The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 3, 2009 -- 5 Raining on my own parade Josh Bayer wishes he could be this sad. H Veay Award-nominated French melodrama is as engaging as it is confusing By BLAKE GOBLE Daily Arts Writer Last year's French melodrama "I've Love You So Long" is difficult to understand with out being a parent. The film's plot revolves around the death of a young child and its resolution is so contentious it's difficult to I've Love say if the movie is any good or not. The film is hard to YOU SO LON understand, as it is driven At the by complicated, parental, Michigan chain-smoking, progressive main characters. French Sony theatrics sure are tough, eh? But maybe that's not the purpose of thi film. "I've Loved You" contains a fascinatin argument that falters only under its own pre tenses and first-timer direction. From what can be understood, the plo goes like this: Juliette Fontaine (Kristin Scoi Thomas, "Confessions of a Shopaholic") ha just been released from prison after a 15-yea stint. Juliette's much younger sister Lea (Els fa ily n Zylberstein, "Modigliani") uneasily takes her big sis in, which casts a lingering pall that hangs over her estranged family. Lea has a husband and two adopted daughters who meet Juliette with equal parts curiosity and crossness. And from their familial interac- tions, we gather Juliette hasn't spoken to her parents in a long time, as they taught Lea to pretend Juliette never existed. Why, exactly, d has Juliette been outcast? - Juliette killed her 6-year-old son. The remainder of the film is a kind of delayed aftermath where scenes and circum- stances come to fruition as Juliette struggles to get back to "normal" life. Colleagues judge her for what she's done, but Juliette bites her tongue harder than any other person has in 9 his or her life, holding herself back from tell- ing others about her past. These reactions are contained 'in a series of moments. But these moments bring to life an array of conse- quences and decisions. "I've Loved You" concerns itself with is redemption and moving on. It's also about making choices, understanding your fam- g ily and, most importantly, being a parent and - taking that responsibility. Maybe this is why college students might have trouble under- at, standing this film. tt Parents and future parents might find the is film more interesting, since it provides fine ir practice in polemics. Why did Juliette kill her a own child? Can a death ever be justified? What can we understand about this woman? Shades of gray, indeed. At first, the film's weakness is that it has no real goals. But that issue becomes "I've Loved You's" strength. Through it's open- ended scenes, the film offers few answers, but still raises interesting questions. . One scene in particular, which contains what might be the most uncomfortable dinner table ever filmed, shows Juliette making a joke of her prison sentence as Lea's literati friends pound her for answers. The party wonders where Juliette has been for such a long time, and her shame is apparent as she's forced to make light of it. Scott Thomas is devastating, and the scene is just one of many standouts. The acoustic soundtrack to the film doesn't always fit, some dramatic beats get screwed by overacting and the way the film blocks together the scenes occasionally hurts. Still, "I've Loved You So Long" is a strong film, with a stronger lead. Scott Thomas has been making the rounds for the last two months as an indie darling. Nominated everywhere from the BAFTAs to the Golden Globes, there was soft dismay at her Oscar snub for this film. She certainly out- performs Angelina Jolie ("Changeling") in a similarly maudlin mother role. Mothers must have it hard, but Scott Thomas excels in her role with greater responsibilities. But who cares about the Oscars atthis point? Scott Thomas is truly affecting and worthy of praise. Just don't bring kids to this one. am a poser. As great as being sad is, faking "sad" while I'm actually quite happy could easily be one of my favorite pas- times. Music can be a vital acces- sory for this sort of psychologi- cal slumming. There's some- thing especially cathartic about JOSH sloshingdown South University Avenue in the pouringrain (without a hood on, of course) while listen- ing to Elliott Smith, assuming the role of the doomed romantic from the cozy vantage point of mental stability. It's a little hobby Ialike to call "safe depression," offeringbthe nostalgic wallowing of bleary-eyed heartache minus all the messy bits. Likewise, music can be just as deft at romanticizing actual, honest- to-God, I-never-want-to-get-out-of- bed-again misery. Listeningto Jim Reid of The Jesus & Mary Chain