The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, April 16, 2010 - 5 He's like a Doctor in a bowtie store. Lord of time and TV Tromooner. Tremendous 'Treme' Latest incarnation of 'Doctor Who' dazzles with stellar cast and storytelling By CAROLYN KLARECKI Senior ArtsEditor "Because it will change your life." This phrase, which the Doctor utters to his new- est companion, is the very essence of "Doctor Who." r Many have been skeptical of the Saturdays reported bril- at9 p.m. liance of BBC's BBC America famous series, which is the lon- gest-running science-fiction show in history, but after taking a leap of faith, they find themselves enam- ored and captivated by the timeless classic. The latest season is sure to continue in this fashion, pleasing old fans while acquiring new ones. The Doctor is not a doctor by regular conventions. This doctor is a Time Lord, an alien species with time traveling capabilities, and he's the last of his kind. Through 31 sea- sons of "Doctor Who," the Doctor has journeyed through time and space in his blue police-box time- machine, known as a TARDIS (Time And Relative Dimensions In Space), protecting the universe and saving humankind with the aid of a companion and his sonic screw- driver. Each time the Doctor or his time machine gets seriously hurt, it regenerates into a new form. The 31st season marks the beginning of the reign of the 11th Doctor (rela- tive newcomer Matt Smith) and his quest to repair the Universe, mend- ing mysterious new cracks in time and space. Playing the iconic role of the Doctor is an incredible challenge. With die-hard fans full of every criticism imaginable scrutiniz- ing every move, it's not a task most actors would be up to. But Smith's portrayal is absolutely stunning. He manages to maintain a love- able quirkiness, yet also balances eccentricity with a believable fear- lessness and thirst for adventure. Concerns that "Doctor Who" has strayed from its legacy by casting the youngest-ever Doctor will be forgotten after mere minutes of Smith's performance. The Doctor's newest companion is Amy Pond (relative newcomer Karen Gillan) who was once visited by the Doctor as a girl, and spent most of her life obsessively wait- ing for his return. When he finally does come back, she runs away with him on the night before her wed- ding. Gillan is just as charming and talented as her co-star, making the cast nothing less than magnificent. Today's science fiction shows are often cluttered with innumer- able CGI sets and characters, and a large part of the charm of the early "Doctor Who" series is its old-school effects. The latest sea- son strikes a balance between old and new. We're given breathtaking shots of Starship UK - 29th-cen- tury Britain, floating like an island through space - and intricate and elaborate ancient tombs, as well as the tried-and-true clunkiness of our favorite evil robot-aliens: the Daleks. Though the modernized "Doctor Who" has undergone some aesthetic changes (the TARDIS interior no longer looks like a game show set and is now reminiscent of Willy Wonka's chocolate factory), the series abstains from any over- the-top effects that would serve only to show off how far technology has come. However, the most remarkable aspect of "Doctor Who" is neither its beautiful yet restrained visuals nor its stellar cast. What sets "Doc- tor Who" above the rest is - and has always been - its superb story- telling prowess. Inonly anhour and a half, the premiere creates a narra- tive that introduces the new Doc- tor, unites him with his companion and launches him into an adventure where he has only 20 minutes to capture an escaped shape-shifting alien prisoner and return him to the inter-galactic police force, the Atraxi, who are threatening to incinerate Earth. Somehow this complicated plot is introduced, developed and resolved at a natu- ral pace with plenty of humor and excitement. Due to excellent writing, the dialogue is snappy and the stories are complex, engaging and sus- penseful; a single episode of "Doc- tor Who" accomplishes in an hour what most movies cannot accom- plish intwo. And "Doctor Who" has done this hundreds of times. Natu- rally, it can't be expected that each and every story has outdone box- office'hits, but the sheer magnitude of individual tales this series has produced says a lot about the legacy we're witnessing. Any TV show that can withstand 758 episodes, 47 years, 31 seasons and 11 lead actors must have some- thing incredibly special at its very core. This isn't just a TV show, it's a British national phenomenon that has created its own culture. The journey on which we are about to embark with our 11th Doc- tor will not only live up to the stan- dard set by years of excellence, but will likely accrue many new fans if they're willing to make the leap of faith and trust the Doctor. Maybe. "Doctor Who" won't change your life, but at the very least, it should change the way you think about TV. The creators of 'The Wire' strike again with HBO drama on New Orleans By JEFF SANFORD SeniorArts Editor In some circles, "Treme" could be the most anticipated television show ever. These ever-growing * circles encom- pass those who trm have vocally declared creator Sundays at David Simon's 10 p.m. previous series H60 "The Wire" to be one of the greatest of all time - member- ship includes a smart multitude of critics, writers, professors and even President Obama. It's good company. For those uninitiated to the "David Simon is'God Club," let's get this out of the way: "The Wire" truly has good claim to be the greatest ever. It's a richly com- plicated, superbly written por- trayal of a city's decay, examined from the perspective of the police force, the criminals it hounds and the corrupt tangle of bureaucracy that's supposed to oversee it all. Still, that's only half the picture. The real brilliance of "The Wire" is that it exposes the how and why behind real-life problems through an impressively thorough, com- plexly human, Great Books-esque narrative. It is unequivocal True Art. So for "Treme," the bar is stratospheric. But is it even pos- sible for Simon's new show - or any TV drama for that matter - to live up to the institution- cracking, perspective-altering "The Wire?" Well, the beautiful part is that for Simon and his loyal nation of Simonites, "Treme" doesn't have to. The show, while occasion- ally evoking the muckraking, let's-look-deeply-and-critically- at-this-mess sentiments of "The Wire," exists on an incomparable plane. Sprawling, ambitious and painfully true to life, yes; but "Treme" is about exploring one's intimate and spiritual relation- ship with his or her city. It's a largely