Monday February 13, 2006 arts. michigandaily.com artspage@michigandaily.com R TeSatchogan Baiiq 5 . .. . .. ..... . The horror, the horror Courtesy of New Line "Shit, I wish we'd gotten that role In 'EuroTrip.' " MECHANICAL HORROR FRANCHISE GRINDS INTO NEXT STOP The entertainment world was stunned. Oscar nominations, announced Jan. 31, stirred a flurry of media attention for the trophy-tipped films, particularly frontrunner "Broke- back Mountain." But calls of victory were short-lived when box-office figures began to filter in that weekend. Which of the prestigious, laurel-laden dramas made it to the top of the charts? In truth, while Hollywood stood mired in obsequious self-congratulation ceremo- nies, America catapulted the horror remake "When a Stranger Calls" to the num- ber one spot with just more than $20 million. But stunned was just the beginning. So triumphant and unexpected was the AM film's success that it prompt- ANE ed a deluge of outrage from the legitimate film community. An anon- ymous letter published in the New York Times called for the public burning of all reels of the horror film as well as the legally mandated political exile of its cast and crew. According to Jake Gyllenhaal, the manifesto boasted a remarkably simi- lar syntactic signature to that of his col- laborator, Heath Ledger. Gyllenhaal took a more pragmatic view of the situation by renouncing art films and expressing his commitment to play only archetypal serial killers in the future. Ang Lee even camped out in protest in front of an L.A. multiplex, vowing never to eat or sleep again until his epic cowboy love story conquered the box office. OK,so none of that actually happened. What's true is that when every movie website, newspaper and film geek was speculating over the Academy Awards, a babysitter harassed by a psychopath topped the box office. What's not true is that anyone cared. The allure of mindless horror is simply too well documented an aberration to surprise many people today. For decades, the movie industry has embraced the profit-yielding merits of films starring attractive, non-threatening young women getting any combination of scared, killed and/or doused in water. The more recent renaissance of the brainless bloodbath drew protests at first, but these too fell away. True, film junkies still sigh every time a film like "Stranger" finds its way into America's heart rather than onto the video-store shelves where it belongs. But for the most part, horror A DI remains the poor, bastard cousin of a Henry James Hollywood - disruptive, tragic, ignored. But if neither the industry nor the media care to dwell much on horror films, nodding at their impressive popu- list appeal before turning to the business of real movies, the American public has proven that it just doesn't agree. The success of a film like "Stranger" - in which an unknown star- let (Camilla Belle) purrs vacuously into a phone receiver while a masked serial killer stalks her in a cavernous house boasting architecture more compel- ling than the film's plot - speaks to that continued .NDA loyalty. And because hor- ror films are such astound- RADE ingly low-risk, high-yield ventures, movie studios have no incen- tive to stop producing them. Take this past weekend. The number one film in America was Steve Martin's comedy remake of "The Pink Panther" with an estimated $22 million, showcas- ing the comedian's considerable skills in an $80-million ensemble event. "Final Destination 3," the low-budget thrill ride following the escapees of a death-by- roller-coaster incident, came in less than $2 million behind and actually claimed a higher per-screen average. Incidentally, that put it far ahead of superstar Harrison Ford's actioner "Firewall" and, for that matter, "Brokeback Mountain." Situations like these lead to two unavoidable conclusions: One being that America has very poor taste in movies. But the other is not so much an indict- ment of the country's cinema sickness as it is the simple fact that horror films, for all their unmerited success, have a per- manent place in our nation's soul. The triumph of terrible horror has too long been the dirty shame of Hollywood, newspapers nodding to American tastes like parents placating their cake-chomp- ing fat kid. But movies are the ultimate populist medium, and denying respect to the public's choice is irrational. There's a place in pop culture for the celebration of such pulp pleasures: It might fall, for example, somewhere between Mariah Carey's Grammy wins and the persistent popularity of Coldplay. - Andrade thinks "Scream 2" is the bomb. E-mail aandrade@umich.edu. By Jeffrey Bloomer Managing Arts Editor "Final Destination 3" is a machine. Its purpose is simple: to sacrifice its cast in increasingly lurid and outrageous fashion, one very determined nail through the brain cavity at a time. It's a serviceable gimmick, eco- nomically sweeping things like motivation and conven- tional logic under the bowel- covered rug, opting instead to Final