8B The Michigan-Daily Weekend Magazine - Thursday,October 3,4996 0 The Michigan Daily Weekend M ® State of the Arts READ THIS COLUMN: IT'S THE NEXT 'PULP FICTION' Bob Dole doesn't like "Pulp Fiction." He'll tell you that right off the bat. In Bob Dole's mind, "Pulp Fiction" is another demonic film that shows youngsters of all ages how to do some pretty naughty things like rob, kill and shoot heroin. In Bob Dole's mind, "Pulp Fiction" is a reprehensible movie beset upon the vic- timized American public that not only teaches immorality but preaches that there are benefits (and few conse- quences) to such behavior. Bob Dole may have a point. But he would never make it in Hollywood. Tinseltown, after all, embraced direc- tor / phenomenon Quentin Tarantino's independently-financed crime master- piece as if it were the messiah when it was initially released two years ago this month. So Bob Dole should take a hint: Going after a film that has earned more than $100 million and become a popu- lar culture phenomenon in the process is not the way to gain many votes in an election. But much like what the former sena- tor from Kansas is trying to do with the Joshua Rich Daily Arts Editor I U.S. government, this movie has already achieved in its own sphere. "PulpFiction" has reinvigorated the movie world by demanding that one think while enjoying its excesses. Since its release, "Pulp Fiction" has become the envy of all in filmdom (as well as the favorite whipping boy of many a feisty conservative politician). Hence, it did not take long for most to announce "Pulp Fiction" as more than just a film - as a feeling, an aura that movie makers have tried to emanate and production companies have tried to cap- italize on for quite a while now. A movie god, if you will. Well, I don't buy it. This isn't the first time we've been led to think that movies can somehow thrive beyond their 35-millimeters. "Citizen Kane" is no more than the well-crafted story of the rise and fall of a great man. Forrest Gump does not symbolize the every- man as he runs and runs and runs across the country (stealing Oscars, as it might be). And "Star Trek" I'm afraid to say, does not give some sort of grand insight into the realm of human existence. So why, then, America should we gobble up critics' and pub- need to licists' proclama- tions that this movie entertai is the next "X" or that film is the next "Y?" Indeed, ever since it was released, "Pulp Fiction" has been consistently recognized as the "X" and "Y" in many a publicity equation. You want to pack your theaters? Just tell 'em that the movie you're showing is "THE NEXT PULP FICTION." That'll v" ,ir *tio9 But it shouldn't. I have no doubt that "Pulp Fiction" is an outstanding motion picture. It was the best picture of 1994, and one of the most notable films of the 1990s. If any movie deserves to be envied or copied or honored, "Pulp Fiction" is it. And yet, publicizing a film as "The next 'Pulp Fiction"' often does a disser- vice to the new movie, let alone to the viewer who hopes to see another slick presentation of smooth criminals and clever dialogue. Take as evidence some recent films many have deemed "The next 'Pulp Fiction"': "The Usual Suspects," "Trainspotting" or "Fargo." The publicity tag line may not have hurt their attendance, but it certainly isn't accurate. "The Usual Suspects" has much more of a plot but many fewer original characters and situations than "Pulp Fiction." "Trainspotting" looks at heroin addiction in a completely differ- ent manner than "Pulp Fiction" "Fargo" really has nothing to do with "Pulp Fiction" except that both are about bad guys and Tarantino favorite Steve Buscemi appears in both. We no doubt pack theaters to see "Trainspotting" or "Fargo" thinking they'll be "Pulp Fiction" reincarnated, and we do find these movies kind of trippy and cool in their own ways. Yet they are nothing like Tarantino's gem (which they probably make no attempt to imitate). Americans need to be fed entertain- ment. Hollywood can no longer release a movie and sell it on its own merits. We are told to see "Pulp Fiction" because it is by the director of "Reservoir Dogs." We take a look at "The Rock" because it is like "Die Hard" on Alcatraz. And when a film comes along that is so orig- inal that we don't know what to com- pare it to - say, "Schindler's List" - - we just give it an Academy Award and send it on its way (even though the name "Shoah" does creep into our US minds). Surprisingly be fed enough, movies can be considered good wnent. or bad or somehow special because of Proposed F .