Monday December 5, 2005 arts.michigandaily.com artspage@michigandaily.com R Te SIC'igtt til 5A -- ---- ------ - ... ........ ..... Anatomy of a backlash After much media touting and excessive paparazzi shots of pregnant actress Jennifer Garner, the offspring of Ben Affleck and his beautiful bride finally emerged into the world amid all the predictable swarm of media furor that befits the second coming of Bennifer. The baby girl is healthy enough. Her parents are the ones coasting on dead careers. But still, there's a celebrity story in all this some- where. And that's odd. J-Gar took the sexy, kick-ass lead in a modestly rated cult show and turned it into household recogni- tion. Sure, she follows AM Sarah Michelle Gellar AND and Jessica Alba, but that doesn't make her fame the less illuso- ry, less hype-based. Her movie career might prove that - "Daredevil" and its objectionably unnecessary spin- off, "Elektra," outweigh the pleas- antly breezy "13 Going on 30." But to pick on Jen in this context is just silly. Because no matter how over- hyped the chipmunk-cheeked actress, no matter how many flops she has to her resume, she's still your basic Hol- lywood starlet. Overrated? Maybe, but affable and pretty. To talk about really over hyped; to talk about the poster boy for over- exposure and the perils of public- ity overkill, we need Ben Affleck. Because nobody in Hollywood has accomplished the stratospheric rise and calamitous crash with quite the relentless and spectacular flourishes of Ben Affleck. Whatever he is now, Affleck was once a friend to the press. Back in 1997, a movie about a misunderstood math genius and the life lessons he learned captivated the nation and launched a pair of Boston-bred best friends into the public limelight. Matt and Ben were sold as a pair, affectionately and unpunnily labeled (Menjamin, to the ever-lasting disap- pointment of one columnist, never really caught on) as a golden duo. So high and intense was their wave of public and industry goodwill, the pair even won Oscars for Best Original Screenplay for their draft of "Good Will Hunting" - an unfor- tunate circumstance that means the DVD for last year's slapstick, "Surviv- ing Christmas" could conceivably be stamped with the words "Oscar-win- ner Ben Affleck." So how exactly did Ben Affleck go from winning statues to slumming in schlock that got buried by "Christmas with the Kranks?" Unfortunately, the answer is probably very simple: Ben- nifer I. Before there was J-Gar, there was J-Lo. There was the explosive, all- consuming monstrosity of Bennifer. The beautiful couple made glamorous kissy faces to the press, but took it a step too far cavorting naked in her A] fabulously self-indulgent "Jenny from the Block" music video. As Affleck sits pensively with his slicked-back hair, looking every inch the token bourgie toolbox of an accessory to J-Lo's astonishing wardrobe, you can almost hear his salary deflating. But then again, Tom Cruise is equally obnoxious these days, and in spite of it, people still pay to see his movies. Ben and Jen did not suffer from such dubi- ous luck. Their first collab- oration was a film about a mobster and the lesbian he loves or something. "Gigli," which incidentally rhymes with "really," gave NDA witty film critics an open RADE license to concoct the most delightfully scath- ing reviews. Though sometimes a film speaks for itself - as more than one critic put it, "'Gigli' is really bad." With his relationship making him a daily coverboy at the National Enquir- er, with his film career in limp shreds of faded dignity, Ben Affleck decided to do the right thing and step grace- fully out of the spotlight for a while. Actually, he married another celebrity. But getting past the jokes, past the public persona of an oafish, incompetent frat boy, Ben Affleck is not entirely to blame for his down- fall. Yes, the relationship with J-Lo was ill-considered and I, for one, never actually made it to the end of "Gigli." But Affleck as a public punching bag is simply the product of a very bad backlash. As a culture, Americans love to lash. Perhaps it comes from that need to establish a unique and individual identity (which must set in sometime after high school, just as we get the knack of being faceless clones) that makes us hate what's popular - what the plebeians are buying these days. Or maybe it's more basic. An emer- gent celebrity might seem appealing, but 30 pop-culture magazines will unfailingly uncover the nasty flaws. Our shame at originally liking what, under the microscope, seems so clear- ly lame might account for the intense, visceral rejection we feel. Even when we feel it collectively. Whatever the source of the back- lash, Ben Affleck has been on the receiving end far too long. I'm advo- cating a frontlash. The man has made his terrible movies, he's done the diva girlfriend. Enough is enough. The Colin Farrells of Hollywood have had it too good for too long with Affleck as the easier target, so now it's time to get past the pink engagement diamond and uncommitted performances. If we continue to celebrate Affleck and his new progeny in the papers, we're going to have to learn to live with Bennifer II and "Jersey Girl." - Andrade thinks they should revive Colin Farrellfor "Daredevil 2." Join the fight by e-mailing aandrade@umich.edu. In an age when the next movie to gross $300 million is only a "Spi- der-man" sequel away, filmmakers have squabbled to pick up the rights to any superhero they can find. Even Aeon Flux though the latest attempt, "Aeon Flux," an adaptation of an animated MTV TV series, is being released in and the Shoa s16 the middle of awards season, nobody expected it to compete for an Oscar. But people didn't expect Para- Paramount mount would lack confidence in the film enough to can- cel screenings for critics either. Any who are still baffled should go see "Flux," a shamelessly futile attempt at filmmaking. "Aeon Flux" is set 400 years in the future in the fictional city of Bregna, where a corrupt government uses its powers to deceive and manipulate its people. Aeon Flux (Charlize Theron, "North Country"), an expertly trained killer and member of an underground resistance force known as the Monicans, is charged with assassinating the leader of the government, Trevor Goodchild (Martin Csokas, "Kingdom of Heaven"). While she undertakes her mission, she comes to the proverbial realization that