ihe Invisible World U David Gates reads at Shaman Drum. Gates, the author of "Preston Falls" and "Jernigan," will read from "Wonders of the Invisible World," his new collection of short stories. 8 p.m. Za irfit igan Daig Tomorrow in Daily Arts: * Read Daily Arts for a review of the new film, "The Adventures of Sebastian Cole." Monday September 27, 1999 I ji~l a~ "; 3y y r- w ! --msmr- - - amw . ", - 4 t4x Jakob' defies solemnitywilies By Christopher Tkaczyk Daily Arts Writer If a comedy isn't funny, is it still a comedy? Maybe the answer to the question is as subjec- tive as its own interest, depending upon what one finds humorous. Or maybe said comedy isn't real- ly a comedy at all, but is posing as one to attract a wider audience. Throw in a million dollar uberstar comedian, weak script and a shoddy editing job, and you have "Jakob the Liar," the film Columbia Pictures has been claiming to be Robin William's next Oscar victory. Surely, they're lying. Williams stars as Jak,,b Heym, a Jewish latka vendor living in a Nazi-controlled ghetto "some- where in Poland" during World War I. Because of the war and the non-existent economy, Heym has been Jakob the forced to close his cafe and Liar spend his days at the work camp where he and the other Jewish men tote bags of At Showcase cement. The beginning of the film finds Heym, starved for news from outside of the ghetto, chasing a page of newspaper being tossed about by the wind. Later that day, in the darkness of late evening, i Courtesy of Fiydaddy Records eading the Welsh music invasion, here come the Super Furry Animals. Furry Anmals pive super show Iv St~ Get ,_...- aily Arts Writer True originality in rock music is a carce commodity these days. As hip- op, techno and other digitally con- *ed music has drawn the multitudes way from the land of the electric guitar, ck musicians seem to have been chas- g their own tails in failed attempts to atch up with their electronic brethren. Enter the Super Furry Animals, a and that has reversed the process. Since ceir incarnation in the early '90s. SFA ave transformed from a straight ahead chno outfit to a rock band that uses vnthesizers - or are they a techno out- it hatuses guitars? Either way, they a-omehow pulled off the rare feat of amlessly meshing Beatles-rooted pop d upbeat rock tempos with outer- ace knob twisting and clever sam- ling. Having roots in techno has given the arnd the expertise to do their own pro- uction and studio engineering, allowing them to construct their records with the layered effect that is inherent Uper Furry within electronic Animals music. "Like we Magic Stick were doing when 1999 we made techno," Sept. 25, guitarist Huw "Bunf" Bunford explains, "we might place more importance on the mixing than the recording. We do all the producing krselves ... even down to the editing hen we cut the record." Hailing from Wales, the band went noticed for the better half of the cade. And they are not alone. Quite to e contrary, the unlikely location of ales has proved recently to be a potent servoir of young musical talent, the es of which also include Gorky's v ic Mynci, Catatonia and tereophonics. "It's not really a scene," mments Bunford", it's just a coinci- nce that [the UK music press] started riting about the bands that were there. e've all been in bands for about 12 ars. We know everyone else in atatonia and we're friends with them, t we don't have much in common with em musically. We have more in com- on with Gorky's because we use the m producer and studio, so we get a tr sound." The more melodic elements of SFA's usic, as well as their British existence, ye led to their being lumped into the ritpop category - you know, Suede, asis, blah blah - by the notoriously ekle UK music press, a label that SFA pise. "It's a lot of shit really," asserts gnford. "We hate Britpop and [the UK ress) tries to market us as a Britpop a from Wales. They're just selling :e~.".SFA share a similar contempt Sthe retroactive tendencies of the ritpop camp. "It's ironic because all of i bands that they're trying to emulate ere ahead of their time ... so they're all bunch of throwbacks really." Whatever pigeonholings the British press tries to bestow upon SFA should be eradicated by the group's latest effort "Guerrilla," an album that frantically straddles as many musical styles as there are songs on the album. From zany calypso to scathing Stooges-style garage punk, the album is a brilliant and smoothly crafted exercise in variation. As fiercely creative as SFA is in the studio, making the transition to the stage has also given them ample opportunity to experiment with their music. In the UK, SEA have gone out of their way to make their shows memorable experi- ences. Recently, they have been includ- ing large horn sections to complement their songs. More profoundly, they have tinkered with an idea called "quadrophenic sound" at some of their British shows. "We were using a joystick to rotate the sound around four speakers, each placed in a corner of the venue," explains Bunford", it's white noise - just freaking the audience out really." Unfortunately, as their resources have been a bit more limited, SFA have not been able to be as adventurous with their live sound while touring North America. Consequently, at Detroit's the Magic Stick - a venue not noted for its expan- sive size -they decided to put on what Bunford regarded as a "punk rock show." And that was fine by the audience. While SFA may have focused more on their guitar-driven songs than their more layered ones, the band did not fail to deliver a compelling set. Kicking the evening off, the bizarre new single "Wherever I Lay My Phone" blazed through a rollercoaster of hyper- speed "drum and bass" that eventually segued into an uproarious freakout of pummeling rhythm and Gruff Rhys' heavenly falsetto singing. Having accomplished that, the band go down to the "punk rock." SFA added extra speed and intensity to upbeat rock numbers like "Bad Behavior" and "God! Show Me Magic. " A couple of dreamy space ballads later- "Demons" and the delightfully Beach Boys-esque "She's Got Spies - they unleashed the relent- less sonic fury of "Nightvision." A track from "Guerrilla," "Nightvision" bulldozed the audience in the form of an armored tank built of heavy metal and manned by Iggy and the Stooges. By the song's end, Rhys was lying flailing on the stage and screaming like a wounded animal into a voice har- monizer. Intense, you bet. The brilliantly extended