The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, April 19, 2011 5B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, April 19, 2011 - 5B Saying goodbye to the University How the Daily became a freshman film buff's niche By ANDREW LAPIN Daily Arts Writer Had I not joined the Daily freshman year, I doubt I would have ever learned just how many people on campus think it sucks. Large swaths of students have told me this over the past three years, in no uncertain terms. Often "The Daily sucks" is the lit- eral phrase they use. "I only pick it up for the crosswords/Sudoku" is another common utterance. "Why didn't you cover my fund- raising event?" probably comes in a distant third. If you've said any of these things, I have no desire at this point in the game to convince you otherwise. That's your preroga- tive, and I'm sorry you didn't feel we adequately served your needs during your time here. All I can say is that things look a little dif- ferent from my end. On a purely selfish note, I would never have had the opportunity to attend my first film festival, interview the two heftiest people in show busi- ness (Michael Moore and Kevin Smith, not to brag or anything) or walk through the hallowed halls of Pixar had it not been for the Daily. But I didn't do this just for the trips and interviews. No, the true value of groups like the Daily lies in the social interactions. Without the Daily as a common ground, I never would have found an organiza- tion of people who share my obsessive urge to talk about issues as seemingly trivial as the critical respectability of Roger Ebert or the number of pop- culture references made on the previous night's "Community." And without those people at the Daily, it's all too likely I would have spent my time at Michigan as an isolated, socially inept film buff instead of as an outgoing, somewhat socially accepted film buff. My iPod would also be miss- ing half its library if I had never joined the Daily, which is the true test of lasting personal impact. Now anytime I blast The Hold Steady's "Sequestered in Mem- phis" or K'naan's "Somalia," the experience will be inexorably tied to memories of dance par- ties and mix CDs, the origins of which can be traced back to - yes - the Daily. This paper was my impetus for most of what made college awesome, just as I'm sure activities like Dance Marathon, club sports or Greek life were for many of you. Look, four years on a campus like Michigan demands a well- rounded experience. And you're always going to leave wishing you could have done more. I con- sider myself lucky to have done all I was able to, which included exploding out of the Big House tunnel alongside the rest of the marching band for three foot- ball seasons. But there was still so much else out there I didn't touch. The bucket list is bottom- less. The more you do, the more you wish you've done. But the more you do, the more you realize this was the place for you. When I leave Ann Arbor in just a little over two weeks (holy shit!), I'll become just another old fogey ranting about how Michigan was better when I was there. So will you. It's unavoidable, like being mocked at Blimpy Burger or Woody Allen's annual flirtation with mediocrity. And as much as I dread that day happening, the fact is that I still took advantage of more than my fair share of opportunities here. And maybe you did, too. Hopefully some Daily article, at some point, resonated with you. But if anyone asks, you'll probably still say the Daily sucks. Hey, don't look at me. It was bet- ter when I was in it. Gryffindor students try to imagine the horror that is Dolores Jane Umbridge. Hogwarts tback to Ann Arbor withAVPS' StarKid sequel 0 promises to charm audiences again By ADDIE SHRODES Daily Arts Writer May 9, 2010 - Even as its members chat while lounging on apartment couches, the cre- ative chemistry of Team StarKid pops. The group of past and pres- ent University students who run this theatrical production com- pany fused together during their early moments in college, and their long shared history shows. As the StarKids discuss their highly anticipated "A Very Potte l Sequel," the jokes never cease to spark. The idea for the original "A Very Potter Musical" ("AVPM") arose after years of the same sort of joking about the "Harry Pot- ter" book series, but friends of brothers and writers Nick and Matt Langnever thought the par- ody musical would materialize. After Matt Lang, a 2009 LSA graduate, spontaneously put up a poster for auditions last year, Basement Arts picked up the show, and the play was born. Even though fans flooded Stu- dio One to see the original Potter show, when the team uploaded the video to YouTube months later it was still shocked by the rapid fervid response. "Without us even noticing, thousands and thousands of peo- ple started to watch this thing," said Nick Lang, a 2008 graduate from the School of Music, The- atre & Dance. Act One, Part One of the origi- nal musical now has over 1.5 mil- lion YouTube hits, capturing fans from across the globe. The team was amazed because it didn't intend for such a wide audience. "So