things are not what they seem and people are not who she thinks they are. The premise is actually very similar to 2002's "Equilibrium," but while that film is both intelligent and thought provoking, "Aeon Flux" is neither. The quality of the film's action sequences is very mixed. While some are well-made - such as Flux's storming of the government headquarters - many are haphazardly constructed through the use of jarring, nonsen- sical cuts in order to save the characters from reciting any more of their horrible lines. And man, is some of the dialogue bad. Theron has some one-liners that would make even Keanu Reeves cringe. The plot of the film demands a tight, intelligent screenplay, but we are left with incongruous and contrived explanations for many events and some bizarre attempts at political commentary. For example, the name of the catalyst that once nearly decimated the population is the "Industrial Plague." The movie has banked its box-office hopes squarely on the shoulders of its star, Theron. Most of it is just a means for the filmmakers to put her in an extremely tight spandex suit or, as in the case with a particular scene, a most revealing nightgown that is really little more than lingerie. Theron started out her career as arm candy in films such as "The Devil's 'AEON' SUX WITH LATEST FILM, THERON 'S CAREER IS IN FLUX By Christopher Lechner Daily Arts Writer Courtesy of Paramount Thank God for that thighmaster. Advocate" before moving into serious acting, trading in her irresistible good looks for such parts as Aileen Wuornos, the psychotic-serial-killer role that won her an Oscar for the film "Monster." To be fair, she signed on to play Aeon Flux before her win, but the career comparisons to Halle Berry, who followed up her Oscar win with such smut as "Catwoman," are now inevitable. The most disturbing part of "Aeon Flux" really is watching the deni- gration of respectable actresses. Joining Theron is Oscar winner Frances McDormand ("North Country"), playing the leader of the Monican rebel- lion and Oscar nominee Sophie Okenedo ("Hotel Rwanda"), Theron's sometime-sidekick Sithandra who has hands where her feet should be. Yet here they are, stuck in one of the most disappointing films of the year. In this case, Paramount and MTV Films were right to cancel advance screen- ings of "Aeon Flux" for critics; in fact, it would have been better if they had canceled every screening altogether. MIT students seduced by Vegas in new book By Priya Bali and Alison Go Daily Arts Writers "Make Money Playing Blackjack." For Semyon Dukach, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology math whiz who tried to take on Las Vegas, this slogan was the "understatement of a lifetime." Busting Dukach and three other MIT stu- Vegas dents embarked on an adventure to By Ben Mezrich "bust Vegas" - or through sheer HarperCollins intellectual brilliance, bring casino moneymakers to their knees. And while the quartet managed their fair share of damage, the Sin City managed to do a little busting itself. In his latest, Ben Mezrich, who wrote the critical- ly acclaimed "Bringing Down the House" about six other MIT students who also took Vegas by storm, effectively communicates the corruption inherent in a gambling career. With a surprisingly smooth narrative voice, the nonfiction work whisks its char- acters through city after city and forces readers to crawl under the skin of the balsy students. Mezrich makes an important point: that the moti- vation of the ambitious high rollers stems not only from the desire for personal wealth, but rather the desire for power and respect. With the performance "as routine and choreographed as a Russian ballet," as Mezrich describes it, the students tackle the casi- no system. With three gambling techniques consist- ing of pure math, the four MIT blackjack players venture into the gambling territories of Las Vegas, Trump Plaza and Monte Carlo, where their new- found skills are put to the test. Dukach and his partners are unstoppable as they willingly face dangerous pit bosses and security guards with one goal: "to bring the casinos to their knees." Each player creates fake identities. Dukach, also known as Nikolai Nogov and Zayats Konstan- tin, hides and loses himself in the false personas so deeply that he "had to forget everything about him that screamed MIT." The story shifts from third to first person in a break from the students' story, and allows readers to understand Mezrich's own purpose for writing the book Mezrich portrays this struggle well through the eyes of Dukach and his fellow blackjack players, who each show us the downside to becoming a king of the blackjack world. The consequences force them to give up their thrones, and the lights die out on the geniuses who made Vegas history. Through careful and honest writing, Mezrich conveys the importance of documenting the untold truths of those willing to do anything for more money in the blackjack world; he exposes the bru- tal treatment of the students during their struggle "against the might evil empire that was and contin- ues to be the casino industry." Readers will never tire of Dukach - his enthusi- asm for not only winning but also beating the sys- tem is infectious. As he says, "It doesn't matter how much you win, it's about how much they lose!" The Aethurius Society pre..t. Get Connected! Get plugged In to this riveting presentation of Cosmic Revelations spanning the last 50 years.This Cosmic Connection shows that we are not alone and offers great opportunity to bring peace on Earth. The evidence will speak for itself. Thursday, December 8, 7:30-9:30 pm At The Rackham Building 915 EWashington, East Conference Room, 4 Floor Doors open at 7 pm - Q & A following presentation Admission: $lI0(limited seating) ~ For more info: (248) 552-9153 :r, ' . s ' . , .. :> ><> Singapore-MIT Alliance Graduate Fellowship FULLY FUNDED GRADUATE STUDIES The Singapore- An innovative engineering educational & research collaboration with National University of Singapore (NUS) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Nanyang Technological University (NTU) Dual Degrees. 11 All MFit trainers have degrees in exercise science. i * Earn a Masters degree from MIT... and a Masters degree from NUS/NTU * Earn a Masters degree from MIT... ...and a PhD from NUS/NTU Fellowship Benefits..y " Full support of all tuition and fees at MIT and either NUS or NTU