24A - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 3, 1996 Stupid Trigger' shoots blan By Jon Petlinski Daly Fim Editor "The Trigger Effect." The title sounds damn tough, doesn't it? After walking into the theater and seeing all those previews, audience members will probably be expecting the action, gore and high drama that the title suggests. Wrong, wrong, wrong. What do we get instead? Nothing more than a heavy dose of stupidity and - of course - a bottle of amoxi- cillin. Annie (Elisabeth Shue) and Matt (Kyle MacLachlan) are happily mar- Kyle, Elisabeth and Dermot anticipate the ried: They've got an adorable baby girl, a place in suburbia, USA, friend- ly neighbors and a great friendship absurd film. with Joe (Dermot Mulroney), their It all begins when Matt drives to the construction worker friend whom pharmacy to pick up his amoxicilin for they've known since high school. dear baby's ear infection. The pharma- So far, everything's normal, right? cist cannot deliver the goods, though, Then, however, their kid gets an ear because the doctor cannot call in the infection - a minor problem - but prescription ... you know ... with the everything's still power outage and normal. all. Ahh, but no. REVIEW The normal That same night course of action, DUM-DAH- The Trigger Effect you ask? WAIT DUM-DUM . * FOR THE MED- A SEVERE ICINE. AN EAR BLACKOUT AtShowcase INFECTION IS SHUTS DOWN USUALLY NOT THE CITY FOR THE ENTIRE DEADLY. But let's follow our little for- WEEKEND. mula: Power Failure equals Mass Chaos So big deal, right? Well, someone and Disobedience. Matt steals it and should certainly tell that to writer / runs. director David Koepp. Most people Soon, the disorder is magnified. think that Power Failure equals Get- People steal things from others hous- out-the-candles-and-let's-play-a-fami- es; all the townspeople decide that ly-game-of-Monopoly-for-awhile. nothing is safe and that they must buy Koepp, however, has a different way of guns to protect themselves. Then, seeing things. In his book, Power they kill others with the guns they Failure equals evil, violent disorder have bought. and the spark of a trigger effect - his Many, including Matt, Annie and Joe formula and theme for this entirely take action and flee the town before it is Popular Belgian author leaps Stateside arrival of some angry moviegoers. too late. Come on. Let's give these peo- ple a break. We all know how power failures can be. And if you think that the plot is bad ... The actors and their character devel- opments are far worse. MacLachlan's Matt (looking very much like Chandler from "Friends") just cannot seem to make his character work for him. At first, he plays his anal retentive qualities to the perfect degree. Maybe we can see how his uptight, impatient behavior led to his-actions at the beginning. But, by the end of the film, ,we are astounded as to how a measly trigger effect could possibly carry this supposed man of reason so far. Elisabeth Shue has us even more in shock with her inadequate por- trayal of Annie - especially with the accolades and success of her last film "Leaving Las Vegas" fresh in our minds. Shue's Annie comes across as coy, immature and full of sexual innuendo. In no way can we even begin to believe she's a mother. In many scenes, Annie is more con- cerned with getting drunk, firing guns and flirting with her high school friend. Dermot Mulroney, unlike Shue and MacLachlan, doesn't leave much of an impression at all. Looking much like Joey from "Friends," his Joe just seems to be there, swept away with the masses by the unstoppable trigger effect. Let's put it all together - we've got both Chandler and Joey from Must- See-TV So maybe this movie is just a really bad episode of "Friends." Maybe this is Koepp's idea of a bad joke. Maybe tomorrow I'll see a pack of gum and steal it. Then just maybe there will be a power failure and Ann Arbor will erupt into mad chaos. We'll all get guns (because what else can one do in case of a failure?) and flee the town shooting each other. Maybe we're all stark raving mad and shouldn't have our doctors pre- scribe amoxicilin when we have ear infections. Or maybe (let's keep this point sim- ple), we just shouldn't pay six bucks to see crap flicks like this one. BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - At 28, Amelie Nothomb is the rising star of French writing. Her seriously weird novels sell like hot croissants, attracting a teen-age cult following and lavish praise from the Parisian literary estab- lishment. Now the Belgian diplomat's daughter wants to "storm the citadel" of the English language. Her fourth novel, a dark blend of humor and menace called "Les Catalinaires" is set for publication in the United States next year by Henry Holt under the working title "The Diatribe." Like her three previous books, "Les Catalinaires" was a major success in France, selling more than 50,000 hard- back copies since publication in September. "That's enormous for a book like that," says Sandrine Labrevois of Nothomb's Parisian publisher Albin Michel. Nothomb burst onto the scene in 1992 with "Hygiene de 'Assassin" ("Assassin's