The Michigan Daily - michigandaily~com h Tuesday, Aprill1, 2008 - 5 The look of a man in need of change. The third-party conundrum- CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: "The Betrayal," Larry Flynt and "The Orbits Inside" A RETURN TOFORM After two tepid years, festival concludes with awards and homegrown, indie mentality By JEFFREY BLOOMER DailyArts Writer "The Betrayal," a prodigious, decade- spanning documentary that follows a fami- ly's immigration from wartime Laos to New York City, won the Ken Burns Award for Best of the Festival to conclude the 46th Ann Arbor Film Festival on Sunday. The feature-length film, also known as "Nerakhoon" and directed by the longtime cinematographer Ellen Kuras ("Eternal Sun- shine of the Spotless Mind"), won a $3,000 prize supplied by the award's moniker, film- maker Ken Burns, who is a graduate of Pio- neer High School in Ann Arbor. A series of screenings Sunday night show- cased more than a dozen films selected by the festival's jury, which included Bill Plympton, a renowned animator; Michelle Silva, an eclectic filmmaker and restorationist; and Bill Brown, an experimental documentarian from Texas. They recognized a total of 25 films with more than $18,000 in cash prizes designed to foster the continuing work from the honored film- makers. Among the top winners was "Diente por Ojo," a lurid, interconnected tale from Spain, which took the Lawrence Kasdan Award for Best Narrative Film, and "kids + money," a winner of the Michael Moore Award for Best Documentary Film that examines the mate- rial drives of young people in Los Angeles. Both films won $1,000. "The Mermaid," an innovatively animat- ed tale of a man who lusts after an unlikely target, and the stop-motion experiment, "Spontaneous Generation," split the Chris Frayne Award for Best Animated Film, which carried a $1,000 prize. "Yours Truly," a much-discussed, startling noir short won the Peter Wilde Award for Most Technically Innovative Film, good for $500. Other awards honored filmmakers in categories like funniest film, best interna- tional film and, of course, best experimental film. On the local end, LSA Senior Lecturer Terri Sarris split the award for best Michi- gan filmmaker with Dean Denell, and the announcement of her recognition earned audible approval from the theater crowd Sunday night. After two turbulent but productive years for the festival that saw a successful anti- censorship battle with the state of Michigan (which led to a special presentation Satur- day night by First Amendment activist and porn mogul Larry Flynt) and an uphill battle to secure its $75,000 fundraising goal, the festival was smooth and continued the tra- dition that has earned it national acclaim. As with every year, there were some tech- nical hiccups, as well as uninitiated audi- ences who seemed weary of some of the more venturesome screenings. One screening Thursday night, called "Cracking the Space-time Continuum," seemed particularly prone to audience disil- lusionment. Some shorts in the presentation were singular, like "Black and White Trypps Number Four," which was constructed out of footage of a Richard Pryor performance and looked like a moving Rorschach test. Others, like "Polar" and "Burren," seemed distinguishable only in the particular kinds of wind-tunnel-like, degraded noise and the size and color of abstract shapes or blurry clips warming up to a warp-speed slideshow. Not all viewers were up to the challenge, and as some began to walk out mid-performance, an audience member spoke up. "We're all in this together!" he implored them as they left, which got a nervous laugh from the crowd. But even when the films were hit-or-miss, viewers continued to file into the theaters abuzz through the weekend, leading to sev- eral sold-out shows. This might have been at the behest of the more hands-on curation the festival fea- tured this year, which included "themed competition programs" that organized the screenings of films into distinct packages like "All That Is Animated," which pack- aged the festival's popular animated films, and "The Orbits Inside," which examined issues of identity and cultural institutions. Though some festival-goers said the themes were not always cohesive or representative, others said they planned their attendance around them. On the final night of the festival, the orga- nizers seemed at ease, and the audience was content. It was another successful year for the festival - a stamp of authenticity for adventurous moviegoers and a loyal, inde- pendent champion of film art. Despite the recent legal battles, it was clear Sunday that its strong, charmingly seditious identity remains intact. - Abigail B. Colodner and Andrew Sargus Klein contributed to this report. he list of frivolous things that have continued to hold my interest since age eight is relatively brief: "The Simp- sons," the Detroit