The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 14, 2006 - 5 "OK. Now I'm a crying mime, talking on a phone and stuck in a box. Lost in translation ENSEMBLE DRAMA CROSSES BORDERS TO EXPOSE CULTURAL BARRIERS By ELIE ZWIEBEL Kikuchi) has little to do Daily Arts Writer "Babel," her story help tfirritu's film: the expi Alejandro Gonzalez Inairritu ("21 Grams") gility in light of failed in doesn't just make entertaining movies - he Miscommunication directs thought-provoking "Babel," and while thi epics. In both "21 Grams" the film's languages, it1 and "Amores Perros," sev- when two characters fa eral stories initially appear Babel same tongue. Richard c unrelated only to turn out At the his fellow tourists' anx irreversibly linked. In Showcase and an off-road Arabic tow "Babel," Ifirritu contin- Quality 16 sobriety and loyalty le, ues that method of story- Paramount vantage sorrow. And Chieko jus telling, only this time his herself to her friends o three separate tragedies are connected on a unfortunate target of global scale. Each main character c Susan and Richard (Cate Blanchett and Brad they are left speechless, Pitt), an American couple vacationing in Moroc- to express themselveso co, suddenly find themselves in the midst of standing listener. tragedy when Susan is abruptly shot while driv- There's also a ques ing through the countryside. Though the inci- throughout "Babel" - h dent is immediately called a terrorist attack, the the time to act rational true culprit is just a youngboy - a goat shepherd could tragedy have b who wanted to prove his shooting accuracy to and writer Guillermo A his brother. The likely repercussions of firing at cerned themselves with a tour bus apparently never crossed his mind. isfying resolutions, ass Meanwhile, Susan and Richard's nanny, "Amores Perros." Amelia (Adriana Barraza, "Amores Perros"), is fiarritu skillfully u caught between her occupational duties to the making the most of the vacationing couple's children and her desire to schools of acting for s' return to Mexico for her son's wedding. Amelia positions. While Pitt dr finally decides to bring the children with her to inspire pity when cr across the border, only to encounter trouble re- his young son, Kikuchi entering the United States. Escorted by Santia- sense of drama when str go, her hot-headed nephew (Gael Garcia Bernal, Tokyo. Inirritu contra "Y Tu Mama Tambidn"), Amelia ends up in the streets with extended sh hands of the border patrol. boys enjoying a forcefu Finally, across the Pacific, a deaf Japanese bare desert mountain to high school student explores her sexuality and wasteland that is the pt the streets of Tokyo. Though Chieko (Rinko tituted northern Mexic FILM REVEW 'Harsh Ti mes, feeble measures By IMRAN SYED oria) had made in liftingthemselves Daily Arts Writer out of a delinquent life. * -There's no doubt life was unfair Our country is now entrenched to Jim, but the film's one achieve- deeply enough in an unpopular ment is remindingus thatthe great- war that pop- est struggles in life are ones we culture ref- * *I bringupon ourselves. Thanks to the erences to it horrors he saw in the war, Jim has have become Harsh Times a mental disorder that costs him commonplace. At the his LAPD opportunity. Owing to a Sure, the war Showcase and childhood spent on the streets, he against ter- Quality 16 has a drug problem, which causes rorism will MGM him to fail his drug test for a post one day have in the Department of Homeland its classic cinematic translations Security. But despite these personal (just as Vietnam had "Apocalypse drawbacks, he's given a chance at a o with the actual plot in s reveal the essence of loration of human's fra- teraction. lies at the heart of s theme applies across becomes most poignant ail to relate even in the an't adequately dismiss xiety about traveling to n; Santiago's lies about ad directly to Amelia's st can't seem to express :r family, becoming the devastating isolation. omes to a point where either because they fail or are denied an under- tion of rash judgment ad the characters taken ly and consider others, een avoided? Ifidrritu rriaga have never con- h happy endings or sat- seen in "21 Grams" and nites an eclectic cast, ir different nations and tome provocative juxta- aws on showy theatrics ying over the phone to demonstrates a subtler rolling casually through sts the bustling Tokyo hots of the two Tunisian al gale atop a beautiful, ap, and finally, the social olluted and highly pros- o. The clips come fast, THE CULT OF CATE BLANCHETT She's wasted in "Babel" as a West Coast wife in distress, but Cate Blanchett has proved among the most prolific and gifted actresses of her