8 - Friday, March 26, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Vital systems fail in 'Repo' One'Minute' of fame A cool concept gets foiled by implausible plot devices and unfocused aims By TIMOTHY RABB Daily Arts Writer When watching a God-awful movie, at least a fraction of enjoyment can be had by wondering about the ori- gin of such filth. Worse ,** than a God-awful movie, however, is one with an Repo Men excellent original concept that falls by the wayside. At Quality16 Introducing "Repo Men," a and Showcase cross between the beauti- Universal ful, advert-filled cityscapes of the critically acclaimed "Blade Runner" and the manure-ridden stor- ylines of other shoddy future-films in the vein of "Gamer" and "Death Race." In the not-so-distant future, the state of American health care has reached abys- mal depths. So essentially, it's just plain old America with a few extra bells and whistles and looming, mammoth skyscrapers in the distance. Modern medicine has triumphed in ways never before conceived, and a large corporation referred to as "The Union" tai- lors artificial organs for terminal patients to the cacophonous tune of around $615,000. Such extortion necessitates the employ- ment of "repo men," mercenaries who are required to repossess an organ if the patient neglects payment - and by repossess, they mean to rend the organ from the patient's insides. Remy (Jude Law, "The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus") is one such employee, and he and his partner Jake (Forest Whitaker, "Street Kings") revel in their duties. They playfully joke and make a game of their gruesome occupation. But the audience is eventually expected to believe Remy's sudden change of heart when an accident renders him in need of The Union's services, as well as support this sketchy anti-hero's altruistic new objec- tive - how quaint. "Repo" fails by trying to be too many things at once - a critique of corrupt politics and corporatism, a profound buddy movie and a harrowing moral dilemma. And it just doesn't work alongside a soundtrack typical of a Jason Statham movie; the music seems like it's egging on the Union workers and conventionalizing their actions rather than deploring their corruption. The only movie for which such a strategy can work is one in which we agree whole-heartedly with the actions of the protagonist and root for his cause from start to finish; such an element is nonexistent in "Repo." The moral compass- es of Remy and his wife as well as Jake are apparently stuck somewhere in the Bermuda Triangle, because your emotions will inevita- bly vacillate between a minute bit of empathy and a good deal more of disgust. Let's not forget Whitaker. He's been a hit-or-miss actor after his acclaimed per- formance in "Last King of Scotland," and it would be nice to say this movie was any- thing but a poorly calculated shot on his part. His constant blinking and melodrama - which might make him convincing in another role - become an annoyance as the film progresses. "Repo Men" gets kudos for a rock-solid concept, but a concept's execution is the key to its fruition, and it's impossible to accept that Remy's jocund approach to his work could be suddenly reversed by a ridiculous twist of fate. More work could have made the characters more believable, and a movie with such enormous potential that isn't willing to demand more depth from its characters is a crying shame for all its waste. By CAROLYN KLARECKI Senior Arts Editor The opening sequence for "Minute to Win It" sets the stage for a television epic. With a bright orchestral theme and * a booming narration - "Some call them Minute to soccer moms, we call them warriors. Some Win It call them dad, we call Sundays at them the next gen- 8P.M. eration of athletes" NBC - it feels more like an Olympic event than a game show. Unfortunately, the inspira- tion of this opening theme of NBC's lat- est game show doesn't carry through to the rest of the show and is ultimately a setup for disappointment. The idea behind the show is just as awesome as its Olympian theme song. Contestants must complete 10 harder- than-they-appear tasks that make use of various household items. Dozens of challenges are posted online, people practice and perfect their execution, send in an audition tape and NBC flies them out to the showto perform them in front of a studio audience for the prize of $1 million. These challenges include emptying a Kleenex box with one hand, stacking five apples on top of each other, bouncing ping pong balls off three plates into a bowl and everything in between, each in only a minute's time. So far, so good, right? But the sloppy execution of "Minute to Win It" dilutes everything great about it. Its first real problem is that some- one thought Guy Fieri would make a great host. This is the first time the Food Network star and self-proclaimed "kulinary gangsta" is tackling a show that doesn't involve food (save for the occasional apple stacking). He's pretty annoying on Food Network, but there he at least knows what he's talking tants is a precious commodity and Fieri doesn't yet have it. Maybe in time, he'll grow into his own and become a Howie Mandel or Ben Bailey, but for now Fieri is just plain awkward. This is probably magnified by the unfortunate realization that "Min- ute to Win It" is unnecessarily long. While the tasks only take one minute to complete and contestants will only complete ten tasks at most (and that's highly unlikely), there are only ten minutes of actual action. The rest ofthe hour is filled with Fieri failing atengag- ing the competitors in casual conversa- tion, resulting in little substance and lots of bore. Luckily, the contestants them- selves are hilarious and mostly make up for Fieri's lack of spark. Big Steve and Rachy-poo (are cute nicknames a requirement