7mdWI~ flf±dL±.~b*.AA ~A±L~. a Get 'Down' Like hey, daddy-o that Beat Generation class just keeps on presenting great films at the Michigan Theater. This week it's Jim Jarmusch's "Down By Law," the namesake of a pretty hip band. Cross "Waiting for Godot," "Deliverance" and "Kiss of the Spider Woman," and you come close to the cultural goulash that is this film. As a bonus, Tom Waits costars and scores the movie. By all means, go ahead and check it out. Page 5 Wednesday, February S. 1995 Empty 'Mouth' feeds on style, irony A Michael Zilberman For the Daily There is one moment toward the finale of "In the Mouth of Madness" when youjustknow that your brain is in the hands of skilled professionals. You see the movie that the film's hero, John Trent, sees- starring John Trent in the role of John Trent and adapted from a novel about John Trent, *hich John Trent did his best to pre- vent from being written. No, I don't exactly follow it either. At least this is how "Madness", the latest John Carpenter offering, wants you to feel when you leave the theater: dizzy and not quite sure what you just witnessed. On apurely emotional level, the movie overwhelms you from the first frame. As soon as you start think- ing about it, it falls apart. "Madness" opens in an asylum, a sinister structure right out of Fritz In the Mouth of Madness Directed by John Carpenter, with Sam Neill and Julie Carmen At Showcase Lang, where Trent (Sam Neill), in a padded cell, narrates his story to an official-looking visitor. In the hour- long flashback that follows, we see Trent, a prosperous private detective, hired by a publishing house to find Sutter Cane, a horror writer who "out- sells Stephen King," and whose prose is said to have a strange impact on sensitive readers. Cane mysteriously disappeared just before the release of his latest oeuvre, titled, you guessed it, "In the Mouth of Madness". As- sured he is about to be used in an elaborate publicity stunt, Trent ac- cepts the job, promptly finds secret maps hidden in the cover art of Cane's paperbacks (uh-huh), and ends up in Hobbs End, a sleepy New England town that is prominently featured in Cane's stories but doesn't exist on any map. There, Trent encounters Children Of The Corn-style kiddies and innkeepers that tend to mutate into slimy creatures at night. Cane's malevolent fantasies use the town as a passage into our world. Loose ends dangle from all sides of the plot like the tentacles of the rubber monsters it incorporates. Even if Cane's writing is charged with mysterious powers, how come the cheesy cover artwork has the same effect? What are Cane's motivations (he doesn't aspire to rule the world, he simply trashes it)? How do you explain that the movie-within-the- movie, filmed while Trent lay tied up in a violent ward, stars John Trent, not an actor playing John Trent? You decide. "Madness" doesn't bother to answer any of the questions it poses, instead opting for a numbing cycle of "and then he woke up" resolutions. Visually, "Madness" is as stylish as popcorn flicks get, blending tech- niques of two genres unlikely to inter- breed. Neill and Julie Carmen (as his confused companion) make a nice film noir couple - she's had some training in "Kiss Me A Killer," he was born to play ajaded detective. As for the things that go bump in the night, special effects courtesy of In- dustrial Light and Magic are inten- tionally old-fashioned and hokey - so hokey that they, like the tinny spacecraft of the "Flash Gordon" re- The movie overwhelms you from the first framo. As soon as you start thinkifng about it, it falls apart make, inspire pleasant nostalgia for the days when horror was cheap, na- ive -- and effective. The feeling is enhanced by a clip from the infamous B-flick with its gorilla-suited guy try- ing to pass of as an alien. Compared to this pure schlock, "Madness," in its forced sophistica- tion, serves only as a reminder of how deep in trouble the horror genre is these days; it is stuck in a seemingly never-ending revisionist stage, eye- ing itself with pointless and desperate irony so perfectly captured in Sam Neill's sarcastic smirk. Not even insanity and body paint can mar the natural beauty of Sam Neil in director John Carpenter's new psycho-horror drama extravaganza "In the Mouth of Madness." Too bad the film doesn't make much sense. uwe e na~fLvin. te~enicaE!i ,imuihtim Baker drops into the Fold 'Merry' Shakespearean fun in 'Windsor' flu E~mn McKAr . . By Matt Benz Daily Arts Writer Nicholson Baker's literary forays Inge from the sublime to the ridicu- lous -from his article of last year in "The New Yorker" concerning the slow death of the