generation. Hertwo other projects opening later this year: "The Good German" (Dec.15, limited): Post-World War It Berlin. George Clooney. Steven Soderbergh. Black and white. People are already going crazyover it. "Noteson a Scandal" (Dec.25, limited): Judi Dench as an old-woman quasi-stalker going after Blanchett's sleeping- with-a-student schoolteacher? Awesome. illustrating how these scenes take place simul- taneously in one world. While sociopolitical themes of cultural com- munication and international relations play a back-seat role in "Babel," Inairritu doesn't raise any social critique much different from last year's "Crash." Despite the welcoming and hospitable locals, the tourists along Susan and Richard's trip fear their Moroccan surround- ings. Border patrol harasses Santiago for what appears to be no other reason than that he is a Mexican with American children in his car. Although extended beyond the Los Angeles race riots, the racism in "Babel" sheds no new per- spective on cross-cultural bigotry. In the biblical story of the tower of Babel, a deity creates the languages of the world by altering the tongues of men trying to build a tower to the heavens. The men, frustrated with their sudden inability to understand one anoth- er, fall to fighting, and the tower crumbles. Just as its title insinuates, "Babel" is an expose of how toxic faulty communication can be in our increasingly global society. Why 'Studio 60' can't keep up A t the beginning of this TV episode. season, there was one show The success of"Heroes" is that people couldn't stop hardly unexpected considering the talking about: NBC's "Studio 60 wild fanfare surrounding ABC's on the Sunset Strip." A drama set similarly arresting "Lost." But, the behind the scenes of a "Saturday floundering viewership of "Studio Night Live"-style sketch 60" is harder to explain. show, it seemed to have it We shouldn'tbe surprised all: strong writing from that a show that requires one of the best in the thinking about red/blue business (Aaron Sorkin, America, the Christian "The West Wing") to win right and even the United admiration from critics Nations isn't a fan favorite, and star appeal (Mat- but there is a place on tele- thew Perry, Amanda IMRAN vision for such a show. Peet) to attract the aver- NBC marketed "Studio age viewer. NBC touted SYED 60" extensively, having only the expensive endeavor acquired the show after a as proof of its return to prime- heated bidding war with CBS. But time relevance, following years of for all its dedication to the show's post-"Seinfeld" languishingthat success - despite lackluster rat- dropped the network to fourth ings, NBC recently opted to buy a place in overall ratings at the end of full season - the network seems to the 2005-06 season. have gone about selling "Studio 60" So who could have predicted in the wrong way. that a show as earnest, polished and Much like "The West Wing," sophisticated as "Studio 60" would Sorkin's high-headed themes inevi- have trouble staying afloat after tably bring in more sophisticated its first few episodes? Actually, in viewers, making the show profit- the age of diverting boilerplate like able despite poor ratings. But for "Survivor," "24" and "The O.C.," "Studio 60" to truly sue.ceed, it we shouldn't be surprised that a would have to get average viewers show that asks audiences to bring to switch over from "Monday Night their brains alonggets immediately Football" and "CSI: Miami," a tall overlooked. order even for established shows. Watching "Studio 60" for even Part of the reason for the success a few minutes proves that no show for "Heroes" is that it faces weaker in memory managed to squeeze competition, and "Studio 60" could as much dialogue into its every benefit similarly from a less com- sequence - and it's not just empty petitive timeslot. chatter, either. Based on the ironic NBC had originally planned to premise of one network placing air "Studio 60" Thursdays at 9 p.m., artistic content above money, every but, fearingthat the new show moment is steeped in the bickering would get pounded in that timeslot and bargainingthat go into pro- by "Grey's Anatomy," "The O.C." ducingthe late-night satire within the show. For the most part, the satire is superb not only because of Sorkin's ability to be poignant in his America wants writing, but also his brazen willing-not ness to be so. explosions, But while the show's streak of social criticism and cultural per- - ceptiveness is what endeared it to critics, it's also the basis for its stag- gering viewership. Every moment and "CSI," the network backed off of the show is ripe with wit and and moved the show to its current critique, so much so