Destination 3 At the Showcase and Quality 16 New Line The film adopts the same basic structure as the first two, opening with a nondescript high school- er who has a premonition of a fatal accident that kills her and her friends. She flips out before it can actually happen, getting them out of harm's way the moment before her vision comes true - that is, until the faceless grim reaper himself, ever the grudge-exacting enthusiast of brutal death, comes back to finish the job. Usually public transportation finishes off our resident cast of decadent teenagers, but direc- tor/co-writer James Wong (returning to the fran- chise after skipping out on the first sequel) has apparently stumbled onto the next best thing: a roller coaster. And frankly, standing on its own, the sequence is a knockout. Coming off of clev- erly manipulated opening credits more creatively inspired than the most of his and Glen Morgan's screenplay, Wong emulates the anxiety leading up to the ride, capitalizing on the fear in the back of every rider's mind: the feeling of imminent danger that gives coasters their primal thrill. Then a curious thing happens. The plot, typically light but usually providing at least basic character motivation, completely shuts down. Instead of expo- sition, the film floods the audience with scene after scene in which the two characters who understand "death's plan" - this time with a subplot drawing, unashamedly from Lincoln's assassination and Sept. 11 - attempt to explain it to the next victim, who, of course, shrugs them off while partaking in the most recklessly dangerous activities he can find. Still, that "Final Destination 3" plays like an extended montage of who-was-that-again char- acters is not nearly as offensive as its complete disregard for any narrative level not involving overt mutilation. The original film worked mod- estly because it took the time to explore the angsty wanderings of the doomed youth even as it art- fully picked them off. Like the best horror of the post-"Scream" variety, it was in clear conversation with the genre, winking at the cultural subtext that defined it. About the closest "Final Destination 3" comes to commenting on its genre is the inclusion of two extravagantly chesty blondes taking their shirts off in a tanning booth. We get it: They have huge boobs. They're going to die flaunting them. Watch carefully or you might miss something. What a puzzling, maddening tease of a movie this is - brutal to no end, vacuous with- out reserve. Perhaps the person here who most deserves sympathy is the film's editor, Chris Will- ingham, the unfortunate soul who found his way into Hollywood with the movie. It's his first work outside television and, if this movie is any indica- tion, probably his last. That's a shame. The guy deserves credit if only for coming to work every morning and making an honest attempt to assem- ble this defective mass of low-concept trash into a fluid story. That's commitment. cut to the chase with the money shot of a guy get- ting partially decapitated by his own convertible top in a drive-thru. At least it looks like that's what happened. It's hard to say, because unlike its comparably frivolous but much more lucid predecessors, "Final Destina- tion 3" is more interested in the laughably elabo- rate build-up to its deaths than the actual killings themselves. By the time we get through the furious onslaught of red herrings - the ominous, stalk- ing shadows and the tongue-in-cheek close-ups of every sharp edge in sight - the so-called payoff to the jarring cycle is little more than a quick glimpse of splattered blood, a few archival shrieks and a decidedly half-hearted cut to black. Friars Martin and 'Panther'slick as ever By Imran Syed Daily Arts Writer Slapstick comedy is hard to get right. No matter the skill of the performers or strength of the material, there's just something inherently insubstantial about its simplistic gags that turns critics off. In the end, you either love a French guy with a funny moustache - struggling over Eng- lish syllables and saying things like, "How fatal was it?" - or such antics make you question the merits of exis- The Pink Panther At the Showcase and Quality 16 Columbia At the University, some things - like cheeky humor and eight-part harmony - just never get old. Saturday night at Hill Auditorium cel- ebrated the 50th anniversary of the Friars, ANGELACES"RE/Dai"y Members of the Friars sing during their performance on Saturday night. an all-male, a cap- pella octet. Named for a turn-of-the- century University group dedicated to drinking and sing- ing, the Friars still recruit some of the funniest and most talented members The Friars 50th Reunion Concert Saturday At Hill Auditorium of the Men's Glee Club for the troupe each year. The ses- quicentennial welcomed a remarkable 135 of 195 living Friar alumni, as well as a variety of musical styles, from ragtime to Motown to pop. University President Mary Sue Cole- man opened the show, joking about the Friars' nickname