The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 5, 2010 - 5A Folds dishes about Hornby collaboration COURTESY OF AMC Should've read the sign. Grateful for 'Dead' AMC's zombie drama has heart and braaaamins... By DAVID TAO Daily TV/New Media Editor Depending on your perspec- tive, zombies can be any number of things. To some, they're canni- balistic monsters who are scary The Walking as hell. To oth- ers, they're corny De reminders of Sundays at Hollywood's lack 10 p.m. of imagination. AMC But theoretically speaking, zom- bies are as serious as any other global disaster. Governments shut down. Public services end. Mil- lions of people flee their homes and mourn the loss of their loved ones even as their loved ones come back to life and try to eat them. Indeed, zombie apocalypse is emotion- ally shattering, morally compli- cated and deadly serious. Nobody knows this fact better than Oscar- nominated writer Frank Darabont ("The Shawshank Redemption"), whose latest project "The Waking Dead" takes this principle to heart. The result? The most affecting, well executed zombie drama ever produced. First, an introduction for the uninitiated. Zombies are dead peo- ple who have come back to eat the living. They can only be stopped by destroying their brains and if they bite or scratch you, you're done for - your painful death will be followed by your resurrection as a rotting carcass that craves human flesh. That's all new infor- mation for our protagonist, small- town sheriffs deputy Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln, "Love Actu- ally"). After getting shot during a car chase and lapsing into a coma, he wakes up in his hospital bed, feeble, unattended and clueless. From there, Grimes slowly makes his way through the dilapi- dated hospital in a series of scenes that establish both Lincoln's skill as an actor and Darabont's consid- erable prowess behind the camera. As Grimes stumbles, confused, through the corridors, Darabont tweaks the lighting and color pal- ette to create a tense atmosphere of dread. Much of the hospital, including its walls, its ceilings and its lights, is a harsh, pristine white. Marred by dried blood, bullet holes and the occasional brutally mutilated corpse, those surfaces become a reminder of shattered tranquility, an eerie effect com- pounded by the ominous flickering of the fluorescent lights. Lincoln makes sure to portray Grimes not as a typical action hero, but as an ordinary guy with whom we can identify. He combines the physical frailties of a recovering gunshot victim with the emotions of a man exposed to an unexplain- able, repulsive new world. He shiv- ers in his patient gown even as he sweats from a combination of fear and adrenaline, his face contorting in expressions ranging from sur- prise to dismay to disgust. When he sees his first zombie, a long-dead corpse dragging its entrails along as it crawls, he recoils in terror. Eventually, he recovers his senses, but his priorities continue to match those of ordinary disaster victims - find out what happened, reunite his family and restore some semblance of ordinary life. As he goes about accomplishing these goals, he encounters the father and son duo of Morgan (Lennie James, "Snatch") and Duane (Adrian Kali Turner, "FlashForward"), who share similar beliefs. Together, they anchor the show by portray- ing realistically human responses to adversity, saying Grace over meals, reminiscing about old times and treating a hot shower like a winning lottery ticket. That's not to say that the episode favors talk over action. Darabont, constructs some of the most chill- ing, visually dazzling setpieces ever seen on television. Dead bod- ies in impeccably applied zombie makeup are presented in dozens of neatly stacked rows, represent- ing the Army's doomed attempt at containing catastrophe. The empty tanks and Humvees that decorate the abandoned city streets tes- tify to military failure, as do the zombies that are seemingly every- where. There's the little girl who Grimes is forced to neutralize and the fellow police officer he eutha- nizes. And there's Morgan's wife, who comes in the night to scare Duane and break Morgan's heart. Try as he might, Morgan can never bring himself to put her down. His tears of grief and frustration epito- mize the edge that "The Waking Dead" has over the competition - its ability to poignantly analyze the human side of something as farfetched as a zombie apocalypse. Hopefully, the series can keep this emotional edge sharp. We catch hints of petty drama from a group of survivors introduced in the episode's closing minutes, which, along with a stale love tri- angle, push expectations for future episodes down a notch or two. Still, the series is off to an incredible start. Let's hope nobody shoots it in the head anytime soon. By DAVID RIVA Daily Arts Writer It started more simply than one might expect. "He had been listening to my records and I had been read- Ben Folds ing his books," Ben Folds said of Saturday his relationship at 7 p.m. with British nov- elist and screen- The Fillmore writer Nick Ticketsfrom Hornby in an $27.50 interview with the Daily. "Our paths were cross- ing more and more and we just finally decided to make a record." Lonely Avenue - that resulting record - was released in Septem- ber and includes lyrics written by Hornby for Folds's arrangements. The new songs will be premiered on Folds's current tour alongside tunes from his extensive back catalogue. Both can be heard in Detroit at the Fillmore tomorrow night. The veteran singer-songwriter claims his compatibility with Hornby stems from their similar tendency to look at all situations with a certain degree of complex- ity. Mixing things that don't often go together is a difficult endeavor for creative types, but it's some- thing both Folds and Hornby embrace. "When it's time to make a book or j1 movie or a photograph or a song, people tend to just