card catalog system within America's libraries to his criti- cally acclaimed 1992 novel, "Vox," which has to do with phone sex. The latter, as Mr. Baker himself described it, is "a conversation between two people" which he felt would be Officultto bring across in live readings, such as those that he is currently giving to promote his latest novel. "I would have to cart around two toy telephones and be the man and be the woman," he said. "Of course I could have traveled around with my wife, but no one wants to hear phone sex between married people." Perhaps people will instead like to bar about the life of a man who, in Tourth grade, discovered his ability to as he did with "Vox." Still, the best part for him will remain the question and answer session that follows. "I find out what people actually think of me," he said. "I learn, to a degree, whether my thoughts are shared or not shared, where I'm nor- mal and where I'm idiosyncratic." One of the more entertaining as- pects of "The Fermata" is the idiosyn- cratic nature of Arno. He is a man who revels in the little things of his everyday life as a temporary office worker. He appreciates a female co-worker, who has just given him a business-related memo, "for not writing 'Thanks' on her note and not using an exclamation point." ForBaker, now 38, much of this is autobiographical. He made a short-lived career out of oil analysis ("I thought it would be cool to have a non-writer kind of job," he admitted), following his gradua- tion from Haverford as an English major. Thereafter, he worked at some 30 different companies as a temp where he "learned a great deal not just about office supplies and staples but about what can go wrong in offices and different characters. I've got thou- sands of pages of notes, conversa- tions and things." There was for him, just as there is for Arno, acertain allure to transcribing microcassettes. "I had alotoffun decid- ing whether a given clause merited a full semicolon or a dash or whether it was really two sentences. I could bring that to quite a scholarly decision." Baker tried his hand briefly at tech- nical writing, but returned to fiction rather quickly with no small amount of 'joy and euphoria."Still, he cautioned, "It's not an easy way to make a living. You're just a slave to the next piece; you finish one, and then the next month or next week you write another." Of his essays that have appeared in "The New Yorker" and "Atlantic Monthly," a notably popular one has to do with the increased computerization of library card catalogs across the na- tion. In it, he argues not for their practi- cality but for their value as bearers of anecdotal history. Each catalog is "a asWetelthe studentsneeded totackle "The Fermata" - the lost Police album? part of the history of that library. There are a lot of people working in libraries now who really havenohistorical sense. Fortunately, a couple of places, as a result of the article or as a result ofsome of the shier, historically-minded librar- ians, have successfully saved all orsome catalogs." To this he added with a short laugh, that there are "all sorts of satis- factions for the industrious writer." Presently though, it is fiction that holds his sway. "I like writing each book, and I get a little rest period," he said. "I seem to write best in the fall, and then I spend spring doing all the things I guiltily put off in the fall." In creating Arno and the world of "The Fermata," Mr. Baker enlisted the help of Suzanne Vega, playing hermusic "very loud" as he wrote. "I wanted to change the tone of my narrator slightly; make him a person who wasn't exactly me-farther away from me than some of my earlier characters." He also has evolved a system, of sorts, to keep track of the little details in life that are scattered throughout "The Fermata" and similar such liter- ary bric-a-brac that he hope to include in future books. "Ihave alotofmanila folders, hundreds of them now, and the trick is to relate one folder to another," he explained. "It's very hard to take a whole heap of notes and then somehow to put them on single thread, but that's the fun part, too." "Our inner lives are interesting," he continued. "So Ijust try to, maybe, find the places that are interesting." One always thinks of Shakespeare's plays as challenging, whether for their iambic pentameter, multiple characters of similar names, or complex mirroring of contemporary society. However, when being brought to the stage, even more complications arise. The plays were intended for performance, but when seen in play form rather than read as a text, elements are very much left in the hands of the creative