4B - Thursday, October 1, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 48 - Thursday, October 1, 2009The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom w 'DAISIES' (1966) A surreal bouquet of 'Daisies' Rocca s modern life By JACK PORTER Daily Arts Writer Vera Chytilov's "Sedmikrasky" ("Daisies") is a divisive film. According to Czech film historian Peter Hames, female audiences saw humor in "Daisies" where men did not. Women also more closely identified with its heroines, while men were more likely to see them as petulant brats. Audiences may be less prejudiced now, but femi- nism is still a contentious topic. Either way, "Daisies" is a delicious conversation starter. "Daisies" is often lumped into the dubious category of the "Czech New Wave," a period during the '60s which saw the emergence of talents like Milos Forman and Jan Nemec. These directors drew from practices like surrealism, cinema verite and neo-realism. But even compared to its contemporaries, "Daisies" is totally iconoclastic; it's a feminist critique wrapped in a beautiful psychedelic package. The film has something like a story, but it's more a series of the- matically connected skits than a logical narrative piece. In sum- mary, the two protagonists, Marie I and Marie II (a.k.a "the blonde" and "the brunette," among other names) are two mischievous teen- age girls who generally wreak havoc, scamming old men out of their riches on lavish dinner dates, upstaging cabaret performances and even setting fires. While dis- rupting social order, they also engage in nonsensical dialogue on the meaning of life. In the same way that the events in "Daisies" are illustrative and allegorical, its characters are like puppets that exist to both enact and deconstruct traditional ideas about women. To heighten this impression of unreality, the direc- tor instructed the actresses (who were models by trade) to speak every line in a silly, coquettish way. This parody of feminine arche- types further calls attention to the film's playful, rebellious spirit. Though its subtext is heady, the film is a blast to watch. Despite the actors' lack of experience, their physical comedy is spot-on. To match the actors' pratfalls, the film is edited to include deliberate con- tinuity "errors," givingthe impres- sion that people and objects can. magically transform and teleport from one place to another. In con- text, these well-timed edits create jokes in film form and add to the overall sense of chaos. But those elements only constitute a small part of the film's outrageous visual style. "Daisies," on the most basic sensory level, is an explosion of color. This is partially achieved by the heroines' costumes and the film's settings, which constantly change. Color filters add to the atmosphere of spontaneity. Tell- ingly, the heroines' bedroom looks like an art installation, with scrib- bled patterns, magazine clippings An artsy movie that's both inventive and accessible. of glamorous women and draw- ings of flowers brought together in a collage that covers the walls. The room acts as a microcosm of the film in its deconstruction of feminine images. Further, this deconstructive theme is explored in striking animation sequences where collages of leaves, roses and butterflies seem to dance in front of the screen. The blazing, shim- mering, rainbow-tinted journey through a train tunnel is a visual high point. Most art films seem to be only entertaining to an elite . group trained in how to "read" them. Against the odds, "Daisies" offers enjoyment on multiple levels. It's frequently funny. It's gorgeous to watch. It has showy technique for film buffs and is open to delirious interpretation games by film schol- ars. It also gets people talking as they struggle to identify (or not) with the blonde and the brunette. For those looking for a film that is both non-traditional and non-bor- ing, look no further. Mo Rocca's eccentric journey from TV addict to media personality By CAROLYN KLARECKI Daily TV/New Media Editor You might not know it, but you know who Mo Rocca is. The man has one of the most ran- dom yet impressive resumes the entertainment business has ever seen. He's a recurring judge on "Iron Chef: America," a regular contributor to NPR's "Wait, Wait ... Don't Tell Me!" and a commentator for VHI's "Best Week Ever" and "I love the ..." series. He was a correspondent for "The Tonight Show" and is currently cor- responding for "CBS News Sunday Morning" and "The Daily Show." Oh, and he was on Broadway in "The 25th Annual Putnam Coun- ty Spelling Bee." So, yes, you're probably familiar with him in some capacity or another. It's almost as though Rocca has the career of a celebrity has-been, without ever really having been. He's well aware of this, however, stating early in his lec- ture at the Ross School of Business on Friday, "At this