The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 3, 2006 - 5A 'Death of a President' too obvious for any success By MARY KATE VARNAU Daily Arts Writer The premise of Gabriel Range's "Death of a President" - a faux- documentary about the 2007 N A'r assassination of President Death of a George w. President Bush - is as Last week at the awkward as it Quality 16 is fascinating. Newmarket It's the WWF of documentaries: tacky, over-the-top, phony and totally pointless. If the film were self-consciously so, Range might be collecting a positive review right now. Though purporting to rally the audience in communal outrage with its oh-so- obvious political agenda, it ends up boring and mildly offensive. The film opens on the morning of Bush's murder in downtown Chi- cago, where the president is set to give a speech at the Sheraton. When a furious mob receives the presiden- tial convoy to protest the war in Iraq with picket signs and line-sitting strikes, a few demonstrators break through the barricades and charge at the president's limo. The "doc" then slowly explores every aspect of the charged atmosphere with interviews of protesters, cops, the head of secret service, speech writer and so on. As the film unfolds, it becomes clear that it's simply driven by an overly obvious political message. It's fairly subtle in the beginning; there are interspersed, affectionate memo- rial statements about Bush from members of his cabinet. But after the funeral, we are presented only with the manhunt - a search that targets and convicts a Syrian Muslim work- ing in America on the shadiest of circumstantial evidence in the film's core indictment of the Patriot Act. The story's falsehood presents one key advantage, namely that it has no constraints in terms of historically accurate verbiage or lackluster wit- ness testimonies. But its narrative is a mess of sloppy footage combined with longer-than-necessary, mostly nonessential and not particularly compelling monologues, and the true crux of the doc's failure is a techni- cal issue: its pacing. I'm not ashamed to admit that I actually drifted off for about 10 minutes somewhere in the film's midsection. Not that it mattered, of course - the same character was still tediously droning on when I came to. The most aggravating of the film's transgressions ends the fake-umen- tary: three or four news-update-style epilogues run just before the credits roll, the first stating something to the effect that even though the FBI had proven the innocence of the Syrian man convicted of Bush's assassina- tion, he still sat on death row a year later. The second epilogue deals even more blatantly with the horrors of the Patriot Act, illustrating how the Political filmmaking of the most irrelevant order. government now has unprecedented interference rights in the lives of American citizens. First off, the idea of a fake docu- mentary having epilogues is posi- tively absurd. They serve only as last-minute, cop-out, I'll-make- tlbs-point-again-just-in-case-you- missed-it-the-first-16-times devices. But they make an appropriate end to this narrative fiasco. What better way to conclude a bor- ing, oppressive, clumsily moralizing fake documentary than by insulting the viewer's intelligence? The look. It's the first step toward a Pulitzer. Omens and prose PROLIFIC AUTHOR SPEAKS TO PACKED CROWD AT RACKHAM By CAITLIN COWAN DailyArtsEditor It's been a long time since a writer caused such a clamor in Ann Arbor. The Rackham Amphitheatre, where a Pulitzer prize-winning novelist gave his lecture yesterday, Jeffrey was filled to capacity well before Eugenides the event's 5 p.m. starting time. Thursday Crowds of people filled the foyer tackday and crushed themselves close to Apiacte the entry doors where they were sadly turned away. Still others were led into a neigh- boring conference room to watch the lecture on an unfriendly television screen. Ann Arbor evidently has a lot of love for Jeffrey Eugenides. His lecture, "On Obstacles and Omens: The Writing of 'Middlesex,"' was quite a draw. He's gained a solid following since writing "Middlesex, " "The Virgin Sui- cides" and many works of short fiction. Despite his successes, Eugenides has no qualms about the hard work that goes into writing a novel. He claims that often people who approach him express their desire to have written a novel themselves, though they haven't been able to find the time. "That's like say- ing I've always wanted to play center court atrWimble- don, butI haven't gotten around to it,"' he said jokingly. The Detroit-born author said that the initial spark of inspiration for "Middlesex" came after he read Michel Foucault's "Memoirs of a 19th Century French Herm- pahrodite." While he was intrigued by the story, he felt that the main character didn't disclose the kind of information or emotions that he was desperate to learn about. "I wanted to tell the story that I wasn't getting from Foucault." Eugenides had very specific ideas about his protago- nist. "I wanted to write about a real person with a real biological condition," he said, "Someone who lived on both sides of the great gender divide." After searching the medical library at Columbia University, Eugenides found an intersex condition that he found tobe particu- larly dramatic. He then considered the idea that would ultimately lead him to the "roller coaster ride of a single gene trough time" that begins "Middlesex" and shapes its story. The question of gender interests Eugenides. "We are all an 'I' before we are 'he' or 'she,' "he said. In "Middlesex" he sought to "champion identities that are hybridized and mixed. And to do that, often you have to go to places where they are not." The plac- es he speaks of are cities like Berlin and Detroit, both divided and reunited cities that figure prominently in the novel. Eugenides also spoke of number of "omens" that he experienced while writing"Middlesex."For example,in writing the description of Cal Stephanides's grandpar- ents, Eugenides drew from a memory of his own grand- parents who he had seen in a rolled-up old photograph years ago. The day he wrote this description, a package arrived by mail from his mother. Inside was the very photograph he had been remembering, smoothed and pressed into a frame. After every portentous moment he revealed, the audience "oohed," whispered and hushed themselves in nervous adulation. Jeffrey Eugenides had an inkling that he might be destined for literary greatness years ago, where he and his wife looked up their astrological compatibility in a love guide. He said that their combined horoscope indicated that his Scorpio wife would "bring out his creative side," and help him win a Pulitzer. Whether he has received any premonitions regarding his future or not, it's safe to say that his tour as a literary giant is far from over. TEEe tshi'wtV Rudes to shine in Twelfth Night' By ANDREW SARGUS KLEIN ManagingArtsEditor Although the Royal Shakespeare Company is currently holding court in Ann Arbor, by no means are they the only group dedicated to per- Twelfth forming Shake- Night speare's plays. Tonight and We've had one for tomorow at the past decade. 8 p.m., Sunday Ever since they at 1:30 p.m. were founded in At the Lydia 1996, the Uni- Mendolssohn versity's Rude Tboatre Mechanicals have been dedicated to providing theater experience to students who do not necessar- ily hail from the Music School. And their productions are not limited to Shakespeare's works; past non- Shakespeare selections include T.S. Eliot's Pulitzer-winning "Murder in the Cathedral." Recently, the Rudes puton a more than solid production of Shake- speare's often-marginalized "A Winter's Tale." Last year, the Rudes broke prec- edent with their production of "Macbeth," which sold out the Men- delssohn Theatre two consecutive nights (in which, in interest of full disclosure, I was a cast member). With several of the usual sus- pects in charge of "Twelfth Night," beginning tonight at 8 p.m., audi- ences should expect a solid run of The Ann Arbor air is ripe for Shakespeare. performances. It will be interesting to see how the Rudes interpret the compli- cated character dynamics found in "Twelfth Night." But if precedent has any say in the matter, they should be all right. Gain real world experience at FRESHMEN!. BUILD YOUR SOPHOMORES! JUNIORS! R S , II vineyard vines" Come by and pick up an application at the Student Publications Building TODAY!! Student Publications Building / 413 E. Huron Applications Due: November 14, 2006 Call 734-764-0554 for more information