many of the things that are funny in the play are because they're inside jokes," said Bon- nie Gruesen (Hermione), a 2010 MT&D graduate and the produc- er of "AVPM." "There is so much to enjoy about the musical, obvi- ously...butit was funny to be like, 'Wow, these people are in on our inside jokes now.'" In retrospect, the group mem- bers agree the musical has drawn so much attention because it's fresh and one-of-a-kind. It has a fully original script, score and take on Harry Potter charac- ters. The musical follows Harry and his wizard friends' journey through Hogwarts while twist- ing the novel's plot points for comedic effect. The popularity of the musical quickly led Infinitus, a four-day "Harry Potter" fan and scholar conference in Orlando this July, to invite the group to perform. The team decided the best thing to bring to Orlando wpuld be a full-length sequel filmed at the University's own Studio One. After embarking on another four- hour play, Team StarKid began to feel the pressure. "Whenever you do something like this that is a cult hit, the tini- they could accept donations. The est cult hit that it is, you have to StarKid brand also produced the live up to not only what it actually Basement Arts musical "Me and was, but what people think that it My Dick" last fall and the Web is," Nick said. "You remember it series "Little White Lie." "A Very better than it was." Potter Sequel" is another incarna- The brothers adopted tac- tion of their "last project togeth- tics so they would not fall into er," Matt said. the conventional potholes that "When I did the original musi- plague sequels. The jokes had to cal, I said, 'This the last show I'll be completely different, and the ever do,' and then I did two more, story needed larger stakes and so it could very well change," Matt twistier turns. explained. "You have to come up with While members will most likely something that (viewers) are not move on from StarKid to individu- going to expect and that imme- al careers, prospects look hopeful diately throws off their guard so due to the success of their produc- they'll go, 'All right, I don't know tions. where it's going so let's watch "We've got industry people where it goes,' " Nick said. paying attention, and really that's But thc team wanted tolivd up "how youstArt out," Nick said."It's to the fans' expectations while helped our reputation; it's techni- providing a whole new story to cally hurt our careers, because celebrate the books. we've spent all of our money. But "We don't want to let down your reputation is gold." those 20,000 people," Nick The team consistently hears said in reference to the core from admirers that it makes the- fan base. "And the thing is that ater for its generation. those 20,000 people have been "Although our teachers don't extremely nice to us, but they know how to do it, they know could be very mean." we know how to do it," Gruesen explained. "It's exciting that we get to make theater for our Time to start friends and our friends' friends." Jaime Lyn Beatty (Ginny doing things the Weasley), who graduated from the School of Music, Theatre & Um bridge W ay. Dance this spring, agrees that StarKid takes theater in a mod- ern direction. "It is a new form of theater The Lang brothers, as well as because it's so self-conscious," fellow writer of both Potter musi- Beatty said. "So many of the cals Brian Holden (a 2008 MT&D scenes in the musical make fun graduate), are thoroughly satis- of the fact that there is an audi- fied with the final script. Without ence or that the props are made giving the plot away, they said of cardboard, and there's some- the sequel adds new characters thing really charming about that and draws heavily from the first, for an audience to witness." third and fifth books."It's better No matter what StarKid mem- than anythingI thoughtwe could bers pursue, they will bring with have done," Matt said. them the optimism and positiv- Although the six-month writ- ity that has surrounded their ing process was taxing through- productions thus far. out, the team hopes the shows "It's easy to be pessimistic will be the opposite. because it's easy to find ways the "It's really the first time all world sucks - the world kind of of us will be in a room together does suck," Matt said. "But it's since this thing has taken off, and hard to find truthful reasons I think it will be less stressful and to think about something in an more of just, 'This is awesome,' " optimistic way." said Joey Richter (Ron Weasley), After all of the Potter shows' an MT&D senior. parodic plot spirals, Matt hopes While many of the friends the show will coax smiles from have dispersed since "AVPM," the viewers in the end. original cast and crew gave them- "We always want to end up selves the name Team StarKid with something that makes you after their YouTube success so feel good." Judd Apatow ushers in a new era of comedic film By JEFFREY BLOOMER r MatgilgEditar Sept. 7, 2007 - It's happened quietly. Two summers ago a surprise powerhouse called "The 40-Year- Old Virgin" opened in American theaters, and week by week, the- ater by