The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September 23, 2011- 7 BEHIND THE SCENES The business side of art Students learn there's no business like show business By ARIELLE SPECINER Daily Arts Writer They say that if someone is right-brained, he or she is more of a creative thinker. If someone is left-brained, he or she is more logicalwhen reasoning. But some students tackle problems with both sides of the brain and start their journey to an artistic career on a less artistic pathway. Though most might assume students in the Ross School of Business or College of Engineer- ing would end up in math-heavy, structural careers, there are many students who would like to engage in something a bit more creative with their degrees. Senior Kathryn Pamula is working on her BBA from Ross as well as a BA in Performance Arts Management from the School of Music, Theatre & Dance. She hopes to one day be a company manager for a Broadway show. "I came into the University kind of knowing that this is what I wanted to do," Pamula said. "I was poking around online and I saw there was a career for people who want to do theater but want FILM REVIEW to do management stuff." This is not an uncommon career path at the University. With prestigious schools such as Ross, the School of MT&D and the College of Engineering, it's no coincidence students who have such aspirations would come here and blend the schools. However, there are also those who simply stumble into this mix of programs. "I can't picture myself sit- ting at a desk and managing a corporate budget - being one of a million," said dual enrolled Ross School of Business and LSA junior Alex Schrader. "SoI decid- ed one day that I'm going to try something completely different. I was getting bored of my classes." After atrip to the theater with her mother, Schrader decided to sign up for MUSKET - and that was the start of her interest in theater arts. Some students go the other way around, like engineering and MT&D student Charlotte Camp- bell, who started out in a creative setting but then didn't feel chal- lenged enough and transitioned to the technical side of theater. "I get a lot of funny Jooks when I tell people my double major," Campbell said. "They're like, 'Wait, how does that work?' When I say sound engineering, they sort of get it." It makes sense that most peo- ple wouldn't initially think cre- ative careers need matter-of-fact thinkers to propel the industry. But after all, show business is a business - there is a need for a Wall Street brain on Broadway Avenue. The University provides an outlet for that. "I think that there are a lot of opportunities within the man- agement field," Pamula said. "That's one of the things I've learned from being here. There are a thousand different things you can go into. You can go into marketing, you can go into com- pany managing, general manag- ing or producing." Though there isn't much crossover between schools, these students make the most of what they have. By taking marketing, strategy, logic design and other out-of-the-box classes, students with creative business aspira- tions are able to overlap their schedules to learn skills for both degrees. "You do have to wear hats. I have to go to the business school and put my business hat on," Pamula said. "The theater stuff is definitely a creative outlet. There have been some classes in Ross where it's good to have a little creativity - but I'm not going to write a play about my finance classes." Campbell explained how her theater skills helped her excel in her engineering classes - not because of the content she was learning, but through the people skills she learned from it. "It's the study of people, bringing other people to life through stories," she said of the- ater. "I like to think that I can bring a lot of that teamwork into engineering." Other ventures prepare these students for their real-world careers, too - not just classroom time. Both Schrader and Pamula landed internships in the theater, though they have business back- grounds. University clubs like MUSKET and Basement Arts also prepare them for real world experiences. "I think it's a learning pro- cess," Schrader said. "Not every- thing in the theater you learn in the classroom, you just have to do it. I learned a ton from MUSKET last year that I never thought I would learn." Making it in show business, or any creative career, is diffi- cult. Fortunately, these students have the advantage of a business or engineering degree that they can fall back on in case the artsy maneuver falls through. "I have an option for myself," Campbell said. "There's a whole myriad of opportunities." Kasabian is sad today. Kasabian roars on new 'Velociraptor!' 'Straw Dogs' remake has no bite By TIMOTHY RABB DailyArts Writer Plenty of remakes, like "Scar- face," "The Departed" and "Ocean's 11," hit the bulls-eye, and plenty more fall short. And then there's the $traW DOgS occasional epic fail that's so out At Quality16 of touch with and Rave its roots, it sets a new standard. Screen Gems The remake of "Straw Dogs" is one such trav- esty - unfaithful to its source material, unjustly stereotypical and offensive on multiple lev- els. For those who haven't seen director Sam Peckinpah's origi- nal, Rod Lurie's interpretation will come off as more of the usual fly-by-night Hollywood schlock, albeit more shocking and violent than most. But if you remember Dustin Hoffman's hair-raising metamorphosis from timid pacifist to cold-hearted killer, this reimagining of Lurie's - stripped of all substance - is a film that simply shouldn't be. The original was purpose- ful, intended as a metaphor for the effects of the Vietnam War on society. Leading good guy David Sumner (Dustin Hoffman, "Stranger than Fiction") brutally massacres his home's would-be invaders to protect the mentally disabled Henry Niles from their bloody vengeance, then he drives Niles into town. Niles turns to Sumner