{page 2' 2B - Thursday, March 22, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 THE VAULT 'TOM JONES' (1963) From novel to film and back ENTERTAINMENT BRIEFS By KRISTIN MACDONALD Associate Arts Editor "It is widely held that too much wine will dull a man's desire. Indeed it will, ina dull man." So states the ever-understated omniscient narrator in1963's "Tom Jones," and however you may per- sonally feel aboutthe effectsof too much wine, ladies and gentlemen, let me assure you: Tom Jones is not a dull man. He is a young man and a ladies' man and a borderline con man but, at the end of the day, he is a good man, and you can't help but like him. Don't mistake him for the Vegas showman, either. Before "It's Not Unusual," the name Tom Jones was better associated with the 1749 comic novel by Henry Field- ing, a literary classic following the humorous coming-of-age of one exuberantly rakish English foundling. The public stir caused by the book's sordid adventures may have been predictable for the 18th-century time period, but its lively cinematic adaptation in the 1960s made no less of a sensa- tion. In a year whenthe Academy's best picture contenders included an Elia Kazan drama ("America, America"), a mammoth Cinerama western ("How the West Was Won") and an unprecedented epic ("Cleopatra"), it was this quirky British comedy that took home the prize. And, for once, rightfully. I've yet to see a best picture so capably combine pathos and comedy. Con- densing more than 1,000 pages of densely packed narrative into a Ike wk~i CONTROVERSY Apparentlymoviepostersfeatur- ingElisha Cuthbert beingabducted, tortured, incarcerated and/or pos- sibly killed is not okay. Billboards advertising for the upcoming film "Captivity" - in which Cuthbert is, um, held captive - have been taken down frommore than 30 billboards and 1400 Big Apple taxis in New York and L.A., E!online reports. Film company After Dark, who produced the flick, said the wrong poster designs were sent to the printer. It was simply a gruesome - and expensive - mistake. BROKE? . Britney Spears spent $21 million of her $32 million fortune inthe last two years and may file for bank- ruptcy after she leaves rehab - or so the Daily Star claims. But then again,thisisthesame"publication" that says she was spotted mak- ing out in the bushes with another patient. "They weren't having sex but there was some definite grop- ing,", the Star's source reported. Excellent. mere two hours, the film careens at breakneck pace through the vari- ous hussies and genuine sweet- heart of Tom's young love life, and couldn'tbe more rollickingwere it shipboard. As the titular rogue, Albert Finney ("BigFish") deserves agood deal of credit. With the manic grin of a young Ewan McGregor (as well as the strange profile resem- blance to a better-coifed Donald Trump), Finney gives Tom all the charm and good intentions neces- sary to keep the ne'er-do-well so earnestly lovable. Throw ina spir- ited lady love (Susannah York), her unapologetically bestial father (Hugh Griffith) and the delicious- ly carnal Mrs. Miller (Rosalind Atkinson), and you've still only got one-fifth of the film's charmingly distinct characters. In the end, however, it's the lively touch of director Tony Richardson ("Blue Sky") that so winningly captures the book's tongue-in-cheek spirit. He freezes frames, runs scenes on fast for- ward and, when he breaks the Courtesy of Lopert fourth wall to address the audi- ence, doesn't just settle - for a knowing wink. He goes for full- out seduction. In one unparalleled display of dinnertime food lust, Tom and Mrs. Miller alternately square off towards the camera with vigorously suggestive rips into their turkey legs. One roaring fox-hunt sequence could make even a vegetarian understand the primal thrill of the hunt. This movie is a living, breathing monument to the spec- tacular over-reaching of human desire, enthusiastic to the core and engaging to the last. How often do you see a film based on a 1,000-plus-page novel and end up sprinting out to buy the book as soon as the credits wrap? Even as I write, Henry Fielding's mammoth tome sits above my desk, the most tantalizing cinder- block of prose to ever bell-curve a shelf. If that backpack anvil has even a quarter of the fun of its film adaptation, it'll be well worth the lifelong crippling of my eyesight necessary to read it. PROMOTED Former SPIN bigwig Sia Michel - one of the first women to edit a national American rock magazine (and arguably the sexiest, accord- ing to her fans and various Chuck Klosterman tomes) - will now be the pop music editor at the New York Times. Michel's promotion from occasional NYT contributor comes after the departure of cul- ture editor Tom Kuntz (real name) to the Week in Review. WHOA "Excellent Adventure" and "Speed" jokes are popping up everywhere: Keanu Reeves alleg- edly hit a photographer with his car earlier this week. Reeves was pulling his Porsche out of a park- ing space when he brushed a paparazzo, according to the L.A. sheriff's department said in a statement Tuesday. The man was taken to the hospital in an ambu- lance but the extent of his injuries remain unknown and no charges were pressed. MISTRANSLATED According to Monday's London Times and IMDb.com, outsourc- ing subtitle translations to coun- tries like India and Malaysia has resulted in heated controversy. Individual lines are being consis- tently botched, ruining punch- lines, creating nonsensical phrases and committing accidental insults. In "My Super Ex-Girlfriend," one of Uma Thurman's lines about a zero-tolerance policy for sexual harassment was translated as "We hold the highest standards for sex- ual harassment." KIMBERLYCHOUAND CAROLINE HARTMANN *I Britney Spears when we loved her. A celebration of the beauty of human movement " By ABIGAIL B. COLODNER Daily Fine Arts