workers. While the roots of these situations may be in reality, despite a young direc- tor, writer and actors, the finished prod- uct isn't wholly indicative of twen- tysomething life. Lelaina charges $900 to her gas card, spends way too much time and money on 900-numbers, and every parent in the film is a caricature. Childress explains the departure from reality as the byproduct of comedy. "They were exaggerated for effect," she says. "[The film] wouldn't have got made at all if the plot was styled down or the laughs were styled down." Childress says the parents were much more developed in the original drafts but were phased out by the studio in favor of a more linear plot. Stiller, also an actor in the film, defends some of the decisions that leaned in favor of a romantic comedy over commitment to a generational film. "I wanted it to be a love story at the end of the day," he says. "I wasn't worried about making generational statements." Although Reality Bites may not end up being the defining film of our genera- tion, it does have other things to offer. Both the soundtrack and the presence of popular young talents make this roman- tic comedy one that will attract many viewers from our age group. In addition, Reality Bites was written with an optimistic message in mind, one that Childress hopes viewers take home with them. She says while the Vietnam genera- tion deconstructed many of the belief systems central to Americans for decades (God, country and family), the post-Vietnam generation lacks these seemingly vital values and beliefs. "It's up to us to start inventing new myths. "The film asks, 'What is there to believe in?"' says Childress. "And I guess the answer in the film is each other, and love, and be[ing] true to yourself." People expecting to identify with this film as they did with so many of John Hughes' films of the '80s or Cameron Crowe's more recent Singles may have a more difficult time with this one. Those who have waited this long for the defining film of Generation X just may have to wait a little longer. UI At Iowa State U., if a virgin walks under a certain tower, a brick is supposed to fall on her head. However, few, if any, such accidents have been reported to the campus hospital. At the U. of Wisconsin, senior Eric Fair says, "There's a statue of Abraham Lincoln on Bascom Hill. If a virgin walks in front of thestatue, Abe will rise up out of his chair. "Of course," he adds, "I haven't seen him walking around." Almost every college has its own stories, its own collection of strange and bizarre campus myths. They begin as rumor and, as they are passed down to incoming classes ' (full of gullible freshmen), graduallyM become part of the school's history. According to Jan Brunvand, a professor of English and folklore at the U. of Utah, any group of people which gets together in one place ends up developing legends. Brunvand began tracking urban legends three decades ago to illustrate to his stu- dents that oral culture is alive and well in the information age. "Many of my students thought folklore was something from the past," he says. "I wanted to show them that they knew folklore, too." Virgin myths are just one variety of leg- ends popular among students. Sarah Evans, a sophomore at Butler U., heard a story about a fraternity house at her school that was abandoned by its members 99 years ago. "This is a true story," Evans says. "They were more like a cult than a fraternity. They did a lot of weird stuff - rituals and maybe Satan worship. Then they sexually assaulted their house mother and she ended up pregnant." According to the story, the fraternity was banished from campus for 100 years, mak- ing them eligible to return next year. But Brunvand doesn't think Butler U. has too much to worry about. He says any story that begins, "This is a true story," probably isn't. Have you heard the one about the lipstick on the mirror? Neil Grant, a sophomore at Iowa State, says "a friend of a friend" told him this one: A student, returning to her dorm room, finds the door ajar. Nothing seems out of order, except that the closet door is slightly open. Afraid to look inside the closet, the student leaves quickly for the library. Several hours later, she returns to find police and an ambulance outside her building. In her room, she finds the mutilated body of her roommate and a mes- sage written in lipstick on the mirror saying, "You should have looked in the closet." According to Harry Oster, who teaches folklore at the U. of Iowa, "The most popular legends are those that tell of horrifying or extraordinary circumstances. People are always interested in the strange or the hor- rible." Oster says these kinds of horror stories may serve a purpose for both the teller and the