glas the Great 1M ItjrTmoatt rrow in Daily Arts: ougas Fairbanks stars in "Wild and Woolly" tonight at the U Check out reviews of the animated "Princess Mononok" higan Theater. Fairbanks plays a wealthy boy who wants to and the new Schwarzenegger flick "End of Days slum it as a cowboy on the open range in this 1917 classic. 7 p.m., Michigan Theater, free. :*RTSTuesday November 23, 1999 - ' OURN EY TOTHE CENTER OF RITAIN Dieector sees im as fresh, n e By Erin Podolsky" Daily Arts Writer "Things only change if you allow them to change you," said film director Atom Egoyan during a recent interview with the Daily. He was talking about himself and the attention he'sa ommanded since his surprising double-whammyy Oscar nominations (Best Adapted Screenplay andF Director) for his 1997 film "The Sweet Hereafter." He could have just as easily been speaking of the underly- ing themes of his films, which also include "Exotica" and the upcoming "Felicia's Journey." Things have changed a bit for Egoyan, or perhaps he's changing them himself. He has moved away from Bob Hoskins plays not-so nice-guy Hilditch, the man who takes young Felicia, played by Elaine Ca original screenplays of late, his last two projects being his wing in "Felicia's Journey adaptations of novels. "It's never on purpose, it's reallyh a matterofwhat you're inspired by.You read something several films that Egoyan has not worked with "One of the other real challenget qpd it strikes you," Egoyan said. "I would say that after young Canadian actress Sarah Polley. Polley seems loved about 'telicia's Journey' is the Exotica,' I was aware at that point I had gone as far as like a logical first choice for the title role, along two characters are kind of suspendedi I could with a certain type of original idea I had. So with Ian Holm (also of "The Sweet Hereafter") in I wanted to do was have these comt when I read 'The Sweet Hereafter,' I felt it was an Hoskins' shoes, but Egoyan decided it would be pieces: She seems to come from thel opportunity to extend my universe, to explore other best to select an unknown actress. and he seems to be from the 1950s. Th issues, take the gift that a great novel offers. "Sarah and I talked about it and we sort of both when you actually realize it's set in the "I did start working on an original script after agreed that to have an actual person from (Ireland) are almost a shock," Egoyan said. 'The Sweet Hereafter,' but then I got 'Felicia's would be pretty crucial. And it's also because Sarah is "Notions of time are one of the m Journey' and I read it and I just couldn't get it out so piercingly intelligent, it would have been really dif- aspects of how a filmmaker chooses to t of my head. And that's really how these projects ficult to believe her as being that naive. We talked The ability to reorient and challenge o begin, I think. You just can't get the ideas out of about it a lot. The original and kind of obvious con- what time is is a really important part o ur head and you seen an opportunity to blend sideration was Ian Holm and Sarah Polley, but it just a film narrative." your sensibility with someone else's and to create a would have been a bit odd since the two films were With "Felicia's Journey" opening piece of work that will be cohesive." made so close to each other," Egoyan said. Egoyan has his eye on his next project Ostensibly a tale of an unassuming serial killer, Instead, Egoyan went with previously unknown Irish ing on an original script again, but whi played by Bob Huskins, and an innocent Irish girl, actress Cassidy. "I knew that it was a very difficult role you'll ultimately be moved by," he saic played by Elaine Cassidy, out of her league in a British to pull off because it's so difficult to believe that in our most unpredictable aspect of what w city as she searches for her absent love. Beneath the culture someone could be that innocent and naive that I you decide you're not going to read a surface of the plot conventions, though, runs a current wanted to present somebody who we'd never seen might be working on something and of pain and just-around-the-corner catharsis found before and who we might believe is the real thing. Now, and decide that that's what you need t throughout Egoyan's original work. Elaine isn't - she's a really wonderful actress but Critical response to "The Sweet H "Issues of personal and political self-determina- because we don't know who she is, I think it's easier to made Egoyan into a wanted man n, issues of how people deal with denial, what's fall under the spell of the world she comes from," fringes of the film industry, refusing t 'e nature of choice, all those kind of ideas (in Egoyan explained. Canada into Hollywood's beckoning a 'Felicia's Journey') really fascinated me," Egoyan Hoskins, who has moved easily between big- looks back fondly on his time in the s said, speaking of William Trevor's source novel. "I budget studio efforts like "Who Framed Roger "I'm humbled by that response an also felt that it was an opportunity to deal with Rabbit?" and smaller fare such as "The Secret think that was a real miracle, what h issues that I'd explored in my previous work but Agent," was a more obvious choice for Egoyan. years ago. The whole film was a peak from a totally different perspective. It's just some- "He's somebody who has always worn his heart on Egoyan said. "That was just a very, thing that is much simpler and the characters were his sleeve. He always makes his emotions so evi- time in my life to be elevated to that much starker than they might have been in my other dent and palpable, and he plays this character who receive that type of support for a filr films." we don't want to believe what he is," he said. "It's being conventional. It's all a bit of a n "Felicia's Journey" is Egoyan's first film not set really important to get somebody who seems very how I make my films that I could su his native Canada. It also marks the first time in accessible." into that pantheon." 