Shloman Reads at Shaman University English Prof. Clayton Eshleman will read tonight at Shaman Drum. Eshleman will choose from his latest book of poems, "From Scratch," which discusses the collision of poetry with other forms of art. Admission is free, and the reading begins at 8 p.m. ARe ~dTSw h~ Arts: 0 This semester's first edition of Weekend, etc discusses the ups and downs of being (or not being) 21. Wednesday September 16, 1998 8 I 'Rounders' By Aaron Rich Daily Arts Writer Picture a world where poker is the game, but five card draw is so exceedingly simple that nobody thinks to play. A world where the ante is upwards of a grand and the pot can reach $60,000. A world where one minute you can be up and on your way to Vegas, and with the flip of a card you can be broke, on the street. This place does exist. It is the world of John Dahl's "Rounders." The game is Texas Hold'em. Mike McDermott (Matt Damon) is a poor law ste- dent, who lives in New York with his equally poor law-student-girlfriend, Jo (Gretchen Mci). McDermott, a rounder - a genius at reading caws, watching the opponent and making money at the card table - pays his tuition with money wo* at poker clubs throughout the city. After losing a for- tune one night, he "retires" from the game and becomes a manual laborer to pay the bills. Just when McDermott is getting his life in some order, his old buddy Worm (Edward Norton) is let out of jail. Worm, who has $25,000 debt on his back, immediately begins dragging McDermott aroind to card games in an attempt to use his friend's talent and savings to get in the black. Being the consammate nice-guy, McDermott vouches for Worm when a thug demands the money he is owed. With hopes of removing the price from ht friend's - and his - head, McDermott reluctantly gets back into the underworld of poker where nothing - espe- cially law school and love - seems certais. raises Damon's stakes More than just a film about the-good-boy-being- bad syndrome, "Rounders" is a lesson in poker, gam- bling and being a wise-guy. Much like Martin Scorsese's "The Color of Money" - where the mode of the vice is pool - part of the entertainment here comes from just seeing the pros do what they do - and hopefully learning how they do it. Dahl sets up this poker school very well by using a voice-over by Damon, explaining what is happen- ing and why. Here, Damon's control of his craft truly shines as he speaks to us in a near whisper, letting us in on this secret, illicit part of life. When physically acting, Rounders Damon is confident and smart and full of just enough cock to make his role work. The film builds gradually At Showcase up to the last showdown and Briarwood scene between McDermott and Teddy KGB (John Malkovich), the now-owner of most of McDermott's money. KGB is a juicy and $? fresh Russian immigrant who craves Oreo cookies and bears a striking resemblance to V.I. Lenin. This scene is just a taste, though, of the solid acting throughout the film. Martin Landau brilliantly plays the grandfather- you've-always-wanted law professor, Petrovsky, and John Turturro slithers his way in as the hus- tling, but much-needed poker buddy, Joey Knish. One large hole in the acting comes in the form of Gretchen Mol. She reads her lines like a scared eighth-grader and removes depth from an already- too-superficial character. Better than what we learn about stud poker is what seems to be kept a secret. We see Worm cheat by loading McDermott's hand with face cards, but we never see how he does this. We are told wxat McDermott knows is in his opponents hands,Wt he never explains how he keeps track of the cards. We are just civilian spectators to this high-stakes, high-skill game. In the end, the framing story - that of a struggling lawyer - gets lost in the shuffle. It seems as if this big part of the story line is just a simple tool used by the writer to get McDermot and Jo to fight and to pull a moving monologue from Prof. Petrovsky. McDermott never comes across as a man who loves the law, and in fact the opposite is true-f likes breaking the law. This set-up becomes a bit ridiculous when the chips start falling, and we find ourselves in the middle of a poker film. Much like in "The Color of Money," "Rounders" shows a world that is far beyond our own - both in sin and skill. Yet it is part of our sphere. Dahl makes sure we know this by keeping us interested in the action - through glitzy card tricks. He also emotionally ties us to the charac- ters through quick dialogue. Most important, Dahl shows how to win without being dealt a straight- flush. Courtesy of Miramax Matt Damon stars as Mike McDermott, a poker addict trying to save his old pal, in the new Miramax release "Rounders." New football season scores high Preachy Birch' NCAA Football '99 EA Sports Sony Playstation Just when you thought Chuck Woodson left campus, here he comes again, this time gracing the cover of EA Sports' "NCAA Football '99." The sophomore edition of this series comes packed with crushing tackles, big plays and every division I-A school that you never knew existed. This title won't disappoint fans of "NCAA '98," who will appreciate all of the changes and additions that "NCAA '99" offers. The action moves at a faster pace, animations are cleaner, and virtual college bands rock fight songs after big plays and touch- 4owns. The dynasty mode, where players can take on the challenge of coaching a team through several seasons, received a major overhaul from last year and is, by far, the strongest aspect of the game. The dynasty now con- sists of five years instead of four, giv- ing you a chance to see the team you built from scratch in action in its final season. Real recruiting takes place, and depending on who is sent out on recruiting visits - whether it's the head coach or the graduate assistant - you could wind up with players ranging in skill from blue chip caliber to walk-on benchwarmers. High pro- file juniors leave for the draft early, creating unexpected voids in your lineup. If you aren't able to produce wins at your school, you may be leav- ing early as well when the athletic director cancels your contract. If that happens, you'll have to continue on at a less prestigious school. New bowls and awards have been added to spice up the chase for the national championship, and "NCAA '99" now includes analog passing, pump/pitch faking and trajectory con- trol kicking. The analog passing is tricky to master, but can provide the most flexibility. The ability to control the trajectory of punts, kickoffs and field goals improves range and adds an extra element of