Wednesday. October 16, 2.2 michigandaily.com/arts mae@michigandaily.com RTS 8A A 'The Savage Girl' author Alex Shakar speaks at Shaman Drum By Shital Thekdi For the Daily Bridget Jones feels the wrath of Catwoman. 'W iteOleander' wilts in sap Ever wonder why those midnight Meijer runs leave you with empty pockets and enough food to feed half of North Campus? Is it the stimulation or relaxation of cof- fee that keeps Ann Arbor's coffee shops afloat? Alex Shakar, author of "The "Savage Girl," would call it a paradessence, "the two opposing desires that promise to satisfy simultaneously." "Savage Girl" follows Ursula Van Urden into the anything-goes career of trendspot- ALEX S ting. This burned out artist explores the At Sham parks and alleys of fictitious Middle City Boo searching for the next big trend. She finds it in a homeless girl hunting pigeons in a Thurs.a nearby park. The Savage Girl's image implanted in Ursula's supermodel sister could change the face of fashion and popular culture. Ursula quickly learns the theorized rules of pop culture with terms like paradessence and postirony while trying to market a brand new product diet water. "The Savage Girl" explores the jagged relationship between humans and the products they crave. Shakar por- trays the grocery store as a dumping ground of corporate strategies to lure humans in and force them to live vicari- ously through the products. Imagine a laundry detergent labeled Now Fat Free or bottled water that boasts its absence of calories. Originally, Shakar thought the idea of diet water was "kind of the most awful product I could think of and it was my personal symbol for end of humanity. Since then it's come true." The character Javier, is optimistic and "believes we can really express ourselves and improve our lives through purchases" while Chas portrays the dark side by believing our pur- chases "cover up what we lack and make us powerful." "The Savage Girl" displays Shakar's love-hate rela- a aa ks ate tionship with popular culture. He wanted to "see the interaction between the individuals and the world we live in, how the bizarre things that are going on in our culture affect our individual psyches. I was writing for anybody that goes to a supermarket watches TV, sees commercials, basically all of us." Trendspotters really exist. Shakar was inspired by them because "They have a perfect combination of ide- alism and cynicism. They're part business- men and part philosophers. What appealed to me about them is that they are people HAKAR who really think that these glittering sur- Drum faces that are surrounding us actually mean >h rsomething deep about us." Shakar's literary skill makes "The Savage 8 p.m. Girl" a little too insightful to be fiction, but much too bizarre to be real. He explains "When writing "The Savage Girl," I got to talk to a lot of trendspotters and marketers and do reading about all these crazy marketing theories. I ended up just coming up with my own because the others weren't crazy enough." Paradessence is an intriguing yet scary idea that ties in closely with many marketing company strategies. "I really didn't know what marketers would think about this book, I thought they'd hate it, but they responded very positively. Last I heard the book was being taught in a marketing class." Shakar most admires authors like Cortazar, Salinger, Faulkner and Vonnegut. "In college I kept reading books that made me not only want to write but want to live. I wanted to feel like I was experiencing life more vividly." He enjoys "the freedom it gives me to think about what- ever I want to think about and become whoever I need to become. I love doing research for books" What's next for Alex Shakar? "Trying to keep writing more books. I'd like to keep changing and keep growing as a person as an artist and try and explore what ever interests me." 41 By Stephanie Kapera Daily Arts Writer The symbolic weight of Peter Kosminsky's new film, "White Oleander," is all in the hair. Everyone starts out blonde, thus leading us to ask the important question (and tagline of the film): "Where does a mother end and a daugh- ter begin?" Well, the daughter "begins" when she chops off her long yellow locks, which is really only a preface to the true climax, in which she dies her hair a trashy shade of brown. So, now we get it. Blonde is symbolic for denial. Brown, or "brunette," is the film's metaphor for freedom, survival and all-around OLEA just being the best foster kid you can be. All At Shov of this would have been better left in an after- Qual school special, from which much of the script seems to have been borrowed anyway. Wam It's a sad thing when a halfway-decent book gets turned into a movie, because the movie is never better than the book (the exception here being "The Godfa- ther"), which calls into question why anyone ever liked the book in the first place. This is what will happen to anyone who has read Janet Fitch's novel "White Oleander" and then sees the film. The film version actually succeeds in articulating one of the novel's worst flaws: its bloated sense of its own importance. The book drew its strength from the lyrical roll of the plot as it stumbled through the lives of so many fascinating characters. Fitch's language, however, attempted to slow down what deserved to be a faster-paced piece. It took itself a bit too seriously and yet this is the aspect of the novel that Kosminsky uses as his aesthetic template, throwing off the plot and instead trying to re-cre- ate Fitch's tediousness with ridiculous camera techniques too pompous for a film like this one. His bumpiness recalls "The Blair Witch Project," and you might, be wishing that you were seeing that instead. The title of the film refers to the murder weapon that gets Ingrid Magnussen (Michelle Pfeiffer) sent to prison. Ingrid, an egomaniacal artist/single mother, has raised her teenage daughter Astrid to "think for herself," which Astrid spends the rest of the film attempting to do, eventually coming to the clever conclusion that her mother is a hypocrite. All along, Ingrid just wanted Astrid to be like her. With her mother in prison, Astrid is shoveled from one foster home to the next, with a few stops at a temporary holding cell for foster kids in between. Astrid's first foster mother is Star (Robin Wright Penn), a piece of trailer trash who takes in foster children because Jesus would want it that way. When Astrid's sexuality destroys the Jack Daniel's-soaked equilibrium of the house- hold, she