for this show?) were remi- niscent of "The Price is Right" contes- tants, but without T-shirts prominently 0 Guy Fieri, get back 0 in the kitchen. featuring Bob Barker's face. The show includes segments of their audition videos, so we're treated to a gratify- ing glimpse of their intensive practice regimens consisting of them scooting around their backyards on a towel. With "Deal or No Deal," it almost seems like the contemporary prime- time game show is back. And though "Minute to Win It" has its flaws, it wouldn't take much for theshowto rise up to that level of national acclaim and success. Cut it down to a half hour or get a new host, or both, and the show will live up to its title sequence. But unless that happens, "Minute to Win It" is goingto have to earn an epic repu- tation before it boasts one. Rabbit gives itself a revamp By EMMA GASE in a thick Scottish brogue. How- Daily Arts Writer ever, its latest record, The Winter of Mixed Drinks, does a lot less At first listen, Frightened Rab- to differentiate Frightened Rab- bit might seem like your standard bit from its numerous counter- moody, folk parts. And while Mixed Drinks is rock, break-up *- definitely easier to swallow than album band haggis, the Scots' most recent that hails from Frightened effort doesn't hit the sweet tooth. the U.K. But This time around, Frightened as the band Rabbit forgoes its poignant, self- proved with its The Winter of deprecating folk-pop songs for heart-rending Mixed Drinks an emphasis on droning melo- 2008 release Fat Cat dies and heavy-handed guitars. Midnight Organ Gone are the charmingly self- Fight, it's more loathing Scots who constructed than just a bunch of young lads some of the most frantically wailing about the trials of love emotive and personal songs out .., : __... of the Glasgow scene. Fright- ened Rabbit's focus is now on the less personal Scottish seas and the vague and elusive notion "loneliness" evidenced in songs like "The Loneliness and the Scream." Album opener "Things" is a drastic departure from "Mod- ern Leper," the delicious first sip of Rabbit's prior album. In "Things," lead singer Scott Hutchinson's signature accent drawls over a drone of reverb- heavy electric guitars layered above feedback and a relent- less bass-heavy drumbeat. The entire song builds in promise of a crescendo, as Hutchin- son's urgent songwriting style becomes more evident, yet the song never fully reaches any sort of release, instead winding down just as you are expecting it to take off. Refusing to be pinned down, Frightened Rabbit then treats the listener to the delightful and sunny "Swim Until You Can't See Land." Easily likeable, one can see why it's the chosen sin- gle of the album. A cheery fin- ger-picked guitar leads off the track, followed by Hutchinson's urgings to do exactly as the title suggests while the band backs him up with perfectly pitched harmonies. Unlike "Things," "Swim" really does take off in the final minute, delivering satisfaction in the climax with horns, well-placed strings and some rowdy handclaps. Mixed Drinks certainly ven- tures in a different direction (if not an exciting or significant one) for the Scottish folk aficio- nados. It appears the band final- ly caved, adding bass to its music and another guitar player for an extra set of hands to help fabri- cate its thickly layered record. The production, which is con- siderably slicker than before, remains centered on Hutchin- son's distinct and at times over- wrought vocals. Mixed Drinks's charm works when the band focuses on harmonies, jaunty melodies and sing-a-long repris- es, but loses its potential edge on directionless songs like "Foot Shooter" that get lost in the swell of production. Too far out of the rabbit hole. You can't blame a band for trying to evolve its sound - Frightened Rabbit's progression is natural and even commend- able. With Mixed Drinks, it just happened to lay it on a little thick. Even so, the band's obvi- ous knack for lyrical melody seeps through the Phil Spector- like drama on standouts like "Living in Color," but would be more effective if they toned it down a notch. The figurative rabbit simply needs to retreat into its hole a little further, and all will be well. A dramatic account of U' students' stories 0 "How many high-fives can we do in one minute?" I see no frightened rabbits. A bl bloopy drug-addled ambiance By SHARON JACOBS AssistantArtsEditor Even before this month's release of the self- titled album by collaborative project Broken Bells, the world knew that James Mercer and Brian Burton are anything but normal. Broken Bells Mercer, the sweet tenor at the helm of The Shins, Broken Bells is prone to spewing image- Columbia rich non-sequiturs all over any song he writes. The Shins's 2007 single "Phantom Limb" tells a story of two lesbians in high school, but from hearingthe lyrics nobody could have guessed. Burton, better known as Danger Mouse, has a penchant for mixing up funky beats and strange sounds. Masterminding Gnarls Barkley's ubiquitous 2006 single "Crazy," he somehow managed to make uber-falsetto crooning into a cool and catchy hit for every social circle. So it's no surprise that, though it certainly has mass appeal, Broken Bells should sound a bit "out there." Opening track "The High Road" floats Mercer's typically cryptic lyrics over swirling, mutating electronic beeps. The finished product sounds like the drugged-out ramblings of a highway wanderer and fades out with the oddly comforting refrain that "It's too late to change your mind / You let laws be your guide." "Mongrel Heart" brings the weird, unearthly fun of Broken Bells to its climax. After opening with a pulsing multi-textured groove, the track picks up when Mercer comes in, his lines separated by whooshing wind sounds and an eerie chorus of "oohs" and "ahs." The momentum