18A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 7, 2000 F ARTS Aguilera media blitz hopes to set theafB teen apart from Brit 'Gun' director " shoots straight from The Los Angeles'l'Ies You say you can't tell your Christina Aguilera doll from your Britney Spears doll? Aguilera hopes to make the differ- ences clearer in the coming weeks. First there is the all-Spanish-lan- guage album "Mi RIeflejo" due out Sept. 12. A month lat'er she'll release her first Christmas album. On both she'll display the kinfd of voice that earned her favorable 'comparisons to big voices like Mariah Carey and won her the best- new-artist Grammy this year - over a roster that included, ahem, 'Spears. Along with TV specials and the rest of her tour, Aguilera may finally break op1t of the pack of former Mickey- louse-Club-members-turned-tcen- .pop-singing-stars. "It's just a matter of time," Aguil- era says by phone from a tour stop. 'in Minneapolis. "Within the next .year probably, a lot of people will really see." They haven't so far, she says: 1 think it's kind of ffustrating that, over the past year, people haven't looked for themselves what the dif- ferences are. Or maybe they've seen us and want to categorize us as being the same thing because they maybe see a navel and some blond hair. But we are different in our own ways.7 Aguilera, 19, has said in the past that she's more attuned to R&B, but her record company tried to steer her more to pop on her year-old debut, which has now sold 7 million copies. The differences will become clearer with the upcoming albums. "I mean, with the Latin record, that's different from what people are doing; the Christmas record will have so many things on it that are just far different types of music, some of it very mature. I think it's something definitely for young and old to get into." As for the official follow-up to her No. I pop debut album, due out next year, she knows, in the words of one of her hits, "What a Girl Wants." "It's not like I'm going to have the first single off my new record be a ver- sion of 'Genie in a Bottle' but with different lyrics," she said. "That's just totally uncreative to me" . The reference is a thinly veiled one to Spears, whose first single from her second album, "Oops ... I Did It Again," was criticized as being nothing more than a remake of that artist's first hit, "Baby One More Time." As Aguilera continues her first headlining amphitheater tour with Destiny's Child, she's anticipating the Spanish album, produced with Rudy Perez. Already it has produced the current Top 10 entry on the Billboard Latin singles chart, "Por Siempre Tu," a Spanish-language version of "I Turn to You." AnOthqr of its tracks, the Spanish version 'f ""Genie in a Bottle" - "Genio Altrapado" - is nominated for the Billboard Latin Music Awards Sept. 13. She'll be up for five MTV Music Video Awards Sept. 7. And she'll be performing at both shows. Never mind that she hasn't quite mastered the second language. "'I have a Spanish tutor on the road with me now, to perfect my Spanish," she says. "Because it is something that I take very seriously as just being a part of me. I mean, * my father being from Ecuador. And my gr'aiidparents would be proud of this album." Half the songs on "Mi Reflejo" are Latin versions of her pop hits (including the title track, a rework- ing of her song from "Mulan," "Reflection"). Six other tracks are new songs. Both the Latin and the Christmas albums are matters of "doing a bit of experimenting and exploring different sides of myself." On the Christmas album, she says, "we're doing a lot of classic, huge bal- lads. You know, 'O Holy Night' turns into a huge ballad. We've got, you know, 'Silent Night' on it,'she said. "This Christmas record is definitely going to show how I've grown over the past year vocally." Such powerhouse ballads "where I just completely let loose and put my heart into, and just belt out" arc impor- tant to her. But, she adds, "I'm still 19 years old, going on 20, and there still is very much a part of me that wants to bdst out in full-out choreography and put on a really entertaining show." For now, she's satisfied with the comparisons to big-voiced singers like Maiah Carey. But she's one in a number of influ- ences Aguilera cites, including Whit- ney Houston, Brian McKnight and Etta James - - the latter being the most unusual choice. the mouth The \ashigton Post Perhaps it's appropriate: The man who wrote and directed a movie called "The Way of the Gun" stud- ied film with a 9mm pistol on his hip. No, not at NYU. Rather, at a small- er, tougher academy: the University of the Amboy Multiplex, Sayreville, N.J., among dope dealers and assorted vio- lent crazies. But to look at Christopher McQuarrie, who won an Oscar for writing the now-legendary 1995 hit "The Usual Suspects," you'd never believe it. He doesn't look like any kind of suspect, usual or not, and he looks like nobody versed in the ways of guns. What you see is a husky thirty- something in Stephen King's beard and glasses, his own gray shirt, khakis and a pair of running shoes. Assistant professor, anyone? Former bright young man of the high school English department? Dentist on day off? You've certainly never seen an Oscar winner with less pizazz, even if he is the man who thought up the legendary master criminal Keyser Soze. To look at his spectacular ordinariness, you'd never imagine that he spent four years toting the 9- mil as a security guard in a danger- ous movie theater just off the Garden State Parkway. And you'd never believe he'd be the writer-director of the bullet- shattered, gunsmoke-seething betrayalfest "The Way of the Gun," which opens in theaters next month, a movie to which you'd be well advised to wear a Kevlar vest. Oh, and be careful not to slip on the empty shell casings on the floor, of which there are many. He seems so ... suburban. What was a nice fellow like him doing with a gun on his hip? And what was he doing on the podium at the Academy Awards'? Explain yourself, young man. Like nearly anybody who is asked to explain himself, even the shy and diffi- dent McQuarrie is up to the challenge. "I was just one of those kids who wanted to write," he says of an extremely middle-class childhood at a high school where everybody went to college. "Didn't want to go to college or anything. Instead of college, I went to Australia for a year through an