'Felicia' explores nostalgia, control s and what I idea that the in titne. What peting period 19th Century ose moments current time ost important ell their story. ur notiqs of f constructing in theatres, t. "I'm work- o knows what id. "That's the ve do, unless nything. You read a book o do next." ereafter" has working the o move from rms. Still, he potlight. d grateful. I appened two experience," very special level and to Mi that is not miracle given ddenly enter By Erin Podolsky Daily Arts Writer The verdant hills of an Ireland who cannot abide the British and a Britain whose gray industrialism seems firmly rooted in the 1950s provide the back- drop for "Felicia's Journey," a film that moves easily between quiet moments of recognition and nostalgic hilarity, all tinged with an ominous undercurrent. Overlaid with a serial killer with a gas- tronomic bent and a young girl on an impossible search, the film Felicia's addresses ideas Journey of control and catharsis with opens Wed. at the equanimity. Michigan Theater A tale of two troubled souls who don't see that they're trou- bled until they find each other, "Fe ic ia's Journey" repre- sents a marked surface change for writer/director Atom Egoyan. His choice of material benefits his charac- ters, and, indeed, embodies them, all three, Egoyan, Hilditch (Bob Hoskins) and Felicia (Elaine Cassidy), outsiders in their locations no matter how at home they think they are. Felicia travels to Britain, motivated by her need to find the father of her unborn child and because her own father has threatened to disown her because of her lover's politi- cal leanings. Walking the cobbled streets in her ill-suited shoes, there she is even more alone than we see her in flashback scenes to Ireland. Felicia arrives in Hilditch's town and the two cross paths many times. Hilditch finally offers to help her search for her missing lover, Johnny (Peter McDonald), but the look in his eye says that he knows more than he's letting on. Hilditch himself has plenty of bag- gage to deal with, and the explanation for his actions is contained in a series of scenes recollecting his mother's old cooking show. Hilditch as a child appears in each one of these, his pain at being little more than a prop to his voluptuous mother (played with juicy horror by Arsinte Khanjian) more than plain on his pudgy face; Hilditch as a man has a room full of cooking appli- ances and videotapes, which he watches and uses to create exquisite meals. Hilditch's eventual unmasking as a serial killer is at once revelatory and expected - the psychological pain that he seems to absorb like a sponge in his conversations with others can only reach such a level before he must purge it from himself. But in Felicia he perhaps finds a match. When Hilditch is not a monster, he seems as innocent as his new young friend, a roly-poly man who, although lonely, is at least happy. But in the well- spring of emotional pain that flows behind his eyes, the truth resides, and eventually overtakes him. And Felicia? Felicia discovers the nature of life and learns to stop the lies that she has unknowingly been living in, believing in. Newcomer Elaine Cassidy, face fresh as cream, does her duty as the unsophis- ticated title character with the charm and grace of a far more experienced actress. Her Felicia is utterly believable-never for a second do we think that Felicia has any idea just how horribly she's been lied to by Johnny. Hoskins, for his part, is the ultimate good/bad guy, a man whom we pray can be redeemed even when we know he cannot. His jolly fagade drops when he is alone in his house of horrors, his sadness made real. Felicia and Hilditch are haunted by their respective memories, by the pain of being lied to and left behind. The mys- tery of their pasts unravels in due time, as Egoyan once again turns to his beloved device of displacing events, of non-linear storytelling. In the hands of a less skilled filmmaker, such a tool would become tedious oreven expected. In Egoyan's capable command, it's sub- lime. While "Felicia's Journey" does not pack quite the emotional wallop of the director's last two films, it comes close -and close is fartcloserthan most film- makers can ever hope to get. 