2B - Thursday, September 30, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 2B - Thursday, September 30, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom * Judging A Book Its Cover Why read a single page when the cover tells the whole story? iinderst a n I COURTESY OF KNOPF What happens when you mix tinues to bring America pride, but love, betrayal and a headless at what cost? Olympic wrestler? You get Jim Shepard's return to bookstores Shepard's latest foray into fiction, across the country has been much of course! anticipated, and fans lining up to "Like you'd understand, any- purchase their copy of "like you'd way" is the heartbreaking tale of understand, anyway" won't be famed wrestler John Body who, disappointed. Shephard captures with the help of expert trainer the ever-changing complexity of Coach McGee, quickly becomes a John Body and Coach McGee's legend, pinning opponents to the relationship. As they shift from mat in record time. His mythi- coach and athlete, to friends, to cal talent brings Body to the 1994 estranged colleagues, to evil sci- Olympics where he swiftly defeats entist and experiment, to Lord the Russians bringing much- Supreme and humble servant, needed morale boost to the USA. never once do their interactions His fame goes to his head as he seem outside the realm of reality. ignores McGee's warnings and Shepard's delicious use of imag- enters a world of cocaine, hookers ery, unabashed statements about and online music piracy. McGee the state of the sports world in the knows the only way to bring Body '90s and knack for capturing emo- back to Earth is to destroy that tion will be celebrated for months. which destroyed him - his head. This soon-to-be classic will keep Without the distraction of a brain you turning pages until you hit the or four of the five senses, Body's back cover. I just can't wait for the wrestling prowess is beyond any- movie deal! thing ever seen before. Body con- -CAROLYN KLARECKI TRAILER REVIEW "I am about to embark on a great adven- ture," intones the preteen des- perado played by True Grit newcomer Hailee Steinfeld at the Paramount openingofthe new trailer for the Coen brothers' "True Grit." You gotthat right, pardner. In the breathtaking one-minute spot for the remake of the 1969 John Wayne classic, due in theaters this Christmas, images of rustic, unfor- giving Manifest Destiny wilderness pop with the unmistakable visual aesthetic of the greatest filmmak- ers working today. An eyepatched Jeff Bridges wields a pair of old- timey pistols on horseback, while a mustachioed and scary-looking Josh Brolin glowers from his porch and a blink-and-you'll-miss-him Matt Damon lurks from afar. And all the while, the haunting melody of a bluegrass children's choir takes the creepiest parts of "0 Brother, Where Art Thou?" and makes them awesome. Joel and Ethan Coen are on an unprecedented winning streak - like Woody Allen, they've been putting out one film a year for four years now. Unlike Woody Allen, these movies are actually worth watching. Does "True Grit" seem, on first impression, to hew a little too close to the formula of the Coen's 2007 Best Picture winner "No Country for Old Men"? Yes. And your point is? -ANDREWLAPIN *I Of all the singles by all the arti- ficial Brit-girl pop quintets, take synthetically fabulous electro- wail "Call the Shots" by Girls Fyfe Aloud. Of all the singers, take Dangerfield oddball crooner "Calithe Shots" Fyfe Danger- field, whose Polydor main attraction, Guillemots, is anything but fake with two LPs of quirky, heartfelt, bird-themed tunes. Put the ,two together, and what do you get? Dangerfield's cover of "Call the Shots," which distinguishes itself from the original immediately, com- ing in with shy audible guitar pick- ing and an organic thumping beat. Where the original Girls Aloud song came off as a mechanized don't-need-you toss-off, Danger- field's version has strings attached - literally, when an overemotional violin comes in with repeated piz- zicato pluckings and strung-out sweeps, and figuratively, from his emotional wail as he blares out the chorus in an about-to-break voice. Suddenly, lines like "it real- ly doesn't faze me how you spend your time" have a painful edge, as if Dangerfield is putting up an unaffected front over a lovelorn melancholy. And just like that, a poppy nonsense song becomes so much more than that. Those crazy girl groups ain't got nothin' on this. -SHARON JACOBS SINGLE REVIEW EPISODE REVIEW Dexter Morgan just can't catch a break. The moment he thinks * he's rid the world of an evil serial Dexter killer (not him seas f ive - someone else) he comes home "My Bad" to find (GIANT Showtime SPOILER ALERT) his wife Rita dead in the bathtub. Season five shows us a vulnerable, confused, and even emotional Dex- ter, but is that really the hero anyone wants from the dark opus? In every episode of "Dexter," there needs to be some sense of real danger. There's always an emotional journey, sure, but there's also that element of action and suspense that keeps viewers hooked and worrying for Dexter's well-being. For an entire episode to follow the dismemberer's emotional journey leaves the show feeling a little empty. If you stopped watching five minutes into the episode then tuned back in for the final scene, you wouldn't have missed anything important. If the entire season is going to be full of Dexter changing his mind and ending up back where he started, it'll be a pointless hole in the series' otherwise stellar run. But plot stagnancy aside, the writing is still solid and brooding, and Quinn is finally getting a chance to both hook up with Deborah (final- ly!) and make himself a notable pres- ence on the police force. This just better not be another season of pure Dexter-hunting. -JAMIE BLOCK