plaintively croon, "You cut me dead /you nail me down and kick my head" can make one's post-breakup trauma seem significantly less trivial. Knowing that there's a whole subculture of open-heart suffering going on out there mightcmake you feel like you're part of an elite clique of broken-down dreamers. This sonic support system can transform your achy discontent into something poetic, lettingyou floatunfettered in a womb-like void of shared mel- ancholy. Certain musicians can take pain and whittle it into something beautiful and empowering, crafting bittersweet songs that allow you to take a step back and view yourself as the tragic protagonistthat every- one's rooting for. So, in the spirit of waning sea- sonal depression and post-Valen- tine's Day angst, I have compiled a completely non-comprehensive list of songs that perfectly straddle this happy/sad dialectic. They are songs that pluck the sweet spot on your heartstring between euphoria and hopelessness. Whether you're happy or sad, these tunes are guar- anteed to make you feel exactly the opposite (and then swing you back around, full circle). "These Days" - Nico Although essentially any song from "The Royal Tenenbaums" soundtrack could have made it onto this list, this one is particularly precious. As Nico spins failure and stasis into something emotionally purging, the listener is swept up in conflicting sentiments of vulnerabil- ity and invincibility. The rainy-day twang of the acoustic guitar, swirled with sweepingstrings and her inimitable alto, lends the track an uncanny magic that makes you feel like you're perched on the edge of the world, readyto tackle anything. "When You Sleep" - My Bloody Valentine This is shoegaze at its woozi best; listeningto this song is like driftingthrough a pastel fever d'vm- Hm-ail--nMnarin- and whistle, free-floating around a sweet tooth melody, perfectly capturing the half-awake swoon of puppy love (or its untimely demise). If you like your exaltation a bit messy and art-damaged, then this is your song. "She's A Jar" -Wilco As Jeff Tweedy's endearingly grizzled voice rolls out non-sequi- turs over a bittersweet stew of heart-on-sleeve organs and synths, you'll have to forcibly will your- self not to get the shivers. With its evocative free-association lyrics, the song is like an emotional thrift shop, shifting meanings to suit the listener's current plight or day- dream. During the chorus, when Tweedy beckons "watch me float- ing inches above the people under me" and a wistful harmonica hook materializes out of the blue, it's hard not to feel like you're floating right up there with him. "Autumn Sweater" - Yo La Tengo "Autumn Sweater" could be the poster child for the tear-blurred line between happy and sad that this list is attempting to address. With his sparse but powerful lyr ics, Ira Kaplan chronicles three stages of a relationship in haiku- Making myself sad, song by song. like fashion, jump-cutting from the disbelief triggered by a knock on a door to images of forced smiles and yearning for "the beginning." And Kaplan's fragile vocals are sure to prod your nostal- gia gland, regardless of what stage of the romantic washing-machine you're spinning in. "Here" - Pavement "I was dressed for success /but success, it never comes." No band captured the breezy apathy of'90s slacker culture as poignantly as Pavement, but "Here" is frontman Stephen Malkm'us at his most ten- der. While he rambles incoherently about bad jokes and Spanish can- dles during the verses, the refrain of "everything's ending here" never fails to strike a chord. "Motion Picture Soundtrack" - Radiohead This may be simultaneously one of the saddest and most uplift- ing songs ever written. It's almost uncomfortable to listen as Thom' Yorke warbles, "Red wine and sleeping pills / help me get back to your arms / Cheap sex and sad films /help me get back where I belong" over a lonely pump organ. But when the tricklingharps chime in and Yorke unexpectedly announces in waif-like falsetto, "I will see you in the next life," the song crescendos to an otherworldly optimism that defies human emotion. Bayer could really use anumbrella for those rainy days. If you have one to I"nr P--mamA rnv"-oi miar " bingly agic tgain By SARAH CHAVEY matic, an abundant amount of con- an example of when Morrissey's to raunchy ("All the gifts that they Daily Arts Writer fidence (which is abhorrent trait proud ego outwears its allure, gave can't compare in any way for anyone but a rock star) and leading itself to hollow kitsch. He / to the love I am now giving to Nostalgia's a bitch. If you have a penchant for engaging in con- tepidly announces, "You don't like you right here right now on the too much of it, you're