point, some of you are probably won- dering who the hell I am," and a little later, "At this point, you may be thinking what a lot of people think, which is 'OK, great, but how the hell did you get to be on TV?"' In an exclusive interview with the Daily, he disclosed how he felt he got his start. "Well, it all started, I think, when I was very very little and couldn't stop watching TV. And the neighbors - I have two brothers, there are three of us in all - the neighbors thought there were only two children because I was inside all the time," Rocca said. "I must've looked like I had skim milk runningthrough my veins because I was translucent. I was so pale and sickly. And so I was just indoors all the time and if I wasn't watching TV, I was imagining TV shows that I would be on." Rocca started performing when his parents grew concerned about the amount of time he spent in front of the television. "And then finally my parents just threw me out of the house - I mean, just like onto the front lawn - and I had all this pent-up energy and at first I used it to pursue a career in gym- nastics," Rocca explained. "I taught myself tumbling. Sometimes I would land on my head and it would hurt. So the gymnastics didn't get too far ... In any case, I sort of segued from gymnastics into performing. And I loved doing plays and musicals, but I wasn't sure if I want- ed to write or perform in them or both." When Rocca went to Harvard he got very involved with Hasty Pudding Theatricals, one of Harvard's more prominent theater troupes, for which he wrote and performed in for all four years of his college career. "(That) is pretty damn impressive," Rocca said. "Very few people do that - not the Har- vard part, I mean the Hasty Pudding part." Rocca is nothing short of impressive, but eccentric is the best word to describe him. He stood out among the B-school faculty wear- ing a pair of bright pink pants - later clari- fied on Twitter as "Nantucket Red" - and a large, funky pair of glasses. He invited audi- ence members to quiz him on world capitals throughout his talk and was never wrong. "South Africa actually has three capitals," he exclaimed. "It's Cape Town. It's Pretoria and it's not Johannesburg, it's Bloemfontein. Am I right?" More than once, he broke out into song and he ended his lecture by giving an impromptu ballet performance. It's clear that Rocca is comfortable with himself and truly loves what he does. And he's done a lot. But he cites reporting as his favorite job. "I loved doing television field pieces and I've done a lot of them," he said. "If you com- bine 'The Daily Show' with 'The Tonight Show' with my gig on 'Sunday Morning,' I see them all as part of one continuum in a way. Three- to six-minute stories with my point of view with me acting in some way as a journalist - certainly as a storyteller - and participating in one degree or another in the story ... I love doing that." Still, it's hard to label him as simply a TV correspondent. "It's not easy to describe what I do or give myself a title," he said. "I've earned the title 'pundit,' but anyone can be a pundit. So I don't want to be a pundit, and a fundit - a fun pundit - is a little too cutesy. I think it's a little too precious ... and 'satirist' is a little bit lofty ... no one knows what a satirist is anymore. So I consider myself a commenta- tor, a correspondent and common. Those are my three seats." Though he's very good at what he's doingnow, Rocca is looking forward to bigger projects. "Well, I want to do another booksince no one read the first one, but Iliked writing it," he said referring to his book "All the Presidents' Pets," which, in spite of its didactic title, is satirical fiction, so you can and should read it. But whatever projects Mo Rocca embarks on in the future, they will certainly be witty and enlightening. "In many ways, my career has been a platter of tapas, and I love tapas, but I'm also looking forward to moving on to a main course." E 4 MFA From Page 1B And the MFA deg: JD or MD, doesn't nicely into the ca trained for. Ernes The University's Creative Writing MFA program offers full funding for the education of all of its graduate students. a t; Iii Steely eyed skeptics can lam- James Joyce and baste the system all they want, achieved literary but what they can't deny is that success without th stand-out MFA programs like MFA. Considering Michigan's have left an indelible enroll inan MFA p mark on American fiction. Apparently A lot of today's best and most influential writers A F have cut their teeth in these graduate programs: program Recent Pulitzer Prize winners Junot Diaz, Richard Russo and you the g Michael Chabon have all sprung out of MFA systems - not to men- of makin tion the countless other MFA- holders who dominate the shelves writing s of Borders. Nowhere is the virtue of the MFA known better than