The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, January 13, 2009 - 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday ianuaryl3,2009-5 The subjective bliss of listening Dead from the start In new horror, David Goyer's directing can't match his screenwriting By BLAKE GOBLE Daily Arts Writer David Goyer is a fantastic screenwriter when it comes to dark action, spectacle and the occult. An Ann Arbor native, Goyer is an avid sci-fi and comic geek who brandishes tattoos and is noted for his brooding writ- ing. He helped write the last two "Batman" films, made the "Blade" movies ' supe- rior schlock and has written The Unborn At Quality 16 and Showcase Rogue example that creative stories can be poorly told. "The Unborn" is the story of Casey Beldon (Odette Yustman, "Cloverfield"), an undergrad student living in and around Chicago. She's starting to see things: creepy kids, blinking fetuses and insects everywhere. And, because this is a supernatural thriller and obviously nothing like real life, the film never shows Casey going to class, discussing her major, tuition or grades. Realistic or not, Casey has just found out that she had a twin who died during childbirth. Perhaps that's why she's haunted by a spooky little boy? Could it be the reason she's seeing dogs with masks on their faces? In search of answers, Casey finds her estranged grandmother Sofi (Jane Alexander, "'the Ring"), a Holocaust survivor and requi- site wise old religious lady. Sofi explains that Casey is being haunted by a dybbuk, a possess- itg demon of Kabalah and Jewish Europeat folklore that can invade our world via mirrors and scantily clad women. How PG-13. The rest of "The Unborn" is a series of creepy moments and crazy images that should leave the audience wondering how Gary Oldman ("Batman Begins") wound up in this movie as an exorcising rabbi. Still, "The Unborn" has some fascinating imagery and ideas. A mix of Jewish mysticism, underage melodrama and imagery lifted from "Don't Look Now," the film occasionally works. It's filled with radically random moments. When a feeble old man suddenly bends and morphs into an upside-down tarantula, Goyer strikes trippy gold. When a four-year-old child appears with a blue raincoat, butcher knife and demon face, it's legitimately scary. And when Gary Oldman sees a bull terrier with an upside down head growling in a temple, it's actually memorable. But it's not enough. While "The Unborn" has great images and fresh ideas, nothing ever quite meshes. Goyer is still green at directing, and he throws his scenes together with little cohesion or flair. Horror films can easily sling cheap thrills at audiences, usually using tense "Psycho"-esque strings inthesoundtrack anderashedits.Goyer' lazily uses these tools, in addition to innocuous slow motion and baroque angles. As a result, one can't help but imagine this material in th hands of a skilled horror director. There's a reason "The Dark Knight" was so good: Goyer let someone else direct his material. What if Guillermo Del Toro ("Pan's Labyrinth") or Eli Roth ("Hostel") got a crack at this? Think of all the tension and thrills people could get from a Goyer collaboration with one of those guys. Instead, "The Unborn" is just a slightly aver- age January thriller. Keep writing, Goyer. When Iinitiallyhbought The Cure's Disintegra- tion I absolutely hated it. I resented the album because y it was mopey, shapeless and way too good for me. I could tell it was great, but in some ivory tower JOSH sort of way that J I would never SAYER fully understand. Then I broke up with my girl- friend. After that, it was like I was listening to the record through a completely different set of ear- drums. Its ambiently undulating odysseys used to bore me to death; post-breakup, they washed over me like a Zen wave of remedial hopelessness. The Cure, indeed. For two weeks, I wanted nothingbut to take long hotbaths in the band's angsty brilliance. Before, the record hadn't even sounded like music to me. There had been no driving force behind it. It would just slosh tepidly in my ears like lukewarm bathwater. But when I listened to Disintegration on a family road trip the day after the breakup, it hit me that it was driven by emotion. What had previously sounded like back- ground music cocooned me like a warm sweater as I slouched bleary- eyed in the backseat of my mom's car. Heartache had unlocked the door to the ivory tower. So as I sit here