michigandaity.com/arts mae@michigandaiiy.com RTS 5A 'Dodger' teaches quirks of sex-ed By Stephanie Kapera Daily Arts Writer With Ben Affleck engaged to J.Lo and Leonardo DiCaprio pushing 30, Hollywood is lately like a regiment full of soldiers too worn out to fight the good fight any longer; hence a crucial question looms like a dark cloud over the industry: Which young male face will be on the next cover of Teen Beat? This season, Hollywood has fought tooth and claw to answer that question. The result? Bad-boy Kieran Culkin in "Igby Goes Down," dimple-chinned Jake Gyllenhall in "The Good Girl" and "Lovely and Amazing," and now, in "Roger Dodger," sloe-eyed Jesse Eisenberg, brother to the curly-haired Pepsi- commercial girl Hallie Kate Eisenberg. Mr. Eisenberg is the spitting image of his sister, complete with the same lisp and stutter, the same messy brown hair and lanky frame. Yet in him, there is also a fine actor, and certain- ly a well-deserving heir to Leo's throne. What's interesting about this trend is that all these new young hunks have made their most recent on-screen appearances in indie films, and well-made indie films to boot. This is a promising, if surprising, move for such a greedy industry, and one that fills this film critic with hope. "Roger Dodger," which won the Best Feature Film award at the Tribeca Film Festival in May, is writer/director Dylan Kidd's filmmaking debut. Teamed with Eisenberg and his (somewhat) older echo, actor Campbell Scott, Kidd has crafted a thoughtful and wickedly funny film. If these bright young things are the future of American cinema, then Hollywood is in good hands. "Roger Dodger" has all the trappings of romantic comedy, and in its basic premise there are hints of "What Women Want," "About A Boy" and just about every other cynical-womanizer-changed-by-love scenario Courtesy of Artisan that's ever been put on the screen. "Roger," however, takes a shredder to that exhausted trope, and what emerges from the wreckage is a raw look at the male ego as it moves into the 21st Century. It's not a pretty picture. Roger (Campbell Scott) is a cynical, indif- ferent thirtysomething working in advertis- ing. In the movie's opening scene, he uses a series of well-developed arguments, delivered with the slimy confidence of a litigator, to prove that sexual intercourse will soon become obsolete. Women, he claims, don't need men to get pleasure from sex. Why else would God put the clitoris outside the vagina? Although the film plays with convention, it also comments on it. Roger's boss Joyce (Isabella Rosselini), with whom he is having an affair, breaks it off early in the movie. Kidd successfully uses this sub- plot to give us insight into Roger's tender side, and the kicker is that he does have one, even before he is "trans- formed." For the rest of the ROGER film, even as he simultaneously charms and repulses the other At The St women he tries to pick up at Ar bars, Roger wears one of Joyce's handkerchiefs in his breast pocket. The film is trying to tell us something: it won't be about a man who is transformed from a Scrooge to a Casanova, but about someone who wears his anguish like a Hugo Boss sports coat. His offensive pick-up lines are laced with an honest but well-hidden fear of loneliness. Enter the foil to Roger's inflated ego - his nephew Nick (Eisenberg), a Midwestern high-school nerd who shows up at his office one day after an interview at Columbia. Nick begs Roger to help him out with the ladies. He doesn't want to return to Ohio the same way he left it, as a virgin, and Roger agrees to give Nick an all-night crash course in the art of seduction. What follows is a series of hilarious, tender and often disturb- D at ti ing episodes giving both boys new insight about matters of love and loss - although not in the way you'd expect. This is a movie first and foremost about education, about what we learn about ourselves in the process of teaching others, and about the shame and happiness that often snarl into a knot under the thick skins of our own pride. Kidd never lets us forget that "Roger Doger" is an indie flick. The locations are filmed in heavy shadow, yet the darkness is offset by subtle hints of light, like the blurred headlights of taxis, the sweat that dews on Nick's forehead and the shiny makeup worn by the two girls Nick and Roger meet at a bar (Elizabeth Berkely and