choose a tone," Folds said. He explained that most artists are not likely to combine an oppos- ing sentiment with that tone, but asserts that he and Hornby both reject this one-dimensional approach to storytelling. "When it comes to art, people don't necessarily reflect the real- ity that there are funny moments in the saddest times and there are sad moments in the funniest (times)," Folds said. This fusion of sad and funny can be heard throughout on Lone- ly Avenue. For example, the intro- spective ballad "Picture Window" tells the story of a girl in the hos- pital during the holiday season. After describing an undeniably bleak situation, the narrator per- sonifies the concept of hope and begins to comically insult it. "Hope is a liar / a cheat and a tease / Hope comes near you / kick its backside," Folds sings as Hornby's words inject a wry bit of humor into the dreary scenario. on the flipside of the coin, "Levi Johnston's Blues" presents a funny premise in the face of a truly tragic tale. The song is told from the first-person perspective of a hard-nosed Alaskan teenager who just so happened to knock up Bristol Palin during the 2008 election season, when her mother was the vice president candidate on the Republican ticket. Folds explained Hornby's thought process for writing the song: "This is Nick watching the Republican National Convention Folds continued by saying that everyone can think of a time when they got into trouble as a kid, but no single story is compelling enough to capture a large audi- ence's imagination. Levi John- ston's ordeal was public enough and rare enough that it would be hard not to be drawn in by the song. With the song's killer melody compounded by Folds's knowl- edgeable and savvy audience, "Levi Johnston's Blues" seems to be on the fast track to instant- classic status. Folds will often acknowledge the fact that he plays to what he calls an "intelligent audience," which is something he is particu- larly proud of. "Over the years you sift out a little part of the population that is sort of your people," he said. "You understand each other on a cer- tain level." "I don't really like calling peo- ple fans, because I kind of feel like we're not really that dissimilar," he explained. "I've spent my time honing the craft of music and that is the reason that I'm sharing that thing that I do. There are people in the audience ... that are great locksmiths ... and they don't get applauded for when they finish their job. And I just sort of like to recognize all that." Overall, touring continues tobe a positive experience for Folds. "There's something really posi- tive about being lucky enough to bring together people who aren't Telling the story behind 'Levi Johnston's Blues!' fuckin' idiots," he said. "What's really kind of nice is to go play one of my gigs and everyone that's there is smart and gets it. And they might not all be one political party or the other - I don't give a shit. But they're on it and they're smart and they get it and I think that's a good reason to tour." and going 'Wow, look at that kid up there. That kid stuffed into a suit looks really uncomfortable. Oh, he has to get married to the daughter. Oh, I see what's going on. Poor kid. Wow, he had to grow up fast.'" "Then he looks him up on the Internet and sees the MySpace page that says ... 'I'm a fucking redneck, I live to hang out with boys (and) shoot moose,' " Folds continued. "So he saw that and he thought, 'Well there's a chorus.'" Though Johnston became a regular in the tabloids whose story is familiar to most Ameri- cans, Folds would like listeners to relate to this story on a broader level. "The story is about growing up. It's not about Levi Johnston," he said. "Nick looks for those sym- bols that resonate, a moment that resonates" , N.E.R.D.'s Pharrell Williams gets funky over 'Nothing' By ARIELLE SPECINER Daily Arts Writer It's time to embrace the revenge of the N.E.R.D. Pharrell Williams, Chad Hugo and Shay Haley are shifting the gears of today's hip-hop world. N.E.R.D. N.E.R.D's new- est album Noth- Nothing ing brings Star Trak/ the funk with Interscope '70s-inspired tracks - a new direction for lead vocalist Wil- liams and his gang. Compared to 2008's Seeing Sounds, N.E.R.D's newest venture has a softer feel with swarms of bluesy horns and 808 beats. The album is rich with both party pump-ups and funky jam-outs with an undertone of N.E.R.D's signature hipster flow. The most electrifying track on the album is the opener "Party People (feat TI.)." Pharrell lures listeners in with a pounding bass track. Old-school hip-hop raps and a party-starting cho- rus entices "party people" to join in because they're "gonna get down." T.I's barely-there cameo pulls the track together so it's not just a jumble of noise. Nothing is book-ended by the other dance track, "Hot-n-Fun (feat. Nelly Furtado)." Pharrell introduces listeners to the track as he explains, "OK, we wrote this for a purpose, to motivate you at this time / With this hyp- notizing baseline, please feel free to lose your mind," while Furta- do's voice chimes in on the cho- rus. Though songwriting may not be N.E.R.D's forte, it makes up Old-school hip- hop vibes meet 808 beats. for it with captivating beats and melodies. The band takes its sound to a slower, sexier pace on the rest of the album with tracks like "Hyp- notize U," a spacey, sexually charged song backed by soft organ See N.E.R.D., Page 6A Are you, or someone you know unable to enjoy things you once liked to do? less interested in people? feeling sad or blue? without energy? Over the age of 18 and not taking medications? If so, you may be eligible to participate in research studies at the University of Michigan. Compensation provided for 2-5 study visits of varying length. For more information, please contact: Depressionstudies@umich.edu or 734-972-6902 UniderM& yeMchin Stdls: RU1005501953? a sUM0OO1tlll5Healtrh Syrari