agency that placed Americans in jobs. Then I wandered the western desert with a friend. Got back and went to work for my father's cousin's security agency. There's a guilty little laugh here. When "The Usual Suspects" was so hot, the publicity suggested that McQuarrie had been a detective, which gave the movie, about a hunt for the legendary, manipulative criminal genius Keyser Soze, an imprimatur of mysterious reality. Even the publicity for "The Way of the Gun" - Which is about a boneheaded kidnapping that goes bloodily, spectacularly wrong-plays up the detective-agency angle, again suggesting that the writer-director has mysterious insights into the world of true crime. "Well, you know, a little exagger- ation," he says. "I didn't do any real detective work. It was security work. I worked in a uniform in a theater that was on the way to cverywhere, and it was crazy. A lot of violence, drug sales, fights, stuff like that. I carried a gun. I carried a gun before I could legally buy ammunition.- What saved -- or doomed - McQuarrie was his high school buddy Bryan Singer, who, just before McQuarrie was about to apply to the New York City Police, asked him to come out to Los Ange- les to work on a picture. Tfihe two pals -both, McQuarrie admits, "social outcasts" in high school - had previously written and directed short films together. McQuarrie, somewhat at loose ends, went out to work on a film called "Public Access," which ulti- mately got made ("Three months after I got to L.A., I was on the set of a movie I had written.") and wo4 a big award at the Sundance Film Festival, which in turn led to a chance to make a much larger film. With that opportunity, Singer called him to revive a project the two had already discussed casually. As McQuarrie recalls it, the conver- sation went like this: S: "Remember the movie?" McQ: "Yeah." S: "I need to pitch it in three days. Get busy." At the time, McQuarrie was work-0 ing in the copying room of a Los Angeles law firm. He found a small place where he could work. "It seemed like an interrogation room," he said. "I started to interrogate myself on what kind of story I wanted to write. As I was interrogating myself, I was talking so much that I named the part I was playing in my mind 'Verbal.' But I was out of ideas and I looked up and there was a memo on the bulletin board about the Heim- lich maneuver. "So suddenly I had an idea for someone getting ideas from a bulletin board behind his interrogator. It was a great twist. So I started coming up with ways to rationalize it. I didn't even know the rules I was breaking." There were other things McQuarrie didn't know. He didn't know, for example, that the phrase "usual sus- pects" came from a movie, namely "Casablanca." He just knew the phrase from somewhere. He didn't know any- thing about film noir, the genre he was in the process of revitalizing. He just had a vague idea about a master criminal who had killed his family -- the inspiration came from a familiar case he recalled concerning John Liszt, who'd done the same - and the idea of someone telling a story off of cues on the wall behind him. H threw in the names of some of the peo- ple he was working with. But clearly, he had a great deal of talent, great luck and good guidance from Singer. Thus, he ended up on the podium at the Oscars. "The Oscar was the best and worst thing that ever happened to me," McQuarrie says. "It makes that film hard to get* away from. I'll always be affiliated with 'The Usual Suspects.' I'd much rather it happened at the end of my career than at the beginning. But it's been great financially. It's kept me alive for years. But even if you win the Oscar, there's a Hollywood real- ity you have to face: Nobody wants to make your film. They want to make their film."Af Courtesy of chnstinia .com 19 and never been kissed? Christina Aguilera is hot hot hot. But Aguilera, who says she first heard the song in a movie, says she has been in a trance by James' "At Last" ever since. She covers the song on the current tour. It may not be the last song she sings by the woman who made "Roll With Me Henry"a hit in 1955. Aguilera has been asked more often lately about Eminem, the rapper who inserted her into his hit "The Real Slim Shady" and alleged all sort of intimate Aguilera behavior with Fred Durst, MTV's Carson Daly and even Eminem. "I haven't even spent any time with Eminem," she said. "I mean, once, for like two seconds! So that was just like really ridiculous." She sees Eminem's name-drop- ping as "an immature way of trying to differentiate himself from this pop audience that he has kind of created for himself." Even as Aguilera seeks to expand her audience and better define her- self with her upcoming projects, she sees [mincm's crude stab as a way of doing his own differentiation. "It made him some money, and I guess that's what he was also really looking for. And it got him a hit song - by using a lot of our names. So, whatever." I- 'I beca use life doesn't stan i still... ;,,. ____T ____ _. . Office of Gree 4115 Michiga ('.11 1-mWK OI93 6-3686 - - u h.ec INTERFRATERNITY CO CIL Fraternity Forum Tuesday, September 12 11 am-3prronthe Diag Mass Meeting Thursday, September 14 7prrn Michigan Union PANHE LLE NIC ASSO IATION Mass Meeting Sunday, September 10 A-L 1pm& M-Z 3pm M chigan Union Sorority Forum Tuesday, September 12 7pr-0pm, Michigan nion GCO GREEK!I (N M T :- AR(H( aek Ufe n Union du/ ~greeks WRITE FOR DAILY ARTS. COME TO A MASS MEETING ON SEPT. 12, 14 OR 18 AT 7 PM IN THE STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BUILDING. 420 MAYNARD STREET. WELFARE REFORM REAUTHORIZATION 2001: WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED FROM THE PAST FOUR YEARS? A Debate of Leading Experts Join national experts in social welfare policy to debate the results of the landmark 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportuniy Reconciliation Act, its impact on the poor in America in the past four years, and the future of welfare with the reauthorization in 2001. September 7, 2000, 4 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Michigan Union - Anderson Room D Rebecca Blank Dean of the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy and former member of the President's Council of Economic Advisers. Ron Haskins Staff Director in the U.S. House of Representatives. MONUMENTAL S VINGS' 0 - OUR BIGGGEST I I I ~ ' iii I