Jennifer Beals). All of this light is scrupulously suggestive of the hopefulness that keeps people wading through the dark world of the Manhattan nightlife. Kidd sometimes shoots his characters from across the )ODGER street, forcing them to compete for screen time with taxis and te Theater 5th Avenue shoppers. With this san two-men-in-a-crowd dynamic, Kidd subtly suggests the univer- sality of his story; Roger and Nick could be any of us, we've probably bumped into them, in fact, somewhere between LaGuardia and Tiffany's. Eisenberg is the essence of purity. He's like a puppy. His cheekbones alone are worth the movie ticket. Scott's precision is razor- sharp, and Rossellini is alternately sympa- thetic and lovely as Roger's latest victim. At the end of "Roger Dodger," just when you're sure the movie can go nowhere but down from the crescendo it has whirled itself into, Kidd pushes his film just a little bit fur- ther. And the touching hilarity of the film's final moment is a revelation in satisfaction. Just know that you'll leave with Mr. Eisen- berg's face on your mind. You might not be able to get him out of your head for days. Chung tuned 'Radio' sensational This lighting is pretty k flattering for both Seagal' and Ja Rule,' too bad the E|Y | movie isn't. Courtesy of Columbia Seagal's 'Half Past' already dead By Melissa Runstrom For the Daily Tomorrow, the "Orchrestre Philhar- monique de Radio France" with con- ductor Myung-Whun Chung will be performing for a fortunate few Amer- icans at Orchestra Hall. The orches- tra, on its first tour of the United States, will play at only two venues: Carnegie Hall in New York and Orchestra Hall in Detroit. The tour is in commemoration of the 10th anniversary of the death of celebrated composer Olivier Messiaen. They will be bringing his legendary "Turangalila-Symphonie" to life. Chung, the director, has worked closely with the late Messiaen on a number of occasions, and he still has a deep emotional connection with Messiaen's music. ORCE Chung himself is a PHILHAR world renowned con- DE R ductor and humanitari- FR an. Chung has won several awards includ- At Orch ing being named "Artist Tom of the Year" in 1991 and 8 p.m. Tick "Best Conductor of the U.esy Year" in 1995 by the Uiversity Association of French Montalbetti the orchestra's artistic delegate explains, "He has such a strong personality. Such aura, which with anyone brings such concentra- tion to the work, has a very great way to try to build with the music." Chung's work adds to an already unique collective of talented musi- cians. The orchestra has a reputation for its masterful execution of 20th Century compositions. One of the unique things about the orchestra is its flexibility; it can change from one full 138 member ensemble to two or three smaller ones. The extra flexibility allows the orchestra to present more than 50 different programs in one sea- son. It also can boast being France's largest producer of music. The orches- By Jenny Jeltes Daily Arts Writer There is absolutely no incentive in going to see Steven Seagal's new action-thriller, "Half Past Dead." Mindless dialogue, bad acting and a lame plot make one want to leave the theater shortly after the opening cred- its. Action films are supposed to rouse an audience and keep it rooting for the "good guys," yet director Don Michael Paul simply saturates the viewer with constant violence and killing - with ous"), who he's not par ization -n ing. Sashah they bothg thrown into mum-secur posedly giv out some n be the first what eviden is more lik director n which make very little coherence - making the more meani film feel like a dizzying spell of nausea. The latest gossip is that Seagal isn't looking too sharp these days. This is absolutely true, HALF PAST DEAD he isn't. Yet, the film A tries to avoid putting him At Quality 16 and in an unattractive light Showcase by using effective cam- Columbia era angles and tech- niques. It is painfully obvious, million in g especially by only showing him from a death ro the neck up during much of his dia- (Bruce Weii logue. And the dialogue, by the way, is just about t not any better, especially when he But Sashac attempts a Russian accent in one of his course, along lines with, "You think you're mean? Some ele I'm meaner." Enough said. plain distur Sasha Petrosevitch (Seagal, "Under there for s Siege 2") is an undercover FBI agent