at Mich- r igan. The University's program is widely considered to be the - Miria world's second best (the MFA's birthplace, Iowa, still holds the No. 1 spot). The University of plenty of reasons. Michigan has produced a parade "An MFA progr of successful writers, including the gift of makini the Whiting Writer's Award win- your primary respo ner Patrick O'Keefe and Uwem Miriam Lawrence, Akpan, whose short story col- MFA student at the lection just achieved the literary wanted the oppor equivalent of winning the lottery, and work with a becoming the newest addition to writers with a va Oprah Winfrey's Book Club. But and interests." what, exactly, makes Michigan MFA programs, such an elite place to study cre- pend-giving progrm ative writing? igan's, afford prec Well, for one, the faculty. budding writers t According to Eileen Pollack, the sively on writing. P director of the University's MFA provides graduates program, "The faculty (members) tangible affirmatio are not only accomplished writ- cation to fiction. ers, but dedicated teachers. Some "I always wrot programs hire superstar writers since I was really who teach one course a year and just wanted the o are never around. All our teach- In Hollywood, the ers are full-time." to really focus on What really separates Michi- said McLaughlin, gan's MFA program from the oth- her motives for pur ers, though, is the funding. In an degree. almost too-good-to-be-true sce- And while an MF nario, the University makes sure essarily translate i all its MFA students are provided ful writing career for while they pursue their degree. helps jumpstart the "We have full funding for all "There is onet our graduate students, so you MFA from a place don't go into debt if you're earn- does: It gets you ing an MFA here. We pick up attention when yc tuition, you get health benefits out," Pollack said.' and you get a really generous sti- have a seal of app: pend to live on. So in a way you read much quicker get paid for two years to write," more enthusiasm." Pollack said. Granted, not all The obvious economic advan- go on to careers ful tages of pursuing an MFA at and booktours. Wh Michigan help attract the cream secure fellowships: of the aspiring-writer crop. ships, alot of grado Josh Boucher, a second-year time jobs to suppo MFA student at the University, while they try to g was duly wooed: "I applied to published. This is 10 schools, and with the fund- of pursuing an MF ing offered here, it was the clear program like Michi choice." happens to be much The unprecedented funding It's not clear ift wasn't the only reason students MFA programs li chose Michigan over the likes depends upon the of Brown University, New York students have tos University and other top-notch writing, the works programs. critiquing other'sw Emily McLaughlin, a second- sumingnew, varieg. year MFA student who, before interaction with ex enrolling at Michigan, was work- ulty or an intricate ing in Hollywood as a televi- of it all. It's not eves sion writer, was more generally programs are in fa impressed: "Michigan has just for good writing - a well-rounded program - the in the writer, not th internships, the visiting writers, But with an expa everything." of successful alumn Still,inspirationcan'tbe taught. clear: Something is ree, unlike the t always segue reer you have t Hemingway, Robert Frost brilliance and .e benefit of an all this, why iogram at all? , there are gives ;eft into mary .bility." m Lawrence, MFA student am gives you g writing into msibility," said a second-year University. "I tunity to meet lot of talented riety of voices especially sti- ams like Mich- ious time for o focus exclu- lus, the degree with a sort of n of their dedi- e stories ever young. And I fficial degree. re was no time your writing," referring to suing an MFA A doesn't nec- nto a success- r, it certainly process. thing that an like Michigan really serious ou send work "(It's like) you roval. You get and with a lot MFA graduates 1 of publishing ile a lucky few and professor- ates seek part- .rt themselves et their work all in the risk A. But with a igan's, the risk smaller. the success of ke Michigan's surfeit of time sharpen their hop process of work and con- ated ideas, the ceptional fac- e combination n clear if MFA ct responsible maybe it's all e program. nding rolodex i, one thing is working. I SAT. JJ urey and Motro OCT. & Shooter Jennings CT wsg: Earl Greyhoundf St. Andrew's Hall They Might Be Giants OCT. wsg: The Guggenheim Grotto 8 St. Andrew's Hall 14 and older welcomel OCT. Hanson I Hellogoodbye. 10 wsg: Steel Train, Sherwood The Fillmore Detroit OCT. The Mars Volta 14 Clutch Cargo's SAT. The Used OCT wsg: The Almost, Drive A 17 The Filmnr D etonit V For moreinforio, leasecall a stmdy rodnrmon sast 4)67-ese0, opion m4. Learn.moxreabout 3120 P.riv~erfessioa rveNNs A~Abor, vvM1481104.5 131