8 - Friday, February 11, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 'y FILM PREVIEW Hardcore ski cinema Polish pianist plays A2 Ski porn comes to Michigan with 'The Way I See It' By ANDREW LAPIN DailyArts Writer Ann Arbor has always been known as a supportive environ- ment for off-the-grid films and filmmakers. And tomorrow, as a fundraiser for the The Way Projectorhead I See It film series from the University's Tomorrow Department of at 8 p.m. Screen Arts and MichiganTheater Cultures, the $15 Michigan Theater will play host to the latest entry in the ever-grow- ing genre of ski porn. Wait a minute. Ski porn? "People in the Midwest and East don't know that term," said SAC department chair Markus Nornes, who organized Saturday's screen- ing and will be handing out swag to audience members beforehand. "But in the West, where I come from, that's what everybody calls ski documentaries." Nornes, an avid skier and native of Fort Collins, Colo., specializes in documentary study and bills him- self as the only ski porn scholar in the world. Of course, around here, he has to make sure to clarify himself when usingtheterm. 4- "Everyone has their clothes on, and in fact they have so many clothes that you usually can't tell the girls from the boys," Nornes said. But \ people in Michigan don't understand his passion. One Detroit ski club called him to clarify there wasn'te any unseemly material in the movie before committing to , attend. Films in the ski porn genre con- sist almost entirely of professional athletes skiing and performing tricks in exotic locations. Its roots go as far back as the '40s, when the genre's godfather, Warren Miller, started filming his friends turn- ing tricks on the slopes so he could study their technique. But he found that his videos had an eager audi- ence when screened in ski towns, so Miller took his work on tour and began churning out ski documen- taries at an incredibly prolific rate, camping out by the slopes when he wasn't filming. Though Miller was the original ski pornographer, and his name- sake production studio is still con- sidered a name brand for extreme ski videos, other companies have risen to prominence in the last decade. These include Matchstick Productions, based in Crested Butte, Colo., which is responsible for tomorrow's film selection, "The Way I See It." So those looking for "Deep Throat" in the snow will be disap- pointed. But what makes the image of people sailing through the air on skis so compulsively watchable? "If you ski, it's transfixing, you know? You can't take your eyes off it," Nornes said. "And if you go to the theater, people are yelling and screaming and shouting out. If someone crashes, you hear every- body going'Aah!"' In Nornes's research, he's found that certain pathways in the brain - called "mirror neu- rons" - light up when the subject performs certain activities, acting as pleasure centers. And for some- one who finds, say, the act of skiing pleasurable, even watching other people ski will activate those same centers. "Just watching someone grace- fully go down the mountain is bliss," Nornes said. Outfits like Matchstick Produc- tions have the added benefit of showingski action from all over the world, including the most treach- erous terrain from Japan, Swit- zerland, British Columbia, Alaska and the American West. So it's a vicarious experience for those ski- ers who will never have the chance to hit those faraway slopes them- selves. And the advent of YouTube, with its multitudes of amateur ski pornographers, has only increased interest in the professionally made selections. During the year, Projectorhead screens a wide variety of films - everything from the "Lord of. the Rings" movies to "West of the Tracks," a nine-hour documentary about Chinese industrial workers. So a ski porn selection actually fits right into the organization's mold. And there's enough of a fanbase for the genre in Ann Arbor to war- rant the screening - it's a common stop on the world tours of Warren Miller films. Though Nornes could go on dis- secting the development of genre aesthetics over ski porn's history- includingthe mixtures of film and hi-def video and Match- stick's innovative use of helicopters - on Sat- urday, he'll be content simply to kick back and watch other people ski. "I'm getting excited just talking about it," he said. In eye i was Polar the Inter natio Chop Coin] tition an e that launc the c nists the f ish p The Rafal judge secor up-at take week Frida on Su Bo By JOE CADAGIN "Chopin is very close to me - Daily Fine Arts Editor one of my favorite composers," Blechacz said. "Thanks to Cho- late October 2005, every pinI can play all over the world, n the classical music world especially since my winning. turned toward Warsaw, the Chopin Competition five nd as years ago. And, of course, his 15th IechaC music is very close to me - to R-C my personality, I think. It's full nal Tonight at 8 p.m. of emotions, a lot of interesting in and Sunday at 4 p.m. technical aspects and a lot of pe- colors and shades of sound." n _ Hill Auditorium and Blechacz went on to say vent Rackham Auditorium that being Chopin's compa- has From $10 triot helped him interpret the ched composer's Polish-influenced areers of many young pia- works, especially the mazurkas - declared its winner. For and polonaises. Yet Blechacz irst time in 30 years, a Pol- also pointed out that non-Poles ianist received first prize. have championed Chopin's winner, then 20-year-old compositions. I Blechacz, impressed the "I must say that there are alot revitalize interest in lesser- known Polish composer Karol Szymanowski. Born in 1882, Szymanowski found inspira- tion in Polish folk music and the works of Chopin. Before his death in 1937, pzymanowski produced a large body of work that included four symphonies and two violin concertos. "Unfortunately, his pieces are not so popular (worldwide) and not so popular in Europe - not even in Poland," Blechacz said. "So I'm happy that I can play his music during recitals around the world." Last month, Blechacz record- ed two of Szymanowski's works, including the composer's Piano Sonata No. 1 in C minor, which he plans to play at Friday's recit- es to such an extent that no nd prize was awarded. The nd-coming virtuoso will Ann Arbor by storm this end with a solo recital on ay and a chamber concert snday. rn in the Polish town of Naklo nad Noteci4, Blechacz began studying the piano at five years old. As a child, Blechacz gained a deep love of music from listening to organ music at church. "I was very fascinated by organ music, and I wanted to be an organist - not a pianist," Blechacz said in a recent phone interview with The Michigan Daily. "My memories from my childhood are connected with going to church and listening to the organ. But, of course, when I started piano lessons, I realized that this is the right instrument for me and I wanted to be a pia- nist." Blechacz is part of a long- standing tradition of Polish pia- nists that includes greats like Krystian Zimerman, Arthur Rubenstein and Frederic Chopin, whose works made Blechacz's name world-famous. of pianists who are not Polish, al. but they play Chopin's music "It's a very big piece in four very well," he said. "Martha movements," Blechacz said. Argerich is from Argentina and "There's a lot of expression in Maurizio Pollini is an Italian this piece - a lot of beautiful pianist. So they are not Polish, melodies, a lot of interesting but their interpretation is abso- harmony and wonderful modu- lutely great." lations. SoI think that the audi- ence will love this piece." Besides recording and per- Rafal Blechacz forming, Blechacz finds time to fit in university classes in his to tickle the home country. I started to study philoso- ivories twice. phy of music at Copernicus University," he said. "I'm very interested in the aesthetics and philosophy of music ... Of course For his UMS recital debut this isn't a regular study with at Hill Auditorium on Friday, regular lessons, because it's not Blechacz has included four of possible when I travel a lot. But Chopin's works on the program. between my concerts, I can do In addition, the pianist will join it." acclaimed string sextet Con- At this early stage in certante this Sunday at Rack- Blechacz's blossoming career, ham Auditorium for a chamber Ann Arbor audiences will have performance of Chopin's Piano a unique opportunity to witness Concerto No. 1. The pianist said an emerging classical music Sunday's concert will mark his superstar. As a young Pole, first collaboration with Concer- Blechacz has helped to spread tante and also his first perfor- the music of his homeland to a mance of the chamber version wider audience. Who says that of Chopin's concerto. the only things that come from Blechacz has also helped to Poland are pierogies and polka? 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