The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 8, 2010 - 5A epic to meet its potential By NICK YRIBAR one of these corporations when Daily Arts Writer they first start and build a career fighting for the company. "MAG" Is bigger better? If I have one is an MMO (Massively Multi- piece of delicious cheesecake, then player Online) game, so once the isn't having two titles have finished rolling, play- pieces twice as *** ers are immediately connected to delicious? Twice the internet and pointed toward as awesome? If MAG any of the several games in prog- playing a video For PS3 ress across the "evolving field of game online battle." with, say, 20 Sony So how do you make sense of the people is a good chaos that is 256 players at once? time, then what about 40? What You try, as creator Zipper Interac- about 80? What about 256? tive tried, to parse it down. To put Zipper Interactive's new title, that many shooters against one "MAG," or "Massive Action another in a simple death match Game," is betting on more being would be pointless. What we have, more. This first-person shooter then, are objectives. Each cor- allows gainers to play alongside poration in a given battle is bro- 255 other players in some sce- ken down into platoons and then The most interesting man in the world says:'When I'm tanning in the mountains, I prefer Dos Equis. A singular success Fashion's Tom Ford makes his film debut with visuals as stunning as his clothes By JENNIFER XU Daily Arts Writer Musicians are notorious for failing com- pletely in their attempts to cross over to act- ing. Rapper Ice Cube has had a prolific career starring in jewels like "Barbershop 2: Back in Business," "Are We A Single There Yet?" and "Are We Done Yet?" Jennifer Lopez Man had "Gigli." Mariah Carey At the had "Glitter." Madonna - Michigan let's not even go there. But ii when a fashion designer The Weinstein makes the transition to film, what happens? The result is "A Single Man," a startlingly potent portrait of a gay man on the brink of suicide after his part- nerunexpectedly dies in a car crash. It's no surprise that the directorial debut of Tom Ford,- formerly the, GiMtivei director for Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent - should be beautiful. Just look at his sleek line of tai- lored menswear or his sexually charged com, mercials for his fragrance YSL L'Homme and you know this man can produce something lyrically and visually brilliant. No, the greatest surprise is that beyond all that surface beauty, Ford can transform his hauntingly lineated images and emotions into something that hits on a primal level. Oscar-nominated Colin Firth ("Bridget Jones's Diary") plays George, the single man depicted in the title. George is an English pro- fessor in the 1960s whose partner died eight months ago, trying to live his life out day by day. Firth's performance is truly a marvel, managing to break out of the "nice guy" type- cast perpetuated by years of trite romantic comedies. It's difficult to portray a character in these types of "emotion" films, because the storyline is so slight, and it's to Firth's credit that he can attach real meaning to the deep grief his character feels. Within his carefully composed appearance there is no outlet for escape, so the wrinkles on his forehead and the despair in his eyes need to do the work for him. Across his sunken, furrowed brow are etched a whole history of emotions - sadness, remem- brance, hopelessness. Yet just when the film threatens to sink into a cesspool of exquisite depression, sal- vation arrives in the form of Julianne Moore ("Children of Men"). Moore plays Charley, a boozy 40-something divorcee still in love with her gay, heartbroken best friend. George, pays Charley a visit on the eve of his planned eslifide; adthe result is a swoony; exhilarat- ing, heartbreaking dream of a scene. The two spend a night of drunken reminiscence and hysterical laughter together, then furiously dance until they pass out on the floor, leaving two tantalizing trails of smoke behind them. The film evokes a level of sophistication dif- ficult to find in any romance, gay or straight. The delectable few flashbacks to George's boy- friend Jim (played with delicious bitchiness by Matthew Goode from "Brideshead Revisited") are as perfectly tailored as the cut and style of a crisp, white button-down. Yet where the strengths truly lie are the irreplicable images with which Ford leaves us. The flutter of a young student's winged eye- lash is juxtaposed against the fuzz of anoth- er's white angora sweater. Strands of violin strings weave in and out of the background while a mass of rippled muscles emerges from the water. This is the Tom Ford we've come to expect. This is the Tom Ford who appreciates the human physique and the power of a melody to transport the audience to a higher emotion- al level. Ford never forgets where his roots lie, liberally drenching his film in the visual and auditory aesthetic. But for all his stylistic feats, Ford can get a little too carried away with his artistry. He has a tendency to experiment with color tones - when George is sad, the entire composition cools down into icy blues and zombie-walking. It seems to scream, "I am sad!" Yet once any- thing remotely positive perchances upon his life, the frame immediately warms up into sun-flecked silhouettes and candy hues. It's all just a little bit too dramatic - beautiful, but too dramatic. But this move can beforgiven;os it's.