(c V Albino Alligator - ~ The English Patie ~ Mother - Octobe V Nightwatch -Oc ~ Swingers - Octo ~ That Thing You DE ~ The Chamber--( ~ Get on the Bus - ~ Some Mother's S ~ To Gillian On Her V William Shakespe V The People Vs, L2 V Dear God - Nov. ~ The Mirror Has Tv V Jingle all the Way VThe Crucible - V Everyone Says I I V Ghosts of Missis Hialet - Decen- VM arvin's Room - V The Evening Star University alum Arthur Miller's "The Crucible" makes its U.S. silver-screen debut this fall. U® what they, them- selves, are. Just because they bear some relation to other films doesn't make them any better or worse. Just because your favorite actor or director made a movie doesn't mean it's awesome. Just because some doofus at the State Theater decides to tell you that "Quentin Tarantino's 'Curdled"' is coming soon iu t "rf: don't live the hype (Tarantino's production group, A Band Apart, simply financed the film that will be opening later this month). And don't think that it will be any good. But please accept this: Movies are movies. The primary purpose of "Pulp Fiction" is to provide entertainment (albeit in a superior fashion to most before it). Distributors may get you into a theater by telling you a movie is like "Pulp Fiction," but don't let them mis- lead you into thinking the knock-off flick is anything special. Think for yourself when you go to the movies. To raise "Pulp Fiction" or any other movie as the standard or the deity of cinema for all others to follow is ridiculous. And if God is what you're seeking, read the Bible. Bob Dole would like that. FILM Continued from Page 128 Hemingway and Sandra Bullock form the basis for "A Farewell To Arms," in Jon Voight fight to save a burning, all- black town in "Rosewood" and Alec Baldwin and Whoopi Goldberg fight to bring down Medger Evers' killer in "Ghosts Of Mississippi." 5. Make 'Em Laugh Starting in late October with Albert Brooks' "Mother," a comeback vehicle for nerky Debbie Reynolds, such sup- posedly hilarious scenarios as Whoopi Goldberg masquerading as a white man in "The Associate" will keep viewers rolling in the aisles. Ex-"Later' host Greg Kinnear as a con man answering letters in "Dear God," Bill Murray and an ele- Best-seller "Sleepers psant in "Larger screen this fall. Than Life," Arnold - Schwarzenegger searching for a covet- ed toy in "Jingle All The Way" and John Travolta as a drunken, womanizing fall- en angel in "Michael" will likely have viewers holding their sides and gasping for air - and that's not just those with heart ailments! 6. Require Kleenex Touching, generally tear-jerking films are indigenous to fall, with this year's native weepers - "The English Patient;' a World War II romance fea- turing former "Schindler" Nazi Ralph Fiennes, Barbra Streisand's troubled ugly-duckling parable "The Mirror Has Two Faces," "Marvin's Room" with Meryl Streep, Diane Keaton and Leonardo DiCaprio as part of a dys- functional family and, at last, Shirley MacLaine in the sequel to "Terms Of Endearment," "The Evening Star." 7. Go Classic Remakes and adaptations abound in the form of Nicole Kidman, in Henry James' "The Portrait Of A Lad," and the live-action "101 Dalmations" that has Glenn Close vamping it up as puppy-lover Cruella DeVil. The heav- ily-hyped first American filming of Arthur Miller's "The Crucible," with uu;tu ""LeCwis exorcising i1 its from Winona Ryder, Kenneth Branagh's mercilessly complete, near- ly four-hour "Hamlet" and Leonardo DiCaprio and Clare Danes asdoomed lovers in Mexico City with guns, drugs and loud music in the psyche- delic update of "Romeo and Juliet" round out the classic remake genre. 8. Dare To Be Different never mi-- ioc mainstream, check out these off-beat intriguing little films bound to make slight rip- ples, if not waves. Jennifer Tilly and Gina Gershon are lesbians-on-the- lam in "Bound" dames and marti- nis rule the lives of "comes to the several L.A. bach- elors in - -- "Swingers" and Ewan McGregor finally lands state- side as a morgue attendant suspected of foul play in "Nightwatch." Kevin Kline and Sigourney Weaver tackle suburban angst in the '70s in "The Ice Storm," Kevin Spacey takes a bow as director with "Albino Alligator" star- ring Matt Dillon and Faye Dunaway and Peter Gallagher wishes, as anyone would, that Michelle Pfeiffer were still alive in "To Gillian On Her 37th Birthday." Wit, Italian food and Isabella Rossellini are plentiful in Stanley Tucci's "Big Night," Spike Lee takes us to the Million Man March in "Get On The Bus" and "Kissed" reveals the finer points of necrophilia. Now that Hollywood's fall roster has teased endless audiences eager to spend money and whetted the appetites of Academy voters, it's time to visit the concession stand, stop talking, enjoy the show and above all ... let it snow.y 1T eee e eee e- Itl 461 e V u u_ I_ When people Johnson strive to < We're a key supplie integrated assemb telecommunications I~ 0 z As one of the most professionals, we kno That won't change no 's SCOOKIES I X ID;NS C TAI STVLl ® N OAIPOPOLAASTUDS5 Of MUfflI TOPS I AWVWWV * fLMON POP .flH HV 1/2 (111 14 * (OLOOU T4= IOZU1 VNU T HT I= PAITS I * 1AV ON -IAVSTV1I, yO'L L100U m1VI1OV!!' I *1 715 N. University 761-CHIP ® Mon-Fri 9:00am-8:00pm - Sat 10:00am-5:00pm - Sun 12:00pm-5:00pm a 1 - V M a M m a VIn wn wWW Make your first move experience what it's like t looking for talented grads v On-Ca Please c appointi 813-22 Avenue, staffing@ tunity emt o- a . a q y a m Y.. Y t Y. V' m k t. ..