now, wallowing in this bittersweet nostalgia, a burning question springs to mind: What makes me like music? Being a music critic, this is particularly distressing. Had I reviewed Dis- integration pre-breakup, I would have panned it as drearily plod- ding Goth sludge. But if I were to review it now, I would worship it as a slow-burn cathartic tour de force. So when I have only a week to listen to and assess a given albums for the Daily, how can I possibly be expected to regurgi- tate a ripened opiion about it? Now, I want to make it crystal clear that I am not tryingto detan- gle this riddle of "what makes good music?" for the masses. Not at all. How could I? I'm tangled up enough myself. But what I am doing is letting you ride shotgun while I attempt to cure my own idiosyncratic confusion. Music could easily hold the throne as the most subjective art form in the big, bad kingdom of art forms. And while we can bicker endlessly about lush arrangements and technical prowess and how fucked-up Bjork is, when it comes down to the nitty-gritty, all that truly matters is the way music makes us feel. Plain and simple. It may sound trite, but it's true. It is for me, at least. It's primal, sometimes even sexual. It's a gut feeling I get every time I hear the guitar solo in "Summer Babe" by Pavement. Or the gooseflesh that explodes on my forearms like serrated Braille whenever Thom Yorke soars into his wraithlike falsetto. That's when I know something's work- ing, how I know the music's doing its job. But is it? If I'm driving my car down Main Street on a balmy April afternoon, with the windows down and the tantalizing aroma of restaurants I can't afford waft- ing into my nostrils, I'm goingto think whatever I'm listening to is a masterpiece. Hell, after having a stimulating conversation with someone, I could probably wax poetic to Lil' Jon. Maybe that's a bit of a stretch, but the point I'm trying to make is that my enjoy- ment and appreciation of music is strongly contingent on not only how it makes me feel, but also how I'm feelingbefore I even hear it. So maybe that's it. Music is like a padlocked treasure chest, and we need only to be in the right state of mind to ransack its riches., Fair enough. But what about differentiating between the different creams of the crop, or between the albums I've already labeled as "my favor- ites"? Being a music elitist, I obvi- ously need to have an all-time favorite album. You know, for when people ask. And when they do, I tell them Radiohead's Kid A. But I could just as easily tell them In Rainbows. While the former may be what I deem "the perfect album," the latter is my go-to; the one I'll spin when nothing else is doing it for me. In Rainbows boasts the highest playcounts on my iPod by a complete landslide. It makes me giddy no matter what Even I don't know what I like. mood I'm in. But, as a critic, I'll tip my hat to KidA for its sheer sonic infinity. Every time I listen to the album, I'll hear something 1 haven't heard before. And I listen to it a lot. So which one is better? Which one is truly my favorite? I have no idea. I guess the more important question is: Does any of this really matter? I like to think it doesn't. Sure, this skittish self-analysis can provide for some thought- provoking cognitive aerobics. But if I'm stoned at Lollapalooza, Broken Social Scene is playing "Cause=Time," and I'm so moved I'm on the verge of tears (hypo- thetically, of course), I'm not going to waste one second pondering why I'm in spch ecstasy. I'm just going to feel it. Bayer is just looking for a new girlfriend. Cheer him up at jrbayer@umich.edu enough junk food ("Death Warrant," "Dark City") to last Spike a lifetime. But as a director, Goyer kinda ... sucks. The weak direction is only thing holding back "The Unborn," a consistently interesting but ultimately medicore new thriller written and directed by Goyer. A brilliant idea-making kind of man, Goyer keeps enough utterly crazy shit on the screen at all times to keep audiences amused, but he never quite leads the film in the direction he should. "The Unborn" is a perfect A menagerie of creative clarity By MATT EMERY plex album they offer. Daily Arts Writer With Merriweather Post Pavil- ion, two things are now poignant- Animal Collective has never ly clear: Panda and Avey are no been transparent. Leaders Avey longer complete mystery men and Tare and Panda Bear's songs are Animal Collective's growing fan caked in