Monday October 24, 2005 arts.michigandaily.com artspage@michigandaily. com RTSe ithigtt tii 5A 1 A starlet for sale "Dear Diary: Today that rat bastard Clooney stole the last ham sandwich from the craft-services table." 'GOOD'NEWS CLOO0NEY'S LATEST SHOWS RELEVANCE OF MCCARTHY-ERA CONFLICTS S o media darling Katie Holmes is still pregnant (about to bear Scientology's messiah would be my guess), Bennifer II should be ready to deliver any day now and Paris Hilton is dating Mary-Kate Olsen's ex-boyfriend just weeks after breaking her engage- ment to that other Paris. In one of his less successful ventures, Woody Allen quipped, "You can learn a lot about a society by who it chooses to celebrate." Imagine the anthropolo- gists of the future. Now imagine the anthro- pologists of the present. We live in an enduringly fasci- nating culture that chooses AMA to revere J.Lo's booty above international conflict and AND domestic economic policy. No well-informed Republican, no matter how passionately partisan, can argue the war in Iraq was ultimately well planned and expertly run, but nearly everyone can agree George W. Bush would be a nice guest at a barbeque. From where exactly - in our genome or in our society - this obsession with personality derives, I couldn't begin to guess. At some point, perhaps, we all tac- itly accept that keeping pace with politics is just much harder than keeping up with the weekend box office. As a pop-culture columnist, how could I argue? No, the real problem isn't that we as a society choose to celebrate entertainment culture, it's that we as the media are get- ting so inept at feeding the frenzy. Per- haps it's precisely because of this absurd focus on entertainment, but someone must have decided Americans are mind- less and spread the memo. Consequently, the pop-culture media has become less a mirror for America's guilty pleasure obsessions and more a sales pitch for party girls and simpering. starlets. It's harder to blame the tabloids. Few people care about Mischa Barton's breakup or Lindsay Lohan's car crash, but tabloids are obligated to run the most salacious rumors available. And as I think the defense secretary once said, you go to the press with pictures of the club- hopping celebrities you have, not the ones you want. No one can force Tom Hanks to table dance. But giving the too-often-maligned tabloids a break this time doesn't excuse a recent flurry of media attention related to hot starlet-for-sale Keira Knightley. The worst offender might come from The New York Times, who ran a splendidly poetic ode to Knightley's face. Here's a :A taste: "The camera follows her around like a besotted puppy. It flings itself out of windows and over furniture and through walls just to be close to her," and "when it finally gets her on the sofa or backs her into a corner, it just licks her all over, in an ecstasy of devotion." This is hardly the only instance, but I have to believe it's the most eloquently writ- ten. If you trust the press, Knightley is a magnanimous creature of spectacular, incomparable beauty and unaffected sincerity. The problem is, it seems few peo- ple trust the press anymore. Sure, Knightley is beauti- NDA ful and talented for her age. Her star will continue to rise RADE because Hollywood and the media have decided she's "It." But apparently no one has considered the ticket-buying American public in this calculation. By my egregiously unscien- tific survey of about a dozen non-newspa- per-affiliated movie fans, there were none who had positive things to say about the starlet. "She's not that pretty, I don't see the big deal" was the No. 1 response. The big deal is that the media thinks you should adore her. And we're con- fused that the promise of seeing her naked and kicking ass in "Domino" was so completely unappealing that the film opened in seventh place, just below the second weekend gross for a Matthew McConaughey vehicle. And how many times have we been through this with Jude Law now? He's a wonderful actor, a handsome man, maga- zines and film critics adore him - gush over every suit and scarf he's ever worn, praise every witty quote and sharp dia- logue delivery he's ever given - and America shrugs. You won't pay to see his movies, but we swear, we promise, we demand that he's a star. Knightley's being touted for Oscar this year, and Law's been to the ceremonies twice now. With a gold statue in her hands, she might be a more credible celebrity, but the box office ultimately has the last word. That indicts plenty of other actors as well; recent "Elizabethtown" stars Orlando Bloom and Kirsten Dunst come to mind. But to name every star solely famous for hype would take an entire column unto itself. Until then, we'll sit here