Red Wings and Nintendo. That's it. Michigan State basketball (I was brainwashed), "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles," "Home Improvement," Sega Game Gear - I've moved on from these things. But I've held on to the others and likely will for a long time, which is why it's difficult to admit that one MICHAEL of my nearly PASSMAN lifelong inter- ests has gone astray. Nintendo, I love you, but your latest venture just isn't doing it for me. I know sales figures and an informal poll of soccer moms shop- ping for birthday presents at Best Buy would suggest otherwise, but the Nintendo Wii is a failure. Sorry, but it is. Not in terms of interest or financial numbers, butthe Wii has failed to deliver on its intended purpose. The Wii was supposed to be the anti-video game video game console: Graphics and buttons were out; interactive gameplay was in. The system hasn't flopped in the sense that Virtual Boy flopped - there are legitimately good, bor- derline-great games available for it - but the Wii sacrificed HD visu- als and a consistently competent controller for one that sometimes works for certain things. Ninten- do's jacked-up TV remote was sup- posed to revolutionize the industry, but herewe areb16 months after it launched, and two things are clear: Third-party developers aren't interested in learning to develop for the hardware, and Nintendo is slowly inching away from it. Thus, I present to you the case against Nintendo Wii: Exhibit A: Third-party sup- port. Since Nintendo 64 launched in 1996, Nintendo has had a difficult time coaxing quality games out of third-party software manufactur- ers. Because producing games on cartridges wasn't economical and scared developers away, N4's soft- ware library paled in comparison to that of the original Sony PlaySta- tion. A few years later, the Nintendo GameCube came along. With its miniature controllers and CDs, it too failed to draw in many of the titles that Xbox and PS2 did. But with the Wi, it seems things have started to change for the house that Mario built. The Wi library is still substantially smaller than Xbox 360's or PS3's, but Nintendo is finally regaining support from most third-party manufacturers. The problem: The games are not good. It's that simple. It was clear at the Wii's launch that developing games that effec- tivelycutilized the Wii Remote was going to be difficult. "Wi Sports" was the only launch title able to truly harness Nintendo's new con- troller, but it was only a collection of basic mini-games. When the Wii launched, the consensus was that though it would take a little while for developers to figure outcthe new hardware, eventually non-Nintendo developers would learn how to use the console. Unfortunately, this has not happened. At the moment there are less than five worthwhile Wi games that were developed outside Nintendo's umbrella. "Guitar Hero III" is solid, but it came with its own hardware, doesn't offer down- loadable content and doesn't even include stereo sound - and it's a music game. The "Madden" series has been half-decent, but it's still not nearly as deep as the PS3 and Xbox 360 builds. And then there's - shit, that's about it. The issue with the other titles is that it seems developers still don't know how to use Nintendo's con- sole. Sports games that should be using the Wii Remote to provide 1:1 gameplay are instead porting over GameCube games and swapping out the A button for a shake of the controller to make it "interactive." Shooters, racing games, action games - nothing has seemed to work that wasn't birthed by Nin- tendo. Exhibit B: Nintendo is inch- ing away from its controller. Since the holiday season, Nintendo has released two major titles that were both undeniably good."Super Mario Galaxy" and "Super Smash Bros. Brawl" are superior to any- thing a third-party developer has conjured for the system, and both validate purchasing a Wii for life- long Nintendo kids. However, both of these games could have been just as good on any other video game console. What made "Super Mario Galaxy" great was its innovative level design, in-game physics and nostalgic appeal. The Remote was used to pick up little items and a few mini-game levels, but it didn't really enhance the game. "Brawl" doesn't even use the Wii's motion- sensing capabilities, but instead utilizes traditional control schemes, basically encouraging players to dig out their GameCube controllers. And on Apr. 27, when "Mario Kart Wil" is released, it will let gamers Nintendo might want to ditch the Wii and stick to software choose between a movement-based steering configuration and a Game- Cube controller. From a consumer's standpoint, it's positive that Nin- tendo is offering multiple control- ler configurations with its new games, but on some level, it's also an admission of guilt. The Wi's controls can be useful with certain games, but more often