THE RSC MAKES I* REVIEW, PAGE 3B. The 'intelligence' of dumb comedies t t ust when I thought you couldn't get any dumber, you go and do something like this ... and totally redeem yourself!" So Lloyd, of "Dumb and Dumb- er," says to Harry after the latter exchanges their dog-shaped van (exterior-upholstered) for a one- man scooter. In comedic terms, Harry has traded the open slapstick of the w Shaggin' Wagon for a rel- atively KRISTIN subtler and MACDONALD much more awkward gag - two men squashed close on a too-small bike. Critics be damned: "Dumb and Dumber" showcases two of the funniest hours ever put on film, so perhaps it's appropriate that the recent shift in modern (popular) comedy has followed Harry's course. Though the days of obvi- ous frat-boy goofiness are only dwindling (not quite gone), the wiser social consciousness and flagrant discomfiture of today's best TV comedy is starting to make its way to the big screen. Case in point: next week's new release, "Borat." Harry might not have gotten a good deal in his trade, but current audiences cer- tainly have. Recent displays of socially minded comedy run along the lines of "The Daily Show with John Stewart" and "The Colbert Report," touting their open mock- ery of typical TV news conven- tions. Sacha Baron Cohen brings a more fictional element to the style with his "Da Ali G Show," in which, like the "The Daily Show," Cohen stages humorously awk- ward interviews with real politi- cal figures by essentially playing dumb. His invented personas, however, are even more ridiculous than Jon Stewart's crew of smugly know-it-all reporters, each as foul-mouthed as they are earnest- ly ignorant and sporting a flagrant political incorrectness that often leaves their interviewees stunned and stammering. It's Cohen's Borat who's com- ing to theaters, a simpleton from a small Kazakh village whose enthusiasm for America leads him to make a documentary while touring the country. Though the film is actually billed as a mocku- mentary, with both Borat and his random assortment of interview subjects unaware of the full scope of their unintentional comedy, some of the movie's unscripted events rocket so far into the realm of the surreal that to lump the film in with Christopher Guest's carefully tailored style of mocku- mentary is to do injustice to the integrity of both. If "Borat" has any actual fam- ily among contemporary film, it's "Jackass." Borat may be the main character, but his movie is more about watching Sacha Baron Cohen play the trump card of his foreigner's "different culture" to humiliate and infuriate innocent, well-meaning onlookers. From his bathroom etiquette lesson at a Southern socialite's dinner party (literally, she instructs him on how to use a bathroom) to his naked romp through a hotel's con- vention center (with an equally naked male co-worker), "Borat" pushes boundaries you didn't even know you had, as if Cohen See MACDONALD, page 2B TS DEBUT WHY 'GARDEN STATE' IS ONLY GOOD SET TO 'TIP DRILL.' PAGE 5B. B THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2006 What better way to celebrate mod- ern pop culture than by creating your ownserial piece of it? That's the mentality behind the newsstands' cur- rent crop of culture magazines - and we're not talking about Entertainment Weekly. These guys are all about thick paper, matte covers, haute layout design. They offer their back issues for sale. They go beyond their fashion features; they are themselves lessons in style. You're not going to find them at the grocery store, either. With most based in London, New York or Los Angeles, "culture" magazines come off as unapologetically mod, somewhat European and definitely metropolitan. Marketed as entertainment along with information, they have a lighter approach, favoring topics along the lines of futuristic style, political discontent, eccentric celeb- rities, offbeat world cultures, incongruous fashion pairings, deconstruction of the banal and street art of any kind. They're not necessary - they're just fun. Even their ads are engaging. Flaunt Magazine's back page, listing the featured merchandise of its fashion spreads, is titled "Buy Curious." Bon magazine offers a two-page "Where's Waldo"-style ad for Absolut vodka. Flaunt also boasts the best public service announcement this side of the Atlantic: a notice about the dangers of forest fires from the Joshua Tree Cham- ber of Commerce, and it doesn't involve Smokey the Bear. A smoldering drag queen lays sprawled wide-eyed and horrified in the middle of the desert. "Fires are a real drag," the caption reads. But the high-end magazine business, it's a hard to remain profitable - even the venerable Life couldn't stay in the black. Culture magazines, then, sell themselves on the freshness and individuality of their personal approach, funneling the world of high art, hip fashion and only the most stylish of music and movies through the lens of their proudly elitist view. Take the brand-spanking new and admi- rably specific Lemon Magazine, billing itself as "Pop Culture With a Twist," which declares on its website that the magazine will "stake its claim at the intersection of '60s/'70s pop and 21st century hyper-cul- ture." Every issue spins this impressive mission statement around a single, all-con- suming theme - with an emphasis on all- consuming. Literally every page of Lemon's current issue embraces the magazine's lov- ing tribute to espionage's pulpy noir style. Most of these magazines take a broader view of things. In fact, along with their shared passions for unwearable avant- garde fashion (littering page after fasci- nating page) and healthy doses of sex (Bon magazine used the three-letter word so much in its cover article on Justin Timber- lake that it might as well have interviewed Jenna Jameson), many of these publica- tions share an almost fetish-like love for the whimsical. Flaunt jumps charmingly from the Black Panthers' 40th anniversary to a Dutch artist known for reinventing her country's traditional Delft ceramics into an appreciative essay on "ass-kickers See MAGAZINE, Page 4 ILIST Oct, 26 to 30 A weekly guide to who's where, what's happen- ing and why you should be there. Here are the week's best bets. AT TEA It'll be just like having dinner with the real Queen Elizabeth II. Well, kind of. Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m., The Michigan Theater will host high tea in the restored Grand Foyer of the venue in honor of the release of "The Queen," starring Helen Mirren. Sunday's screening will be at 4:30 p.m. - prefaced by tea, biscuits and such - but the regal biopic officially opens tomorrow night. Mirren's per- formance is already garnering raves. Regular ticket prices are $6-$8.50. IN THE 'D' The highly anticipated Muse- um of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD) will celebrate its debut with a gala opening tonight at 8 p.m. Pay the steep price ($125-135 a person, food and drink provided) to preview "Meditations In an Emer- gency" before everyone else at 6 p.m., or contribute $45 in advance/$55 at the door with the regular folk. Ann Arbor's Matt Dear and Ryan Elliot (Spectral Sound) from Ghostly Inter- national will man the afterparty. ON SCREEN Just in time for Halloweekend: M- Flickswilllscreentheclassic"Batman Returns" Saturday night at 8 p.m. at the Natural Science Auditorium. Not only will you get to watch Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman, Danny Devito as the Penguin and Michael Keaton as filmdom's original Batman, M- Flicks will host a costume contest at the showing. And the film will end just in time for that first party. Admission is free and prizes will be awarded for best dressed. AT THE PIG The Bang! is back for its annual Halloween-themed fete at The Blind Pig Saturday night. Aside from its usual fare (concerts, the occasional karoake contest), the Pig hosts The Bang! about once a month. Jeremy Wheeler's rock'n'roll dance party is best known for its holiday event,s and Halloween is no exception - actu- ally, Halloweekend here is definitely tops in the our book. Cheap PBR, werewolf suits and Prince songs? We're already there. i