The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, March 31, 2011 - 3B The unity of style They wore patterned sweatshirts or blocks of bright color. Boys grew their hair out to the level of unkempt crew cut. Girls straightened where nec- essary and dabbed their eyes with enough mas- cara to beau- tify a small village. Both SHARON genders were JACOBS prone to long, eye-blocking side bangs and multiple pierc- ings. They called themselves Pokemones, and in the town where I was volunteering - a tourist hub in the region of Pata- gonia, in southern Chile - they donned the label with pride. My fellow volunteers and I were rather confused by the craze for Pokemdn, an exuber- ant blend of emo and Japanese kawaii, or "cute" styles. But it was clearly a widespread phe- nomenon in that part of Chile. Seven of us were teaching Eng- lish in various schools around town, and we'd all had excited students in Converse and neon jeans announce to us, "Soy Poke- mdn" - "I'm a Pokemon." Was it a joke, or some hor- rible mistranslation? We'd each been the subject of at least one language blunder - my friend Kendal, asking the members of her host family if they'd seen the movie "Catch Me If You Can," chose to apply the word "coger." In the Castillian variety of Span- ish she'd studied, "coger" can translate to "catch," but Latin American Spanish has its own, slang definition of the word, and Kendal, through no fault of her own, forlornly suffered the humiliation of realizing she'd named a film "Fuck Me If You Can." I repeatedly used the word Californiano to refer to myself, as in "I'm Californiana" or "This is how we Californianos do it." It was only during the last week of my stay that a giggling student finally told me that in Chile, Californiano means "horny." But Pokemon was no such linguistic mistake. It was a legitimate fashion trend - nay, way of life - for the teenagers we taught. Once, on a weekend trip to Argentina with the other volunteers, I took a picture of myself wearing a blue sweatshirt ornamented with silk-screened metallic stars. I pushed my hair in front of my face and widened my eyes. When I managed to get the photo up on Facebook a few weeks later, numerous students let me know how hilarious I looked - an American Pokemdn. But my friends and I laughed just as hard at their instant rec- ognizing of the picture as mock Pokemdn. The fact that we could so successfully make fun of it meant that, as funny as it was, Pokemon was real. A few months after returning from Chile, I began my fresh- man year at the University of Michigan, where the boys wore douchey shades and Rainbow- brand flip-flops and the girls sported Uggs and straightened their hair to death. My first style conclusion was that the good people of the University were complete fashion slobs. I had arrived decked out in souvenirs of my year abroad - a stiff dou- ble-breasted jacket with a Bel- gian label, crinkled grey jeans from an upper-crust boutique in Patagonia and a periwinkle beret from France. Pretentious? You betcha. But my wardrobe was howI saw myself at that time. Fast forward a semester or so, and I had bought my first poofy, knee-length North Face and learned that leggings were the best kind of pants. Without any conscious effort, I'd adopted a style that was never my own. We're taught to see style as a pure mode of physical self- expression, the outside showing what the inside knows and all that crap. But my first year of college taught me it's not always so. For me, style was more of a process of cultural evolution, of changing and adapting to new surroundings - in my case, the urban San Francisco Bay Area fashion trends gradually giving way to those of a small-town Michigan college student. In a world full of trends, you gotta catch 'em all. Style as a symbol of the col- lective rather than the indi- vidual identity, style as a marker of belonging - all concepts on which I could wax eloquent if I were an anthropologist or psy- chologist. But I'm not. So what really gets me about this new definition of style is just one thought: If I had grown up in Chile, would I have caught on? For all that we make fun of silly trends in other countries, there's an idea that stops me in my asso- holic culture-teasing tracks. If trends are product of the people rather than any one person, it seems logical that - and the thought stops my laughter in its tracks - if I were a teenager in Chilean Patagonia, chances are I myself would be a neon, pierced, made-up Pokemon. Jacobs wants ponchos to be the newest 'U' trend. To dissuade her, e-mail shacobs@umich.edu. COURTESY OF UNIVERSAL Note the composition and even shadowing of this shot from the "Cheer Sex" scene: Classic Film 101 material. 0 EA 'BRING IT ON' (2000), UNIVERSAL Bringing it on and on ByJENNIFER XU Senior Arts Editor According to the personal canon I made during my quasi- productive, mostly dreary week of "spring" break, "Bring It On" ranks as the 36th greatest film I have ever seen, wedged squarely between the more acceptable heavyweights "Unforgiven" (a melancholy Western master-' piece) and "Gilda" (Rita Hay- worth, mee-yow!). And yes, I am referring to the cheerleading movie. "Bring It On" has become a regular fixture on cable televi- sion, often blared noisily on the likes of TBS or ABC Family on a lazy Saturday night. So it's not, strictly speaking, a "neglected jewel" of yesteryear. Yet, while so much has already been said about the film - Ian Roberts's marvelous, manic spirit fingers, Eliza Dushku's smokin' ass, bub- bly Kirsten Dunst back when she was still relevant - so little about it is given credit. The modern teen comedy, which debatably originated in early John Hughes filmography, is its own beast. There are the tropes we've come to expect - the inappropriately timed gay jokes, the obligatory pan across a notebook-sketched map of caf- eteria cliques, the cheating loser boyfriend - and the movies that adhere faithfully to them. Unre- markable on their own, these films have managed to craft their own discourse over the years. But then there's the trifecta, the films called favorites by even those for whom pubescence is a faraway memory. These movies bring something special to the table, whether brutally display- DO YOU SING SONGS FROM "LES MIS" IN THE SHOWER? US TOO. COME FIND YOUR CASTLE ON A CLOUD. E-mail join.arts@umich.edu