optimistic narrative, with. adversity and the human spirit as its subjects and music in its soul. "The Wire" was about bureaucra- cy, government and institutions. "Treme" is about the individual. The show is set in New Orleans, three months after Hurricane Katrina, and the pilot includes plenty of heart-sinking shots of the city's decimation. It follows a group of musicians, business owners and other locals who are reconfiguring their lives after the disaster. Like "The Wire," there's a troupe of characters who could be called the show's "stars." There's Antoine Batiste (Wendell Pierce, "The Wire"), a trombonist who gets by on a gig-to-gig basis and can barely pay his cab fare, and Davis McAlary (Steve Zahn, "Sav- ing Silverman") is a charmingly obnoxious, spliff-smoking guitar- ist and radio DJ. Non-musicians include Creigh- ton Bernette (John Goodman, "The Princess and the Frog"), a rabble-rousing college professor and proud New Orleans native, and Albert Lambreaux (Clarke Peters, "The Wire"), a Mardi Gras Indian intent on restoring a destroyed bar as well as his tribe's presence in the Big Easy. And the list goes on. Obviously, for a show so dense, the 80-minute pilot had to take pains to introduce the labyrinth of characters and their situations, and in so doing, was a little light on plot development. But brilliant flashes that hinted at the show's promise were .readily apparent. The production itself is done right; it's directed beautifully, with both the city's grandeur and destruction captured through the lens. Music informs every scene, whether it comes out through the Sun Ra poster beaming from the wall of McAlary's bedroom or the trombone that Batiste puts up for collateral when he doesn't have cash for the cabbie. Still, behind the ebullient tra- ditional New Orleans music and Simon's trademark humor, there is real sadness. The seemingly simple recurring question "How's your house?" takes on a special resonance for those who lost everything after the levees broke. Restaurateur and chef Janette Desautel (Kim Dickens, "Fri- day Night Lights") twice replies "Don't ask me about my fuck- ing house," communicating that among all things lost or destroyed, the devastation of the home is particularly painful. "Treme" features essentially personal stories - sad, hopeful, angry, carefree and otherwise. We've seen what Simon can do when tackling big-city organi- zations. Now, he has turned his sights on something much more intimate - the human soul. It looks to be similarly compelling. Basement farming Learning the hard way with The Dap-Kings By BRAD SANDERS Daily Arts Writer What happens when farm ani- mals become tired of their caretak- ers? Naturally, they revolt. The Base- ment Arts Animal Farm play "Ani- mal Farm," Tonight at 7 p.m. derived and 11 p.m., from George tomorrow at 7 p.m. Orwell's Walgreen Drama Center original Free communist satire, is based on Joseph Stalin's Russian revolution of the mid-20th century. Not finding the pleasing result they expected after their uprising, the animals begin to question whether life was better when they were subordinates. The show's director, Lou King, a junior in the schools of LSA and Music, Theatre & Dance, found inspiration to put on the play after reading an article with a similar story. "I read an article about this tent city that developed in Providence, R.I., where a group of homeless individuals had created this uto- pian society where they had their own rules and their own code of life," King said. "Everyone worked for the good of the community and they would kick people out if you were to do anything that was against their code." "Eventually, the people revolted against their leader because they thought his codes were becoming ridiculous, and it reminded me of reading 'Animal Farm' junior year of high school," King added. The play contains many of the same points that Orwell made about political society as a whole. "I was really drawnby the novel about what the human says in the end when the pigs are meeting them, that you have your lower animals to contend with and you have your lower classes. That was the inspiration of the production and how we ended up performing it," King said. "The play in general discusses ideas of health care for the elderly, retirement, the strong protecting the weak; these rules that would be in the ideal society. We see how it plays out, and it doesn't play out in a utopian way." King worked with many stu- dents in the School of Music, The- atre & Dance as well as the School of Art & Design to create an enter- tainingvisual and auditory experi- ence for the audience. Staging Orwell's masterpiece. "The play ended up being very sculpturally based. The costumes are made out of recycled and found materials," King explained. "The music that you will hear was com- posed directly for the show, and it features puppetry." Erin Murray, a junior in the See FARM, Page 7 By JOE DIMUZIO Daily Arts Writer I Learned the Hard Way is a tough album to critique. On one hand, it does exactly what it sets out to do: It's sequenced, written and produced well; it's filled with excellent arrangements, per- formances and slick musicianship; it's got style, swing, everything. And it's boring for all the same reasons. ILearned the Hard Way, like The Dap-Kings, is a curiosity. Led by Sharon Jones, The Dap-Kings is a tight, professional band with a compulsive desire to record songs that sound like lost soul classics, (or at least songs worth inclusion on a PeanutButter Wolf compilation). Under the lead- ership of Jones, the band issued its first ** LP in 2002 on their own label, Daptone Sharon I Records, which has TheD since put out records by a smattering of I Learned, similarly intentioned Daptone Ret groups. Over the course of four albums, Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings Jones & -Kings the Hard Way cords 's music has last 50 years; JB-style funk, Philly, southern and northern soul, Stax-styled horns, Muscle Shoals, Motown, the list goes on. The Dap-Kings play as though hip hop and disco never happened. This commitment in style wouldn't make a difference if the tunes weren'tenjoyable. Luckily, I Learned the Hard Way has some of the group's strongest work yet. With a sound more polished than ever, Way is crisper and more polite than The Dap-Kings's previous albums. Every solo, echo and drum break is purposefully sequenced for maximum impact. Each call-and-response is tuned and timed to high heaven. Rumor has it See SHARON, Page 7 evoked numerous black music touchstones of the Earn U of M academic credits without spending your summer in a classroom! 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