I Wy Mollasis reads from his book "On a Wing and a Prayer." The book follows the journey of Detroit's favorite hockey team, the Red Wings, on the its quest to win the 1997 Stanley Cup. The reading will begin at 7 p.m., and will be held at Borders Books & Music. Admission is free. U31e £d~m hUgt Monday in Daily Arts: Come back from eating all that turkey and stuffing just in time to be filled with Daily Arts film reviews of this week- end's releases. We'll be sure to have "Home Fries" prepared nice and tasty for you. Wednesday November 25, 1998 5 Film delves into tragic beauty By Ed Sholinsky Daily Arts Writer In the beginning of Roberto Benigni's "Life is Beautiful," a narrator announces: "This is a sim- ple story, but not an easy one to tell." This brief statement encapsulates "Life is Beautiful" better than any other. uch has been written about this film - a lot PPeople calling this movie a comedy about the Holocaust. It is not. "Life is Beautiful" is funny, but never makes light of the horror of 13 million dead human beings. Rather, the film Life is M Beautiful At the Michigan Theater is divided into two intercon- nected parts: the first is a light-hearted romantic comedy; the second is a gravely serious account of a father and son struggling to survive the Holocaust. "Life is Beautiful" is set in fascist Italy against the backdrop of the Second World War. At the center of the film is Guido (Benigni), an Italian Jew, who meets the woman of his dreams when she liter- ally falls into his arms. From the second he meets Guido makes it a point of finding Dora and letting her fall in love with him. To do this, Guido disguises himself as a gov- ernment official who is supposed to speak at the school at which Dora teaches. It's only after Guido arrives there that he realizes that he has to give a speech on Aryan superiority. In one of the film's funniest scenes, Guido turns the Nazi Superman lecture into a mockery, showing the school children different parts of his body as an example of what a Nazi Superman should look like. After this, Guido sweeps Dora off her feet, spending a romantic evening with her, rescuing her from a boring state dinner with her fiance. In an intensely romantic and comical sequence, Guido unlocks Dora's heart, before stealing her away from her fiance and their engagement party. Up until this point, the violence against Jews is kept mostly in the background. The most overt sign of anti-Semitism is when a group of kids paint Guido's uncle's horse green and write "Jewish Horse" on it. But Guido turns even this hatred around, riding the horse into the party to take Dora away. At this point, "Life is Beautiful" works as an amazing romantic comedy, worthy of heaps of praise in and of itself. Benigni displays his adept sense of physical comedy in the tradition of Chaplin, Keaton and the Marx Brothers. But instead of continuing down this path, Benigni shifts the film and takes it into the years when Germany occupied Italy towards the end of World War II. In the several years in between Guido and Dora getting together, they've married and had a son; Guido has opened his bookstore, and the situation is getting dire for Jews. Not that "Life is Beautiful" loses its sense of humor. When Guido's son, Giosue (Georgio Cantarini), asks his father why stores have signs up reading, "No Jews or Dogs Allowed," Guido suggests that they put a sign in the bookstore's window that reads "No Spiders or Visigoths Allowed." But things get out of hand when the Nazis round up Guido, Guido's uncle and Giosue on Giosue's birthday. Guido has to make the decision that he cannot let his son know what's going on. How can a father explain the ultimate evil to a young boy? Instead of letting Giosue face reality, Guido turns the concentration camp into a game. He convinces Giosue that they can leave as soon as they earn 1,000 points, at which point they will win a real tank. At the same time, Guido has to survive the back-breaking labor and keep his son alive after all of the children and the elderly are executed in the showers. Balance this with the fact that Dora has decid- ed to join her family in the camp despite the fact that she's not Jewish, and does not know if her son is alive or not after all of the children and the old people are rounded up. The result is a tragi-comedy of the first order. "Life is Beautiful" is less about the Holocaust, and more about the lengths to which a father will go to protect his son, both physically and psycho- logically. The film leaves the audience with a question: If an adult like Guido can't understand t f 4. Courtesy o Miramax Braschi make a beautiful appearance in Benigni's Beautiful" would undoubtedly win the Oscar for Best Picture if it was in English. Alas, the American prejudice against subtitles will hold this film back, which is a shame, because it's the second best film of the year. I can guarantee you will cry at this movie - it would