funkathon of "The Man Don't Give a Fuck" proved to be a worthy successor to "Nightvision"'s reign of terror and thus concluded SA's 90-minute set. Is the world ready for the Super Furry Animals? Probably not, at least not the brainwashed masses in America who eat up radio fodder and think that Limp Bizkit is cutting edge. But, while world domination may be a little beyond their sights, SEA have given those who are fortunate enough to pay attention a fan- tastic little corner of the musical uni- verse. Superfurrydom -- and what a wonderful place it is. Heym is still chasing same scrap of paper, now past parietal curfew and in the dangerous territory of Nazi no-nos. In the highly controlled ghetto, news of the out- side world is forbidden, as are the possession of newspapers or radios. He is sent to the offices outside of the ghetto to see a Nazi officer for punishment and, by accident, hears via radio broadcast that the Russian army is 400 kilometers away and that Nazi forces are unable to hold the lines. After being sent back to the ghetto by the offi- cer sans punishment, Heym bumps into 10 year- old runaway Jewish girl, Lina, who broke free from a concentration camp-bound train and, like Heym, is trying to sneak back into the ghetto after the gates have been locked. During a tender moment of duty, widowed Heym realizes that his function is to hide the girl in his attic. If this movie had been set in the lower country, this review would read a bit differently. Heym keeps the pres- ence of the girl a secret from his friends for fear that her discovery would lead to the most dire of punishments. The next day, Heym tells a friend, Mischa, about the closeness of the Russians and the nearness of freedom. Excited, Mischa demands to know the source of the news. For reasons unexplained, though probably for fear of life, Heym doesn't dis- close his listening to the radio in the Nazi office, and uses the packaged "I just know and, you have to believe me" line. Even though Heym denies any secrecy of a radio, Mischa rationalizes that if Heym had a radio he would hope to keep it secret by denying any possession of it. Of course, all gossip travels fast and soon the whole ghetto knows of Jakob Heym and his radio. The only lie Heym actually tells to his fellow men is that he has the radio. An exaggeration of American involvement is explained at one point, and a speech by Winston Churchill is concocted to quench the men's thirst for news about the war. The moral of "Jakob the Liar" arrives in a par- ticularly moving scene when Heym and Kowalsky (played effectively by Bob Balaban) realize that the lies deliver a sense of hope that, in more ways than one, is keeping the Polish Jews of the ghetto alive. The suicide rate is down and there is a newly determined strength in seeing the war to its end. Courtesy of Columbia Pictures Robin Williams brings hope to his fellow ghetto inhabitants In "Jakob the Liar." WARNING, DON'T READ IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW THE ENDING ... EVEN THOUGH YOU CAN PROBABLY GUESS WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN ... But the audience is left questioning the affabili- tv of a such a moral, especially when the outcome of the war and the imprisoned Jews are unaffected by Heym's lies. In the end, after Heym is tortured by the Nazis to reveal the location of his purport- ed "radio," he is given the chance to reveal to the ghetto villagers that the radio was a lie. The maddening gallows scene could possibly have worked if Williams had shouted "Freedom!" before an untimely death. He remains silent, however, and the brilliant hope within the people lives on while he is shot down to reality. His death is turned down a notch, and, although still effective, draws more tears from shock than for glory. Jakob Heym is no mar- tyr because his cause and the hope are extin- guished by his gruesome death, regardless if such a radio had actually existed. The once-hushed onlookers break into screams of terror and run for it. Where to is unknown. OKAY, YOU CAN READ AGAIN ... For as potentially strong as "Jakob the Liar" could be, it is a disappointment that director and Holocaust survivor Peter Kassovitz didn't do more with the story. The scenes between Heym and Lina are tender and redeem the film from its senseless supposed dialogue and slow plot development. The editors also should've screened the film a bit more close- ly, as the overhead boom microphone can be spot- ted in more than one scene, making the audience realize that, yes, it's only a movie. Jakob Heym is-a liar based on a few fibs that got the proverbial ball rolling, and the citizens oL the unnamed Polish ghetto are the main contribu- tors to the fornicative tragedy, which, of course, by the Hollywood Bible, must result in the unfor- tunate death of a simple do-gooder with the tell- tale heart. A liar is a liar by any standards. It only takes one killing to make a Nazi a murderer and Jakob Heym only needs to spread one fib to be con- demned. But he really isn't the liar, the film proclaims him to be. The true moral of "Jakob the Liar" should've been: Yes, it's a sin to tell a lie, but redemption is assured if the lie is bound to some higher cause, such as the sustaining of hope. The dramatic performances in "Jakob the Liar" are good. Alan Arkin does a fine job as an out-of- work actor/father and Hannah Taylor-Gordon as Lina brings a serious interest to Jakob Heym's story. Their foster parent-child relationship is what gives Heym a pulse and reminds the audience that he isn't just a liar. There's nothing funny about "Jakob the Liar." As seems to be the formula for all of Williams' films, a silly improvisational scene featuring his famous knack for entertainment is included. Throwing a comedian into the drama is like throw- ing a wrench into the iron works or dropping an atomic bomb to end a war. Sure, you're going to please a few people, but the sensibly informed will be sickened. Read the Daily. Write for the Daily. Recycle the Daily. b Phoenix Services is presently recruiting for the following positions: Administrative Assistants-Receptionists, Data Entry Clerks, Bookkeepers- Accounting Specialists-Customer Service Representatives, General Office- Light Industrial-Fork Truck Drivers, Production/Assembly Positions. We offer SAME WEEK PAY, profit sharing, paid vacations, holiday pay, referral bonuses, medical benefits and free software training. 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