Wednesday April 5, 2006 arts. michigandaily. com artspage@michigandaily.com ITbe lluigtI&UX t&id RS, 8 First-time directorp takes on taboosxa'?as-k>a\sY atxzzxz rs By Jeffrey Bloomer Managing Arts Editor Jason Reitman hates being told how to live. The fresh-faced 28-year-old writer/director - scion of stu- dio-comedy maven Ivan Reitman ("Ghostbusters," "Meatballs") - set out to satirize the U.S.'s ever-expand- ing climate of forced social confor- mity with his oddly charming first feature "Thank You for Smoking." "I think that political correctness is at an all-time high," Reitman said. "People telling other people how to live is at an all-time high, and that's what this movie is trying to satirize." The R-rated comedy, based on the acclaimed 1995 book by Christopher Buckley, centers on a tobacco lobbyist (Aaron Eckhart, "In the Company of Men") attempting to balance his duties as a highly visible rep for the tobacco industry with life as a single father. The film has enjoyed booming per-screen averages since it opened in limited release last month, and has clearly struck a chord with its target audience: an American public stifled by socially enforced respectability. Reitman said that even along the film's promotional tour, the same sort of socially dictatorial politics the film argues against came center stage. "We had a screening in Berkeley, and we had this woman who said, 'You didn't take on the big issues! You didn't talk about how tobacco's ruining our lives!' " he explained. "There are tons of people like that, tons of politicians like that." Due to precisely this cultural taboo, the film's production has been in flux for years, with several studios rejecting the project unless the film- makers agreed to weave a family- friendly message into an otherwise savagely comic slap in the face to all sides of the political spectrum. "They were trying to make 'Liar Liar' with smoking - it was ridiculous," Reitman said. "This is a film studios didn't want to make because of its politics and because of a lead character who doesn't apologize for himself." To keep from distorting the book's aftertaste, Reitman decided to axe the film's big-studio upbring- ing and go under the radar with a budget less than an eighth of the more typical $60-million price tag originally planned. But Reitman said this shouldn't be construed as a blow to the film's mass-audience appeal. "There's this idea that indepen- dent means that only a few people are going to like it," he said. "I think what independent usually means is independently minded. And often films that take a different track have to be made on a different track." That the film employs the increas- ingly popular device of social satire drawn into near-caricature of our current political atmosphere, a style befitting the "Daily Show" genera- tion, reflects its universal, broad- based appeal. "I think in a weird way, satirizing is the only honesty anymore. We've become so politically correct, and so polite, that we're just lying," Reitman said. Though it may seem that the ubiquitous political concern over the cigarette industry has long since been out of the mainstream public eye, Reitman said the issue is more prevalent and far-reaching today than many of us might think. "There's still tremendous uproar," he said, pointing to a publisher's recent decision to remove a cigarette digitally from the children's book "Goodnight Moon." And with news earlier this year of a potential Residence Hall Association ordinance that would require smokers to stand at least 25 feet away from their Univer- sity dormitory buildings to smoke a cigarette, the ideas Reitman puts forth in "Thank You for Smoking" don't seem too far from home. Courtesy of Fox Searchlight "Look, when they told me about 'Pay- check,' I thought the title might be a sign." WINNING SATIRE TAKES A TONGUE-IN-CHEEK LOOK AT U.S. POLITICS By Kristin MacDonald Daily Arts Writer "Why is the American government the best govern- ment in the world?" When his precocious son posits the lamest of fourth-grade home- Thank You work questions, Nick Naylor's T knee-jerk response puts a new for Smoking twist on patriotism: "Because of At the Michigan its endless appeals system." Theater Naylor (Aaron Eckhart, "Erin Fox Searchlight Brockovich"), the pleasantly rakish hero of "Thank You for Smoking," is the ultimate in mixed morals: a public spokesman for and perpetual defender of Big Tobacco. No wonder he admires the appeals system - his product, as he freely admits, kills almost half a million Americans a year. It's his job to keep this industry's image publicly afloat. And Naylor is quite good at it. "Michael Jordan plays ball, Charles Manson kills people, I talk," he shrugs, and there is indeed an undeniable thrill in watching him work. But though he boasts a public notoriety he (justifiably) places on par with that of Genghis Khan, Naylor's infectious likability proves to be his greatest selling point, and the charismatic Eckhart makes for a deft casting choice. With his aggressively all-American good looks, Eckhart practically radiates confident machismo - deep tan, blonde hair, bright, unblinking blue eyes and the widest slice of winning-white smile ever to launch a sales pitch. How telling that the kingpin of modern snake-oil salesmen should be the visual embodiment of the textbook American dream. "Thank You for Smoking" never roundly condemns Naylor for his task; rather, it exposes the humor that the position exists at