The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, October 6, 1994 - 3 Better Nate Than Never 'Olivier, Olivier' mirrors life, ignores fairy-tale ending Shear terror It takes a little more Prell to wash ose locks each morning. Only Weatherman White Rain will do. Just one squirt of Brylcream doesn't cut it anymore. People start confusing you with Crystal Gayle. People start con- fusing you with Cousin It. Your mom ends her letters with: "Maybe you could try and get a haircut tomorrow - it's been four weeks." Those are just some of the subtle Onts that remind us that it's time to take a little off the top. On a scale of enjoyable things to do, haircuts rank right between taking an oral Spanish exam and watching "Live with Regis and Kathie Lee." But it hasn't always been that way. Gone are the good old days when men went to a respectable barber who gave an efficient haircut, pausing to talk gout baseball or to ask about sideburn 'f'ngth. Gone are the days when women went to beauticians named Flo and spent the day in curlers with a deafening "Pigs in Space" dryer on their heads, but always managing to gossip about the locals and exchange casserole recipes. Gone are the days when kids got their locks trimmed by any relative or friend who could al- 'jost cut a straight line around a bowl. We now have the privilege of go- ing to places called "Sheer Cutting Edge Express" that consist of a dozen or so "hairstylists," one of whom will randomly assign themself to you. After spending 20 minutes reading People magazine or Highlights for Children, a stylist - usually named Ginny - approaches and says, "Did you want a haircut?" Wanting to y, "No, I thought this was One- our Martinizing," but remembering that Ginny can cut my scalp open, I say "Yes." The following conversation then ensues: Ginny: "So, how do you want it?" Me: "Basically, just shorter all over." Ginny: "OK. Do you wear your ir to one side?" Me: "Yes, where it's parted." Ginny: "OK. And do you want me to cover up the gray?" Me: "But doesn't that take an aw- ful long time?" Ginny: "Not with Just For Men." Me: "Wait. I'm not graying." Ginny: "Oh, OK. Did you want any sideburns?" Me: "Just as much as I have now." " (This last question is sometimes replaced with, "Straight across the ear?" which is hairstylistese for "I want to sweep your sideburns up off the linoleum tonight.") The haircut begins with the spray- bottle period and some stimulating conversation on the weather and then it dissipates (the conversation) as the actual cutting takes place. My mind .sually drifts off to topics like, "I wonder how high this chair can go," 'Do they really use all those kinds of :nousse," "That's sure a lot of ceiling iles" and "I hope she doesn't cut my Mar." That last concern is an important ane, as I've had my ear cut twice, by lifferent hairstylists. During the deli- .ate, final vibrating razor stage - ight before they take off the napkin ktie-the hairdresser's mind drifts *ff, probably to ceiling tiles and mousse as well, and then it's BZZZZZZ. "Oh, no!" the hairstylist exclaims, while wiping up blood with t le neck napkin. There is then an awkward conver- :.,ttion. Ginny (thinking "I went through this whole haircut and now I'm not tting a tip"): "I'm sorry. Are you Me (thinking "I hope I can get out of this place before she tries to shave my neck"): "I'm fine. Don't worry about it." But few hair traumas are as bad as By SARAH STEWART If art mirrors life, somewhere there's a disturbed family watching themselves in the 1993 French film, "Olivier, Olivier." Everyone else will find something masochistically in- triguing about director Agnieszka Holland's portrayal of a family that nobody could possibly envy but upon which everybody will effortlessly unleash their voyeuristic instincts. The first scenes of the film are somewhat deceiving. Young Olivier (Emmanuel Morozof) and Nadine (Faye Gatteau) romp through fields playing Martians and are tucked into bed by their loving mother, Elizabeth (Brigitte Rouan). At least for a while it's possible to disregard the father's (Francois Cluzet) abusiveness, the mother's blatant favoritism towards Olivier and the fact that not all is right in the Duval household. But come afternoon the following day, all hints of normalcy have disap- peared, along with Olivier, his bike and a red 49ers cap. Elizabeth goes off the deep end, leaving Nadine and Entertainment Center her father Serge to flounder in her wake. The next thing we know, six years have past, and Olivier has returned. Or so it seems. Anyway, everything seems better on the surface, but with all that's going on behind closed doors, the audience is not to be fooled. Presenting one shock after another, Holland makes heads reel. The fre- quent hints of incestuous tendencies between all combinations of mother, son and daughter are unnerving, as are the violent outbursts, both physi- cal and verbal, between mother and daughter. The almost gothic music that ac- companies many of these scenes and others seems too dramatic, yet the film often comes close to living up to it. The characterization of the older Olivier (Gregoire Colin) adds to the complexity of an already multi-di- mensional films. He's hard to place, as sometimes you're shaken by his youthful sensuality and other times you want to shake Elizabeth for being taken by the affection that we can recognize as insincere. Colin should be commended for succeeding in the difficult task of portraying a character who, as far as his family is concerned, is a blank slate with the mysterious qualities of someone who seems to have risen from the dead. One of the few inferior qualities of "Olivier, Olivier" is its brief, yet memorable, use of the supernatural. Although Nadine, the recipient of the powers, seems slightly bewitched throughout the film, itfs not until she stares at a shelf in the bathroom and consequently knocks it over that her true nature is revealed. This incident occurs too late in the film for it to deserve any legitimacy, making it a blemish on Holland's otherwise bril- liant film. In the end, which shall remain a secret, Holland doesn't disappoint. He spares nothing for the sake of delicacy throughout the film and is careful not to undermine this achieve- ment with a fluffy fairy tale ending. - C 662-.1313 235 S. State St. (at Liberty) Any Size rAny Flavor 250 OFF m-.- -- - J== Any Flavor - Any Size 250 OFF r Beer -24 Pack 50COFF - Limit 6 - COKE 3/$1 .1 12 oz. cans plus depost L "rn r.. EA College Rock Night! ...and yes, we do have 16 pound balls. 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