W1. r 1er 0 "Hilary and Jackie" continues its run at the Mi Check out two Academy Award-nominated perfor film about cellist Jacqueline du Pre and her battl Hilary and multiple sclerosis. Tonight through Su p.m. $5.50 for students. New com( By Erin Podoisky Daily Arts Writer Ben Affleck. Casey Affleck. Janeane Garofalo. Courtney Love. Jay Mohr. Christina Ricci. Paul Rudd. This, boys and girls, is just a sampling of the illus- ti cast of "200 Cigarettes; an ensemble film aNut one wild and crazy night (heard this one before?) that just happens to be New Year's Eve 1981 in New York's already wild and crazy East Village. These are actors in the truest sense of the word, people we've seen doing their job bet- ter than half of Hollywood. 200 They can be comical or dra- Ciret matic, flamboyant or understat- C aetes ed. They are none of those things, however, in "200 At Showcase Cigarettes," a poor attempt at filmmaking that is nothing more than a good cast gone wrong. It's a colossal piece of repellantly unfunny garbage, and it's painful to think of the great movie that this bunch of creative types could have made together if only they'd realized their mistake before it was too late and the camera was rolling. *he only possible explanation for this is that the prospect of working with each other was so enticing (or that MTV offered so much money to pull togeth- er a high-profile, sure-to-bring-in-the-target-demo- graphic audience that they couldn't refuse) that it blinded them to the terrible script they were working from. Call it a form of Hollywood denial, call it greed, call it whatever you want. Just don't call it a quality decision. chigan Theater. mances in the e with sister nday, 7 & 9:30 Ire ARTS -shIngs from Daily Arts: We at Daily Arts wish you a safe and restful Spring Break. Be sure to come back on March 8 for a review of "Sunset Boulevard," which begins its three-week stint at the Detroit Opera House on Tuesday. 4 Friday February 26, 1999 5 dy goes up in smoke , .. cabbie's (Dave Chappelle) taxi cab and he offers them advice or a hit off of his joint. We start out with Kevin (Rudd) and Lucy (Love). Kevin is in mourning because it is his birthday and he has just broken up with his girlfriend, Ellie (Garofalo). This opens the door for he and Lucy to have many boring, repetitive conversations about moping on New Year's and sex with each other and other people. Come to think of it, there aren't really any non-boring or non-repetitive conversations in "200 Cigarettes," so just consider it a given that each mentioned conversation is boring and repetitive. Val (Ricci) and her best friend Stephie (Gaby Hoffman) are a couple of Long Island teenagers with thick accents and a fear of the eastern East Village. They are stalked by Tom (Casey Affleck) and Dave (Guillermo Diaz), a couple of Misfits- looking guys who just want to be loved and make their drug delivery. Hoffman gives what is far and away the worst performance in the film, and every second she is on screen is a second of your life you will not get back. Consider yourself warned. There are a host of other plots involving the other actors, but like the ones already mentioned, they are overdone and boring to boot. Even Elvis Costello's cameo falls flat. The technical aspects of the film are mediocre at best and while the soundtrack offered some promise since this is an MTV film, it opens with "I Want Candy" (a song that sounds infi- nitely better when recast as "I Want Stanley," as every loyal Detroiter knows) and heads downhill from there. If you just can't wait to get your dose of one or all of the people in "200 Cigarettes," it would be a much better idea to spend your $7.50 at the video store stocking up on older but better films. This one is a dud that ought to be sufficient to embarrass its players for years to come. Courtesy of Paramount Pictures Dave Chapelle lends pot to Angle Featherstone. The main idea behind "200 Cigarettes" is that everyone is whiling away the evening waiting for the hour to be fashionably late enough that it's cool to show up at Monica's (Martha Plimpton) party, the bulk of the guest list being made up of her ex- boyfriends. This is one of those too-many-cast- members-to-count movies where we bounce back and forth between each pair or trio of characters who will ultimately all end up at the same location. The gimmick this time out is that they all, at some point during the night, ride in the nameless disco kodo drums up excitement at Power '8 mm' snuffs out Schumacher's career By Adlin Rosi Daily Arts Writer A Taiko drum heard from a dis- *nce was an old Japanese method of establishing a community bound- ary. This past Tuesday night, the popular Japanese drum troupe, Kodo, pulled Ann Arbor into its community as they performed at the Power Center to a nearly sold-out crowd. Kodo's performance proved that music can cross all cultural barriers. 