ARTS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 11, 2005 - 9 Coach Carter approves of his cinematic story By Jeffrey Bloomer Daily Arts Writer In January of 1999, high school basketball coach Ken Carter benched his entire Richmond, Calif., basketball team, which had previously been 13-0, after a small number of his players began to slip academically. The resulting firestorm of publicity, both positive and nega- tive, brought Carter's story into the national spotlight. Six years later, Paramount Pictures and MTV Films have collaborated for the cinematic version of the story, a project that came about to Carter's surprise. "The lockout received a lot of national attention," Carter said. "When the calls first started coming, I thought they (were) jokes my friend was playing with me and stuff of that nature. It's kind of surreal when * people start calling you and say ... we would like to Wmake a movie of your life.'" "Coach Carter," directed by Thomas Carter ("Save the Last Dance"), also had another surprise in store for the basketball coach: the casting of Samuel L. Jackson in the title role. Ken Carter, a fan of Jackson's, couldn't have been more pleased. "He's the actor's actor. He's the No. 1 guy." Jackson resembles Carter little beyond the shaven head they both sport, but he says that what was really achieved went far beyond simple appearance. "He had 0 my mannerisms down, the way I hold my hand," he said. "When you see Mr. Samuel L. Jackson ... you are almost looking at a mirror image of Coach Carter."~ The movie also stars an array of young actors as the Richmond Oilers, including Rob Brown ("Finding Forrester") and Rock Gonzalez ("The Rookie"), all of whom Carter say wonderfully capture the young people he knew as a coach. The film also marks the feature film debut of hip-hop star Ashanti, who Carter said did ''an excellent a job'' in her role as a player's pregnant girlfriend. Carter played a central role in the actual production of the film as well, more than he had originally antici- S pated. "A lot of times, when they buy life stories ... they make the movie and they have the person go away. I was fortunate." He also had extensive dealings with the filmmakers. "They interviewed me constantly. I spent a lot of time with both writers and the director and the producers." fCarter was also hired as a consultant on the film and was on the set every day of the production. He went on to note that being there reminded him of his coaching job in Richmond, with a group of people who worked as a unit to achieve the best final product possible. "Every- one in the cast worked as a team. We ran it like a team. I fwas still coaching, but it was just in a different arena." After seeing the film's final cut, Carter said the story DVDs capture animated absurdity By Alexandra Jones Daily Weekend Editor After establishing their shows as cult favorites, the creators of some of The Car- toon Network's Adult Swim's biggest hits "Sam Jackson ain't got shit on me.. have released DVD collections from the network's Sun- day night line-up of extremely weird adult-oriented animation. 'Aqua Teen Hunger Force: Vol. 3" and "Space Ghost Coast to Coast: Vol. 2" ("SGC2C") highlight some of the best of Adult Space Ghost Coast to Coast Vol. 2 and Aqua Teen Hunger, Force Vol. 3 Warner Bros. Swim's animation oeuvre. "SGC2C" originated more than a decade ago when Cartoon Network recycled an old car- toon, Alex Toth's 1966 series "Space Ghost."~ The show gradually evolved into its fake talk show format, interviewing live action celebrities within a show created without regard to the interviews' con- tent. Space Ghost (now going by his real name, Tad Ghostal) has interviewed Matt Groening, Radiohead's Thom Yorke, Jim Carrey, Fran Drescher and Michael Stipe, among others; Pavement and Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth have both per- formed on the show. Cartoon Network aired "SGC2C" at midnight on Fridays throughout the late '90s, and the 15-min- ute program was later incorporated into Adult Swim's Sunday lineup. "Aqua Teen Hunger Force" ("ATHF"), also clocking in at fifteen minutes, is unique to the Adult Swim lineup simply because the characters and animation are originals, not repurposed and revoiced from corny Hanna-Barbera cartoons. However, the characters - sassy bas- tard Master Shake (a giant talking milk- shake), computer whiz and straight man Frylock (a floating box of fries who can shoot laser beams