The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, December 10, 2007 - 5A More than the sum of its parts The glory can be yours - if you have the right console. Xbox gives 'FIFA' its due respect By PAUL TASSI scheme, and the minute differ- Daily Film Editor ences between a chip pass, a chip- lob pass and a chip-lob-through If there were a book that list- pass are just as miniscule as ever. ed everything Americans cared And you'll spend at least half an about, profes- hour trying to (correctly) learn sional soccer FIFA 2008 how to rainbow the ball, which is would probably the greatest in-game skill move of be 400 pages Xbox and Wii all time. in, wedged The computer A.L can range between goat cheese and "Beck- from own-goal impaired to teams er" reruns. David Beckham flew that appear to be made up entirely across the pond trying to pique of Cristiano Ronaldos on crack. our interest in the sport, but after his ankleinjury,the public became more interested in his abs and fembot wife than anything else. Nothing, however, has encour- aged our soccer interest more than the "FIFA" series, and this year's iteration is a perfect example of why. Now in its third season on Xbox 360, you can almost see each individual gap in . Ronaldinho's goofy smile, and really, how much beterganagreen soceer fiekloak w from 100 feet up in the press box? Playing against friends is always Having reached what seems to entertaining. Nothing is more be its graphical limit, "FIFA" has intense than an overtime pen- spefifthITe previous yef Nitihirig '"IY kick shoofcit "Whicli'lsu- every club on Earth into the 2008 ally results in something getting edition. That's right: 30 leagues, broken. The game is just as fun as more than 600 teams and about it ever was, and with a few new 16,000 players - insanity. There's moves and modes and an ava- no conceivable reason you'd ever lanche of new teams, everything be some of these teams, unless from the World Cup to the loading maybe you were on them in real screens are enjoyable. life, but that you can if you want to Only a few may like soccer here is surprisingly reassuring. in the states, but try rainbowing "FIFA 08" continues with its a ball over a goalie's head and not exceptionally technical control cracking a smile. Feet-to-hands process doesn't do it on Wii By CHRIS GAERIG ease. To shoot: a flick of the wrist Daily Music Editor up. To pass in a specific direc- tion: hold the pass button and In theory, Nintendo's Wii was toss your wrist that way. designed for sports games. The The realissue with the controls combination of spastic gyrations comes down to the various dif- and random button-mashing ferent actions they try to employ. makes the system's controls the With a finite amount of buttons, ideal format for the interactive the game requires countless aspects of physical sports. And multiple trigger actions. You can yet with the exception of EAs spend more than an hour trying "Madden" franchise, the Wii's to master the tutorials and still motion-censor controls seem to be baffled by the game's basic functions. As such, EA's "Family Play" mode allows you to ignore most of this, focusing on shooting and passing. Certainly a way to avoid the compounding control sys- tem, it drains much of the fun out of the game. l-. But in EA's defense, it has been doing everything in its power to bring the Wii into relevance (read: online gameplay). "FIFA -y r - w s -.2008'# is another FArglease.that: convolute the games rather than has an excellent Web version make them more enjoyable, and with very little lag and constant "FIFA 2008" falls to just that action. Unfortunately for anyone - flaw'. '" Whd"Wants to play as the L.A. The sheer physics and rules of Galaxy, you'll run into countless the game present the first prob- opponents who play as Manches- lem: soccer uses your feet; the ter United, giving them a serious Wii, your hands. As such, EA advantage. had the difficult task of trans- The graphics are stellar and lating the motions of the sport the gameplay rather realistic. to your hands while keeping it For soccer fans, "FIFA 2008" is realistic, and, most important, a must-have. For everyone else, entertaining. And though most continue to ignore "the world's would think this impossible, the most popular sport" and just pick company pulls it off with relative up "Madden 2008." By GABRIEL BAKER Daily Arts Writer Remember when top 100 music lists weren't just cheap ploys to boost stubborn magazine sales? Think back 10 years ago - when VHl and MTV were morally required to broadcast music vid- eos and specials, including epic lists like the "top 100 singles of all time." It was always an elaborate production, featuring different celebrities to host the countdown in to-song segments. At the time, it seemed like it meant something, like we were being offered the divine verdict of music's real