audience. "From a psychological view they bring out people's deepest fears," he says. "Expressing them out loud takes the edge off the fear." , ' ' Y : + ; 4 1 :lit I w t rrectness TALLAHASSEE, FLA. - Last fall, Gerald Gee, professor of public relations at Florida A&M, said the phrase "nig- ger mentality" during a classroom discussion. This fall, he wont be leaching there. The administration of Florida A&M, a historically black university, has decided not to renew his contract for the next academic year. "In part, his comment had something to do with our decision," says Provost and Vice President Richard Hogg. Gee, who is while, explains, "I told [the class] I was about to say something and use a term that is offensive to me and I suspect to [students], too. I said, 'A person who does not take advantage of opportunities that are there or who doesn't make opportunities for themselves and others, has a kind of 'nigger' mentality - the sort of thinking that can keep one on the back of the bus, forever."' In a letter to the administration, seven of Gee's stu- dents said his remarks were "detrimental to his rela- tionship with many students in our class." * Sharla Head, The Famuan, Florida A&M FLAGSTAFF, ARIZ. - White male professors at Northern Arizona U. are crying foul because the univer- sity gave raises to minority and female faculty only. Last May, a university study found that 75 female faculty and 208 male faculty qualified for raises. Of the 75 female candidates, all 11 minorities and 58 of the white faculty members received raises. Of the 208 male candidates, only the 16 minorities received raises. The raises ranged from $183 to $6,945 per year. Nearly 150 of the white male faculty are pressing a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. "We did it to protect the rights of the affected facul- ty," says Bob Poirier, a political science professor who filed the complaint. The group is considering filing a lawsuit against NAU for civil rights violations. Interim NAU President Patsy Reed says that former President Eugene Hughes gave the raises to correct long-standing pay differences between white male fac- ulty and female and minority faculty. "The university has not found any of the actions to be unlawful," Reed says. She notes, however, that the fac- ulty senate is conducting an investigation to be report- ed in April. Lukas Velush, The Lumberjack, Northern Arizona U. TUSCALOOSA, ALA. - For most of last football season, the marching band at the U. of Alabama carried flags with crosses on them as part of a halftime show cele- brating the Old South. But late in November, they returned from Thanksgiving break to find that the crosses had been removed. Apparently, some students had complained about the crosses, and several alumni had suggested "that the use of the flags seemed to suggest an endorsement for a particular religious faith in the show," says Don Crump, assistant vice president for academic affairs. "We felt that we might have been offensive to some people," says Band Director Kathryn Mann. "Since we're there to entertain, we decided to remove them. Our intent is not to preach a message." Stephanie Aldrich, a senior and captain of the band's color guard, says band members felt the decision was "kind of ridiculous. I think this is kind of taken to an extreme." * Sean Kelley, The Crimson White, U. of Alabama Medical students seem to be prime targets for mor- bid stories. According to one, Boston medical students stole the arm off of a cadaver, put it in a jacket sleeve with a dollar bill sewn between the index finger and the thumb, then extended the arm - with the money attached - to a toll taker on the Tobin Bridge. When the man took the money, legend has it the whole arm fell into the booth. Brunvand says the tollbooth story can be traced as far back as the 1930s. Students also perpetuate myths related to academics. Ask any group of students how long you have to wait for a professor to show up for class and you'll probably get a variety of answers. "I think it's 10 minutes," says junior Jeff Burke. "It's in some book or something." Junior Jeannie Young heard differently. "For a pro- fessor, I thought it was 15 minutes," she says. "For a teacher's assistant, I think it's 10. The professor gets more time because he might be busier." Brunvand says there is no such waiting limit. He also says he's never heard of a school that actual- ly implemented the infamous "suicide rule." But don't try telling that to Iowa sophomore Annabelle Garcia, who believes it wholeheartedly. "If your roommate [commits suicide], you get a 4.0." Garcia says. "I hope my roommate dies tomorrow." U u aByaTory Brecht, The Daily Iwan, U. of Iowa MARCH 1994 MARCH 1994 ZU " U. Magazine U. Magazine " 9