perplexed as you display far more autonomy than the media think you have any right to. - Andrade could write pages about why we shouldn't care about Keira Knightley. Get the full story at aandrade@umich.edu. By Kristin MacDonald Daily Arts Writer Don't let the Brylcreem fool you - George Clooney's "Good Night, and Good Luck" is a thor- oughly modern piece of movie-making, and an excellent one at that. Welcome to his beautifully stark, black- and-white world of TV journal- Good Night, ism, complete with thoughtfully and Good smoked pipes, horn-rimmed Luck glasses and cigarettes so ubiqui- At the Showcase tous that a primetime newsman and State Theater could puff away on air without Warner any fear of FCC retribution. Independent For all its period style, "Good Night" chronicles a chapter of history specifically relevant to our own current TV-news climate, though it takes place long before cable's buffet of political pun- dits gained their 24=hour soapbox. Celebrated old-time newsman Edward R. Murrow (por- trayed with cold, noble compassion by an excel- lent David Strathairn, "L.A. Confidential") questions where exactly he can draw the line between fact and opinion in making his bold public criticism of Sen. Joe McCarthy's anti- Communist witchhunt. Clooney's tightly constructed script doesn't lose focus and barely even shifts it with the film's action kept almost exclusively in the CBS news- room. These newsmen might politely inquire about each other's wives, but as far as the film is concerned, their lives are at the office. It's a serious newsroom atmosphere, with all the sharp quick-quip banter and camaraderie that that implies. "You always were yellow," says Mur- row to his nervous producer Fred Friendly (Cloo- ney) before a particularly provoking broadcast. Friendly's reply: "Better than red." There are plenty of lighter moments as well - one memorable scene has Murrow interviewing the famously flamboyant Liberace about, of all things, marriage (Liberace, in archival footage, gamely confesses that he's simply looking for the perfect "mate"). And a subplot involving the clandestine marriage of two CBS reporters (Robert Downey Jr., "Wonder Boys," and Patricia Clarkson, "Dogville") proves especially winsome. Company policy for- bids marriage between employees. They're relegat- ed to either talking shop or exchanging long looks, which Clooney effectively captures with impressive minimalism - this is a couple accustomed to talk- ing with eyes alone. Clooney has made a remarkable sophomore directorial effort after 2002's vastly underrated "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind." He moves at a brisk clip, demonstrating an ear for lively dialogue and elegant dramatic timing. A jazz singer performing in a nearby studio provides period-music scene breaks, and though the real- ist camera's constant motion is a somewhat mod- ern style, the black-and-white coloration keeps the story appropriately dated nonetheless. And perhaps the wisest decision Clooney makes is the length: At 93 minutes, the film's fight-the-good- fight-rhetoric doesn't wear out its welcome. Beware - "Good Night, and Good Luck" has a healthy dose of saintly, heroic speechifying. It happily avoids cheesiness, however, by not portraying McCarthy as an unrealistic villain. McCarthy, in fact, portrays himself, as the film relies on an unusually hefty selection of archi- val footage rather than acting. It's a crafty move, justifying Murrow's fight as a noble necessity by presenting McCarthy in all his real-life irra- tionality. More than just a movie with meaning, what Clooney has actually fashioned is a civics lesson with style. Su Friedrich discusses women and film By Mary Kate Varnau Daily Arts Writer "Don't worry, you can always go to the salon tomorrow." Oscar buzz for Theron inluewam'Country' Su Friedrich has tackled extremely personal issues in her films since she began working in the medium in 1978: "The Ties that Bind" focused on her mother, while "Sink or Swim" explored her relationship with her father; another featured a fictionalized breakup. But "The Odds of Recov- ery," screened last Thursday as part of the Screen Arts and Cultures Department's Woman Film- maker Series, has exposed her in a way that none of the others did. "It was very hard to make," Friedrich said, ciga- rette in hand outside the Modern Languages Bulid- ing. "I guess for most of my filmmaking career, I have been determined not to use myself so directly - not to use my voice, not to be on camera - and there was no way around it with this film. So I sud- denly had to get around that hurtle." In "The Odds of Recovery," Friedrich takes cen- ter stage and documents her recent spate of a num- ber of health problems. Over