value. It was even in primetime. Now, wiser, we can look back on the experience as simply growing pains. The truth is that VH1 did a top-100-singles list practically every year. Each year's list would be the same awkward amalgam of classic '60s rock and Motown arbi- trarily ordered, and never with any explanation. Some Beatles single would be the second-greatesttrack of alltime and "Respect"by Aretha Franklin would be No.1, balancing out the disproportionate number of rock songs to every other kind of music. To be blunt, lists suck. They almost routinely overreach and fail to provide creative ways to sup- port their argument. But leave it to the music writers at Detroit's alt- weekly Metro Times to whip up a music list that puts most others to shame. The publication recently putout a "Best of Detroit" segment that highlights the "100 Greatest Detroit Songs Ever," whether by artist, group, band or sound. Obvi- ously, liberties were taken. The context seems miniscule - the best songs coming out of one city. But believe me, it is a behemoth of a list that pushes "Respect" all the way back to No. 25. f Even though the Temptations, Stevie Wonder, and Marvin Gaye flat-out dominate the competition, the list remains relatively lenient and diverse, allowing pop-country star Del Shannon to creep up to No. 6 with "Runaway." Artists like Iggy Pop and MC5 also get a consider- able amountof attention andcredit amid the Motownstranglehold. All in all, the writers get it right. Instead of Aretha, Marvin gets top honors with "What's Going On," and I couldn't be happier. If for some reason "What's Going On" doesn't convince you that Marvin Gaye was a god incarnate, just go to YouTube and type in "1983 NBA All-Star game." It'll make you love your country more than anything else possibly could. Other highlights on the list include Funkadelic's 10-minute guitar opus "Maggot Brain," for which George Clinton famously told guitarist Eddie Hazel to play as if his mother had just died (the rest, they say, is a cataclysmi- cally immense track). There's also 13-year-old Stevie Wonder with his exuberant harmonica-driven hit "Fingertips." His age is clear throughout the track; he breaks into "Mary Had a Little Lamb" The genius of the Metro Times's top 100 Detroit songs. for a couple seconds and then just refuses to stop playing the har- monica while the orchestra is try- ing to close out the number. The value of a song seems best explained by individual stories or moments. Metro Times uses the phrase"purespine-tinglingquality" as one gauge for placement on their list. And, really, out of all possible qualifiers, it makes the most sense - more so than record sales or pop- ularity. Even the notion of impact seems intangible. What makes a song memorable and of value to a person is not just an assessment in passing but actually feeling and see- ing the song's magic in action. I can't help but look back on a list that ordered the best songs of the '60s and put Sam Cooke's "A Change is Gonna Come" at No. 3. There's talk of Cooke's popular- ity and the impact his music had on the civil rights movement. But that doesn't visualize the essence or the power of the song. The "pure spine-tingling quality" of the song comes from picturing Denzel Washington as Malcolm X, float- ing down the street to his eventual death. It comes from imagining Rosa Parks alone in her room, hav- ing just heard the news of Martin Luther King's death and putting on the song for support. It comes from something instinctual, real and momentary, and so rarely is a list capable of expressing that. 'Compass' all sight, asino sound By SHERI JANKELOVITZ DailyArts Writer Long before the book became a movie, Christian groups attacked Philip Pullman's "The Golden Compass" series because of its clearly anti-religious message. So it makes sense the movie would be subjected to the same invective. ** But the message isn't the movie's problem The Golden (it ignores the book's CompaSS context, anyway). The makers of "The Golden At Quality 16 Compass" know its kid- and Showcase die audience wants to be New Line enticed by spectacle, and in that sense, it succeeds - it's a gorgeous movie. That doesn't mean it knows how to tell a story, and the fantasy set will no doubt be disappointed with the movie's hollow characters and lack of cohe- siveness. The golden compass itself is a device called an Alethiometer. If used properly, it can answer almost any question. The compass is put in the safekeeping of Lyra (newcomer Dakota Blue Richards), a rebel- lious young girl. This is a problem, because a device like this is valuable and bad people want it. The main villain: Mrs. Coulter (Nicole Kidman). She seems sweet at first but quick- ly turns evil. Her heinous plan involves kid- napping children and cutting away their daemons - little animal forms of a person's soul that accompany them