be inhuman not to cry. But you will also laugh through your tears. Dora (Nicoletta Braschi), who he calls "Princess," ido is love struck. As it turns out, both Dora and Guido live in Tuscany, where Dora teaches and Guido waits tables in a fancy restaurant while saving up to buy a book store. After another chance encounter, Roberto Benigni, Giorgio Cantarini and NicolettaI film "Life Is Beautiful." why the Nazis are killing all of the Jews, than how can Giosuc?. Not only is "Life is Beautiful" incredibly writ- ten and directed by Benigni (he co-wrote the screenplay with Vincenzo Cerami), but the cast is perfect. Benigni, Braschi and Cantarini never miss the mark, displaying the right effect when the film is comic and when it is tragic. "Life is Yfradition dancest Detroit ly Wter ByF'n Jnn ln For anyfamilies, watching Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite" has become a Christmas tradition, earning it a place as this century's most frequently performed ballet. Now, for the third year in a row, the University Musical Society is bring- ing a new version of this classic bal- let to Michigan for the holiday sea- son. "The Harlem Nutcracker" will * performed in a larger venue this year - the Detroit Opera House - rather than in Ann Arbor, making the performance open to more people. Popular in its own right, "The Harlem Nutcracker" maintains a unique identity from the traditional ballet. "It's a 180 degree difference," the show's star Gus Solomons, Jr. said. Donald Byrd's show includes 'Fluid' techno flows into Detroit By Jason Birchmeier Daily Arts Writer Nearby, the mysterious metropolis that introduced the world to techno music awaits its renaissance. Late tomorrow night, five of the men pivotal in the conception of techno music a decade ago will come together in Detroit for a very special performance. Titled "Fluid," this event promises to be a glimpse of what may evolve into a weekly event in the future. Two of the artists performing, Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson, revolutionized the world of dance music in the mid to late '80s at a now-legendary club known as The Music Institute where the music now referred to as techno first began to materialize. The other three artists performing Thanksgiving night at "Fluid" - Carl Craig, Kenny Larkin and Stacey Pullen - were understudies of May and Saunderson and eventually led the second wave of Detroit techno, spanning from the early '90s to the present. This monumental event in the history of electronic music Courtesy of The University Musical Society The Harlem Nutcracker begins Its Holiday jaunt at the Detroit Opera House on Friday, and can be seen until Dec. 6. Paperclip People To be announced Tomorrow, t.b.a Thursday night will take place at a brand new, undisclosed location in Detroit, said Carl Craig, whose goal is to eventually have the concept of "Fluid" evolve into a club similar to what the Music Institute was 10 years ago. "In 1988, 1 had a place that was a temple' Craig explains. "What we're trying to do here is make this the testing ground, maybe even the breeding ground for the new pioneers." Over the past few years, Detroit's gigantic underground raves held in shady abandoned buildings hidden deep within the decay of the inner-city on a past decade but most will agree Paperclip People is unique. Some of Craig's descriptions of his music include "crazy music." "deep and dark," "party music" and "straight ahead underground stringy kind of thing." He also said that listeners "have to have a certain mentality to be able to comprehend." This project began several years ago when Craig started releasing singles on 12-inch vinyl such as "Oscillator" and "Throw" under the name Paperclip People until all the mater- ial was eventually compiled into an album called "The Secret Tapes of Dr. Eich" in 1996. "'The Secret Tapes of Dr. Eich' is not a compilation but a kind of essay of the past," Craig said. "I find it's better for me to put together projects in long form. That's why I head my own record label. It gives me more control to release what I want." Besides Paperclip People, Craig also releases music on his record label, Planet E, under the names Interzone Orchestra, 69, Psyche, BFC and Carl Craig as well as others. He explained his reasons for the multiple aliases rely upon "the whole concept of productivity. If I would have put all the material I was doing before under the name Carl Craig, I would have flooded the market." "It was also a situation where each song under a different moniker has a different personality," he said. "69 could sound similar to Paperclip People, but it'stotally different. To me it sounds completely different. It has a different concept behind it.' Craig's record label, Planet E, remains as vital to the evo- lution of techno music as his own music. Artists such as the controversial Moodyman and DJ Recloose - who used to spin as DJ Bubblicious at Ann Arbor's