4 Find Maps Here... Adventure writer Miles Har- vey, author of "The Island of Lost Mapsspeaks at Hale Auditorium. 5 p.m. Free. michigandaily.com /arts AiiTS THURSDAY OCTOBER 4, 2001 4 ELITE ENTERTAINMENT EXPOSITION Surf or fight? I'm too scared to do either 'm beginning to wonder about the odor of napalm, and just how exhil- arating it is to fill ones nostrils with the stuff before breakfast. War is terri- fying hell-on earth, where you can watch your friends perish into statistics in front of your eyes. I'm not a coward, I'm not afraid to go toe-to-toe with the entire Sigma Phi Epsilon house if ' need be, but the idea of being dropped off in a strange place with a fire-arm and being told "Go get 'em" just doesn't Lyle Henretty sound like any-L thing I could do with great luster. Zero Yet I can't shake the feeling that I'm just being a weenie, I mean, my Grandpa was my age when he went to WWII, and that guy down the hall sophomore year was training to be a Marine. What do they have that I don't? Who, what could get me to not only agree, but happily agree to, in the immortal words of George C. Scott, "Make some poor bastard die for their country." Something has changed. Like every other red-blooded film buff, I've seen "Apocalypse Now" a handful of times. Last week, upon the 14th or so view- ing, I began to have admiration for Lt. Col. Kilgore. I had always loved the lunatic-fringe airman with his pristine ranger hat and instant catch phrases. He was more comical than heroic, though, surly that was the intention. A super- powered tool of the American Defense Machine who was incapable of func- tioning in normal society. The kind of guy that got a job coaching high school football and lived in a one-bedroom apartment over a dry-cleaner after the war. Yet something really clicked this time. Serving under the likes of Kilgore meant that if you were hurt, you would be taken care of. The person who hurt you would be killed. We're meant to look at Kilgore as a horrific, sickly comic parody of the gung-ho military. As his unit attacks an encampment of mostly civilians, a woman throws a grenade onto an American helicopter. Enraged, Kilgore chases the woman down with his own helicopter, tearing her body to shreds with machine-gun fire and calling her a filthy savage. Extreme, ignorant and intended to leave a bad taste in your mouth. But how would it effect you or I as your friend's bodies shatter into confetti because some "Charlie" threw a grenade at them? I don't know. To win a war you have to fight, and to fight and kill people you don't know, you need a reason. "To win the war" is a far cry away from killing that guy, or girl or whomever. Someone like Kilgore allows you to feel an important part of something bigger, something you can really contribute to. That entire set of ideas and images flashed into my mind, all by the time the Lt. Col. suggested that his men should surf, even while shells exploded around them. I felt sick, I actually wanted to be a part of the unit, a part of the game that allowed you to be macho and surf and save your country from those evil things, whatever they are. A real Kilgore, not played for sick laughs, would have no trouble leading people just like me into combat. I look to film for leadership because every real leader has always been broadcast to me over some form of media or another. President Ronald Reagan during the Cold War made me feel better about life in America, as did President Thomas J. Whitmore when those "visitors" blew up the White House. War movies are documentaries to those of us who have never fired a BB gun. "Saving Private Ryan" simply made war scary, it was anti-war. The battle was so real, so believeable, yet the characters did not exist. I've never known "The Guy From New York," or "Their Leader." I wouldn't care enough about these people to cover them in the trench. On the other hand, Private Joker and Private Gomer Pyle from "Full Metal Jacket" are people I know, or people I could know. Wow, movies effect how we think and act? Am I just repeating something that everyone who's ever uttered "Yeah, baby, yeah," or "Schwing" or "I'll be back" has known their whole lives? Films