The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 16, 2009 - 5A 1 "This is the last time I buy a guitar on eBay!" "So you want two soft tacos, a crunch wrap and cinnamon twists?" Three guitar heroes share their love of their instrument By ANDREW LAPIN Daily Film Editor Rock is dead, they say. Or, if not dead, then at least appropri- ated by new-age fizzy emo bands Itmih like Fall Out Boy and Paramore. Get Loud Now, don't mis- At the State understand; it's not that these Sony bands aren't talented. It's just that the idea of rock music has been shifting a lot in the last few decades, from the three-chord paint-by-numbers structure of the late '50s to the falsetto-tinged pretty boys of today. And among the many musicians who have lived in the in-between, Jimmy Page, The Edge and Jack White stand out. Maybe not as the best guitarists, necessarily (that is a separate, immaterial debate), * but as three guitarists who under- stand the ways of the guitar. They know how to bend the sound around their environment, how to fiddle with their amps to produce crazy but not overloaded effects and how to simply make their instruments their own. Putting these three masters in a room together with their gui- tars sounds more like an epic jam session than a full-fledged documentary film. And yet here we are with "It Might Get Loud," the new movie that does exactly that. Even though the film isn't interested in revealing great, hid- den truths about its subjects, it's still an absurdly fascinating ride through the past and present of three crazy good musicians. If nothing else, "Loud" most closely resembles a 90-minute free-form rock song. The film cuts between the backstories of White from the White Stripes and the Raconteurs, The Edge from U2 and Page from Led Zeppelin as though telling different verses with the same melody. It doesn't go chronologically, and the film- makers aren't trying to tell the life stories of the three so much as they're on the hunt for clues as to what influences and experi- ences make up a rocker. There's a mixture of archival footage and on-location shoots in which the musicians tour their old stomping grounds and point out which fur- niture they would move to make room for their instruments. In between the three different stories, we're treated to Page, The Edge and White sitting on couch- es inside a giant, cavernous sound studio, talking about how awe- some blues music is and teach- ing each other their tricks. And director Davis Guggenheim ("An Inconvenient Truth") is smart enough to know that he can show five minutes of The Edge naming chords as he teaches the others "I Will Follow" and the audience will still be hooked. Out of the mountains of footage that were probably shot for this film, Guggenheim is able to latch onto the images and sequences that leave a lasting impression on viewers. Like White playing blues music with his young son, whom he dresses in miniaturized ver- sions of his own outfits much like Ben Stiller's character in "The Royal Tenenbaums." Or Page's humongous record collection, which stretches from floor to ceil- ing along all the walls of a room in his mansion. Or White again in See GET LOUD, Page 7A Pir w ,Sex, traditio been with t hamme shreddi that sa the sta minate awe-ins musical But, sit in t broadca tunes f stars w Don Qu radio d tionabl' Panzas. ates raid the air heroes of this tale transcend to god- like status in the comedy "Pirate raves from the Radio." The film is set in the United high seas Kingdom during the '60s - when rock'n'roll, with its then provoca- By HANS YADAV tive and radical lyrics, was barred DailyArts Writer from being played over the radio --- for more than 30 minutes a day. drugs and rock'n'roll have For a group of musical aficiona- nally dos, this radio ban is unacceptable. associated These men (and one woman) set he chord- sail on the good ship Radio Rock to ring, fret- pirate Radio broadcastthe likes of Jimi Hendrix, ing gods The Who and The Kinks for all of unter onto At Quality16 Great Britain to rock out to. As a ge to cul- and Showcase result, the crew members become an act of Focus instant celebrities. When the Brit- spiring ish government quickly learns of 1 perfection. this pirate radio, it moves swiftly to what about the men who crush the resistance. All the while, he lonesome radio towers, the hands aboard Radio Rock asting those soul-shattering remain one step ahead of the min- or millions to hear? If rock istry while doing what they do best: were the spotlight-hogging playingfuckingrock'n'roll. ixotes ofthis world,then the The humor is purely British, lisc jockies would unques- with a heavy emphasis on sexual y be their 'trusty Sancho overtones, large generational gaps . But the normally unsung -between parents and children, and as usual, satirical pokes at political authority. In particular, the consistent prods at the Brit- ish government are the best. The feud between Radio Rock and the minister in charge of dismantling their operation plays out much like a Wile E. Coyote and Road Run- ner episode of "Looney Tunes." The government creates elaborate schemes to destroy the pirates, but the crew always manages to side- step the traps, rendering the gov- erning enforcement worse off than before they set the failed trap. Radio Rock hosts seven DJs, each broadcasting his own show in a manner consistent with his personality. To name a few: -the Count (Philip Seymour Hoffman, "Doubt") is the bold American who continually pushes the boundaries of what is allowed to be played on air; Dave (Nick Frost, "Hot Fuzz") is the raunchy Brit always look- ing to sleep with whatever woman comes aboard; and Mysterious Mark (Tom Wisdom, "300") is the See PIRATE, Page 7A ! lT ! a 1+'Ar... ' + . Getting into TV lenty of people play video games on TV screens, but soon we could be playing games on TV shows. And I, for one, am abso- lutely thrilled. Interactive TV is an idea that has been tossed around for some time now, with game shows- where viewers JAMIE call in to answer BLOCK obnoxiously easy trivia questions, but this retirement home-esque chipper * activity is hardly groundbreaking or innovative. But if a recent Sony patent is a sign of things to come, the whole meaning of interactive shootable characters to otherwise live-action war movies, and, more interestingly, the ability to race actual NASCAR drivers in actual NASCAR races. Yes, that's right. They may have just found a way to make NASCAR entertaining. And any idea that can accomplish that seemingly impossible task deserves all the attention and investment we can give it. Game shows are an obvious start, and producers know it. There are late-night Game Show Network interactive programs in which viewers at home serve as contestants via phone. Let's com- See BLOCK, Page 7A HPV Fact: Your boyfriend Vf"% Ur that causes There's something you can do. i ou ampu * Interactivity in half-hour bursts. TV could be changed drastically, and most certainly for the better. According to an article on LiveScience.com, Sony has filed a I 7 3 patent for a game of sorts in which viewers can control on-screen avatars, usingthem to chuck toma- 1 6 3 7 4 toes at actors or kick them in the pants ("Interactive TV to put you 3 4 in the show," 11/08/200)9. This is obviously just a first step, and it's 3 not clear how many people would jump at the chance to throw toma- toes at actors - especially if the technology required special movie * discs to use, which is up in the air 2 17 right now. Possible future forays into the 1 2 3 4 5 interactive TV world are specu- lated to include adding cartoon * DO ARTS. 9 4 2 5 E-mail join.arts@umich.edu for an application