own Bird of Paradise and Hiedleburg two years ago - are exported across the globe. Craig sees a rise from the underground as "better for our movement." His music is made to reach and inspire people, his record label to develop innovative artists and his event, "Fluid," to once again bring Detroit back its status as a world center of music. "I believe there is a large market of people in America that can be influenced by our music. We have to give them an opportunity to be influenced. They need to be exposed and educated," he said. Tomorrow night's event will be the first step toward Craig's vision of a musical renaissance in Detroit. His visions are to "take the past like Derrick (May) and match that with the future" in an effort to once again create "that inner city love that comes from being part of the culture.: To hear the location and time of "Fluid," call (313) 438-0112 any time tomorrow Harlem Nutcracker Detroit Opera House Friday at 8 p.m. Duke Ellington's musical inter- pretation of "The Nutcracker Suite" and jazz dancing. "The Harlem Nutcracker" keeps Clara as the main charac- ter, but trans- forms her into an African Americ an grandmother rather than a lit- follows Clara as tle girl The story show. New jazz music also required adding other types of dance to the traditional ballet. Choreographer Donald Byrd "has taken the ballet dancing from the original and infused it with street dancing ... and jazz;" Solomons said. "Overall, it would be called jazz, but it's not jazz in the conventional style." To take on the challenge of com- bining ballet and jazz, Byrd doubled the size of his normal dance compa- ny to 21. "The dancers have been trained in jazz and ballet, so they pretty much know everything," Solomons said, "and they really have to do everything." A professional dancer for the past 40 years, Solomons plays the hus- band, while actress Eleanor McCoy, who has danced with Alvin Ailey's company, portrays Clara. The com- pany also includes two dancers from the Dance Theatre of Harlem. The show "is a whirlwind of energy," Solomons said. "The dance is very demanding physically." In a business dominated by young performers, this show stars two dancers who've passed the traditional age for leads. Solomons attributes this to a movement going on in the New York dance community. "The youth culture of dance is starting to run its course, and now people are wondering what happened to the artistry," Solomons said. Artistry "gives the show depth so you get both spectacle and emotional content." That's just one of the reasons he continues to perform in "The Harlem Nutcracker," which draws a variety of people to the theatre. "It's a great show for kids, but it's got the adult story," Solomons said. "It's funny, it's sad, it's very entertaining. It's a show that has everything," he explained. "The Harlem Nutcracker" even draws people in who have never been to the theatre before. "It's a catalyst that's bringing together the jazz audi- ence, the music audience, the ballet audience and the black audience," Solomons said. Tickets prices cost $12-50. Call UMS at 764-2538 for more informa- tion, including bus service andrush tickets for 50 percent off the regular price. Each show through Dec. 5 begins at 8 p.m., except for Nov. 30- Dec.]. There are 2 p.m. shows on Nov. 28-29 and Dec.5-6. weekly basis have created a culture where the importance of partying surpasses that of innovative music. "You go to Chicago and they're living house music," Craig said, contrasting the current attitude in Detroit. "We used to be trend-setters, or we used to be pioneers. We're not finding those pioneers anymore. I don't know of any artists out there right now doing things totally different on a totally new level." Craig's first-ever Detroit performance tomorrow night promises to be ambitious and far from mundane. Although his performance "is something the rest of the world has seen," Craig rarely performs in his hometown due to the internation- al popularity of his music. "Detroit is a place that's very indi- vidual and very special to me. I'd rather do it on a level that's very special" he said. Craig has released music under various personas over the she celebrates her first Christmas after her husband's death while dreaming of their courtship in 1920s Harlem. Duke Ellington's music from the Harlem Renaissance captures the mood of this era. Ellington adapted Ichaikovsky's music in 1960 for his chestra. The jazz score features "Sugar Rum Cherry" instead of the traditional "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy," for example. David Berger composed and arranged additions to the Duke Ellington score for this Happy Thanksgiving Break, from Daily Arts. 'T f1 P}1111111111111111 X11 I I ead the Daily Online at http://www.michigandaily.com t _ - _ .. ,. _ .. _ _ _ _ .r .: : .. .:5, , ,'; ti:. :a;, ..... ; . , \, ... \ .:.:.. \..;,:_: ::... : ~tom.:. ' :::'.. .. __.._. _:..si or 0