lay- base will continue to develop with ers of technical the group's most accessible, soni- production with cally reserved effort yet. There many of their Aimal are no more songs that might lyrics shrouded not even be songs, and fewer and garbled, COIIediVe obtrusive squeals and wandering as if they were Merriweather sounds. Also, someone told Avey singing in an Post Pavilion he didn't need to scream any- aquarium. The . more, which is nice. sporadic yet cal- Still, from the first warbles of culated sounds opening track "In the Flowers," and production have always it's painfully clear that Animal trumped Animal Collective's Collective isn't looking for abso- characteristically indecipherable lute clarity this time around. B3ut lyrics. Merriweather is an astoundingly Similar to their lyrics, Tare and crisp, buttery effort that not only Bear's lives rest in relative secrecy. rounds out a lot of the blunt edges They don't do many interviews. from the band's first few albums, They don't blog constantly. Even but also ups the lyrical deftness of press photos are scarce. All they 2007'sStrawberry Jam. All of these really have speaking for them is elements formulate what is sure to their music, and it has certainly be one of the most technically and helped their legendary status grow vocally precise albums of 2009. exponentially with each new, com- Merriweather is a decidedly adult album. Despite the thinly veiled drug references (including the lyrics "If I could only leave my body for the night" on "In the Flow- ers" and the cross between an opti- cal illusion and a "Magic Eye" book that is the album cover), Panda and 'Tare are growing up. Panda feels domestic on "My Girls," singing, "Is it much to admit I need / a solid soul and the blood I bleed / With a little girl, and by my spouse / I only want a proper house." On "Daily Routine," the production - full of chirpsandelongatedvocalpatterns - mimics the daily routine of pro- tecting a child from gas fumes and stopping at traffic signals before the vocals blend into stretched and desolate shutters. The songs pack a bit of raw emotion that didn't seem possible on Animal Collective's previous albums, especially under- neath the complex drum patterns of Sung Tongs and Tare's old pen- chant for screaming. For all its wispy hits and swirl- ingtmelodies aboutleaves and flow- ers, Merriweather pushes a more dance-oriented Animal Collective, though with more than a touch of hippie musical elements. The grinding and mechanical "Sum- mertime Clothes" is scrubbed clean by dueling and jovial chimes from both Tare and Bear about the healing powers of the sun. But the undercurrents of tension and fear create a fitting, grounded quality, which can be seen when Tare sings, "Walking around in our summertime clothes / Know where to go when our bodies go." True to form, Animal Collective still enjoys embracing its tribal and jungle influences. "Lion in a Coma" skips along injected with a didgeridoo-like beat and the sound of buzzing insects, and "Guys Eyes" sounds like it was recorded in a swamp where Tare and Bear's vocals compete for a dose of fresh air. The subtle touches to songs like these and the delicate lyrics of love-song "Bluish" show just why Animal Collective has such a cult following: No one else can make songs so astonishingly complex. "Brother Sport" feels like a dance song, even though it may not be, with the lyrics "Open up your, open up your, open up your throat, and let them go" falling into video game blips and bloops, compli- mented by a siren-like squalor. It's an outcast on the album, falling into the final slot, and it might be the closest the group has to cling- ing to its alienating self of old. But underneath it all are the complex connections ofvocals and the com- puter splashes that should never go together so well. What really pulls "Brother Sport" into Merriweather Post Pavilion is the culmination of all the things that have worked so well for Animal Collective, not just on the album, but for the past decade. Dance and hippie jams all in one. It's a bit of an anomaly after all the flowing tracks, but Merriweather wouldn't be the same without "Brother Sport." It's a peppy, dance- and-chant-oriented reminder of the group's eclectic tendencies that shows that even on top of such an emotionally raw disc, Animal Col- lective really has found its stride and picked its best elements to craft a startlingly precise album. 1 r- 7----7 A I & i i