out of his eyeballs) and Meatwad (a shape shifting ball of hamburger) - originally appeared on a "SGC2C" episode. The three anthropo- morphic fast food items live together in a house in New Jersey; in the past, they supposedly solved crimes. Now, they just piss off their pathetic ex-metalhead neighbor Carl and deal with (i.e., ignore or make fun of) bizarre aliens and mon- sters who pass by. The show's original- ity and humor really has to be seen to be appreciated. "SGC2C: Vol. 2" and "ATHF: Vol. 3" both feature some of each series' best episodes. Guests on the "Space Ghost" DVD include Janeane Garofalo, Carrot Top, Ben Folds, Method Man and James Hetfield and Kirk Hammet of Metal- lica. The episodes on "Aqua Teen" are relatively recent, and part of a con- tinuing streak of great episodes: "Frat Aliens," perhaps one of the series' best episodes, kicks off the first disc, followed by "Revenge of k the Trees" (the one where some local trees are angry), "The Cubing" (the one with the wisdom cube) and "Spirit Journey Formation Anniversa- ry" (the one where Shake writes a new Birthday Song), among others. In addition to the truly awesome epi- sodes on these DVDs, Warner Bros. has stocked each collection with a bounty of sweet extras. One of the fundamen- tal ways that the series differ is in how they're animated. "Aqua Teen" is cre- ated entirely with computers, using Adobe Photoshop images and Final Cut Pro. "Space Ghost," however, was made five to ten years before that; the DVD even features a pencil test and footage of rough sketches animated into Space Ghost's repeated movements. "SGC2C: Vol. 2" also boasts commentary on all 14 episodes, Matt Groening's full live action interview, the show's pilot (which used only material from the origi- nal '60s series), a biography of Sonny Sharrock (the guitarist responsible for the "SGC2C" theme) and a Thurstom Moore performance paying tribute to Sherrock. The commnayith only disappointing extra, simply because commentary tracks are usually pretty dull. How- ever, it's cool to hear the par- ticulars of each show. .> For example, all of "Jacksonville," $ the episode on bers of Metal- lica appeared as guests, was animated com- pletely before r;the writers knew that the band would be appearing on that a program. The extras on the "ATHF: Vol. 3" DVD include com- mentary on four of the 13 episodes (which encounter the same pitfalls as on the "SGC2C" discs), as well as a "making of' featurette on the epi- sode "The Cloning." It's pretty much just home movie footage of two guys in khaki shorts deciding whether Shake should throw an axe or shoot a crossbow at the Aqua Teens' television set. The most fun extras include two versions of a karaoke music video for the occult/metal epic "Spirit Journey Formation Anniver- sary" and a version without vocals so viewers can sing along at home. There's a featurette on Schoolly D, who wrote the "ATHF" theme song and pages of the scripts from five episodes complete with the writers and actors' notes, along with the voice-over track. But the absolute coolest bonuses on the "ATHF: Vol. 3" DVD are answering machine messages recorded by Meatwad, Frylock, Shake and Carl that can be recorded as per- sonal voicemail and short, quirky ani- mated Adult Swim promotional spots. If the desire hits to hear Meatwad sing "Oh girl, your lips are so smooth" or Carl share his thoughts on fitness ("You'll die anyway ... Someone'll stab ya. So make sure your abs are frickin' Sripped"), here's your chance. Show: ***** Picture/Sound: Extras: Courtesy of Paramount "1'm playing that guy?" was extremely close to original events. "I say it's 98.5 (percent accurate). I mean, it's really that close." He is also hopeful that his message will get out to the young viewers he anticipates will be drawn to the movie. "It's a family film. I think this message just rings loud to young people." Carter seeks to idealize the concepts of integrity, leadership and accountability because, as he repeatedly emphasized, "education was always my goal ." ThcHE AN DAILY MAS MEETING r UORROW AT 6 P.. 42O WYNARD ST. PUNCH AND PIE. BUY YOUR TEXTBOO KS AD SAVE UP TO 4% OFF THE LIST PRICE. Save an add itional focomTM on a purchase of $50 or more. Redeem this coupon by entering this code: ANNARBOR2005 at halfcom ror a fam td fime, first-itne nly. See itN m beow2* I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 by eay « - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - i___i