kicking strategy that has been missing in past games. The best new feature, though, is the play editor. If you get tired of the tradi- tional plays that are offered for each . team, then you can opt to create three of your own offensive and defensive alter- natives. This is very useful in the dynastyr mode, as you can design plays specifically around your teams' strengths and star players. A virtual announcer calls off last names of the more famous college players after big plays, and new last names can be added - something cool for people who like to create their own charac- ters. Let's hear it for Sanders! To keep up with improving industry standards, EA Sports gave "NCAA '99" a 3-D polygonal engine, allow- ing for more realistic gameplay. Tacklers in EA Sports' past football games used to just throw shoulder tackles. Now they wrap up, flip, or roll offensive players to the ground. The 3- D engine really sparkles when looking at instant replays. The camera can be moved around to virtually any posi- tion on the field and can zoom in close to capture bone-jarring hits and critical one-handed touchdown grabs. Some improvements still have to be. made for next year, though. Forced fumbles often backfire on the defense. If an offensive player scoops the b4l back up, that player tends to rumble on for a rather large gain. Every so often, a blitzing linebacker may break through the line and bounce off of the quarterback who scrambles and becomes ridiculously hard to tackle. Either that, or the QB will - IA release a crazy, over-the-shoulder pass which is usually hauled in far a big gain - very frustrat- } ing on those crucial4 third downs., Minor anloyances aside, this game shines atop the col- lege football game market. EA Sports did a good job improving upon last years' version and has wlkt players' appetites for next year. It's only fitting that a Heisman Trophy winner was chosen to be on the cover of this MVP-caliber product. Chalk up another national footlzll champi- onship in video ganing for EA Sports. -Deven.n Q. Sanders . ' 1 isn't ~}a 'Meaney By Matthew Barrett Daily Arts Writer "Simon Birch," suggested by John Irving's "A Prayer for Owen Meany," is dripping with Hollywood cliche from its very beginning. Simon Birch, the smallest baby ever deliv- ered in Gravestown, a boy that no one gave a chance to live a day, much less a lifetime, dreams of being a hero. The boy with an undersized heart somehow has the biggest heart in the entire town. And yet the character is so endear- ing and lovable that he is able to sal- vage a movie that suffers from an atrocious voice-over and some unskillful storytelling. Simon (Ian Michael Smith) is a boy with destiny on his mind, and he feels that someday he'll perform some sort of miracle that will make the world around him a better place. W4 I Courtesy of Hollywood Picture Joe Wenteworth (Joseph Mazzello) and Simon Birch ([an Michael Smith) are con- fronted by a large dog. Simon Birch ** At Showcase and State a Smith is so con- vincing in the part that he leaves the audi- ence feeling as if he truly is the title character. Simon is the focus of the movie and an essential part of making things work, if the role was miscast the movie could have been a dis- aster. and inquisitive A foul-mouthed some Saturday morning kids show. But as much as the makers suc- ceed in dealing with the two boys, they fail in the other aspects of the picture. Jim Carrey appears briefly at the beginning and the end of the movie, and is heard throughout it via a nau- seating voice-over. After the first two minutes of the movie, viewers know the fates of two main characters simply because the writer chose to include it. This infor- mation adds nothing to the begin- ning, and only takes away from the movie. Ditto, later on when Carrey either alludes to what will happen next or simply tells the audience things that it can figure out on its own. This misuse of voice-overs comes across as an unnecessary filler that severely damages the film. Another down point is Simon's family. Both of Simon's parents could care less about him and essen- tially give him free run of the neigh- borhood. There is nothing more to the par- ents than the fact that they are mean, old people. The characters are so one dimensional and simple that they are completely unrealistic. When Simon gets in trouble and ends up at the Sheriff's office, his father suggests that he spend the night in jail rather than pick him up. And this is a grade schooler? Simon's vision of himself as a hero seems all the harder to swallow when his parent's are taken into considera- dreamer, Simon is constantly on the outside looking in when it comes to the church, schoolmates and the world in general. One of the few peo- ple who he feels comfortable around is a school pal named Joe (Joseph Mazzello). Joe seems able to relate to Simon, mainly because he, too, is an outcast. Born to a single mother (Ashley Judd), the identity of Joe's father remains a mystery and the source of much interest to the town's people. The two outcasts have a tight bond that is handled with care and skill by the makers of the film. The scenes between the two characters seem real and not as if they were pulled out of tion. Someone had to keep planting the idea that he was special into th boy's mind at a very young age, and if it wasn't his parents then who wa it? Yet somehow, Simon developed into an insightful and bright y g boy and its his sly comments.a keep the film above water. Simon constantly struggles with his lust fo girls, all of whom seem to peg him a nothing more than cute - "sh means cute like a baby turtle, an girls don't kiss baby turtles" - an his musings on the opposite se: carry truth for a person of any age. Simon is cast as Baby Jesus in church Christmas production an*i behavior sets the stage for what turn out to be one of the year's funnies scenes. Smith is so on the mark, tha the idea of award nominations for hi performance isn't that unrealistic And while some will say that th director overuses Simon to ge laughs or that Smith's role may nc be that far from his reality, the fac that he comes across as a funny an charming character is undeniable. Overall, "Simon Birch" has *( very funny parts, but the story is to off the mark for the movie to com together as a whole. The voice-ove gives too much away, and the seconc part of the framing sequence witt Carrey is painful to watch. But the relationship between th two boys and an enchanting perfor mance by Smith help "Simon Birch squeak past the glut of average i crowding today's theaters. Check out the Want A m ..: