The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com [the b-side) Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 3B A full night of indie rock Castanets, Shapes and Sizes to rock East Quad's Halfass tomorrow By Karen Stasevich Daily Arts Writer Boy does he look happy. Smile, just don't ask questions By BLAKE GOBLE and a Q & A session to follow. All is Daily Arts Writer not lost. Let's go seea movie. It was one of the most bewilder- ing experiences of my life. On Sunday in Birmingham, there was a private red-carpet screen- ing of Mike Binder's new Adam Sandler-led drama "Reign Over Me," which opens tomorrow in Ann Arbor. Binder, a native of Detroit's suburbs, recently found the success of his career with "The Upside of Anger," which was also set and par- tially filmed locally. Allow me to tell you the story of my night. 5:35 p.m. A photographer and I arrive in Birmingham. We have to get to the Palladium 12 theater for the Detroit premiere of "Reign Over Me." Why would a major studio drama, which touts heavy performances from Adam Sandler and Don Chea- dle with a New York sensibility for post-Sept. 11 trauma, premiere here. of all places? Simple. Binder is somewhat of a W hometown hero. The line of people waiting to see this Birmingham native doesn't feel like people excit- ed to see a new movie so much as a bunch of buddies getting together. 6:37 p.m. After a fair amount of waiting, informal dialectics and growing impatience, we're on. People start to arrive: Bob Seger is the first big name. But I don't realize it's him, I just thought he was another ran- dom, middle-aged man. Sorry Bob. P.T. Anderson appears, the direc- tor of "Punch Drunk Love." As the only one who recognizes him, I call outhis name.I askabouthisupcom- ing film, "There Will Be Blood." He makes a slight acknowledg- ment and walks on by. Allen Covert shuffles in, the lead in last year's comedy "Grandma's Boy" and frequent Sandler collabo- rator. Being the jackass that I am (I gave "Boy" a positive review), I scream out "Grandma's Boy!" Covert does a double take, stops and slowly says, "Yeah"? "I loved that movie! I actually gave it a good review," I stammer. I am a whore, trying to get an autograph: I might as well pull out his headshot and beg. But Covert is surprisingly kind. He shakes my hand, says thank you very much and makes his way to the elevator. Sandler and Binder finally emerge. When you wish to ask about the film, its makers and the story behind it, it's hard to get a word in when 100 people are jam- ming "Happy Gilmore" DVDs in front of your face. Sandler and Binder come near me, and I'm ready to ask a question. I try to ask Sandler about the project, and he belts out at me, "Thank you, guy!" Twice. I try to talk to Binder about Ann Arbor and its uses in his last film. "We love you," he blurts out. , Within about 30 seconds, it's all W over-they'reinthatmagic elevator separating us from the screening. Everyone disperses, and I realize I didn't get my questions in. But I still have a free viewing of a new movie 7:25 p.m. Sandler and Binder enter the the- ater to induct the movie; their words are as kind as they are brief. Binder is revered by locals and well-wish- ers. Sandler quips that the seats are "squishy" and that Binder's been eating well in Los Angeles. There is hope tbe film will speak for itself. The movie turns out to be legitimate. "Reign Over Me" has emotional intelligence, heart and humility. Sandler can definitely act, Cheadle was at his most affable and Binder directed with the assurance and control of man who cares about and understands his work. Chasing Adam Sandler and a local hero. 9:30 p.m. The movie is over, and there's a 10-minute standing.ovation. Binder and Sandler are pleased with the public response. Maybe they think they'll turn a profit, or if they hold out long enough, get an Oscar nomi- nation. The first is possible, the sec- ond, not so much. The floor opens for questions, but it's more like an exercise in heck- ling. "You deserve an Academy Award!" one woman shouts out. "Will you come over for Pass- over?" a young girl begs of Sandler. It's all in good fun, and the com- bination of Sandler and Binder at the mic makes for an enjoyable story hour. Soon the questions become more legitimate, and the answers more earnest. Binder speaks about the film's "communicative pow- ers," hoping that people will leave "Reign" thinking about being more honest and open to others. Sandler admits to the fears of doing a proj- ect that req'uired such gravitas, acknowledging. his hesitation to play such a serious role. To quote him, he was "scared as shit." Sandler and Binder appear to be men working to make some- thing that people can appreciate and understand. The goal was to make a drama about grief and loss, and "Reign Over Me" is an articu- late reflection of that. The film was about mending, and luckily the audience got it. 10 p.m. Q & A over. Sandler lurches out, but not without dozens of fans try- ing desperately for that last-chance autograph. I need to ask a question. Now or never: I see Binder isn't nearly as crowded by fans, so I try to make it in for a question. I get up to the man and grab his attention. We make eye contact and he smiles. I look down read my question. I wantedto ask about where the story came from, seeing as he wrote the film. As soon as I asked, I looked up, and he was gone. Damn it. "Well,I hear we're playing at the Halfass Friday." "Really? I can't see my face." B ring the frat to the show," said Ray- mond Raposa, mas- termind of Castanets. "It's loud and we are all very attractive - half of us are very attractive." Need more incentive? Castanets is