the years, she's tallied many surgeries and treatments, including a hormonal imbalance affecting her sex drive that leads to the deterioration of a long-term relationship. The film, which was made without an actual crew, tags along to a mammogram, examinations and appointments with breast-cancer specialists. Set on the counter, the camera almost becomes another char- acter in the film - an impartial viewer who records her frustrations with everything from her treatment to the way that the surgical gown ties up. At first, Friedrich felt uncomfortable avith how much "The Odds of Recovery" revealed as the movie speaks openly about her health issues and sexual problems, even exposing her physically throughout. But that's the point, she says. "If I am willing to do it in a public venue, then I feel like I can give other people the opportunity to think about themselves." Friedrich hopes that the film will encourage women to think about their health and speak out about problems that people tend to keep private. "One of the big issues running through the film is this hormone imbalance I've had. It devastated me for a number of years. But after a new drug became available and I was able to deal with it, I realized that this is not a commonly known medi- cal issue. Part of making the film is thinking, 'If I show this a lot and women see it who have the problem, they'll learn something from it and be able to help themselves.' " Women's issues are a central concern in Fried- rich's films, which have recently been digitally remastered and released in a five-volume collection. But she doesn't want to be defined by her gender in her professional life. "I wouldn't mind being called a 'woman filmmaker' if every male filmmaker was called a 'man filmmaker.' Women have been trail- blazing in so many parts of film history," she said. "But the risk is that we keep being ghettoized. By Andrew Bielak Daily Arts Writer Fresh from her Best Actress-win- ning performance in the 2003 thriller "Monster," Charlize Theron appears to be taking another shot at Oscar gold. North "North Country," Country based on a real-life story, reinforces At the Showcase Theron's ability and Quality 16 to play the suffer- Warner Bros. ing, downtrodden woman as she battles her way through the working-class abyss with an unre- lenting "stick-it-to-the-man" attitude. Fortunately, unlike her serial-killing prostitute in "Monster," Theron's char- acter doesn't seem to take the notion of "sticking-it-to-the-man" literally, prefer- ring to challenge the powers that be with a stringent lawsuit and steel resolve. Mobilizing her best '80s haircut and rural Minnesota accent, Theron stars as Josey Walls, a hardworking mother of two resentment from the male miners who see female co-workers as a threat to their masculinity and their livelihood. Indeed, Josey's initiation into the job is supple- mented with a continuing cycle of sexual come-ons, vulgar practical jokes and physical intimidation. The scenes within the mining factory are both intense and realistic, capturing the brutal, physical nature of Walls's work and the sexual humiliation that often accompanies it. Faced with increasing hostility from her co-workers and the callous indiffer- ence of company bigwigs, Walls's enlists a sympathetic lawyer (Woody Harrelson) to challenge the mine in a sexual harassment lawsuit. Unfortunately, the legal battle itself, presented as the elemental struggle of the film, fails to captivate on a basic level. In lieu of actual realism, the trial is a reiteration of a cinematic clich6, com- plete with dramatic lawyerly posturing, witnesses breaking down and the whole courtroom occasionally freaking out. Despite its weak third act, "North Country" elicits our affection and sym- pathy. Theron is at the top of her game, instilling Walls with a rare combination MIKE HULSEBUS/Daily Su Friedrich spoke at the MLB on Thursday. Men get treated like the norm and women or film- makers of other ethnicities get treated like the other. The same holds true for being called a 'les- bian filmmaker.' On some level, I think that all of these categories don't really make sense." The Blind Pig hosts teen faves The Honorry Title By Jake Montie For the Daily Thursday night saw Brooklyn's own The Honorary Title make a stop at The Blind Pig, and despite the youthfulness of the crowd in attendance, they put on an impressive performance. Along for the ride were a trio of bands that complemented the night well. Texas natives Cruiserweight opened with 30 minutes of femme-punk-meets-'70s-studio rock. New York The Honorary City's post-emo crooner band, Nightmare of You, Title CAITLINrKLEIBOERK/Daily Hnnrav Title frnntman JarrdrnAnhgiIperforme~, dtThe Blind Pik Thursdav.b