Editor Ann Arbor is a place people come to work on their expertise - to hone their craft among receptive people and institutions, whether that craft be electrical engineering or, as for choreographer and Dance Prof. Peter Sparling, dance. Many institutions that offer entertainment in Ann Arbor fight for preference among an educated community. "I complaina bit about it but I'm also thrilled at the rich- ness," said Sparling, who is the founder and artistic director of his own Ann Arbor-based company, the Peter Sparling Dance Com- pany. It was in part this richness that brought Sparling to Ann Arbor Peter from New York more than 20 Sparling years ago. "I'd Dance reached a point where I need- COmpany ed space and Tonight, Friday, resources. I'd Saturday and gotten weary Sundayat8p.m. of leading the $10-$15 'hand-to-mouth' life of an artist," At Rudolf Spaing said. Arnheim Studio Sparingaid. Theatersof Dance Now, Spar- Gallery Studio ling collaborates with other pro- fessionals on inventive pieces that span mediums. Sparling's company of half a dozen dancers performs at the not-for-profit Rudolf Arnheim Studio Theater of Dance Gallery Studio on Main Street. His com- pany's Home Season, which begins tonight at 8 p.m., will include text by author Charles Baxter, a con- temporary author and former Uni- versity professor, narrated over a duet, music composed by Ann Arborite Frank Pahl, and lighting by the University's lighting depart- ment head, Rob Murphy. The collaboration that marks this season's works speaks to the fluidity and relevance of dance. It's an expressive form that too often, and unreasonably, remains in the realm of aficionados. Sparling, who was himself a professional dancer for more than 30 years in the Jose said. And dance in performance Limon and Martha Graham dance (rather than social dancing) was companies, companies that defined first kind of a European import, early modern dance, offered an and maybe the last art form to get explanation of the prevalent atti- a foothold in America." Antidotes to this perception can be found in dance thatincorporates No jargon needed what Sparlingcalled "idiosyncratic gesture," or motions from daily to describe this life that tell a story. "The System," a duet in tonight's performance, is choreography. built on these. Sparling didn't need jargon to describe how his choreography feels: "I work from the inside out, tude toward dance as a rarefied from the core of the body - torqu- form. ing, spiraling, using the idea that "I think American culture has the body can wind around itself, some strange inhibition about the then release like a spring," he said. human body and movement," he He admitted how strongly he I NOW IN THEATERS At the State Theater, Quality 16 and Showcase * * OR ***** According to our dueling crit- ics, "300" is either an "aggressive and exuberantly stupid spectacle IObc.(that) purports to get the audi- ence off, but there's no fire here, Enruott in a Kaplan -cnmprah accsur a tno heat, and in the end the whole by March 31 aCid get a $o0 rbat* thing tu noa d parde by limbs and egos mutilated beyond lStet rt yc>u r p rcg C r or i n Ar nn ArIc> r e cl repair," or it "speaks to themes of . s n.E \loyalty, honor and duty, but no one f I y i S I I r yC . r h O r E tc Wvnu! bought a ticket to see 'themes, A , dlw ayS, ic9 trciriiifir fEIEIs. they came to see abattle. And the fighting itself is so beautiful and well-orchestrated it carries the movie." Either way, it's '- aaO- K APF-T E T j beapte st#corn/ -eb te ecometthe film event of the late winter MCAT, C7A, C , and P 00000.0,0,,, 0oo ourser, Class , ,,. v Courses,0IS-."2-, ar00t.3500.00"r 0rivate'0Tutoring. 00,, 000 00,,,,o0 0n frcond"tioer w raen ormat"foosand Wild Hoes was influenced by the movement styles of Graham and Limon. He is a regisseur of the Martha Graham Trust, which has been embroiled in controversy over the rights to stage the deceased artist's works. Spar- ling is one of the privileged few who hold those rights. The Gallery Studio's perfor- mance space, carved out of a con- verted ballbearing factory, allows audiences an intimate closeness to the performers. "There is so much on campus that often people forget about the local, the grassroots production compa- nies," Sparling said. This weekend, with springofficiallyhere,seewhat kind of growth comes from expert roots. just any superhero - Ghost Rider (Nicolas Cage) is a superhero with a motorcycle, flaming skeleton head and powers of a satanic min- ion, although for some reason he uses them for good. Actually, this whole package is a hard pill to swallow. But Eva Mendes is hot, right? Zodiac At Quality 16 and Showcase "Zodiac" opens in 1968 and doesn't stop jumping weeks from there, months and even years, fol- lowing the various men - a drug- addled San Francisco Chronicle reporter (Robert Downey Jr.), a family-man detective (Mark Ruf- falo) and, eventually, a cartoonist (Jake Gyllenhaal) - who take charge of and are slowly con- sumed by the investigation into California's most notorious (and elusive) serial killer. The Lives of Others At the State Theater tomorrow ***** In pre-unification East Berlin, Gerd Wiesler dutifully begins an investigation of a German couple suspected of espionage. As they begins smuggling anti-party lit- erature out to West Germany's sympathetic press, the East Berlin government increases surveil- lance over the seemingly average couple. Percise and articulate. Premonition At Quality 16 and Showcase **** Linda is a bored housewife, minding after two boringly cute daughters and a boringly attrac- tive husband. Day after day, she awakes to find herself ina bizarre series of events, leading her, in non-sequential order, to find that her husband has died. The prob- lem with this lumbering Sandra Bullock vehicle is that by the end, we just don't really care. 0 0