and remarks, "I don't know my way home." Sumner smiles and turns to meet Niles's gaze, reassuring him, "It's OK, neither do L" The 1971 Sumner's reply is a By ELLIOT ALPERN Daily Arts Writer All one needs to know about Velociraptor! can be gleaned from the album cover: It's dark, brood- ing and has a few screaming band members. Kasabian But none of that detracts Velociraptor! from Kasa- Columbia bian's fourth effort, which takes more than a few strides from 2009's West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum. The British out- fit has always toed, with finesse, the fine tightrope line between indie and hard rock. But with the advent of Velociraptor!, that line has been blurred to obscu- rity. Despite taking its name from Charles Manson's female get- away driver, Kasabian draws some influence from a couple of fairly conventional bands. "Let's Roll Just Like We Used To," the first track on Velocirap- tor!, begins with the combina- tion of a lone horn and creepy background vocals, but eventu- ally settles into traditional form - it could easily double as a modified hit off the latest Muse release. "Re-wired," in all likeli- hood one of the best songs Kasa- bian has put out, has a shade of that cool British disdain that is oh-so-inherent to bands like the Arctic Monkeys, among oth- ers. The key here is that while the record does borrow some sounds, it's wholly distinguish- able as an entirely separate work, making it well rounded instead of plagiaristic. Velociraptor! also fortunately runs into one of the rare ben- eficial accidents of the music industry. Well-received singles are few and far between and are infrequently overshadowed by the rest of the album. However, "Days Are Forgotten" is one of those "perfect storms" where not only is it the hit represen- tative of the record, but it's not even the best on it - the single essentially leads listeners to a wealth of great material. That being said, "Days Are Forgot- ten" engages a left-hook chorus that will keep it a lasting fixture on alternative radio stations in the coming weeks. Kasabian is also clearly undaunted to showcase its dark- er side. "Switchblade Smiles," which can be heard on the upcoming "Fifa 12" soundtrack, is all but a lock to be the second single released. Beginning with a deep, fuzzy bass riff, the song switches to a few moments of warbled vocals reminiscent of an imam's call to prayer, before the drums thunder in and the already intense track picks up even more. "I Hear Voices" is less creepy than one might expect from the title, but the fluid guitar and fluctuating synthesizer meet perfectly at the chorus as frontman Tom Meighan issues his countdown: "One minute to, one minute to, one minute to midnight!" Dinosaurs have never been so bloody British. The Leicestershire locals have always been known for their grand, driving power- rock anthems, and Velociraptor! only gives them more occasion to dial up the intensity. Aside from "Goodbye Kiss" - an out- of-place ballad with actual sen- timentality - and a relatively dead track in "Neon Noon," the record is packed with bravado and bold audacity. On the heels of its last work being overshad- owed by the death of Michael Jackson, Kasabian has taken advantage of its latest opportu- nity to make a statement. The band has issued the proclama- tion that it will be heard and that its name will be spoken along with Muse and the Arc- tic Monkeys as some of the best that England currently has to offer. Warning: Hot blondes in mirror may be closer than they appear. tidy summary of every war film be screaming from the studio that rode the wake of Vietnam. rooftop that he's not about ideal- Sumner isn't a mathematician ism, metaphor or really much of on sabbatical but a soldier, naive anything else. to the battle that awaits him. The new elements Lurie intro- Forced to resort to savagery to duces in his 2011 remake say save his home, his family and his nearly as much as what's left out. Instead of Cornwall, England, the "Straw Dogs" revamp is set in T tthe Deep South. Rather than an unassuming mathematics teach- er, Sumner is a suave screen- writer fresh out of Hollywood. camel's back. By leaning on Southern stereo- types - preachers who pray for the football team, indiscriminate fights - Lurie neglects real char- life, he emerges from the fray a acter development. And when he shadow of his former self, lost replaces the old, quiet Sumner and devoid of purpose. with the bombastic new one, Funny that the remake should Lurie denies him the moral fiber copy nearly every nuance of the that justifies his killing. The new original plot and keep all the vio- Sumner is tough to like. Should lence, yet omit its most impor- we root for him when his house is tant scene. Lurie might as well attacked by an F-150 decked with confederate bumper stickers and loaded with rednecks, or did the pompous little bastard have it coming? The 1971 masterpiece included a powerful statement about the effects of violence on the human psyche. It was a brutal reminder of how a government with an itchy trigger finger could throw soldiers with stable minds and families into the fog of war, only to toss them aside like "straw dogs" after their years of faith- ful service. Today's version is a revenge thriller of the basest kind, no better than rape revenge flick "I Spit on Your Grave" in its glorification of depravity. Like a soldier before the war, the original is : composed and purposeful. But Lurie's take on Peckinpah's classic looks more like some returning soldiers - a vapid, empty shell of a film. IM Recruiting Healthy Participants We are looking for healthy women ages 21 to 40 to participate in a study about how life activities (including sexual ones) affect immunity. Compensation of up to $100 is provided. For more information, contact: sexresearch@umich.edu, lifeandbody@umich.edu, or 734.763.7121 Join our Team! TM ATHLETIC GEAR van Anders lab HUM00025873 h-i