theater, it built into one of the year's most successful mov- ies, let alone comedies. Though another movie, "Wedding Crash- ers," released a few weeks before, far overshot its pop-culture infil- tration and box-office returns, the film was well-liked by audi- ences and critics, building to $110 million on a modest budget and propelling a then-marginal Steve Carell into one of the industry's most important comedians. It was ahit, and more important, its success came with an uncommon wave of goodwill. People liked to like it. This is perhaps because the co-writer, co-producer and direc- tor of the movie is Judd Apatow, a familiar name in the industry who had in the '90s and early '00s become the foremost cau- tionary tale in the television side of Hollywood. His beloved series "Freaks and Greeks" last- ed just 18 episodes, and his less aggressively followed but still well-regarded follow-up series "Undeclared" was canceled after just 17 episodes in 2002. The shows were funny, good-natured and often beguiling in how much they understood about student life and how deeply they under- stood it. Even in "Undeclared," a sitcom, the usual grind of rush week and other college-fiction tentpoles became hilarious odes to the faux-empowerment of stu- dent groups on campuses. His material is funny, but that's the device, not the point. In "The 40-Year-Old Virgin," a movie whose title needs no expla- nation, the hero isn't belittled or even difficult to understand. The big fight he gets into with his first serious girlfriend is partially over her treatment of his toys, and it's not played for laughs. Though we don'tunderstand his situation, we understand his perspective. This guy makes sense - we're never laughing at him, or at least we're never intended to - and that's the chief appeal of Apatow's work. This summer's pair of "Knocked Up," which Apatow co-produced, wrote and direct- "Is that ... a double rainbow?" ed, and "Superbad," which he produced, proved not only two of the most successful but two of the most discussed movies of the summer. "Knocked Up" opened in June and has already outgrossed "Virgin" by nearly $40 million, and the more mod- estly marketed "Superbad" has amassed $94 million to date with strong holdover every weekend since it opened last month. Audiences responded, predict- ably for "Knocked Up" and per- hapsless so for"Superbad," and so did the filmcommunity. The sexu- al politics and dance around abor- tion in "Knocked Up" spawned potent commentary from every ideology and viewpoint. As critic A.O. Scott wrote in the New York Times, "If you haven't seen it, you've been AWOL from the most entertaining battle in the culture wars, and if you have, you'd bet- ter re-up before the really serious fall movies start forcing you to pretend to care about something other than sex." "Superbad," in contrast to the bickeringover "Knocked Up," has benefited enormously from Inter- net buzz and become another movie everyone loves to love. (On IMDb.com, the film database, it's alreadybeen voted the 120thbest movie of all time.) The film, which follows two childhood friends about to head to college, is exu- berantly filthy and almost giddily unpolished, full of improvised scenes and the unmistakable per- sonal drive of its performers. The film finds balance between filth and sweetness, and it ultimately morphs into one of the most hon- est movies about male friendship in years. It's participatory multi- plex comedy with an uncontrived message, a rare species in recent mainstream comedy. Contrast that with, say, "I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry," released in July, a movie that believes it has an affirmative message amid a string of jokes lifted inevitably from stereo- types. The Adam Sandler school ofcomedylikethe fratpack (both of which Apatow has dabbled in), excels at this broad and repeti- tive comedy, which is sometimes funny but almost never reveal- ing. These movies are successful, but studios spend huge amounts of money on name stars ("Chuck and Larry" cost nearly three times as much as "Knocked Up" to produce and grossed consider- ably less) when they could put it into the creative minds that make comedy worth more than the moment. To this end, Judd Apatow has become a brand. Though he didn't write or direct "Super- bad," his mark is all over it, and the expansive cast of perform- ers (which includes the writers of "Superbad") who recurrently appear in his work indicates that his creative philosophy has formed contemporaries. As a pro- ducer he has at least seven movies in production or in development, and so his brand of comedy, spir- ited and intelligent and built on original humor rather than nasty archetypes, could be headed into a resistance, and perhaps into a new movement for mainstream American comedy - movies we like to like, that will live on beyond the joke about the guy with the funny accent. It's said Apatow gleans his nar- ratives from his own experiences and temperament. Luckily, if his movies are any indication, he has a lot of friends. Lucius Malfoy leads the Death Eaters into Harry Potter's past for revenge. A a