all. Once a week, Naylor meets for snappy dialogue and a greasy bar dinner with his fellow public foes and best friends (Maria Bello, "A History of Violence," and David Koechner, "Anchorman") who happen to be spokesmen for the other two most derid- ed, mass-marketed products in the nation: alcohol and firearms. Together, the three create the most cheerful triumvirate of vice since the witches of "Macbeth." This same acerbic sense of humor slyly guides and elevates the whole film. The film's first fifth plays like a quick sitcom clip, and while the film may lag in spots, its 92 minutes skim rapidly over an incredible variety of terrific characters - J.K. Simmons ("Spiderman's" cigar-chomping editor) as Naylor's blustery, disloyal boss, Robert Duvall ("Secondhand Lions") as a mint- julep-lovin' Southern-gent tobacco tycoon and Sam Elliott ("The Big Lebowski") as a grizzled Marlboro Man gone sadly to seed with lung cancer. "Thank You for Smoking" thankfully keeps up its winking humor, though it gamely turns with the arrival of a flirty reporter (the miscast Katie Holmes, "Batman Begins") to a hard questioning of its hero's job. Her accusation that Naylor is a "yuppie Mephistopheles" brings to light the weakness of his only moral defense - that he's got a mortgage to pay, too. Does Naylor even buy that rationale? "Smoking" doesn't settle for defending lobbyists as valiant pro- tectors of the consumer's "freedom of choice." Nick Naylor is, after all, just a talker. What about the larger system of government, with those appeals courts and paperwork loopholes he manipulates with such skill? "Thank You for Smoking" ends up tongue-in-cheek toward both sides. A little sign hanging above the lob- byist trio's corner booth boasts an American flag and the words, "We have the best government money can buy." It's a sentiment that makes for the film's darkest, and most compelling, touch. " XX / / - DALy ARTs. 'South Park' stays steady in 10th season BLOG ABOUT 1NEW EPISODES OF "24" AND OTHER SHOWS ON THE FILTER AT MICHIGANDAILY.COM. By Mark Schultz Daily Arts Writer ~r I "South Park," one of the most vulgar and crude shows in the his- 41A 0; tory of television, is back to breathe new life into Comedy Central's bad-1980s-movie and "Chappelle's Show"-saturated lineup. It's hard South Park Season 10 Wednesdays at 10 p.m. Comedy Central sitcom age reserved only for endur- ing favorites like "The Simpsons" and "Friends." "South Park" will always have its detractors, but its ribald gross-out humor and tongue- in-cheek social commentary has left an indelible mark on the face of TV culture. After a number of surprisingly controversy-free seasons, the net- work stalwart was faced with an unusual problem when Isaac Hayes - the voice of popular character Chef - quit to voice his disapprov- al of the show's send-up of Scien- tology last season. Not surprisingly, show creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone responded by doing what S YOU DESERVE CREDIT - FOR SPENDING THE SUMMER IN NEW YORK. GET IT AT BARUCH. Whether you are picking up extra credits toward your degree or mak- ing up credits, or you just have time to kill this summer, Baruch offers transferable credits at very affordable prices, taught by a faculty that's second to none. After all, how much beach can you take? TITSON * $250/credit for New York State residents $530/credit for out-of-state residents TWO SESSIONS *June -July 6 *July 10-August 17 Housing assistance is available. For more information, call Educational Housing Services at 1-800-297-4694 or go to www studenthousing.org/ T VIE THE SUMMER SESSION SCHEDULE AND OBTAIN N APPLICATIG, VISIT WWWAARUCH.CUNY.EDU/SUMMERI to believe the show many people thought was a one-joke animated nightmare has reached the golden I-. 1- School's for SUMMER 600 courses.7,000 students.Unlimited possibilities. DISCOVERTHE POWER OF SUMMER they do best: criticizing it for their own twisted amusement. It wasn't exactly a dignified send-off for the lovable Chef - he was graphi- cally torn apart by bears - but any respectable action would be unchar- acteristic of "South Park." In the season's second episode, the show picks up where the last season left off, poking fun at the foibles of celebrities, activists and wannabe intellectuals in tradition- ally blunt and unmistakable fash- ion. The show derives much of its satirical power from its ironic use of the town's clueless and blindly trendy adult citizens as foils to Stan, Kenny, Cartman and Kyle, who are seemingly the only voices of rea- son in this "quiet redneck mountain town." The town's citizens embody the show's view of what is wrong with America, a country that, in Parker and Stone's opinion, is quickly becoming intolerably vapid, self-satisfied and politically correct to a fault. "South Park" tries hard to shove its views down the viewer's throat, but as the series progresses the unabashed parody becomes tiring. It reached its pinnacle in recent years through its clever and brutal sati- rization of society's ills, but now the show is sliding downhill as it tries to cling to the few scraps of society it hasn't yet insulted into oblivion. But "South Park" should keep its hit-or-miss satirical approach - as long as there are politics and enter- tainment, the world will always need someone to remind it of its occasion- al ridiculousness. "South Park" will always be there to remind us just how absurd society can really be. I 617-353-5124 1www.bu.edu/summer I 11 11 mil I