an amalgamofthe darkerside offolk, indie andblue- grass. Raposa began his music career playing in punk bands in San Diego, where his debut album Cathedral was recorded and released in 2004. "I was just making tapes for my girlfriend and a friend want- ed to produce a record," Raposa said. "Singing songs was sort of accidental." "I grew up listening to hard- core stuff, so it's always impor- tant to me," Raposa said, citing his darker musical roots. This eclecticism no doubt accounts for the shadowy tones of his music, but mix that with. hip-hop infected R&B like R. Kelly, and you might begin to get a feeling of where Raposa's music comes from - musically and demographically. The band moves around a lot, though they're currently based in New York. Cynical and mournful lyrics characterize songs like "Danc- ing With Someone": "In between me and any / any true rejoicing / I wanna forget this reckoning / proud and disbelieving / get the hell out of Denton / with the privilege of everything / alive truly in everyone." At times, Castanets's sound is woeful - think Okkervil River - but with an additional element that sets it apart. The band's style varies, as the number of mem- bers changes from solo tours to an eight-piece project, wield-' ing diverse instruments, from the staple guitar and drums to indistinguishable and distorted sources. - Despite the overall musical theme of life's downward spiral, it's unlikely this sentiment will weigh heavy on the hearts of University students during the show. "A guy in Florida was shaking his dick at us the whole time we were playing," Raposa said of a Courtesy of Asthmatic Kitty particularly enthused spectator. "He was a fan, but somehow it manifested itself that way. It was awesome." If making music hadn't fallen into his lap, Raposa might be experiencing a very different lifestyle: "Driving Nascar. It's fast, a lot of people get a lot of enjoyment out of it," Raposa said of his alternative. "I think it's a noble profession." Castanets recently finished recording a new album to follow 2005's First Light's Free, and is touring to promote their latest work, which currently has no set release date, "I think it would be too early to say anything about it," Raposa said. "I heard that it was good." Facial hair rocks! n their debut, Shapes and Sizes welcomes you: "We come from the wilder- ness / We come bearing gifts for you / We happen to like the city / We happen to like you, too." If the Canada-basedband's self- titled album is its salutation to the world, then their second album, SplitLips, WinningHips, A Shiner, is their triumphant proclamation to society- it's a debutante's com- ing out, a son's rite of passage. Although Split Lips - available in May - comes just 10 months after their first album, the band promises the maturation between the two is significant. "On our first album, it was very obvious when a trumpet was a trumpet. On this album, we brought in a trumpet and distort- ed it," bassist and vocalist Nathan Gages said. "We tried to find sounds or create abstract sounds that didn't sound like an instru- ment." While the combined male and female voices on the first album sound like. a fusion of Dismem- berment Plan and Rilo Kiley, this next album will add in styles that Gages ambiguously described as "a little more foreign or alien" and "aggressive, less uppy." This is the predicted sound for their upcoming performance at the Halfass in East Quadrangle Residence Hall this Friday. The band has taken huge strides in the past year, even though they've been together for four. The group exhibits a more complex persona than just anoth- er run-of-the-mill indie rock band from the North, deriving their songwriting power from sources beyond their own lives. "They think we're from an island," Gages said. On the self- titled album's first track,. "Island Gone Bad," listeners tend to take the lyrics literally, but their inter- pretations are often incorrect. "They equated it to an Adam and Eve story. It was funny listening to it afterwardsbecause we could see where they got it from," he said. This interpretation doesn't fit Shapes and Sizes's real meaning for the song, which, for anyone who's read "Lord of the Flies," should conjure clear images of the island created by author Wil- liam Golding. The words "Eating moms, eating dads / Children going bad" neither evoke visions of a biblical paradise gone awry nor describe any known province of Canada. But Shapes and Sizes try not to fit into anymold one might expect - even those that they've created themselves. Realizing their own range and fan appeal, the band admits that their sound is "a little hard to pigeonhole." "We played this show in Louis- ville, Kentucky, and the moment we got into the bar, it was like, 'These people aren't going to like us.' After the first song, the crowd went crazy and they really liked us," Gages said. Despitethefactthatmanyofthe shows they play are small and that they're only on their first tour for the Asthmatic Kitty label (owned by SufjanStevens), forecasts prom- ise an optimistic future for Shapes and Sizes. Having recently played alongside hundreds of bands at SXSW - including Cursive, Girl Talk and Apostle of Hustle - they might have the opportunity to reach for widespread fame. THE "ese CE N T E R ' Sofas ; Chairs ' "ILuggage Lamps u Records i Stereos 'Hardware Bikes s Appliances S TVs t Electronics, ti Collectibles S i Building Materials . Exercise Equipment / I PRESENTED BY THE ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL El TopO (The Molel The FRI, MARCH 23 Holy @ MIDNIGHT Mountain SAT, MARCH 24 @ MIDNIGHT FOR MORE INFO VISIT MYSPACE.COM/STATETHEATREA2 I A