than not, the system ends up holding software back more than pushing the indus- try forward. All of this poses an interesting question that isn't going to make a certain crowd happy, but it still needs to be addressed. Would it be best for gamers - all things con- sidered - if Nintendo abandoned the hardware industry and stuck to making software? After all, soft- ware, not hardware, is what the company has always done right. I've never met someone who legiti- mately enjoyed using a GameCube or Nintendo 64 controller, but any- one who grew up with a Nintendo console has some kind of attach- ment to the franchises the com- pany has generated over the last 20 years. Almost everyone I know who has purchased a Wii has done so because Nintendo's software is con- sistently good, yet knowing they're not going to find much else of inter- est from other developers. And if "Galaxy" and "Brawl" - and pos- sibly "Mario Kart Wil" - could be just as good on, say, Xbox 360, with the added benefit of HD visuals and more thorough online infrastruc- ture, would it be so bad if Nintendo kids who also like playing other video games only had to invest in one system? Considering how well the Wi has sold, this isn't going to happen. Still, I'm having a hard time believingthe current industry setup - which basically requires gain- ers to buy a Nintendo system and a more well-rounded system - is hurting everyone but Nintendo. Sega's blue hedgehog has been floating around other platforms for years now. Maybe Mario could use a change of scenery, too. Passman is actually a Microsoft operative. E-mail him at mpass@umich.edu. Stale just keeps getting staler By IMRAN SYED lescent, whose life story is not for Daily Arts Writer the faint of heart. Jill Johnson (Sara Paxton, "Aquamarine") is "Superhero Movie," the lat- the cute, clueless girl-next-door est in a prolific series of terrible who needs Rick to save her - she spoofs on clichad film genres just doesn't know it yet. When ("Scary," "Date," "Epic," etc.) Rick gets bit by a mutant drag- is quite easily one of the year's onfly on a school field trip and worst films. That said, it's also develops the rare superpower probably the best film in that that allows him to perform com- spoof series, which should plicated dance moves on verti- tell you something about how cal walls - well, it's stroight-up astoundingly awful these films kismet. are. Other stuff happens too, of "Superhero" pokes fun at ele- course - not because it's part ments from many recent super- of the story, but simply because hero movies, including "Batman it can be done. Pamela Ander- Begins" and "X-Men," but its son makes an appearance as central focus The Invisible Woman ("Fan- is the film that tastic Four") that isn't invisible started the cur- enough. Tracy Morgan rolls in rentresurgence Superhero on a wheelchair as Prof. Charles of the superhe- Move Xavier ("X-Men") forno apparent ro genre: Sam reason. Tasteless jokes abound, Raimi's "Spi- At Quality 16 tackling everything from race derman." Now, and Showcase to Stephen Hawking's paralysis rightoffthebat, MGM (Spoiler alert: the wheelchair- I see a problem. bound man gets hurled from A spoof of "Spi- a skyscraper at the end). And derman" already exists - it was what's a "Movie" without hun- called "Spiderman 3." A film that dreds of fart jokes? actually attempts to embrace Amazingly there are also and amplify the genre absurdity jokes here that work. Jeffrey that finally became undeniable Tambor's (TV's "Arrested Devel- in that off-kilter finale to the opment) blas6, fatalistic doctor "Spiderman" series will obvi- character is hilarious, though ously be a complete disaster. On decidedly out of place in this that account, "Superhero Movie" mess. The spoof on the prolifer- doesn't disappoint. ation of iPod-related items hits Rick Riker (Drake Bell, TV's home, but that's good for only "Drake & Josh") is a nerdy ado- one of the film's 85 excruciating Hmm. Where iz pesky ceiling cat? minutes. And there's also a very comical soul-searching is cer- funny Tom Cruise parody, but tainly ripe for parody. But unfor- Tom Cruise parodies are way tunately, "the guys that brought you 'Scary Movie' " (as if that's an accomplishment) are simply W ill a "Movie" not very good at translating ear- nest oversteps into searing sat- movie ever ire: They're just good for pitiful one-liners and busty cameos. impress? Ultimately, the film has a beginning and an end, a feat of coherence unheard of in this spoof series. That is an achieve- too easy these days. ment, I suppose, but it doesn't The recent onslaught of change the fact that "Superhero superhero movies has left even Movie" is flagrantly abusive to the most devoted fans reeling. both the subtle art of satire and This genre, with its often-jingo- to even the unrefined sensibili- istic gripes and self-righteous, ties of its high school audience. ti 4