punch-drunk flict with, well, everyone. Years of me / but you love me / Either way floor"). and the warm Refusal is a musical manifestation you're wrong / You're gonna miss Despite these notable tracks, sentiment hazes * of all these elements. me when I'm gone." the album itself lacks an ebb and all reason and Morrissey's voice is his most One of only two true ballads flow of energy. Years of Refusal judgment. In the recognizable quality. His strong, on the album, "It's Not Your doesn't fall flat - the majority world of music, melodic tone and marked British of the songs throb with a brash such nostalgia- Years of accent have long worked wonders, - vigor fashioned by eager drums induced beer Refusal ' lending just the right amount of and garage-rock guitar - but goggles make Attack/Lost arrogance to maintain his musi- The ever-woeful the energy level is at a constant it all too easy Highway cal allure. This time around, throughout the album's entirety. to become con- his vocals are more punctuated, M orrissey is And by the fourth track, those vinced that less-than-genius music though. Where there used to be 0 drums and power chords have is classic. Butthe hard truth is this: undertones of annoyed detach- - Impotent this pounded any apt ,eardrum into What once was perfection might ment, there now lies degrees of numbed boredom. There is no not remain great forever. For, as full-frontal aggression. time around. progression or variation of verve, Robert Frost once said, "nothing This is befitting to the album's and, while individual songs suc- gold can stay." largely heavy subject matter. His ceed, the album lacks dynamics. On Morrissey's Years ofRefusal, words are clipped as he takes ven- Years of Refusal brings Morris- it's tempting to hear his cool, cocky geance against ex-lovers, drugs, Birthday Anymore" begins with sey's outspoken and salaciously voice - the once-signature sound alcohol and human mortality. He enough cymbal swooshing and arrogant voice back onto the scene of The Smiths - and declare the takes on drug addiction in "Some- pitch bending to cause some seri- and dishes out a refreshing dose album a triumph by default, stellar thing Is Squeezing My Skull," ous indigestion. But the chorus of good old fashioned rock'n'roll. by association. But while distinct - which he sings in true to form, soars with Morrissey's powerful- There's a fine, line between the tracks are successful, the album over-the-top fashion. In the song, ly emotive bellows coupled with throwback album of a seasoned doesn't quite reach the soaring he punches with lines such as classic power chords, saving him musician and that of a washed-up heights where Morrissey's icon "Diazepam, Valium, Tarmazpam, from sounding top much like a rock-star.Yearsmanagestoachieve perches on its pedestal. lithium / ECT, HRT, how long Robbie Williams clone. Lyrically, the former, but flounders in piecing One of the world's more forth- must I stay on this stuff? / Please the song goes from nonsensical together a moving, complete album right and controversial rock stars, don't give me any more." ("Your voice it might say 'no' / but up to the caliber of Morrissey's for- Morrissey has a flair for the dra- "All You Need Is Me" provides the heart has a heart of its own,") mer band. ARTS IN BRIEF Film Review Fighting to survive "Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li" 20th Century Fox At Showcase and Quality 16 "Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li" is about Chun-Li (Kristin Kreuk, TV's "Smallville"). The movie showcases the same kind of banality and repetition found in that state- ment. On top of a horribly uninterest- ing storyline about a 'girl looking for her kidnapped father (think "Taken," but vice-versa), it uses the franchise name of "Street Fighter" for a movie with none of the high-energy action or character-driven stories associat- ed with the classic video game. That is a serious crime. The few fighting scenes in the movie are trite and per- functory, dialogue is long and campy and famous "Street Fighter" charac- ters are introduced just for the hell of it with no accompanying background information. If this is Capeom's plan to rein- troduce the franchise to the movie- watching public, then "Street Fighter" might be in trouble. In fact, the 1994 "Street Fighter" big-screen adaptation with Jean-Claude VanDamme is actu- ally far more entertaining to watch than "Chun-Li." And that says a lot. Anyone who remembers the cheesy fighting sequences and over-the-top acting from the 1994 film knows that the producers were at least having some fun with the material, The same cannotbe said with "Chun-Li." It's not fun to watch. It's just sad. HANS YADAV