4 -- The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, September 15, 1994 Violence isn't new Cohens kill, too Kunous raps heartily" Chance has made his career By ALEXANDRA TWIN Between "Natural Born Killers," "Killing Zoe" and the highly-antici- pated "Pulp Fiction," it is apparent Hom Entertainment that the milieu of ultra-modem vio- lence films, not to mention most of the fall film season, while we're at it, is very much under the distinctive and resounding stomp of one Quentin Tarantino. But pre-"Reservoir Dogs," say circa 1990, the scariest possible depiction of modem-day violence lay not in the exploits of the ordinary but in the everyday of the extraordinary, namely, the Mafia. In a time when, forevery "Good Fellas" (1989), there was an "Innocent Blood" (1991), "Miller's Crossing" (1988), Joel and Ethan Coen's fine contribution to the modern Mafia flick stands as a some- what startling, if comparatively pas- sive original. Not quite so many films about the Irish mob, these days. It's all Vinny or Guido or Corleone. Tommy, the strik- ingly handsome lady-killer/ mobster played by Gabriel Byrne, the strik- ingly handsome actor/director is the number two man and top advisor of noted Irish Mob boss Leo (Albert Finney). Leo's in charge, but he never makes a move without Tommy and he never questions what Tommy preaches. Tommy is smart and resil- ient, your perfectly studded Mafia in a time when, for every "Good Fellas" (1989), there was an "Innocent Blood" (1991), "Miller's Crossing" (1988), Joel and Ethan Coen's fine contribution to the modern Mafia flick stands as a somewhat startling, if comparatively passive original. guy, but just wary enough and weary enough of his situation to earn points as the secretly-sensitive guy, a trait that lets him ease nicely into the ad- mirable, if predictable role of anti- By DUSTIN HOWES Straight from the streetdown from the get-go; ain'tadamn thing changed. Kurious is an average guy, in person and on wax, a rarity in the hip-hop world. Can average be a good thing? He's not necessarily average in a musical sense, he can "top-of-the- dome" rhyme like very few on wax, to which anyone who listened to WCBN the night he was in town can testify. He is also extraordinary in that he has come straight from the ghetto to suc- at Def Jam - I didn't care about Def Jam, you know, I wasjust like'What'd you got to carry?' and he was like 'Envelopes.' I said, 'All riiiight!' (snaps his fingers)"From there he got to know Pete Nice and others who had heard about him kickin' it on open mikes around the city. The rest is his story. And his roots shine through the tracks on his first release, "a consti- pated monkey." Kurious said, "... it's showin' real street, like how we chill, cess on wax - a one in a million. He is average in the sense that he is notpretentious, not anti-preten- tious, he isjust ... himself - the guy from around the way. His al- bum isn't the most sexist but it's notP.C. either, it's not the n a day when over- blown, macho, primpin' and pimpin' rappers saturate the market, his honest averageness is . . well, refreshing. it's not some staged, gimmick with guns ...*if this was to be, (my first and) last album ... I want to come natural, so I drop all the ego bullshit and I just come up with what means somethin' tome" So the album flows. Kurious Gabriel Byrne menaces a fence with all of his vicious anger. The Young Womens Health Project University of Michigan Medical Center FEMALE VOLUNTEERS NEEDED The Young Women's Health Project is conducting an ongoing, federally-funded study of nutrition and its impact on menstrual function. Subjects are needed who have experienced or are regularly engaged in any of the following behaviors: " binge eating " intense dieting or fasting " vomiting or other types of purging If you are interested, and you are a sophomore woman, you may be eligible to participate. For further information, please contact Eva Rosenwald, Project Coordinator at 936-4867. All subjects will be paid for their participation in this project. I1 hero: the tough guy with too much heart. Both Leo and Tommy are involved with the glamorous, manipulative Verna (Marcia Gay Harden). Both men threaten to marry her at varying times throughout the film. Both men also protect her weasel of a brother, Bernie (John Turturro), albeit reluc- tantly, from the fervor of rival mobs, furious with his shady bookie skills and lack of good taste. Whereas Tommy knows exactly what grift Verna's on, so bewitched is Leo by her dominating, earthly charms as to wholly misjudge the dragon lurking beneath. He's a sucker that can't see past the lipstick and he suffers for it. Although it is Verna that eventu- ally draws the two men apart, it is the shards of his own serrated ideals that have been digging at Tommy for a while. Thrust into the torrent of an all- out gang war, Tommy finds himself pitted against Leo, pitted against Bernie and therefore Verna, even pit- ted against the disseminating memory of his own ironically-ideal tenure as the mobster who never killed anyone. Prominent, yet rarely over-stated performances from the principles serve to give the characters and