6- The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, March 30, 1995 Maniacal laughter rings in 'Brazil' By Michael Zilberman Daily Arts Writer There are two things to remember about Terry Gilliam's "Brazil" should you decide to rent it. A) It certainly Hoe~ Entertainment Center. does not star Robert De Niro, con- trary to what the movie's distributors would love you to think. De Niro does, however, show up in a cameo playing probably his most offbeat character ever, including Johnny Boy and Frankenstein's monster. B) "Bra- zil" is neither set in Brazil, nor does it have anything to do with that country. The title is culled from an annoying ditty on the soundtrack. The storyline is rather convoluted - the movie unfolds in a series of powerful but loosely connected se- quences. From what we are able to figure out, Sam Lowry, a humble gov- ernment employee, stumbles upon a minor mistake his department has made: due to a glitch in the system, a wrong man was imprisoned and ex- ecuted. Shocked by the discovery, Lowry embarks on a spiritual quest of sorts. The rest of the film involves terrorists, utility workers, nagging mothers, bureaucrats and dream se- quences in which Sam shows up as a winged superhero. The key to understanding "Bra- zil," as hinted at by the irrelevant title, is, bluntly put, forgetting about the plot. Like every dystopia after "Me- tropolis," "Brazil" employs the quest motive because it's the most conve- nient way to lead the Everyman hero through different levels of society. Sometimes, we just have to look past the actors, into the background of the frame where the real fun lies. The word "fun" is used since "Brazil" is about the only movie in its genre executed with a sense of humor. It relies on uncontrollable nervous giggles rather than on genuine laugh- ter, not unlike Scorsese's early work (maybe it's De Niro's presence, after all?). In fact, the humor of "Brazil" is downright disturbing. Paperwork lit- erally devours a man. Call the myste- rious "Central Services" to report an air conditioning problem and two sin- ister gnomes in uniforms will materi- alize in your kitchen and rip your apartment to shreds. The scene of the innocent man's arrest is at once gro- tesquely exaggerated in a way worthy of Abuladze's "Repentance" (the po- lice barge in through the holes in the ceiling) and matter-of-factly, even domestic (the immortal "This is your receipt for your husband, and this is my receipt for your receipt"). Else- where, a grieving widow might be shown at her husband's grave. Here, she is presented with a refund check. It is peculiar that "Brazil" is told entirely through the eyes of the system's functionary, not its victim, which only adds to the deadpan quali- ties of the narration. At some point, this indifference becomes more un- nerving than the pathos of "1984": After all, the latter's hidden purpose was to show the world what we've managed to avoid so far. In a tasteless gesture of public reassurance, it was even shot and released in '84. "Bra- zil" sets its story "somewhere in the 20th century, 8:45 p.m," and its real- ity, while less openly menacing, is also much more conceivable. It's hardly a mythical dictatorship - it's a system where the bureaucracy is blown up to monstrous proportions and services have grown completely faceless. Like it or not, "Brazil" is a logical extension of the basic tenden- cies of today. As if that wasn't enough, the film is weirdly stylized. It toys with the trappings of film noir, gathering all of its key motives: a quest, a mistaken identity case, a wrong man's execution, and then makes sure none of these actually lead any- where. With "Brazil," one can't even be certain whether it's a flaw or a strategy. The pace is jarring - the movie culminates at exactly the same pitch it began - but doesn't it add to the overall effect? Sam Lowry is not much of a character, his "dra- matic need", so to speak, isn't really established - then again, why should it be? At its worst, "Brazil" is a clever, acid political commen- tary. At its best, it pushes its narra- tive convolutions over the line into the realm of gleeful absurdity. *1 ACID JAZZ Continued from page 1. Spearhead (formerly of Disposable Heroes ofHypocrisy and The Beatnigs). Although not one, the acid jazz label and joint projects by jazz and rap artists, has joined these two art forms at the hip. There is now no question that the over-intellectualizing and tradition- alist consciousness which once kept jazz and rap separate is crumbling. Miles Davis, as he did for decades, led the jazz community when he hooked up with Easy Mo Bee (Big Daddy Kane, Rappin' Is Fundamental) for his last studio album, "Doo Bop." As 1995 began, the Pat Metheny Group inte- grated loops, however simplistic, into their new album "We Live Here." New jack jazz artists like guitar- ist Ronnie Jordan, poetess Dana Bryant and groups like the Groove Collective, the Soulsonics and Night Trains offer new flavors and a bet- ter understanding of how jazz and rap can work together, even if they do not have as much talent as the established artists. As hip-hop's rhythms permeate yet another genre, both jazz and rap breath fresh air. It's music that we were raised lis- tening to. It's always been in our homes. -Mecca (AKA Ladybug) from Digable Planets. We still babies to me. - Q-Tip As hip-hop reaches back and pushes forward simultaneously, the possibili- ties seem exciting and endless. Cutting edge rap groups are now composed of the personnel of a jazz quartet plus a DJ and a rapper while samplers are becoming commonplace tools for jazz artists. Caught in between the two are the innovative acid jazz artists who do not quite have the skills of the jazz artists and do not quite understand hip- hop like rap artists. This group has provided a forum for the meeting of two art forms, and it is here where innovation takes place. Latin influences are beginning to join the repertoire of acid jazz artists. Rap- pers are reaching back to the lyrical styles of the Last Poets. Togetherthese forces express an amalgamation of tra- ditions and innovations that will keep evolving into new forms and new ideas, carrying both jazz and hip-hop into the next century. Robert DeNiro isn't really in "Brazil" that much, even though its distributors would like you to think so. OCHS Continued from page 5 Mississippi mud" may fail to resonate in younger minds, the message remains clear: act now or face the consequences later. It is the passion of the music that comes through most of all in Ochs' work. He was obviously a man who cared deeply for his country and felt each misstep it took as if it was taken by a member of the family. It is not outrage that he vents in "That Was the President" but unadulterated sorrow, a sadness at a senseless tragedy. "Call it peace or call it reason/Call it love or call it treason/I ain't marching any- more," he sings in the title track, stating his ideology as clearly as anything he ever wrote: it was his love for the country that ultimately drove him, not just anger and cynicism. Love endures, cynicism does not and thus his work survives while that of so many other protest singers remain rightly buried permanently in that decade. Ochs went on to make another handful of records, each one com- ing up shorter than the last. A live record from 1965-66 sadly remains out of print, though much of it is available on Elektra's fine compila- tion, "There But For Fortune." He recorded three albums for A&M, all of which are unavailable in the States, slowly embracing more elaborate arrangements and more poetic lyrics, finding the burning passion of his early days occasion- ally but missing more frequently and sinking deeper and deeper into alcoholism and depression, unable to grasp why "the movement" col- lapsed into counter-culturalism and apathy. On April 9, 1976, Ochs killed him- self in New York. His music survived him, however, living on in the work of artists like the Clash, Billy Bragg and Tracy Chapman. Now that his two most important works are available once again, there is no excuse for failing to embrace one of the best and most dedi- cated of the protest singers. PAID ADVERTISEMENT DENVER COLORADO Numerous Opportunities Exist for Michigan Professionals Colorado's employment picture continues to remain bright for the first quarter of 1995. On February 28th, the 4.9 billion dollar Denver International Airport opened. 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