are a part of culture, they effect the way we think, period. . I don't buy it. I've never killed any- one after watching countless horror movies, or even maimed them. I never lit anything on fire after watching "Beavis and Butthead Do America." Yet what it means to be an American, to have pride, to fight, to question, to sometimes hate what America has done, has been more influenced by film then by parents and school. At the end of "Apocalypse Now," Col. Kurtz deserves to be killed. He's a monster who cannot be controlled. Sec- onds before his demise, he wonders aloud about Air Force pilots (Kilgore?) who are trained to erase cities with bombs, yet are not permited to write "fuck" on the outside of their airplanes because it's obscene. I always think how stupid this is, and then I watch the protagonist hack Kurtz to, pieces with a machete. The Confusion. The Confusion. -Lyle Henretty can be reached at lhenrett@unmich.edu 4 -Z ... : :. * a .: . Coutesy of WEA/Atlantic She don't look like no Eminem. Weekend Figures in Millions of dollars. 1. Don't Say a Word ($19.0) The only words, and I'm whisper- ing them, are - "it sucks ass." 2. Zoolander ($15.5) A movie about male models lost to bad Michael Douglas movie. Obvious- ly, this speaks volumes. 3. Hearts in Atlantis ($9.0) Instead of being filled with blood, these hearts are filled with water, from the drowned. WHAT'S ENTERTA NOXZEMA GIRL CHARGED WITH MANSLAUGHTER - Actress Rebec- ca Gayheart has been charged with manslaughter in the death of a 9- year-old boy. The Internet Movie Database reports that the television and movie actress, best-known for a series of commercials for Noxze- ma cosmetics, allegedly sped around a stopped car, struck and killed the boy, who was crossing the street. No drugs or alcohol were involved, and the boy was reportedly not crossing at a cross- Courtesy of WireImage Her face belongs to County Billboard's top 10 selling albums 1. The Blueprint, Jay-Z - The trick to selling albums is to sell out, and Jigga did that long ago. 2. Songs in A Minor, Alicia Keys - Why is God punishing us? 3. Silver Side Up, Nickelback - Isn't silver normally supposed to be pretty cool? I gave this girl I liked a silver crayon in third grade. She broke it, like my heart. 4. Strange Little Girls, Tori Amos - There are a lot of strange little girls on this CD, but none of them stranger than Tori herself. She is one screwed up chick. 5. Greatest Hits, Martina McBride - Martina McBride has a greatest hits? Geez, who's next, Col- lective Soul? Wait a damn minute. 6. Gerald's World, Gerald Levert - WHO ARE YOU. 7. A Day Without Rain, Enya - A day without rain is pretty sweet. Rain, like Enya, sucks ass. 8. Satellite, P.O.D - I, I've never felt so alive. Damn whoever keeps playing this song in my .house. Jesus doesn't like the rapcore. 9. The Look of Love, Diana Krall - Have you seen Diana Krall? She isn't the girl you want giving you the look of love. You want her giving you, "the look." The, "I want libidmous pleasure with no strings attached" look. 10. Hybrid Theory, Linkin Park - For some reason or another the'se limp-a-likes just can't stop selling records. 4 1u 4 box office results 4. Hardball ($5.1) With Barry Bonds at the cusp of the record books you'd think more people would be going out to see Keanu. 5. The Others ($4.7) The other movies on this list are pretty hor- rendous too. 6. Rush Hour 2 ($2.4) Most lucrative black-asian fusion since Le Tigre. 7. The Glass House ($2.1) Those who live in stones should not throw glass houses. 8. The Musketeer ($1.7) I'm relieved to see that people aren't going to see this shit-fest in droves. 9. Rat Race ($1.7) Okay, here's the ending: They split up the money and Smashmouth is there. And What's worse, they give it up to charity. 10. Two Can Play That Game ($1.6) Two won't be seeing this movie as it is about to drop off the top ten, into "Glitter" territory. Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox Wasn't she in "Clueless?" NEWS IN LINMENT walk. If convicted, Gayheart could spend up to a year in jail, have her license suspended for a year, or pay a $1,000 fine. RIVERS' PRESHOW DUMPED - E! Entertainment Television has announced that Joan and Melissa Rivers will not be hosting their annuel pre-Emmy bash when the awards show airs this Sunday. TV Guide reports that this is due to the September 11 attack on the World Trade Center. How this relates was not discussed. The pre-show will have more of an entertainment news feel, similar to the network's "E News Daily." BUFFY COMES UP HUGE - Despite the stigma associated with switching networks, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" brought with it the biggest ratings ever for a UPN program. Zap2it.com reports that the first new episode of "Buffy" to air on UPN pulled in nearly 7.7 million viewers, the second highest ratings in the show's history. SHARON STONE HOSPITALIZED - USA Today reports that actress Sharon Stone was hospitalized last weekend for what was believed to be a tiny aneurysm. Sunday and Monday'evealed bleeding around the brain in the form of a subarachnoit hemorrhage. She is still in a San Francisco hospital, and the hemor- rhage's cause has not yet been deter- mined. J.LO GETS WANG - Director Wayne Wang ("The Joy Luck Club," "The Center of the World") Chas signed on to helm "Chambermaid," a new romantic comedy set to star Jen- nifer Lopez as a chambermaid in a fancy hotel who falls in love with a prince. Zap2it.com reports that the Lopez character suddenly quits, and the prince must then pursue her. The screenplay was written by John Hughes ("Home Alone"). LOVE SUES NIRVANA - Actress/Singer and widow of Nir- vana frontman Kurt Cobain filed a lawsuit last week against Geffen Records, Universal Music Group, Nirvana LLC, and surviving. Nirvana members Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl. Rolling Stone reports that Love wants all rights fyom Nirvana to be reverted to her. SPACEY SINGS, LENNON REMEMBERED- The stars came out Tuesday night to honor the late John Lennon, TV Guide reports. Wife Yoko Ono, Dave Matthews, Cyndi Lauper, Sean Lennon, Lou Reed and Alanis Morisette came out to cele- brate what would have been Lennon's 61st brithday. When origi- nally planned, the event was intend- ed to raise money for gun control, but with the recent terrorist attacks, the money will now be split between gun control and relief efforts in New York. The biggest surprise of the night was host Kevin Spacey's rendi- tion of Lennon's "Mind Games." 'PULP' WRITER TAPS ELLIS - Screenwriter/director Roger Avary, who won an Oscar for co-writting Bad boy Van Der Beek as a brat? Nahl the "Pulp Fiction" script with Quentin Tarantino is writing and directing "The Rules of Attraction" based on the'novel by "American Psycho" scribe Bret Easton Ellis. Entertainment Weekley reports. The film, to star James Van Der Beek as a spoiled rich college kid. THE WONG GOODBYE- Char- acter actor Victor Wong passed away last month, Aint-it-cool-news reported. The actor was best known for his role as the grandfa- ther in the "Three Ninjas" series and as magic-master Egg Shen in "Big Trouble in Little China." He will be less remembered for the 1990 film "Life is Cheap But Toi- let-Paper is Expensive. DID You KNOW In "Boogie Nights" Buck Swope (Don Cheadle) mentions a "TK421" modification for a stereo unit. TK421 is the serial number of the storm trooper from whom Luke Skywalker stole a uniform so he could blend in at the Death Star and save Princess Leia. Source: IMDB "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST MOVIES," Jack Mathews, NEW YORK DAILY NEWS "DON'T DUCK THIS ONE, IT'S A WINNER." Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE "THE MOST CONVULSIVELY FUNNY MOVIE OF THE SUMMER." Joe Baltake, SACRAMENTO BEE "THE MOST ENJOYABLE MOVIE OF THE YEAR." David Edelstein, SLATE "ONE OF THE "DO NOT MISS FINEST FILMS OF #. THIS MOVIE." THE YEAR." Jeffrey Anderson, Andrew Johnston, US WEEKLY SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER "BEST MOVIE "THE SORT OF OF THE YEAR!" MOVIE PEOPLE GO Bruce Newman, .1J7 'fTO SEE TWICE." SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS Liz Braun, TORONTO SUN Glenn Kenny, PREMIERE Roger Ebert, CHICAGO SUN-TIMES WINNER BEST ACTRESS THORA BIRCH SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL RILM FESTIVAL m