- something that can be attributed more to inex- perience than pretension. What Ford does exquisitely well is craft a fine portrait of a man tragically heartbroken. "A Single Man" is a triumphant, understated debut from a man who hopefully will go on to create a masterpiece. While this particular film isn't quite that masterpiece, it's pretty damn close. narios. The idea is that two mas- sive armies clash over a set of objectives (fuel stations, vehicles, communication towers) on a huge field of battle. Guns are blazing, enemies are everywhere and wits and comrades are your only assets (except for lots and lots of bullets). That, at least, is the theory. In practice there are some nagging, unfortunate problems that end up making "MAG" a thoroughly mediocre and occasionally frus- trating experience. There's not much in the way of story behind "MAG." Set in the very near future, the world has been divvied up among three pri- vate military contractors: S.V.E.R., Valor and Raven. Players choose 256 players with weapons make for unorganized gaming chaos. squads. Leaders (higher ranked players) are then assigned to take command of both and instruct their underlings to bomb a specific roadblock or demolish a certain bunker, all in hopes of achieving the larger goals for which the sce- nario calls. See MAG, Page 8A 'Pew pew pew' times256. CONGRAT$! Results from week one are In$ January 17Ih-March 271' TIP: Print double-sided U-M placed 1st in the Big whenever possible! Ten! But 67th overall for percentage recycled... $0 COME ON, MICHIGAN! INCREASE VOUR RECYCLING! University of Michigan Waste Management Services www.recycle.umich.edu for more information call 734/615-6449 The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts presents a public Lecture and reception UMMA asks students to react By HEATHER POOLE DailyArts Writer In celebration of the upcom- ing one-year anniversary of the reopening of the University of Michigan Museum of Art, a new student-geared program has been created. "l Year, Many Voices" focuses on students' responses to the museum's collections. The Student Programming and Advisory Board of UMMA, in col- laboration with Arts at Michigan, is accepting submissions from stu- dents until Sunday, Feb. 14. The Board is asking students to create a response to one piece of art in the UMMA collection. There is no restriction on format. The medium of the submission can range from photography to music to a written response. "We really wanted to open up the doors to any way that students would respond," said Mary DeYoe, education program coordinator of UMMA. "So it could be musical compo it coul could b ed it to The this p Board's ventioi up bou plines. ca "Peo ferentl cool ab be real sions," The the jur sisting sition, it could be sculpture, tiple backgrounds, including both d be something written, it undergraduates and graduates me a poem.... We really want- whose areas of study range from be wide ranging." Mathematics to Art & Design to diverse possibilities with Japanese Studies, the Board mir- irogram result from the rors the intended diversity of the s desire to push past con- program's submissions. nal readings of art and open "It's a wide range of students ndaries across several disci- (who) make up this board," DeYoe said. "This year it's really cool because it's the first year that they have a building to work with and (a chance) to actually create pro- new museum grams and to help figure out ways ills for a new to get students involved." Since the reopening of UMMA, o r m the Board has become increasingly focused on the students' reception of the collection. "What we wanted to do this ple look at things very dif- year is ... to really showcase how y and that's what's really students have been engaged at the out it and what we hope will museum," DeYoe said. ly cool about all the submis- In addition to a monetary award, DeYoe said. the top three submissions will Board will also serve as receive publicity on either a guided y for the competition. Con- tour of UMMA, the museum's web- of 12 students from mul- site, YouTube, or in the museum's publication, depending on the medium of the selection. There will also be a ceremony on April 1 to cel- ebrate all of the submissions. As for future plans, the Board is keeping an open mind on the con- tinuation of the program. "Right now it's just this year's project and I think we'll see where it goes," DeYoe said. However, DeYoe indicated one enduring theme in future programs will be the students' interaction and involvement with UMMA. UMMA offers a stunning col- lection of work, spanning from Contemporary and Modern to African to Early Western art. Now, in correspondence with the UMMA motto "the more we look, the more we feel," students are able to finally be a part of a museum that has become a staple of Ann Arbor. For more information on how to submit pieces, go to umma.umich. edu. Tuesday, February 9, 2010 Alumni Center, Founders Room 4:10 PM SA I