The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, February 6, 2007 - 5 Best wallof hands since "Labyrinth." Kill the ..Messengers HONG KONG DIRECTORS EXCEL AT AMERICAN HORROR CONVENTION By ELIE ZWIEBEL DailyArts Writer It's appropriate that, in their American directorial debut, Hong Kong twins Danny and Oxide Pang pull together all of Hollywood's favorite * horror formulas into one ghastly package. The trite The result is a scary movie that Messengers could appeal only to sev- enth graders, for whom At Quality16 half the thrill would simply and Showcase be seeing a rated film with- Columbia out having to sneak into the theater. In its most reduced form, "The Messen- gers" is just "The Grudge." The only difference is that instead of Sarah Michelle Gellar moping alone in Tokyo, semi-famous starlet Kristen Stewart ("Zathura") mopes with her family in North Dakota. Yes, North Dakota. After getting into some trouble in Chicago, Jess Solomon (Stewart) and her family are forced to pick up the pieces of their shattered lives and move out to a farm in the Peace Garden state, where Jess's father (Dylan McDermott, "The Practice") decides to invest the family's last hopes, dreams and money into, of course, sunflower seeds. With the help of live-in hand John Burwell (John Corbett, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding"), the Sol- omons look to start over, unaware there's one big problem: their new farm is haunted. "The Messengers" opens with a black-and- white flashback of the murder of the farm's pre- vious occupants. Shot in black and white and obscuring the identity of the family's assail- ants, those first three minutes are a promising display of suspense, if not originality - and the film's last glimpse of either. The rest of the movie quickly falls into the tried-and-truly- boring scare tactics of recent horror like "The Grudge" and "The Ring." Every otherworldly spirit in "The Messengers" scampers across the screen in that awkward and supposedly creepy jump-cut movement, a stagnation of modern horror that leaves you wondering if ghosts move in such a purposefully disjointed manner or if they're just epileptic. of course, Jess and her younger brother begin to experience this paranormal activity before either of their parents. Of course, neither parent believes Jess and dismisses her claims as blatant cries for attention. Of course, Jess then decides to take it upon herself to solve the North Dakota mystery in the face of her family's lack of support or trust. As the plot unfolds, so do the innumerable holes in the storyline. While the movie's tagline and commercials advertised it as a horror film based on the idea that children can see para- normal phenomenon via electricity, the actual movie never bothers to explain why it is that only people under a certain age can see ghosts. Not to mention the inexplicable crow infesta- tion that begins by just pestering the family and WOULDN'T YOU JUST GET BORED? If you were a horror director in the Asian exploitation industry, would you come to Hollywood and essentially remake your own movies? Well ,these guys would. Oxide Pang Chun and Danny Pang - This team of twin brothers bred in Hong Kong made their stateside debut with "The Messengers" but previously worked on "The Eye" and "The Eye 2," the Japanese hits currently being remade here (Jessica Alba is tentatively set to star in the first film, due next year). Takashi Shimizu - The most extravagant offender here has directed the American remakes ofttwo of his own movies: "The Grudge" and "The Grudge 2." Hideo Nakata - The director of "Ringu" and "Ringu 2" made his English-language debut with "The Ring 2," a sequel to the American remake of hisfilm. Got that? then leads to the ultimate triggering of avian- induced terror. Or the characters without any purpose whatsoever - note Colby Price, played by William B. Davis (the cigarette-smoking man in "The X-Files"). As "The Messengers" progresses, the horror does not. At one point of poltergeist violence, one of the aforementioned seventh graders did jump out her seat, but it became clear quickly that her cell phone just happened to vibrate during a moment of intended suspense. Five bucks says she remembers the call better than the movie. A big bowl of commercialsm or most Americans, the clearly just discovered "the Coke Super Bowl means three side of life"). things: football, beer and Frito Lay's two ads, under the advertising. People aren't huddling Doritos brand name; were genu- up to their screens just for the inely clever. A man runs bag after game anymore. Commercials aired bag of Doritos through the check- during the Super Bowl XLI hit a out aisle while the cashier, indif- record $2.6 million per 30 second ferent at first, becomes gradually spot, turning time-outs and quar- aroused. The final frame finds her ter breaks into highly anticipated with tousled hair, struggling to media victories. stand and requesting a cleanup on The competition is register six. fierce and companies When it comes to Super know it. The ads Bowl ads, I expect epic com- feature every trick in mercials. And at $2.6-million the book, from sex- a pop, why shouldn't they be? kitten consumerism This year, there were still to celebrity sight- some were notable disap- ings. GoDaddycom - pointments. boasted this year's Garmin's commercial pro- best underdressed/ moting GPS navigational sys- wet girls, and famous CAROLINE tems was a disgrace to the faces included ranged evening's typically for- from Sheryl Crow to HARTMANN ward-thinking TV spots. Dwyane Wade to even The ad centers on an ordi- the Times Square Naked Cowboy nary businessman being attacked (not to mention Robert Goulet). by a map that quickly expands But there were some names to become a huge monster. The that shouldn't have been dropped. man's GPS unit then morphs him Carlos Mencia tried to play off his into a giant, chrome-covered hero ethnic charm for Budweiser, but to combat the beast, all set to an wound up looking like a jackass. obnoxious rock tune thatcyou prob- And even though the overhyped ably heard in a commercial for Kevin Federline promo for Nation- robo-action figures 10 years ago. wide cleverly used the "Life comes Snickers sent an odd message at you fast" slogan to poke fun at to manly sports fans by using the Federline's rapid decline, I can't candy bar to induce a kiss between imagine it did much to boost his. a mechanic and his male customer. credibility - not that he ever had Both quickly reaffirm their mas- any. culinity by ripping out handfuls of Beyond the predictable formula carpet-like chest hair. (Do I need for campaign success, there's usu- to explain why this is a no-go?) ally a thinly veiled attempt to If you're actually interested in tug at the nation's emotional pull watching the game, it's almost strings. Where lasteyear's tributes impossible not to miss at least one went largely to American troops, commercial, if not a whole hand- this year's February Super Bowl ful of them. Luckily the digital age commemorated Black History Month. Coca-Cola took a contem- porary, minimalist approach to Admit it - you highlight major figures in African- American history, and Frito Lay barely watched the recognized the time-held tradition of football fans with an announc- big game. er's appreciative subtext that it's 'not just getting here, but what getting here represents." So which commercials went is catching up, and the Internet home with a blue ribbon? Anheus- has transformed into Super Bowl er-Busch shelled out cash for 10 backup. CBS, AOL and YouTube. spots but pulled through with com posted every commercial only a few noteworthy ads (see the online shortly after its airtime- if yard-party face-off and Jay-Z's not before the actual debut. And virtual playing field). Considering since ad critiques dominate gossip the company's track record and circles immediately after the game the evening's hefty price tag, the anyway, each site provided its own commercials came off unexpect- unique rating system to determine edly flat. Coca-Cola and Frito Lay, Sunday night's other winning on the other hand, showed some team. Companies like Frito Lay snappy originality. and Chevrolet took advantage of Coca-Cola played it smartby the web early on by letting the appealing to a variety of audiences public vote and pitch ideas. with several completely unique The Colts might have taken commercials. One of the ads ran home the Lombardi trophy like a violent GTA-style video - courtesy of Tiffany & Co., natu- game, until the alleged criminal rally - but the real prize earnings helped himself to a Coke and will come from you, the devoted began spreading his newfound joy consumer. to the neighborhood by putting out a fire, retrieving an old lady's sto- - Hartmann couldn't tell you len purse and essentially rebuild- the final score if her life depended ing the entire city through various on it. Send her your favorite other admirable deeds (having ads at carolinh@umich.edu. N Straight from the South of London By MATT EMERY Daily Arts Writer If you haven't heard of Lily Allen, then you clearly haven't been anywhere near an indie blog in the past two years. Clap Lily Allen Your Hands Say Yeah Alright, Still dominated the Capitol blogosphere in 2005, and it helped push their debut album to instant stardom. 2006 was Lily's year. Her debut album, Alright, Still, launched in early Feb- ruary in the United Kingdom, and she instantly became blog fodder thanks to her scathing jabs at pop stars and stunning good looks. Even fellowlabel-mate Colin Meloy was giving props to the young Brit- ish lass. Now, with the same album finally set to debut in America, the blog overload can begin once again - and rightfully eo. Though her album cover might suggest someone childish and play- ful - she's riding a bike next to an English Bull Terrier wearing a bobby's helmet - Allen bites hard. What makes her special is how she combines a sexy, kittenish attitude with sharp lyrical rants. She also uses her MySpace page as a post- ing ground for her no-holds-barred blow-ups concerning Britain's NME magazine and the under- ground dog-snatchers that ganked her beloved Maggie May. Then you get into her album. The opening track, "Smile," "I'm from the streets, bitch." throws Allen's attitude to the fore- Allen's passion for sex resonates front, sampling Althea & Donna's throughout the album. "Knock'Em "Uptown Top Ranking" as she Out" gives advice on how to evade quips, "When you first left me sleazy British pick-up lines: "Ana / I was wanting more / But you no you can't have my number / were fucking that girl next door Because I lost my phone." The com- bination of trumpet bleats, fleeting piano and hectic drumming mesh- Brit import's debut es with the off-kilter rejection jabs. Allen even resorts to biological album finally hits warfare near the end of the track by adding sarcastic quips about the Sthaving herpes and syphilis. the States- Lily drops a little street cred on "LDN," which describes a run-in with the police. More crisp first / What'dya you do that for?" Very lines declare, "Walking through few artists can get away with such the city with my bike all day / a line and make it adorable. The 'Cause the filth took away my reggae backdrop blends perfectly license." And what would a London with Allen's scathing indictment of street be without some drug ref- her ex, creating a track both edgy erences? Lily's got those covered, and accessible. too. "Everything seems to look as it Courtesy of Capitol should / ButI wonder what goes on behind doors / A fella looking dap- per and he's sitting with a slapper / And I see it's a pimp and his crack whore." The track is propelled by a persistent bass line and drum pat- tern, occasionally interrupted by trumpet calls. Though the album is front- loaded (but what good pop debut isn't?), Ms. Allen still combines sharp street lyrics, danceable reg- gae beats and an English touch that makes her the perfect female answer to Mike Skinner. Though she may never reach the universal appeal of other female hip-hoppers - see Lady Sovereign or Missy Elliot - Allen has man- aged to carve out a deeply idiosyn- cratic niche in the rap market. Her music is fan-friendly, just don't piss her off... or hit on her at a pub. - New revolving student loan -'M' checks " Free online banking 24/7 " ATMs on campus -Three campus branches * StudentVISA credit card ForYour Best Choice in Financial Services umcu.org email: umcu@umcu.org phone: 734-662-8200 NCA I O