10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 20, 1999 Fox hits with 'Fight' 'Dogma'joins gripes of Brooklyn Museum admist Los Angeks Times The one sure thing th Fincher's S68 million mov Club" has going for it, or ag controversy. According to movie experts, the free publicity t generating can either help o film's ultimate box-office per But many said the movie w uphill baVtle sustaining itself i ketplace and appealing to peo its core audience of 18 to 3 males due to its graphically v tent. Despite some critics praisin as a groundbreaking masterpi Club" is being released at time with violence in entert major flash point in Washingt Fox naturally chose not to violence in its marketing which some competitors rega leading advertising. Instead th is focusing on the film's achievements, its originality themes. "Audiences are saying, 'giv thing original,"' says Fox controversy chief Bob Harper. "This is not a movie that's been made five other times. It's hat David unique, distinct and intelligent and the vie "Fight biggest marketing tool in its post-open- gainst it, is ing will be that it's something riveting and important to talk about." marketing Fox executives are hoping audiences he film is will look below the surface and connect r impair a to the film's satirical, existential themes formance. and overarching comment on the mod- vill face an ern world and the dehumanizing influ- in the mar- ences of such things as consumerism. ple beyond "I think the movie is very, very intense 0-year-old in its ideas and the way they're present- iolent con- ed, and people mistake that for vio- lence," says Laura iskin, who as head ng the film of the studio's movie label Fox 2000 was ece, "Fight the executive who bought and developed a sensitive Chuck Palahniuk's book on which the ainment a movie is based. on. With a script by first-timer Jim Uhls, play up the "Fight Club" stars Norton as an alienat- materials, ed white-collar drone stuck in a mean- rd as mis- ingless job at a big company. He e company befriends a freaky, charismatic loner cinematic (Pitt) who lives in a dilapidated mansion and larger where he makes strange soap. The two begin an underground fight e us some- club, where disaffected men like them- marketing selves take out their pent-up aggressions Is Fincher's film too violent? Pitt, Norton and 20th Century Fox don't think so. by beating each other up bare-fisted as a way of emancipating themselves from the numbness of contemporary life. Fox's movie chairman Bill Mechanic says boxing classics such as "Raging Bull" and "Rocky," and certainly many war films, are much more graphic than "Fight Club," which he notes, "I don't see as a violent movie." Mechanic says the fact that Ziskin was the one who championed and developed the movie indicates that "Fight Club" won't turn away most women as some people are speculating. "I'm interested in what it has to say about men and society at large," says Ziskin, "And, why we have all these (material) things and still feel numb and can't sleep at night." Still, Fox executives are well aware that their unconventional movie - which was co-financed by Arnon Milchan's New Regency Prods. - won't appeal to everyone. Those who have seen it tend to either love or hate this film. The New Yorker critic David Denby called it "a fascist rhapsody pos- ing as a metaphor of liberation," while Rolling Stone reviewer Peter Travers called it "groundbreaking." Mechanic said, "It's an Us Vs. Them movie. It's certainly not a middle-of-the- road movie ... we didn't make it for everyone." Mechanic remains convinced the film could do enough business to make it a hit. "We didn't make it as a non-commer- cial movie. The fact that we made it at the price we did, we had the inherent belief that it would attract a big enough audiences to turn a profit," said the Fox chairman. The film's success will ultimately depend on word of mouth. If the movie doesn't satisfy enough of the audience, no degree of controversy or publicity will help. Nwsy 0 In "Stigmara, Patricia Arquette is plagued by (hrist-like. blood-oozing wounds. The Catholic Church's exis- tence is challenged. without irony or humor. A cardinal is shown trying to strangle Arquette. Protest against this ugly, sodden rip-off of "The Exorcist" came mostly from critics offended by its crimes against taste and imagination. Otherwise, it's about to disappear into home-video purga- tory with barely a murmur from the religious Thought Police. In "Doema," Linda Fiorcntino is a lapsed Catholic working- in an abor- tion clinic who is beckoned by God's sardonic mouthpiece (Alan Rickman) to stop two rogue angels (Ben Affleck and Matt Damon) from entering the portals of a New Jersey church and, thus, ending Life As We Know It. Though religious mythology and pro- priety are kicked around like so many soccer balls (a cardinal, played by George Carlin, is shown