through life. There's more to this plan, most of which involves magic dust. The dust probably plays a role in the war so often discussed in Giving us the 'Goo' we really want Yeah, yeah. It measures truth. But can it hit a jumpshot against Duke? the film. But we don't actually see any part of this war. Guess they're saving that for the sequel. The film has obvious parallels to "Harry Potter" as well as "The Chronicles of Nar- nia," and for good reason. It's based on a series of books, it involves magical worlds outside of our own and everyone is Brit- ish. Is it a rule that fantasy can only exist in The spectacle is maverick, the storytelling dense. the United Kingdom? Can't Americans do magic, too? But that's not important. "The Golden Compass" series is the least known and least popular of the three, maybe because it's too complicated for younger kids to grasp. The film retains too much of the book's plot, with very little explanation given. This can lead to some confusion, as the film includes several fancy names and terms tossed about without regard 'for the audience's under- standing. It's a lot to deal with, but don't get con- fused. Even more so than most works of fiction, "Compass" requires the complete suspension of disbelief. It doesn't really matter if you know what's in front of you. See this movie because of its amazing visu- als, which are often breathtaking and, sur- prisingly enough, rarely cheesy. The characters are often just as colorful as the pyrotechnics, but many get so little screen time that it becomes hard to care about them. Take Lord Asriel (Daniel Craig, "Casino Royale"), who, based on the film's wall-to-wall advertisements, seems to be onscreen quite a bit. But his appearance is practically a cameo. Many other characters, in particular those played by Eva Green (um, "Casino Royale") and the veteran Sam Elliott, deserve far more attention than the film gives them. Still, the movie manages to take a talking polar bear and turn him into the audience cares about. Not easy. Don't expect to understand much of "The Golden Compass," even after the lights go up. But since the film's purpose is to amaze and awe, it works. By LINDSAY CHMIELEWSKI For the Daily While you may not be quick to add the Goo Goo Dolls to your list of favorite bands on Facebook, it's hard to deny the simple appeal of its melod- ic alternative rock. Its sound is about as generic and com- mercial as it could GoGo possibly be, but you have to admit, the Dolls band has some pret- ty good songs. Greatest Hits Greatest Hits Vol- Volume One: ume One: TheSingles The Singles puts those songs all Warner in one place, mak- ing for the ultimate guilty pleasure album. The Goo's first best-of compilation includes 14 of the band's 22 singles since it achieved mainstream success, which are well- known by fans and even casual lis- teners almost by default. The most immediate with the Greatest Hits compilation is that with just 14 songs and a definite skew toward the Goo's later career, the album passes over most of its early singles and ignores a progression in its music. The compilation leaves out every single from before the 1998 album Dizzy Up the Girl except "Name," the track from A Boy Named Goo that put the band on the mainstream map. Skipping over "Long Way Down" and other earlier singles, it's clear the band is showcasing the more polished, radio-friendly side of its catalogue. Even "Name" has been re-recorded for Greatest Hits to conform to the typical refined sound of the Goo's later albums - to an unfortunate end. Frontman John Rzeznik's new vocals sound strained, as if he's trying too hard to sing in that prepackaged style. The drums and vocals both come in earlier than in the original version (and at the same time), rushing the entire song. And the haunting reverb on the acoustic guitar during the intro? Gone, as well as the song's dis- tinctive character. The only new single on Greatest Hits is "Before It's Too Late" from the "Transformers" movie soundtrack. Fit for your dentist's waiting room, the track is about as bland as the band has ever sounded, and the lyrics are equally stale. A prototypically inspi- rational song about life and love that comes off tired and uninspired, the lyrics are often redundant and lame: No pre-1998 Goo Goo Dolls? But ... but... "So live like you mean it /Love 'til you feel it / It's all that we need in our lives." Thankfully, the compilation's mis- steps are overcome by the presence of all that we know and love by the Goo Goo Dolls: "Iris," "Black Balloon," "Here Is Gone." "Slide" is impossible not to sing along to, as are most of the band's singles over the years. Die-hard fans may not be satis- fled with the rather incomprehensive compilation, but for those of us who became addicted to the singles, Great- est Hits Volume One: The Singles is the least conspicuous way to enjoy. A