comes to a head at the two-minute mark, when an expansive instrumental interlude crashes in, headed by a trumpet melody straight from southern Spain. Several of the songs on Broken Bells reveal one of the newly minted group's strongest suits: its preference for unusual instruments. One section of "Mongrel Heart" uses patterns of white noise as a rhythmic base. Sporadic laser bursts add an extraterrestrial feel to the Mixing The Shins with Danger Mouse. otherwise beach-pop psychedelia of "Your Head Is On Fire." Meandering, trippy "Sailing To Nowhere" might be one of the first pieces of popular music to use a Native American rainstick as an instrument - it could even be real rain, actually. Broken Bells does have its share of Shins- style low-fi guitar and simple synthesized grooves. Behind Mercer's heavy-echo vocals, "Citizen" is mainly backed by a straightfor- ward two-measure piano melody. But it's difficult to trace the origins of many of the sounds on Broken Bells. The "how'd they do that?" aesthetic is something all elec- tronic music should strive toward - anything is possible in a genre unbounded by the limi- tations of physical instruments. Broken Bells know how to take advantage of their medium, and the result is refreshing. .Though much of Broken Bells is stoner dreaming, ultimately it works. Mercer's warm voice and simply patterned melodies keep the tracks from feeling aloof or lonely. There's plenty of experimentation, but each track is clearly structured and nothing seems extra- neous. Every stray blip or bloop on Broken Bells adds to its ambling, drug-addled ambi- ance. With the Broken Bells moniker, Mercer and Danger Mouse have found that rare mix of "directed" and "drifting" that makes elec- tronic music really flow. With The Shins on hiatus and Danger Mouse as independent as ever, it looks like Broken Bells gould be around for a while, lyri- cal and compositional abnormalities and all. But, really, who needs normality when you've got these two around? By SHARON JACOBS Assistant Arts Editor A fraternity brother who doesn't drink. A multiethnic girl whose hair provides a lesson in identity. A rape vic- What's tim. A boy coming to YourStory terms with his sexu- ality. What do these Tonight and characters have in tomorrow common? They're all at 8p.m. real students at the Michigan Union University. And their Free tales will all be told onstage this weekend in the student- produced play "What's Your Story?" Friends and collaborators Mitch Crispell and Robbie Dembo, both LSA juniors, stumbled on the conceptbehind "What's Your Story?" after a dinner at Noodles & Co. on State Street last fall. "Robbie just kept saying, 'I want to put on a play, I want to put on a play,' " Crispell said, "And I was like, 'Shut up Robbie, you can't put on a play!' ... (But) then I started thinking about it." Outside Noodles, Crispell and Dembo saw a man with a sign ask- ing passersby to share their stories. Inspiration hit: They would create and produce their own play, using stories written and performed by fellow stu- dents. "Everyone has a story, and we're just telling some of them," Crispell explained. "What's Your Story?" is composed of distinct scenes of anonymously submit- ted monologues held together by a sto- ry-gathering character, B.D. written by Crispell and Dembo, who observes and sometimes comments on the action. "We're trying to inspire empathy, show interconnectedness and really inspire people to share and to listen," said Patricia White, an LSA junior heading the group of student directors working on the show. "People from different religions, different sexualities, different -back- grounds, race and ethnicities" shared a variety of personal experiences, White added. Fifteen actors will lend their voices and bodies to the stories. "I really have learned the impor- tance of taking the time to listen to other people and what they have to say," said actor Olivia Horn, an LSA freshman. Horn will retell two stories - one of her own and one by an anony- mous author. "It was definitely a lot easier for me to get into character (when) I knew it was my story," Horn said. "(The anony- mous piece) was a lot harder because it wasn't something that I had personally been through, soI had to really reflect on it and put myself in that person's shoes, moment by moment." LSA senior Joel Arnold agreed that empathy is key in the transmission. "(We're) going into the show with a mindset that we want to take all that perspective that we gained and give it to other people," he said. Arnold will portray a student taking a deeper look at his faith after being diag- nosed with a chronic pain condition. "Hisbig question is, 'Why would this God that I've heard about, the compas- sionate, benevolent God, let this hap- pen to me?"' Arnold said. Another scene, which White dubbed "Frat Boys," combines two stories. "One is this guy who is quite a beer pong champion, and he's talking about A play inspired by a guy with a sign. how proud he is as a freshman to be invited by the seniors in his frat to play beer pong ... and one guy has never had a drink and is really proud of that," she said. "We all have that stereotypi- cal frat boy in our mind, but (the scene shows) two really different aspects of that." The flow of the storyline links all these disparate stories together, expos- ing feelings and experiences to which and audience can relate. "When the lights go up at the end, you will have just seen accounts of emotion... across the spectrum of what people can feel," Crispell said. "You will have heard about rape, you will have heard about racism, you will have heard about joy and sorrow and rela- tionships and what friendship can do for someone and what hate can do ... and hopefully you'll feel this incredible desire and passion to ask from someone else their story." 0I