more. For ex who gets into the crime scene through Sonny Ekvall (Richard Bremmer, "Just Visiting"), the head of a criminal organization. Sasha is trusted by the menacing, threatening Ekvall partly due to the support of his young buddy, Nick (Ja Rule, "The Fast and the Fur- vouches for him, saying t of any government organ- no FBI, no CIA, no noth- has Nick fooled, too. Soon get into trouble, and are the "New Alcatraz" maxi- ity prison. This will sup- e Sasha an edge on finding ew information, but I will to admit, I have no idea nce he's looking for. What kely, however, is that the ever told the audience, es the rest of the story even ngless. The rest of the story, by the way, is that a group of not-so-scary villains, headed by 49er Six (Nia Peeples, "Blues Brothers 2000") and 49er One a.k.a. Donny (Morris Chestnut, "Under Siege 2"), break into prison to find the whereabouts of the $200 gold brick stashed away by w inmate named Lester tz, "Deep Impact"), who is o serve his death sentence. comes to save the day, of ng with his sidekick Nick. ments of the story are just bing, and they seem to be hock value, and nothing xample, when Donny locks ...................................... : 6 . Lester in the electric chair and unsuc- cessfully tries to get some answers on the gold, Donny turns around and shoots a priest standing next to him. This resulted in a lot of gasps from the audience, but other than that, the scene simply reminds the audience that this is a horrible film, and that characters have to go to such great lengths as shooting a priest in the head in order to keep our attention. There is no redeeming quality to "Half Past Dead." The attempt to make Sasha a glorified hero creates nothing more than laughs. Moreover, the filmmaker makes a pathetic attempt at bringing status to the side- kick Nick. Ja Rule just can't play a believable character, and he would have been better off recording another album than wasting his time on such a gutter-dwelling action-flick. IESTRE RMONIQUE IADIO ANCE estra Hall aorrow ets: $10-$56 Musical Society tra also has a close con- nection with Messiaen; the late composer dedi- cated one of his last works to the orchestra itself, and the orchestra regularly performs his works in concert. The orchestra was going to perform at Hill Auditorium, but for obvious reasons had to be rescheduled for Orchestra Hall in specifically chose Ann Theatres and Music Critics, along with "Man of the Year" in 1995 by UNESCO. He is also active with the United Nations youth anti-drug pro- grams. Under his directorship the "Orchestra Philharmonique de Radio France" reaches superb heights of excellence. Chung's liberal approach allows the musicians to work their own magic, which is evident in the performance. He serves as a constant inspiration to the orchestra, as Eric Detroit. It Arbor because it was, "one of the most interesting places to present the project," said Montalbetti. This change in venue means that it won't be able to do the entire program that they had planned. This program and tour, including the "Turangalila-Sym- phonie" and Debussy's "La Mer," is to give Messiaen the homage that he deserves, and it selected the music to reflect that goal. The word "turan- Courtesy of UMS Mr. Chung, director and leader. galila" is Sanskrit and is loosely translated to be a combination of joy, love, life, movement and death. Mes- siaen himself described the symphony as a love song and a hymn to joy. This symphony highlights the orchestra's woodwind and piano parts and is itself a very strongly constructed work. The Orchestra Philharmonique de Radio France and conductor Myung Whun-Chung try, above all else, to add to the audience's enjoy- ment of the music. It has an extraordi- nary link to the music and to the composer, which comes across in their enthusiasm and respect for the music itself. According to Montalbet- ti's, "I think the music is saying so much about love, about peace, about faith, it is a message that is so strong and so clear." Tickets can be bought from the Michigan League's ticket office. Stu- dent rush tickets are available the day of the performance, and transporta- tion to and from Orchestra Hall is available for an additional $13, but must be reserved in advance. I 1INTAE CLOTHING, ANTIQUES, AND COLLECTIBLES LARGEST SELECTION OF FASHION & COMFORT SHOES STEV 4ADDED' REACTION' KENNETH COLE - ;._