'Flaw'ed film shows weak Schumacher Come to 420 Manard toy get free "Knoc kout Kings 2000" posters featuring the real king of the world Muhammed All. y rin Podolsy as~rts Writer itling a film something along the nes of "Perfect" or "Four Stars" (both f which exist, I assure you, although I ave not seen them) is more often than ot asking for trouble. It's trite and it's ness - it encourages quote whores, ose names in tiny print that you see in ads below quotes attempts to deal with themes of redemp- tion and acceptance. Instead, it ends up coming across as boring and crass and, when not insensitive, rather schmaltzy. De Niro plays New York City police officer Walt Koontz, a career cop with medals to back up his badge. We know this because he likes to stare for hours on end at a picture of himself and his old buddies holding up their valorous Courtesyof MGM like "'Perfect' is awards. Walt lives a lonely life in a tene- r"nnipeur n"""'" a ".'oer ue scar.n .oe aenuuan a r . perfect!" and it ment populated with dealers, hookers the room, piano still ringing, they sud- Robin," he's offering yet another so- e n c o u r a g e s and drag queens. We know this because denly realize that they need each other.' called skill up for the media to skewer. lawless exceedingly lame we are introduced to representatives of Isn't that sweet? Rodney King was right! All I can say is, Joel, I accept your chal- t a g 1 i n e s . each during a stupid subplot involving We can all get along! Tolerance is possi- lenge. Just keep on turning out the crap. * "Flawless;' the stolen drug money and the kingpins who ble! It's official! Drag queens and police I'll be here to warn the mdltitudes. new film - and I want it back. Walt hates and ignores all officers can live in harmony not in their The problem with "Flawless" is not SWetd. aQlty1 use that term of them - until the day he suffers a performances, but in their very presence. its subject matter, or at least not its only showcas extremely loosely debilitating stroke. We know this What possessed these two fine thespians problem. The problem is that - - from Joel because there's nothing like physical to sign on (and to make matters worse, Schumacher is so concerned with ham- Schumacher, is no adversity to change the intolerant ways De Niro's Tribeca production company mering home his message that it robs exception to the of a protagonist. produced the film) is as big a mystery as the plot and the relationship between rule. Its tagline is Part of Walt's therapy to improve his which three brgin cells are still function- Walt and Rusty in particular of all sub- "Nobody's per- decimated speech skills is singing ing in Schumacher's head. tlety. If the film had been a ten minute feet. Everybody's lessons. Because he has difficulty mov- "Flawless" was not only directed by slide show instead of a bloated two awless." It is, of course, anything but its ing around, he asks friendly neighboring Schumacher, but written as well. It's hours, it would have had the same tIe. Perhaps it won't be long now before showtune-loving, makeup-proficient, Schumacher's first official attempt at impact. If the film had been a series of 'e see films entitled "Dreck" and robust drag queen Rusty Zimmerman screenwriting since helming and author- crayon drawings done by a six-year-old, Worst Film Ever." (Hoffman) to teach him to sing. ing brat pack standard "St. Elmo's Fire" it would have had the same impact. Starring two talented actors, Philip Naturally, neither party wants to be with- in 1985. Not satisfied with proving him- Making this a movie does not make it eymour Hoffman and Robert De Niro, in 10 feet of the other, but after umpteen self incompetent as a director with such better. It does not make it flawless. It flawless" is a paper-thin tale that scenes in which one or both stomp out of films as "8MM" and "Batman & makes it pointless. Flarlem Nutcracker comes to Detroit y Neshe Sarkozy >r the Daily With the holiday season just 'ound the corner there seems no bet- ter way to get into the holiday spirit than with "The Harlem Harlem Nutcracker." lcracker Based on Tchaikovsky's troit Ogera Huse f a m o u s Nov. 26-Dec. 5 "Nutcracker Suite," "The H a r I e m Nutcracker" puts a modern spin on the well- known holiday classic ballet. With the musical arrangement by Duke Ellington and the choreography by Donald Byrd, "the show not only tells a story but is filled with jazz and modern dance Theater," said Kenneth C. Fischer, president of the University Musical Society. What we can expect to experience in this particular production is a story that is set in Harlem in the '90s. The story surrounds itself around an African-American family over the holidays. With the central focus being Clara, a grandmother and is set in her house. Clara reminisces about the good old days, Harlem in the '20s, and how she misses her later husband and the life they lived. "Since African-Americans don't have the same holiday traditions, such as Handel's Messiah and "The Nutcracker Suite," said Fischer, "Donald Byrd (show creator and choreographer) wanted something that the African-American population could relate to and enjoy." With the help of UMS, Byrd's show premiered in 1996 at the Power Center, As the show expanded and the audiences became larger, it moved to Detroit. "This way people could see it more conveniently," said Fischer. In 1994, UMS first learned of "The Harlem Nutcracker" and co-commis- sioned, along with six other commu- nities around the country, the whole production. This year there will be 11 performances and two full-length performances for children throughout southwestern'Michigan. An interesting thing to note about the show is the wide range of partici- pants. The Rudy Hawkins Singers chorus, which consists of 50 people, became a professional chorus through the show. 22 members of the cast are professional dancers. Auditions were held in the Detroit Metropolitan area; out of 180 chil- dren only 27 got in. The 15-piece jazz band arranged by David, Berger (a former member of Duke Ellington's orchestra) plays in Ellington's swing era style. Fischer exclaimed, "All that is left now is that we are hoping for snow - for the holiday spirit." * " Shabbat Israel " Experiences . ". Tours il