for information on applying. ing the teenage condition ("The Breakfast Club"), cheekily evok- ing Victorian literature ("Clue- less") or satirizing teen cliques and queen bees ("Mean Girls"). What separates "Bring It On" from the likes of these classics is that it's actually really stupid. It's about a group of cheerlead- ers that rips off a neighboring school's routine and then get second place at a national compe- tition. It's about a goofy, hyper- kinetic girl who breaks up with her lame boyfriend and instantly lands herself a cute one who plays air guitar in his bedroom. In short: stupid. But it works, maybe because its expectations fall nothing short of conveying the honest, true- to-life adolescent experience. In place of self-aware satire, "Bring It On" goes for the belly laughs - football players fum- bling over the pigskin, a montage of "American Idol"-style cheer tryouts. Teenagers aren't por- trayed as modern prophets or Holden Caulfield-esque saviors - they're genuinely confused, sometimes cruel, human beings. This authenticity intertwines rather potently with the film's depiction of young love: The tooth-brushing scene (you know which one I mean) is one of the sweetest I've seen in contempo- rary cinema, admittedly in part due to the crooked smile of one Jesse Bradford. And, it boasts a career-best performance from Kirsten Dunst, emotions shown blankly on her face as she dances like a maniac to a mixtape that serenades her "pom poms" and vows to feed her "bon bons." And yet, there are the stylis- tic things that infuse "Bring It On" with its own all-American aesthetic. Decked out in full '90s fashion with belly shirts and crimped hair, the charac- ters develop their own brand of teen jargon: "She puts the 'itch' in 'bitch' " and "Follow me or perish, sweater monkeys" most notably spring to mind. There's camerawork comparable to the heavyweight caliber of Roger Deakins (of Coen Brothers fame), in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it kind of way. Check the whooshing camera tracking from foot to face when introducing, center screen, the head cheerleader of the rival school, Jesus light glimmering in the background. A surprisingly quintessential teen movie. "Bring It On" gets better and better with every viewing, and there's not many movies you can say that about. I think it's because there's something dis- creetly original about it. While you can lump the film into a host of categories - whether a mod- ern screwball made up of bobble- headed ditzes or a postmodern parable on ownership and origi- nality - "Bring It On" is most accurately a film of its own cali- ber, completely comfortable in its own unremarkable skin. Toward the end of the film, Torrance says to another char- acter: "I am only cheerleading." That is, both sheepishly and exquisitely, an encapsulation of the entire existence of "Bring It On" - for better or worse. COURTESY' OF tFC "Coffee? Yeah, I could use some of that." War and coffee brew in Denis's'White Material' Film succeeds despite lack of take-home message By MACKENZIE METER DailyArts Writer Coffee - it's delicious, it's something to be enjoyed and, for some of us, it's an insatiable crav- ing. Sometimes we don't think ** ,- about what coffee must White go through M erial before we can take that At the Michigan first exquisite sip, but we do IFC know that a lot of work goes into it. A film offering a different perspective on the production of coffee is "White Material." That's actually not quite true. The film is about a struggling coffee plantation called Vial Cafe and its owner, a French- woman named Marie (Isabelle Huppert, "I Heart Huckabees"), who is caught in the midst of her adoptive African nation's civil war. All she wants to do is harvest a last precious crop of beans, but her workers have run out on her. They fear for their lives, as they should - the fight- ing is brutal and is escalating all around them. On one side are the rebels, led by an idealized fighter named "The Boxer," who is slow- ly dying throughout the film. On the other side lies the oppres- sive former regime, grappling for power with the rebels. What results is a chaotic, screaming film fraught with bloodshed, child soldiers and idealism in the face of oppression - not exactly a fun look at our favorite morn- ing beverage. It's difficult to find a true mes- sage to take away from this film. The message could lie in Marie's steadfast desire to remain on the plantation, regardless of the fact that the French military is leav- ing before advising her to do the same - maybe we are supposed to feel empowered by her iron grip on what she holds dear. But then again, nothing good comes out of her remaining on the plan- tation, since her family is scat- tered and torn apart by the rebel army. Maybe the message is that people will not be silenced and will do anything to throw off the cloak of an oppressive regime or an unfair government. But that doesn't really resonate through- out the film either - in the end, it's the regime that maintains the power. So what's the point? Maybe it's OK for a film like this not to have a "point." From the get-go, audiences will feel an all-encompassing absorption by the script, becoming emo- tionally tied to Marie's fruitless attempts to keep the plantation. Filmgoers will pity her son, who is slowly losing his grip on sanity in the face of the civil war. They will detest the actions of the rebel army, yet pity their fail- ing cause. They will ultimately abhor the oppressive regime that triumphs. The camerawork is gritty and gorgeous, the ten- sion is palpable and the charac- ters are so convincing that it's like audiences are looking in on a documentary. It's one of those films that keep hearts and minds racing throughout. It's one of those films that, when the lights come on at the end, a collective exhale by the audience can be heard amidst expressions of "That's the ending? I can't believe it." One that can be appreciated for being great without pandering to a traditional cut-and-dry sto- ryline. If audiences seek a film that will stay with them for once, they need look no further than "White Material." I SCOREKEEPERS Pints " All 28 Drafts S11 eineken & Amstel light " Pint & 6 Wings $4.99 $2.75 Pitchers Or$1 Off All Sandwich Platters Killians / Coors Ligh HapyHor - d x1'o fl a 734.99# 010