ARTS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 8, 2000-8 Dreamcast's'Zo gets big marks "Zombie Revenge" is the beat 'em up follow up side story to the "House of the Dead" series of-games. That's quite a legacy to live up to, and it's not surprising that it doesn't fully make it. From a story point of view, "Zombie Revenge" clears up a lot of thematic loose ends that were never clear in the "House of the Dead" games. Grade: B+ Zombie Revenge Sega Oreamcast Reviewed by Daily Arts Writer Ted Watts The undead are super sol- diers made for the govern- ment but something went wrong yadda yadda yadda. God players even get to fight at the original and titu- lar house of the dead and see it from a 3D perspective instead of the predetermined tracks that previously mbie Revenge' with the living gling fedora-ed dwarves that throw hatchets at you to shambling unwrapped mummy things, you have the chance to get up close and personal with a variety of old friends. But of course it's ilways good to meet.new people, or in this case mutated humanoids. Immense skull faces with one huge extra vulvic red eye in its forehead on the top of a fleshy stalk, old factory workers who transform before your eyes into something you need to take a shotgun to and purple-poison spitting plants are just a few of the cast of characters so horrifying that you could've met them at a party. The game play is straight forward; draw a bead with your gun or release a flurry of fists on the advancing well wishers whose good intentioned glad handing is a little too putrid and friendly, like the security at Altamont. Hold down the fire button for long enough and you can release a highly charged shot to rip through one or more of the local science experiments. You can even change the rules of the game; you can jack up either the force of your gun or your winning personality at the expense of the other. You can be aloof or all up in that and suc- ceed; it's a nice way of catering to player's differ- By Jennifer Gates For The Daily ences. There's a choice between playing in nor- mal arcade mode or in an original mode which allows you to collect food items for the inspired zombie raising mini-game. You can raise a zom- bie on the Dreamcast VMU to fight with in a fighting mode on the main console. But the best part of the mini-game is that you can play mini- games within it, including "Zombie Fishing." A fun little parody of Sega's Bass Fishing, the very concept is enough to make this game attractive. "Zombie Revenge" is not the incredible inno- vator its "House of the Dead" predecessors were, but it is a good game. For a legacy game like this, it's the little touches that matter. Now get out there and fish, uh, I mean fight! 'Brothers' comes straight out of the basement to 'U' Senior theater student Jessica Spenny was in for a surprise when she read Jonathan Gentry's script for "Keeping Brothers" last semester. Drawn to the script, she ended up directing it as this weekend's Base- ment Arts show. The play, part of a brother-focused trilogy senior theater student Gentry is working on, concerns the brothers Donald and Daniel Ryder. While Daniel lives under the public eye as a television star, Donald is a phobic who hasn't left his house for 25 years. When an incident hightens Donald's fears, Daniel must return allowed one to tour the infested manse. Actually, getting to see the old set helps to show the failings of the new game. Because it's familiar, the fall from the lushly rendered racked-shooter graphics smacks you in the puss the way the characters in the game do the strangely athletic corpses. Familiar game sprites also pop up. From gig- 0 I s. .< , f,, ,. «,z. z UNiVEPSITY ACTIVITiES CENTER LSA STUDENTS & MAY 2000 GRADS Seeking a REWARDING SUMMER JOB? Be a Summer Academic Peer Advisor! Info at LSA Advising Center, 1255 Angell or Attend an Information Session at 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, March 8, 3410 Mason Hall Keeping Brothers Arena Theatre Thursday through Saturday at 7 p.m. Tickets are Free home to care for his brother. Spenny, searching for a play to direct as the final part of her senior pro- ject, was imme- diately drawn to the play because like Donald, she too had experi- enced agora- phobia, or fear of open spaces. ago I was a bor- niche. As director of Basement Arts' "Keeping Brothers," Spenny said that she has to make sure Gentry's play "functions on the stage but doesn't lose what he wanted." Spen- ny relates her role as it stands to the University actors, most of whom have been in other Basement Arts productions - Dan Hall from "After Liverpool," Kevin Raleigh from "Rosencratz and Guildenstern ar9 Dead," and Dan Granke, Aimee Clark, Anathea Alberda and Erin Harrison - to a hiking journey. "I know the big picture. The actors lead me up to the path, and I make sure they don't fall off the mountain," Spenny said. Other students involved in the production include Becky Hibbs, Alvin Wierzbicki and Angela Zuck. Spenny, who last worked wits Basement Arts as one of the direc- tors of "Shorties," deemed the pro- ducing unit "a great venue." As a student-run theater company subsi- dized by the University, it allows for innovative freedom. The director of "Keeping Brothers" believes that through Basement Arts you can "see some of the best stuff and the worst stuff all in the same place. A produc- tion happens because someone thought it was really neat rather then* 'well we can keep an audience up if we do this."' While Spenny was personally attract- ed to "Keeping Brothers," she said that it could be relevant to anyone. "It is kind of like you are looking at this one guy's reality and what he does with it' Spenny said. "I suppose if there is a message, it is to take a look at your own boundaries - have you really changer them or are you still sitting in the same box with the same wallpaper?" "About eight years IIIATUPING: " "i MU~hIT 4 l1t/+rs o. ... M-I i l(ApS~ f(il.5 {CtMIX(;LL? ANVN y....'; *4.it lt/ fjUP I 5 MICH A" M P I M 1,Wl fKI "' 1IC'P5 .IJI tIC lt lix' derline agoraphobic," Spenny said, "And I realized that if I didn't fix this I was going to end up dead, and so I went out into the world." Her venture outside her house led her to sign language, to Lansing Community College, to "accounting, to door sales, to retail, to fast food, to non-fast food" and to the Univer- sity of Michigan and directing, where she has finally found her I k The Zippori Archaeological Dig Spend six weeks in Israel touring, learning and digging deep into your past on one of the most exciting Israel college programs of the year. For 52000 the program includes the following: " Six credits at the University of Michigan " Round trip transportation " Field Trips throughout Israel " Educational Seminars on Jewish Identity " Room and board Call Hillel at 769-0500 and ask to schedule an interview with Rabbi Rich Kirschen. University of Michigan Students after five weeks of digging in Israel If * : _ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8 IICKETS ARE $3 AT AT THE POWER CENTER TICKETASTER, MOTO, OR AT 8:00PM 763- TKTS III! I I REGISTER WITH MYBYTES.COM AND SCORE BIG! GET A FREE SONIC ABYSS 5.......... 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