'he group's sound is based entirely ound the traditional Japanese drums. Flutes and group singing are rarely included. So Kodo's music is constructed almost strictly on (by Western standards) very odd drum patterns and syncopation. It is a wonder then, that Kodo Power Center Feb. 23,1999 with so few melodies and without a sin- gle word spo- ken in English, Kodo man- aged to mysti- fy the crowd. The 15 artists took turns onstage and collective- ly performed a 10 song set and added two more as like "Fu-Rai-Do," the group show- cased its versatility in performance. Another amazing aspect of the night was the incredible physical discipline and endurance that mem- bers of Kodo exhibited. Some of the drums were played by pounding on them while sitting on the floor and setting the upper body at an almost 45 degree angle. Just imagine the stress on the body, as Kodo songs run an average of seven minutes! The night's proceedings were not limited to merely the drums howev- er, as heard when Kodo performed "Yae-No-Furyu." In this number, the group moved in a dance from Japan's Obon festival, the festival of the dead. As mentioned earlier, rare appearances of flutes and group singing were showcased as well. What was also plentiful was youthful vigor and spirit in the per- formance. The majority of Kodo performers were made up of fairly young looking members who kept their discipline during the morose numbers, but were not afraid to let their hair down and have a good time during the more upbeat ones. This was especially so as during one of the numbers, the Kodo member playing the cymbals jumped around and showcased moves worthy of Elvis. The group was given a standing ovation after finishing its 10 song set. The crowd response was so overwhelming that Kodo had to return to the stage twice to humbly bow to the crowd's approval. A two song encore was then performed, which consisted of two irresistible numbers, "Shake" and "Itsuka Mata.' "Itsuka Mata" was appropri- ately a song about wishing well until someday meeting again. 8 mm At Birarwood and Showcase (Nicolas Cage) on a one-man mission to track down the dis- tasteful people he sees in a home snuff film left behind by a dead industrial tycoon. A snuff film, for those of you who don't much frequent the underbelly of the porn sector beyond the days Courtesy of Columbia Pictures Nicolas Cge ponders his snuff fn in 8 mm." of a dreamer and the nights in between, is a movie that records an actual murder. Here the victim is a young runaway lured by promises of money and fame when she finds that Los Angeles isn't the city of dreams she thought it was. Welles spends a good chunk of the movie first tracking down the girl's identity (inexplicably traveling to Cleveland to do it), then the girl's mother, then the girl's path across the country. He makes frequent calls to his wife (a woefully underused Catherine Keener) who seems to spend every waking moment cooing to their infant daughter. Like most of the movie, this lengthy expository sequence drags on and on and Schumacher subscribes fully to the "when in doubt, break out the baby" school of filmmaking. The movie picks up speed once Tom reaches Los Angeles and teams up with porn expert and purveyor Max California (Joaquin Phoenix), with whom he bonds over a pile of dirty magazines. Phoenix handles the role well, looking a bit like the lead singer from Prodigy and guiding the naive Tom through the seedy world of la la land sex. The two become partners and we learn that Max is just another victim of Hollywood dreams gone sour, but at least we care just a little about him. By Erin Podolsky Daily Arts Writer Joel Schumacher had something to prove with his latest film, "8mm." And he proved it, all right - the man who made the "it only cost $100 mil- lion, I swear!" box office bomb "Batman and Robin" proves once and for all that he should never again be given a budget over $40 million. "8mm" is an exercise in lame sensa- tionalism, revealing little beyond the less-than-a-revelation that Joel Schumacher is a hack. "8mm" follows upwardly mobile private investigator Tom Welles "Bring out the gimp!" was originally intended, Once they are found, "8mm" disintegrates into a patchwork of climax after climax (no pun intend- ed) as it struggles to find solid footing amidst the faux-shocking aftermath of the snuff crime and succeeds only in schooling the audience to expect the so-called surprises dropped ten- fold into the movie. Luckily, each moment that Phoenix is present is one that is a little less painful, although the idea that some- body could steal a scene from Nicolas Cage should be the first clue that something is severely wrong with "8mm." There's little doubt that the studio got that clue. The film's ending smacks of studio tinkering - and it isn't even satisfy'ing, resolving tinker- ing. Sure, things are resolved, but at the end of the film we're left to won- der what exactly the message received was supposed to be. The message that should have been telegraphed loud and clear to every- one at Columbia Pictures was not to let Schumacher make this botched effort at a lurid, seamy thriller. Next time, instead of making the snuff film, he should be the star. Together Max and Tom track down the evil sex fiends responsible for the girl's death. There are three of them: Eddie Poole (James Gandolfini), an overweight skin flick producer; Dino Velvet (Peter Stormare), the snuff film's director and lover of cross- bows; and a mysterious man-in-black known only as Machine (Chris Bauer), about whom the phrase encore num- ers. The wide range of drums used and the different sounds they made evoked many different moods throughout the night's performance. It was amazing to see that the drums, usually used as a means to keep the beat of a song, could be so expressive as a focal instrument. From playful and upbeat numbers like "Chonlima" to the darker ones Jimmy John opened his first store in Charleston, IL in 1983. Today he has a whole bunch all over the place, including here. k Q: HEY, JIMMY JOHNI My job stinks. Who doI have to kill to get to be one of your gourmet sand- is i i ii r s l ..... .. I" This ain't your parents' g travel agency. I With our staff of experienced travelers, a global network of offices, great prices, ticket flexibility