that casual slot (Mondays at 10 p.m.). In the viewers become immune to itcvery process, however, "Studio 60" was quickly. And after this immunity left with another disadvantage. is achieved, it difficult to think Because "Heroes" and "Studio 60" of "Studio 60" as anything other have entirely different viewerships, than an overblown motor-mouth the unlikely pairing leaves "Studio of a show that loves itself and its 60" with few lead-in viewers. The concept of high art just a little too 10 p.m. slot is also too late to garner much. substantial ratings and the show Now contrast "Studio 60" would do far better at 8 p.m. or 9 with its lead-in, the new drama p.m. "Heroes," which features ordinary "Studio 60" was saved from the people (you know - cops, congress- brink of cancellation last week, men, cheerleaders) who discover but unless it moves to an earlier they have super powers. Unabash- time and gets a more favorable lead edly spouting lines like "save in - like "Law & Order" or "ER" the cheerleader, save the world," - Sorkin's drama will continue to "Heroes," in all of its cheeseball generate meager ratings. Consider- glory, is the intellectual opposite of ing the sputtering start "Seinfeld" "Studio 60." It has a complicated, endured in its first couple of sea- even intriguing storyline, but sons before achieving unparalleled despite all the pseudo-scientific commercial popularity, we should jargon about evolution, "Heroes" remember that it isn't that art asks little more of its audience than doesn't sell on television, it's that to stare in amazement. And every networks don't know how to sell it. week, itcgets about 15 million people to tune in and stare, twice as many - Syed can be reached as "Studio 60" managed in its last at galad@umich.edu. Now," "Full Metal Jacket" and "Platoon"), but first there will be failed attempts. Case in point: writ- er-director David Ayer's "Harsh Times," a gritty, dark depiction of one war veteran's personal destruction. Christian Bale ("Batman Begins") plays Jim, a hardcore kid from South Central who becomes an Army Ranger and ends up serv- ing in the Iraq war. Jim's street upbringinghas alreadyill-equipped him for success in mainstream life, and his stint in the war only wors- ens his social isolation. Suffering frompost-traumaticstressdisorder, Jim is turned down for employment by the Los Angeles Police Depart- ment and then ironically heads in the opposite direction, returning instead to his original life of law- lessness. Along the way he drags old friend Mike (Freddy Rodriguez, TV's "Six Feet Under") down with him, threatening the progress Mike and his girlfriend Sylvia (Eva Long- The war in Iraq has yet to spawn a classic film. big-timepositionbythe federal gov- ernment - it is Jim's own refusal to change that throws it all away. The destruction of Jim's spirit is a quiet, contemplative process in the film, and his final demise chill- ingly effective. But even the pro- found character testament in him is ruined by a simplistic and unper- ceptive narrative. After a shocking opening sequence, nothing signifi- cant happens to propel forward the story or its themes. Jim and Mike drive around, throwing their lives away, and all the movie can manage are a few hip-hop themed words of endearment to the human self. The plot itself is convoluted and unorig- Brotherly love or drug deal? inal; no sequences develop on the ideas established by the ones that came before them. It isn't enough, now or ever, for a film to simply say, "The war H O M E E5 messed up this poor guy and you have to feel sorry for him." We the audience have to love the human side of that character to feel sorry for his destruction, but "Harsh Times" is in too much of a rush to conclude its winding plot to ever touch on anythingmore significant. Jim - despite another instinctive performance by a buzz-cut Bale - never rises above the level of a street thug and, to the audience, his death would actually be justified. Consequently, Bale's clever grasp on a Chicano accent (proving once again his reputed linguistic prow- ess) is but an amusing gimmick. Ayer does give Rodriguez a little more to work with. Balanc- ing his criminal side for Jim with the clean-shaven glazing that Syl- via (herself a successful lawyer) insists upon, Mike has a lot more to lose than his reckless friend. We might feel a twinge of sorrow when Mike realizes the error in his ways (too late), but even this emotional spike is easy to ignore in a film thatf creates settings and characters so easy to despise. s NEXT FAIL? ChECk OUT OUR FALL REALTY PACE NOVEMBER 16Th rOR ThE BEST LEASES ON CA MPU S! FOR MORE INFORMATION CA11 TMD CkAssiliEd SECTiON 734.764.0 557