forces behind the scenes. This is definitely true in the case of the University Players' latest of- fering, "The Merry Wives of Windsor," running this Thursday through Sunday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. One of the more challenging ob- stacles that confronted dramaturg Bert Cardullo and director John Neville- Andrews was how to make the play fresh. "As in any production of Shakespeare these days, you want to bring something to it that others have not," explained Cardullo, a professor in the Department of Theatre and Drama. "What was most important to us was to try to do a more or less faithful production, but we agreed that most productions of 'Merry Wives' that ei- ther of us had been in or seen had slighted the realistic element in the play. That is to say, the realistic depiction of contemporary economic and social re- lations between people." The comedy revolves around Sir John Falstaff, a former knight who has fallen on hard times. He seeks out the company of two married women -the merry wives themselves - Mistress Ford andMistress Page. The two women play along with him, infuriating Master Ford, who is ofajealous nature to begin with, and who doesn't know that the wives are just pretending in order to make a fool of Falstaff. Meanwhile, Master and Mistress Page are bargaining to sell their daugh- ter Ann in order to marry her to money, and MasterFord, suspicious of his wife from the outset, pays Falstaff to pursue her amorously in order to test her loy- alty to him. Shakespeare, and secondly, we needed a funny, pleasant, joyful Shakespeare for this particular slot in the season," said Neville-Andrews. "We felt that after Christmas, the weather can be extremely awful, and people tend to get depressed and develop cabin fever, so we thought a Shakespeare comedy would be good. Cardullo cited the fact that "Merry Wives" is seldom performed, and though it is aplay sometimes trashed by critics as Shakespeare's worst, he finds THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR Where: Lydia Mendelssohn Thearre; When: 8 p.m. tomorrow Sthrough Saturday. 2 P~m. Sunday Tickets: $16, $12 $6 students it endearing and appealing. "It's the only play of his that uses a contemporary English setting, sq it's closer to our idea of realism," he said. "It's set in (Shakespeare's) contempo- rary Windsor, and it contains numerous references - for example, the Garter Inn - to places that you can still visit." Another obstacle Cardullo and Neville-Andrews confronted was the presentation of money as motivation for the characters. "Falstaff and Fenton are the only aristocratic characters in the play and both of them are invading this community because they want to get some of this bourgeois money," Cardullo said. "This aspect of the play in every production I've seen or read about is lost. That's partly Shakespeare's fault. The thematic through-line is not present all the time, and the play becomes a kind of bedroom farce," Cardullo said. "It's far more than that, so we decided to emphasize (the monetary) parts of the play." The money issue also involves the play's treatment of women: the Pages want to marry Ann off to someone rich. Master Ford views his wife's supposed infidelity as a violation of his posses- sions. "What this play shows," Cardullo noted, "is that these middle-class women were, in essence, a kind of property. The female characters in this play, al- though very strong, are still confined by bourgeois marriage and are more or less bartered in the play." T'hough a comedy, "Merry Wives" promises to be complex as well as amus- ing. "You can take the comedy and the farce of this play and just present that, and that works quite well - people enjoy that, and they don't need to think any deeper," concluded Neville- Andrews. "We decided this time that we would look deeper into the play and see what else was there." drop into the Fold. As the character Arno Strine describes it himself, "A Fold-drop is a period of time of vari- able length during which I am alive and ambulatory and thinking and look- ing, while the rest of the world is stopped, or paused." Being the in- quisitive heterosexual that he is, Arno takes these opportunities to undress men, look at them and then replace tneir clothes just as they were before starting time back up again. With a title drawn from the musi- cal term for a pause, "The Fermata" is abook of which Baker is "perversely proud. It is a book that I took respon- sibility for." And so, while on tour to promote it, he will readpassages from the book, rather than from a prepared ,ay on the subject of reading aloud, YV I YYY Y I _ - i_ m