is * HITE ANDER wcase and lity 16, er Bros. sent to an orphanage for older children, where she finds a friend in fellow artistic soul Paul Trout (Patrick Fugit, "Almost Famous"). The two of them make beautiful art together until Astrid is relocated to the home of Mark and Claire Richards (Noah Wyle, Renee Zell- weger). Claire, a mentally unstable actress who buys Astrid Marc Jacobs dresses and makes paella for dinner, seems like the dream mother Astrid never had, until Ingrid manages to break up the happy little family, partly out of hon- esty, but partly due to plain old malice. This is the point of no return for Astrid, who now has 0 Greek 'Medea' powers Center brown hair and a goth 'tude to match, until one day, when the mother and daughter duo must come face-to-face in court. Will Ingrid be able to "let go" of her daughter? By this point, we practically don't care any more. The screenplay, written by Mary Agnes Donoghue, miracu- lously finds ways to sap the energy from Fitch's novel. Donoghue thinks it is suspenseful to withhold crucial infor- mation from us -namely, the details of the murder that lands Ingrid in prison - which turns the movie into a manipulative did-she-or-didn't-she narrative that is nowhere to be found in the book. Frankly, the real mystery that had my friends and I perplexes during the movie was why, halfway through the film, the still-blonde Lohman's eyebrows suddenly turned black, and then back to blonde, and then black again. The actors are silly as well. Pfeiffer confuses Ingrid with Lady Macbeth, reciting all of her lines with a regality of speech usually reserved for members of the Royal Shake- speare Company. Wright Penn is far too pretty to be playing white trash, and Lohman just opens her brown eyes really wide and calls it a day. Of all the women, only Zellweger breathes any life into the film. In her crinkly smile and skit- tish movements, we see flashes of pain. Or maybe we just feel pain, because we are in the fourth row at this movie, the main character suddenly has black eyebrows, and, hey, there are still 45 minutes left to go. By Christine Lasek Daily Fine/Performing Arts Editor The University Musical Society will be opening it's third annual International Theatre Series with the Abbey Theatre of Ireland's critically acclaimed produc- tion of Euripides "Medea." This produc- tion ran on London's West End a year ago, directed by Deborah Warner and starring the legendary Mi: Fiona Shaw. "Medea" is an ancient At the Poi Greek drama, written by Today, Thut Euripides and first per- 8 formed 2,431 years ago. an Medea was a powerful Sun. witch, and daughter of $2( King Aeetes of Colchis. University N/ She fell in love with awe .rs. 2p. 8p 2 Mus Corinth, Kreon, who offered Jason is daughter's hand in marriage, with the promise of a kingdom to follow. Although he had already sworn his ever- lasting love to Medea, who had since borne him two sons, Jason agreed to the marriage, promising Medea a comfort- able existence if she would keep quiet and out of sight. Howev- er, meek and submissive were two qualities com- EA pletely lacking in Medea's character, and er Center she was none too happy . and Fri. at with Jason's plans for M. their future. She exacted p.m. her revenge in such a way p.m. as only a witch and ex- ;42 princess from Colchis sical Society can, defying all law, natu- ral or otherwise. Jason, leader of the Argonauts, and helped him steal the Golden Fleece from her father. They fled together; becoming outlaws but sworn together in their love for each other. They found a friendly harbor in the city of Corinth. Jason man- aged to ingratiate himself to the King of Euripides was born in Attica in 484 BC. He was a prolific playwright, writ- ing 92 plays, though only 19 of these plays still exist. Although he is hailed, along with Aeschylus and Sophocles, as one of the figures who made fifth- century Athens pre-eminent in the his- L Do You H ave Acne? If you have acne you may qualify for an investigational study at the University of Michigan Department of Dermatology. S You may also receive compensation for your participation. If you are interested in participating, call the University of Michigan Department of Dermatology to find out more. UnTme 7 -y o( The number is : (734) 764-DERM ichigan The pain of "Medea." tory of world drama, his work aroused great opposition and controversy based on his unorthodox portraits of women and his focus on the individual, as opposed to the community. Along with "Medea," his most famous plays include "The Bacchae" and "Electra." Although "Medea" has been running for over 2,000 years (eat your heart out, "Phantom of the Opera"), The Abbey Theatre of Ireland is up to the challenge. The Abbey Theatre has been in continu- ous management longer than any other repertory company in the English speak- ing world. It was first conceived of by William Butler Yeats and two landown- ers in thewest of Ireland, as a new the- ater that would produce plays "written with a high ambition, and so build up a Celtic and Irish school of dramatic liter- ature." The Abbey has a commitment to present works of eminent foreign authors, but the primary objective is to provide a performance space for Irish dramatic writing. This production of "Medea" is also a reuniting the dynamic forces of Irish born actress Fiona Shaw and Deborah Warner, one of the most acclaimed directors on the contemporary British stage. Shaw is one of the most controversial and exhilarating performers in Britain today. Most recently, she has ignited venomous criticism and rapturous praise by playing Richard II, the sorrowful English king in Shakespeare's play of the same name. Warner is a bril- liant stage and opera director, best-known for her dazzling and daring takes on the works of Shakespeare, Sophocles, Bach, Berg, Beckett, Brecht and Ibsen. For Jonathan Cake (Jason), this is the most difficult production he has ever had the pleasure of being a part of. Cake believes that "Medea" is a timeless masterpiece, catching the minds of audience members through every movement in history. "It is one of the greatest plays ever written," Cake muses, "but it is unforgiving. I have never had to work as hard as an actor, and I have to have high energy every night, because this play just sucks energy." Past productions of "Medea" that went on to receive criti- cal acclaim were more traditional, with the actors speaking in strict verse. The Abbey Theatre's produc- tion will be done in modern dress, J Al