4B-The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 5, 2006 the b-side The French are coming, with pearls By Rachel Common Daily Arts Writer Dewy-skinned female courtiers swathed in pearl- encrusted, silvery lace dresses sprawl across maroon and purple velvet sofas. Their white-wigged male counter- parts drink from silver goblets amid platters overflowing with strawberries. Elegant brass candelabras and Greco- Roman stone sculptures flank stone arches and a pink and orange sunset. This is not a scene from Sofia Coppo- la's "Marie Antoinette," which will open in U.S. theaters Oct. 20 - it's an images from the Dolce & Gabbana fall/winter collection ad campaign, a prime example of how the buzz surrounding the movie and its sumptuous costumes has resonated in the fashion world. The film stars Kirsten Dunst as Antoinette and Jason Schwartzman as Louis XVI and follows the 19 lonely, public, lavish years the queen spent at Versailles in the late 18th century, from her first meeting with royal heir Louis at 14 and the relentless rumors and complete lack of privacy she endured as queen to the final days of her reign during the French Revolution. Coppola's subject is controversial. Historically, you either love the notorious French queen, or you hate her. Notoriously unconcerned and disinterested with politi- cal matters, Antoinette instead surrounded herself with an exclusive circle of friends, unconcernedly throwing money into diamonds, clothes, shoes and cakes, and hosting late-night gambling parties. Coppola's take, based on Antonia Fraser's sympathetic account "Marie Antoinette: The Journey," portrays the queen merely as a woman whose superficial lifestyle was largely a result of her girlish naivetd. But it's the extravagant costumes that are getting most of the buzz. Costume designer Milena Canonero's exquisite creations were showcased in the September issue of Vogue, for which the cast was photographed in full costume by Annie Leibovitz at the Centre His- I torique des Archives Nationales, Hotel de Soubise in Paris, where parts of the "Marie Antoinette" were filmed. Leibovitz arranged a party scene in a room of aqua walls decorated with curly white molding, gilded mirrors and glittering chandeliers. Dunst looks slyly angelic in a powder blue silk court dress with delicate dove-gray lace and metallic silver embroidery detail- ing the bodice. The gentlemen sport powdered wigs in low ponytails and white ruffled shirts under coats with metallic-stitched detailing, breeches and stock- ings. Surrounding the queen is her coterie, dipped in silk pastel confections dotted with rhinestones, pearls and lace. The women don wigs with silk flowers and marabou feathers. The grand Rochetti-crafted wigs are sure to receive accolades. The most flamboyant belongs to Marie her- self, a beautifully constructed cinnamon-and-sugar tower rising more than a foot above Dunst's head to a plateau of curls, a trickle of pink roses trailing down the side of her porcelain face. Already poised to win the costume design Oscar, Canonero's work has been sending shock waves through fashion circles for a while now. Marie Antoinette's influence is obvious in Dolce & Gabbana's fall ads, but her influence doesn't stop there. Oscar de la Renta's fall/ winter ad campaign, set in a hedge maze, showcases a cobalt duchess satin gown, with puff sleeves and cov- ered buttons trailing up the front of the bodice. Juicy Couture - the American company that made it OK to wear velour tracksuits in public - ironically settled on a Marie Antoinette-inspired shoot to market their new Eau de Couture perfume: Debutantes pose in candy- hued ballgowns among platters of petit fours. In another photo, a model wears a mile-high pink clown wig that channels the queen's pouf. Generally, a no-nonsense, almost somber mood pre- vailed in this year's fall collections. Austere blacks and navys are widespread in the collections of everyone from Ralph Lauren to Tracy Reese to Valentino, with only a touch of gold or a glimmer of silver to break up the gloom every so often. The soft pastels in "Marie Antoinette" stay clear of the runways this season, but it is the overall atmosphere of a return to formality that gives the film its dominating fashion presence. In the early '90s, a young, promising designer named Marc Jacobs faced immediate dismissal from his posi- tion at Perry Ellis when he conceived the now-infamous 1993 "grunge collection." Jacobs had been inspired by the growing influence of the music movement of the same name which spawned the casual, anything-goes bent on American fashion and culture that lasted for the rest of the decade. Gone were the shoulder pads, pumps and yuppie Frills, thrills and bouffants: The costuming in "Marie Antoinette" influences and embraces fashion's return to women of class. suits of the '80s - the '90s uniform consisted of flan- nel, ripped jeans and army boots. Calvin Klein mini- malism descended onto the American public as well, making mainstream fashion a bore. Red-carpet dress- ing, on the other hand, simply increased in tasteless- ness, the height being Lil Kim's nipple patch accessory at the 1999 VMAs. It was only a matter of time before we wanted to look classy.again. Finally, in the new millennium, celebrities have attempted elegance on the red carpet, making worst- dressed lists a lot less embarrassing than a decade ago. Stars like Scarlett Johansson and Charlize Thereon have helped bring back old Hollywood glamour and tasteful sex appeal. The recent "Marie Antoinette" influence won't be enough to change the entire Ameri- can fashion landscape, but it's at least helped to infuse a quiet, formal elegance detailed with simple touches of luxury into the designer houses which, for now, is a welcome aesthetic. So the cult comes crashing down A Bizarre bazaar: Tonight at 'down's By Jeffrey Bloomer Managing Editor If a tenet inherent to the cult movie is that its genius can only be understood by a certain num- ber of people - some niche sub- set that favors the extravagances of a certain filmmaker or genre - then university students are uncommonly magnetic creatures when it comes to film. I'm talk- ing about you, faithful devotee of "Donnie Darko" and "Boon- dock Saints," "Fight Club" and "Garden State," the sort of person who can hear about, watch and declare eternal love for a film in a single day's time. These are the people who refuse to worship at the alter of "Old School," opting instead to stock their shelves with "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" and its contemporaries, if only because they make for more impressive desk ornamentation. They are, in short, the better part of the kids who make up your class, those who with a fleeting sense of duty flocked to "The Science of Sleep" last weekend rather than "Jackass: Number Two," because, well, it just seemed like the right thing to do. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with this picture, other than the built-in paradox: Among most university students, hip, experi- mental taste in film often amounts to exactly the opposite, the drably conformist product of too much of freshman year spent in the dorms. You know "Donnie Darko" is the most visionary American movie since "Blade Runner" because the guy in the next door over told you so (he got it from his older brother), and before long Facebook confirms it as the upper echelon of modern cinema. There is no science to the pro- cess, just arbitrary word-of-mouth campaigns that typically immor- talize movies with ideas that never really go anywhere. "Darko," the alpha and omega of these discus- sions, is a fascinating film for its provocations more than for its actual ideas, which for the most part are the product of disjointed philosophizing between a wide- eyed Jack Gyllenhaal and some guy who used to be on "ER." No one got it when it was first released (and a month after Sept. 11, no one wanted to get a movie about a plane crashing and driving subur- ban teenagers mad), and I suspect no one gets it now, although that giant rabbit is the damndest thing after a joint and a few beers. It's cool for precisely that reason - it's a trip, and you can walk away from it sufficiently perplexed with- out having to take part in an actual discussion. Others are easier to peg. "Fight Club" and "Boondock Saints," for example, are popular because coarse gangster violence never gets old - as long as there's a money shot of theatrical brutality and a few good lines to be poorly quoted between friends, it's in. "Eternal Sunshine" passes off the same old break-up movie with original "Trust me, man. 'The Da Vinci Code' is, like, the best book ever." framework, which makes people feel smart while Hollywood brain- washes them into thinking love is forever. And "Garden State" is so totally your life. Besides, you love that soundtrack. This is not meant as ridicule, just observation. Cult films are historically dismissed when first released and later glorified by young people who think they were ahead of their time, something so quietly revolutionary that the pre- vious generation couldn't pick up on it. The fact is, of course, that the inanities of youth are forever, and expounding on them will never get old. The American college student, with this in mind, has hijacked one of Hollywood's classic exploita- tion industries, the cataloged cult film, and made it into the status quo. It's now to the point where the State Theater picks up mov- ies released only a few years ago for its midnight movies, because more and more students can't be bothered to go as far back as, say, "Brazil" or "Dr. Strangelove." The major studios have all created art- house divisions that tap into this pulse almost effortlessly, touting their Sundance acquisitions (hello "Little Miss Sunshine") as the new-movie-you-haven't-seen-but- you-should months before they even hit theaters. The trend surely has a multitude of actual causes, but they start here, with the movie that kid next door told you that, like, you so had to go rent. The consequences are many, but of dubious severity, since most of the films that fall under this umbrella do have something to offer. There is no bona fide Pan- dora for film (Netflix recommen- dations, no matter how niftily they try to perfect them, don't count), and genuine word-of-mouth is a force more powerful than any Hol- lywood marketing firm could hope to match. There is also the inevi- table backlash to consider - the ever-vocal minority who lashes out at "Garden State" and its fluttering meditation on youth (never mind that the screenplay isn't half bad) - but even that doesn't amount to much. While social responsibility dictates that "City of God" is about as far out as you can go and still lie comfortably within the cool- kid mainstream, there is great film old and new - almost 100 years of it, in fact - that you're missing. And so the only person cheated in this equation, my dear Zach Braff- revering colleague, is you. By Andrew Kahn Daily Arts Writer Get ready, Ann Arbor. D12's biggest member is coming to town. No, not Slim Shady, Bizarre but his Tonight big-bellied At Touchdown's groupmate Bizarre is scheduled to perform at Touch- down Caf6 tonight. One of the more popular - and certainly more recogniz- able - members of the Detroit rap group, Bizarre was able to generate enough support to start his own record label (Redhead Records) and release a solo album, Hannicap Circus, back in 2005. The project wasn't over- whelmingly successful, but he did shoot a video for the single "Rockstar," produced by Emi- nem, a song that received steady airplay in Michigan. Bizarre's extroverted person- ality and willingness to speak his mind (most of his lyrics are not suitable for print) along with odd behavior such as wearing shower caps in public, has made him an amusing character to say the least. Add that to his weight prob- lem, and it was not surpris- ing that VH1 came calling to ask "Bizzy" to appear on the program "Celebrity Fit Club." Bizarre appeared in the third season, which aired earlier this year, and lost an impressive 31 d "Grrrrrrrrrr." pounds on the show, leading his team to victory. Bizarre's performance at Touchdown's should be highly entertaining if nothing else. He owes his fame to Eminem, and playfully tries to separate him- self from his more successful rhyme partner. "For the media, I got some suggestions / Fuck Marshall, ask us some ques- tions like / Who is D12? How'd we get started?" he raps on "My Band." Fans can expect Bizarre to perform some of the singles from his solo album as well as some of his verses from the more popular D12 songs like "Purple Pills," "Fight Music" and of course, the ubiquitous "My Band." I