putting golf balls into a sacramental cup), this goofy, exuberant movie ends up embracing faith, with a capital F, in God - revealed here to look very much like Alanis Morrisette. Nevertheless, writer-director Kevin Smith, the lapsed comic-book artist and practicing Catholic best known for his ribald, slacker comedies-of- manners "Clerks" (1993) and "Chasing Amy" (1996), has gotten a taste of what may lay in store when "Dogma" opens nationwide Nov. 12. Its screening at the recent New York Film Festival prompted demonstra- tions by Christian fundamentalists whose only knowledge of the film is what they've read about it. Smith, however, recognizes it was somewhat fortunate that this screen- ing was all but obscured by the noisi- er ideological brushfire over the recent opening of the Brooklyn Museum of Art's "Sensation" exhibit. "I feel bad for the museum. I feel bad for the artists. I feel bad for the people of New York," Smith said the Where will you be in summer 2000? Working with parent teacher associations on environmental education projects in the Solomon Islands. Conducting teaching workshops with the Ministry of Education in Nepal. Teaching general or integrated science to high school students in Namibia. Visit our booth! Health Career Fair .0C. Wednesday, November 3 Register through Career Planning and Placement. To find out about upcoming information sessions visit our Web site www.peacecorpsgov or contact Nancy Parachini at (734) 647-2182 orPeace.Corp lumicldu.' S pcializing In: Skin Care Full Body Waxi 15% OFF THROUGH OCTOBER 31ST!!! ANNE TARITAS afternoon before "Dogma's" first of two festial screenings. "A the same time, it took a little heat off me. and I'm all for a break. I've been dealing __ with the Catholic League for months now, and if they've turned their atten- tion away to something else, it's a relief, you know?" The original idea was to avoid con-. flict in the first place. Disney-owned Miramax produced "Dogma" as it had Smith's preious films. Recognizing the hot-potato potential of a moxie that mixes theology with masturbation and poo-poo jokes,- Miramax honchos Harvey and Bob Weinstein bought "Dogma" out of their own pockets and sold it to Lions (late Films, the distributor behind such hot potatoes as "Buffalo '66" and "Gods and Monsters." Nice save, fellas. But talk about stigma -- the word is, as they say, out on "Dogma." And while its hip, high-I powered cast - which also includes Chris Rock as the "13th apostle," Salma Hayek as Serendipity the Muse and Smith and Jason Mewes reprising their "Clerks" and "Chasing Amy" roles as slackmeisters Jay and Silent Bob - would be enough to guarantee zeitgeist interest, the movie's box office can only be helped by the con- troversy. "The Catholic Church isn't taking a stance on it all," Smith said. "No. 1,a because movies are kinda evil, I sup-.' pose. But the Church is smart enough ".. to know that if you don't want to call attention to something, you don't point at it, screeching, 'Don't look at this!' The Catholic League, on the other hand, has been going after Disney for years, and if calling atten- tion to the movie means calling atten- tion to itself, so be it. 'Stigmata' prac- tically gets a pass because it's not a Disney film, and I'm sure that if Lions Gate had this film from the get- go, there would have been no brouha- ha over it at all." Meanwhile, even critics who like "Dogma" have thus far lodged their usual complaints against Smith-'s movies: that it's overloaded with- comic-book dynamics, it's visually inept and everybody talks too damn much! Smith pleads guilty on all counts. To the first, he says, "There's a bit, of 'Justice League of America' to the way this quest-battle is devised. But if you're going to do a movie like this where you see ideas portrayed in the form of angels and muses and visions, it helps to have this play out as if it were a graphic novel." As for the last two complaints (which, upon reflection, really add up to one complaint), Smith shrugs, "What can I say? In other movies, they don't have to talk too much. In mine, unfortunately, they do because I'm not a gifted filmmaker. No one thinks of well-directed visual movies when they think of mine. I'm a writer who has to direct his own stuff. And yeah, it's because I'm in love with language. But in this instance, you need a lot more exposition and dia- logue because you can't presuppose that everybody knows about Catholicism. So they talk a lot. It's what I do." ng Arbor Hills Hair & Body Salon 2295 S. State St. Ann Arbor, MI (734) 913-5557 Hiring Sophomores The Michigan Daily will give you the opportunity to gain valuable business experi- ence in display advertising. As an Account Ex- ecutive, you will sell advertising to local and na- tional businesses, manage your own account territory, create ad copy and layout, and earn commission- based pay. ti , s : ;: x i i I