ultimately the film the impermeable backbone it occasionally lacks. Equally strong are the supporting players, including Jon Polito, J.E. Freeman and character ac- tor-extraordinaire Steve Buscemi, a later Tarantino recruit. Ultimately, it all comes down to the exquisite writing and quality of execution. The Coen Brothers, never ones to squirm in the arms of precari- ous circumstances, find just the right balance of excess and near-manical restraint. The extent of violence in these character's lives is given it's fair play. It is the means by which the necessity of this violence is commu- nicated that draws the broader pic- ture. It's a distinction that Oliver Stone would have done well to have taken to heart before over-running the highly stylized "Natural Born Killers." Stripped to what it is- a low impact yet highly inflammable foray into modern-day violence-"Miller's Crossing" is an easy step in, a clear pro-genitor of the afore-mentioned Tarantino season and a polishable gem of its own. slammin'est ever but it's no slouch, his lyrics aren't amazing but they hold their own. In a day when over- blown, macho, primpin' and pimpin' rappers saturate the market, his hon- est averageness is ... well, refreshing. His life, and his music, reflects a working teen/man (now 23) who ended up with an album. From uptown Manhattan, he started kickin' lyrics with the fellas around 1983 andupto 1989 neverhad any aspirations to get on wax, it was "just for fun, you know." Into rap from the begin-".. It's sho, ning, Kurious wit- street, iike nessed the whole shebang as it was Chill, it'S 11 born from the staged, gi streets of New York. "Before guns ...,ifs 'Rapper's De- be (my firs light' even came out, the older kids album I... in my building come natu would have tapes of rap ... like in all the ego the clubs and stuff I just comi before rap actually got on wax ... so I what mean grew up on hip- to me. hop." Yet this freestyler, who just kicked it around the way and grew up on the vibe was not thinking wax -he was just livin' the life. 1w i0i td ) b ei raps about everything from drinkin' forties and smokin' blunts to school and his dog Samson, he samples his favorite album of all time (the Jungle Brothers' Straight Out the Jungle), and he kicks lyrics with the fellas (including The Grim Reaper to Ca- sual). He pretty much comes off like he is - another fella from the CM crew. What's the CM crew? "... back in the days people around my block were called 'CM', like with graffiti and shit like that, but it rin' real standed for any- fin ralthing, like how we Criminal M i n d e d, t some Chainsaw Mas- mick with sacres, Child Molesters, you iS Was to know what ever and) last you wanted it to vant to Representin' his Ri, so i drop block came to be part of the 5ulishit an d album's title al- up with most by chance, but since a somethin' Kurious is so. much one of the boys it is alto- - KuriOUS getherappropri- ate that one of his fellas came up with the name. "... so Zev Love X from KMD ... he's the one who actu- ally made up 'constipated monkey' the name 'cause ... he played me this old Last Poets type tape, 'Just sittin' at the bar starin' into an empty bottle like a constipated monkey' he was like, 'That's dope, right?' And I was like 'Yeah' and then I was like 'Oh shit, constipated monkey -C.M.'.. and it just fit so well forme 'cause my See KURIOUS, Page 6 I A Symposium on Someone else's good fortune would have a hand in the life of Kurious -his friend was moving up from messenger boy at Def Jam records. "I needed a job, I had a mes- senger job ... but I was carrying big bags of fabrics and stuff, I'm not really built for that shit (laughs) ... They need(ed) a new messenger over MIC H IGAN'S LARGEST FUTON MANUFACTURER 'THE fRIGIous IG HT ANDTHE fFiqs'TAtiEzMENvT Saturday, September 17, 1994 10:00 A.M. - 12 Noon (9:30 A.M. Coffee and Donuts) Presentations by Russ Bellant Bellant is an investigative reporter currently completing a book on the influence of the religious right in Michigan politics. He has conducted investigative research on far right political groups and religious cults for news organizations, including NBC News, 60 Minutes, and the New York Times. Lore A. Rogers Ann Arbor Attorney Lore A. Rogers, is also Chair, American Civil Liberties Union, Washtenaw County; Chair, Public Law School, Washtenaw Trial Lawyers Association; and Board member, Washtenaw County Bar Association FIRST UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALIST CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR 1917 Washtenaw at Berkshire PUBLIC INVITED Sponsored by the Jackson Social Welfare Committee of the First Unitarian-Universalist Church of Ann Arbor AV AVAVATAYALAVAAAYA RH Is: LIBRARIES WHERE You LIVE YOU'RE AT THE ONLY UNIVERSITY WITH RESIDENCE HALL LIBRARIES (RHLs) - LIBRARIES WHERE You LIVE. You DON'T HAVE TO KNOW HOW TO USE LIBRARIES TO USE YOUR RHL - wE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU LEARN. WERE CONNECTED THROUGH MIRLYN AND SALE*SALE*SALE Diamond Back TOP ANG A Suggested Retail 449.00 359 Diamond Back OUTLOOK suggested Retail 229.00 . 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