for her: baby chief. "But when you have eight young men in tuxedoes, I'm not going to com- plain," she said. Grouped together by eras (for example, 1967 through 1973), the former Friars came out in tuxedoes, sport coats, sweat- ers and blazers. Ordered chronologically, each group performed two songs. The '77-'81 group took the stage in Hawai- ian shirts and straw hats, singing "The Banana Boat Song" and throwing banan- as into the audience. Groups covered George Gershwin, TV theme songs and reworked Billy Joel tunes. Not everyone caught the line about "hooking up in the (Gradu- ate library) stacks" in "Northface Girl," but the crowd loved the '73-'77 group's take on "Operator," whose tenor soloist leads with fiery, blue-eyed gospel. It was obvious that each group spent a significant amount of time arranging their performances, not to mention their bursts of choreographed dance moves. Five of the six living members of the original double-quartet were pres- ent; they earned a standing ovation as they stepped from the eaves to join the current 2005-2006 Friars for their seg- ment of the concert. "There's the camaraderie (from the '50s to the '00s) and you can tell the Friars were very important to every age group in their college years," said Ann Arbor resi- dent Karen Bamsey, who attended Satur- day's show. Current Friars started the concert with the first two songs the original Friars performed. The old-and-new combination fittingly closed the small group performances. Afterward, the finale featured all 135 prior and cur- rent Friars. "(It was) kind of a passing of the torch," said Joe Zande, current Friar and operations manager. tence itself. The revival of perhaps the greatest slapstick franchise of all time, "The Pink Panther," shows that there's often a big divide between a good film and a fun film. This one falls squarely into the latter category. Steve Martin ("Shopgirl") is Inspector Jacques Clou- seau, a lowly country policeman in France. Clouseau is a hopeless imbecile, but oh, how he doesn't know it. Complete with his palm-sized car, miniscule moustache and airy sense of self-importance, Clouseau goes about his everyday life with an air of boredom. But when a big-name soccer coach is murdered in Paris, Chief Inspector Dreyfus (Kevin Kline, "Wild Wild West") hires Clouseau as a cover: The media fol- lows him around and the real detectives do their work unhindered. Little does Dreyfus know how seriously the compas- sionate Clouseau takes his work and how far he would go to save the face of his beloved France. Accepted since his days on "Saturday Night Live" as the crown prince of slapstick, Martin's step into the role immortalized by the incomparable Peter Sellers (also known for his Oscar-nominated turn as Dr. Strangelove) is immaculate. He reminds us just enough of Sellers, but has a comedic element all his own that takes the char- acter to new heights. Though the revamped "Panther" suffers from a screenplay nowhere near as strong as the two Sellers had to work with, Martin's comic genius sustains the film. Beneath all his self-promoting outbursts, inadvertent- ly derogatory comments and a complete obliviousness to everything going on around him, Martin's Clouseau is charmingly amiable. When he finds out the real reason for his appointment, the farcical atmosphere of the film suddenly shifts into humiliation for Clouseau. Surpris- ingly effective, this plot turn produces an ironic, albeit short-lived, sadness. The audience suddenly realizes how kindhearted Clouseau really is, making the finale more effective than if he remained nothing more than a bumbling fool. There are several fine supporting performances that also help to move the film along at a strong pace. Besides Kline, Jean Reno ("The Professional") offers a famil- iar but still-amusing array of punchlines as Clouseau's unfortunate assistant. The charming Emily Mortimer ("Match Point") is superb as Clouseau's secretary - the inevitable bull's-eye of his hijinks gone awry. And Clive Owen, in an uncredited role as Agent 006 (just one short of the big time, Clouseau tells him), is a pleasant sur- prise, reminding the audience how perfect a James Bond he had the potential to be. Though a pure romp can be a tough sell, even to the mainstream, very few people who have an active desire to see "The Pink Panther" will be disappointed. The plot is thin and the story repeatedly stalls, but it has enough solid laughs and performances to make it pass the time comfortably. Martin runs the show like a kind- ly ringmaster. And on that note, forget "Cheaper by the Dozen." Martin proves once more that he is among the great- est comedic actors of his time, and we can only hope that the franchise will continue so we can see him once again take up the tiny moustache and frivolously funny French accent. ft WMWYM laudtt Y // advertising design. ':; ,r r z :; ' g },, ! ' f 'A 'Yi d.: .. .K .. , ... ..,,_. '. {4$ .,'n % 14eW ial practice onCetal I- ---- Klmberlee 1. Karey, D.D.S General Dentistry