Hygiene"), the sinister tale of Pretextat Tach, an obese, octo- genarian writer with a murderous past. It sold 100,000 in hardback, many more in paperback and has been trans- lated into a dozen languages. Stage ver- sions have been performed around Europe. There's even an opera based on it. "I'm always asking myself, 'Why?' I thought I had written an elitist book," said Nothomb in an interview in her parents' Brussels apartment. "It seems this book can be read 100 different ways - as an intellectual novel, as a comedy, a thriller, a horror story." Nothomb turned to writing at the age of 17. Uprooted from a childhood spent mostly in Asia, she had just arrived in Europe, a lonely, anorexic teen-ager desperate to postpone adult- hood. "I prolonged my childhood with anorexia. The adult body still disgusts me," declares Nothomb who delights in communicating that disgust. Her books describe their grotesque characters in stomach-churning detail. "I'm attracted by extreme beauty and extreme ugliness," she says. "But it's easier to describe extreme ugliness." She admits to being obsessed w fat people and their food. In one passage of "Hygiene de ]'Assassin," the portly Pretextat Tach reduces a guest to a vomiting wreck by describing his eating habits. "For several hours," the character recounts with glee, "I boil pig's skin and feet, the rear ends of some chick- ens, bone marrow and a carrot. I add a ladle of lard. This broth I like to drink cold, after the fat has hardened forms a crust that makes your lips g. ten." Nothomb says writing helped her overcome anorexia. But her diet remains as odd as Pretextat Tach's. "I like rotten fruit, for example, when it starts to grow little green hairs." Before launching into her daily four hours of writing, this slender, dark-eyed woman breakfasts on cup after cup of strong black tea. "It makes me throw up. But it gis me the energy I need to write," she says. "The tea, together with the disgusting things I write about, means I have to stop often to vomit." Her writing has that effect on some critics. More than one has resorted to expletives to dismiss her work. One female critic has said she will slap Nothomb's face if they meet in the street. "They call me unbearable, prett tious, disgusting," says Nothomb. "It's strange. I thought my work, like most books, would provoke only indiffer- ence." Others laud her as the most promis- ing French-language novelist around. The literary magazine Lire voted "Les Catalinaires" 1995's book of the year. "She's insolent, very fresh, provc tive" according to Lire's editor PiUWj Assouline. "She has a humor and an irony that are very rare in today's French writing." Assouline has compared Nothomb to both Nobel Prize winner Samuel Beckett and the commercial horror writer Stephen King. A (in the courtyard shops, on the1 corner of Murfin and Pymouth>l J, Hours: Mon.-Sat. loam-ym 0 Sun. I lam4pm 761-1016 y47l " Comic Books (25% off Collector's Club) " Full line of trading cards including sports, non-sports and collectible card games (gaming tables available on Wed., Fri., & Sat.,lOam-6pmJ * Largest selection of starting line-ups and action figures in town * Apparel " And much more! 75rfo tds9309 S 75 1st topping FREE nlYOffer Ends 9-30-96 Only No coupon necessary. Plus delivery and tax where applicable. Not valid with any other offer. 11 Only 2 m Ho limit special offer for U of M students only 1752 Plymouth Rd. & Broadway 998-2600 "Pe@za TWO MEDIUMPIZZASi SUB MEAL DEAL $10.95! $4 95! only I only 2 Mam P*Large Sub ch edes P eSide Salad Cheeand 2 Toppings' £ .20 oz. Coke |--------- -- ------------ 4S/COURTYARD CAFE Turkish Cuisine * Michigan's only Turkish restaurant * Homemade vegetarian and meat dishes. * Quaint atmosphere. * Reasonable prices; perfect for a student budget. p-s t1' fHoPPJ FooD FUN FOOD SNOF ' D 25% off your order with this ad. 662-1711 1703 Plymouth Rd. In the Courtyard Shops Are you a student ot *AC hil eclure - C Avoid the crowds of central campus. c There's a store catering to C C' your specialty at North Campus: Located in the Pierpont Commons &&0&r^^^ - SUISLEY HALL- VA\ BAITS HOUSES - ARAT & AKCHITECTU AE - EN INEEKIN1 G -TMUSIC For your All signs information --fiefteReita point north, to "D" OficeThe Pierpont 'Oarpev,,eneiof Publc Safet toal Cet ; r Commons' -Student Countseing Services S B u "okote1967raa -University Cashaer sOfce Places to Eat T o- - Thin oie RestaurntsT - Cars ac'epted 'Wok ExpesU ,, e,, ,,,n r OpenMondayFrdrysfrdch Vi i s nede d 11A35 r2'3sp PianoLo Fetc Ch tr an dMac CGood Fed aa orie pM etin. New Meousyaily Anand D3nrapces opsn icd S r GexotiC Hor:M n-hr.1 a-1Apmir. 11m-0:0p, i Chinese Cuisine Gy EE AfWe feature a huge selection of fresh, delicious Chinese food. Ann Arbor's original No/Low FatC holesterol and Calorie Special Selection Menu Section Daily Lunch and Dinner Specials Exotic Catering Hours: Mon-Thurs. 11lam-l0pm, Fri. 11lam-1O:3Opm. Sat.-Sun. l2pm-10:3Opm Get your FREE MEAL of the week by getting on Lucky Kitchen's Frequent Diner's Program!l FREE Delivery (limited area, $8 win.) -~ in the Courtyard Shops b ..phone: 747-9968 fax: 747-996 7 :