2B - Thursday, March 8, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2B - Thursday, March 8, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom ARTS RECOMMENDS In this feature, Daily Arts writers will give their endorsements for the arts you need to experience to help you deal with current events. "All the President's Men" Super Tuesday and the hoopla surrounding the Republican primaries really puts you in the mood for a good old political thriller. "All the President's Men," the breathtaking and devious take on the Watergate scandal, provides dirty politics mixed with some inspiring investigative journalism. Plus, fabulous performances from Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford make this an instant classic. WARNER BROS. Hunky Dory - David Bowie Hunky Dory is an album that's silly, lovely and tragic all at the same time, with tracks ranging from hopeful pop tunes to acoustic heartbreakers. Yet they all somehow flow effortlessly, tied together by Bowie's dynamic voice and soulful piano play- ing. It's an album about uncertainty, with Bowie singing about lamentingthe past, being uncomfort- able with the present and unclear about the future. _______Who can't relate to that these days? RCA "Dune" - Frank Herbert Missing the beach after a sunny spring break? Escape back to the sandy paradises of last week's much-needed hiatus with "Dune." Frank Her- bert's classic may have been published when your parents were toddlers, but it's far from dated. Fol- low Paul Atreides as he struggles to survive in a strange land - and don't forget: "The spice must flow." ACE TRADE "How to Make it in America" You're probably done with midterms. Now it's back to those desperate last-minute applications for internships and jobs. If that's you, HBO's "How to Make It in America" is perfect procrastination material. It's derided by many as too "Entourage"- esque, but the sitcom about young hustlers trying to make it in New York's fashion game isn't tit- filled feel-goodery, but a motivating story of ideal- istic struggle. ( S " Stephanie Barnhill Ten Thousand Villages volunteer How did you start volunteering at Ten Thousand Villages? I actually came in as a customer. I spoke with the manager and the staff and I was really intrigued. Having parents that are missionaries, I wanted to get involved, and this was a really good way to do it. What do you like about volunteering? It's really fun to learn about the people that make the products, the organizations and even the countries they come from. Excerpts are taken from the B-Side Buzz video, which can be found on MichiganDaily.com. Interview by Jeff Waraniak 0 9 SINGLE REVIEW TRAILER REVIEW If your world was shattered by the electronic turn Sufjan Stevens took in his last album, you may want to start gath- ering pitch- forks and Museum torches now. Q The indie- folk super- s/s/s star, joined by Son Lux and Anticon rapper Seren- geti under the moniker s / s / s, has just released "Museum Day" - a song that replaces buttery vocals with Auto-Tune and is virtually devoid of any of Sufjan's well-loved acoustic guitar. The song is a far cry from the Stevens the music world once knew, droning on with slow, stifled energy and fluttering sound effects for six minutes flat. This Stevens doesn't wel- come listeners into his mem- An anti-hero has to break into a futuristic prison, res- cue the president and do it all before the things the government injected in his LCW neck blow up. Sound famil- Film District iar? It should. "Escape from New York" is a cult classic. If you haven't seen it, do. And then when you see the "Lockout" trailer, you'll notice a lot of familiar things. There's the anti-hero, played by Guy Pearce ("Memento") and described, literally, as a "loose cannon." There's the futuristic pris- on, which is in space this time. And then there's the president that needs rescuing - except in this case it's his daugh- ter, played by Maggie Grace ("Taken"). ory-scape, but creates a cold distance from them instead. The electro-vocals are too abstract to be endearing, as is the hookline "I am recoloring" that echoes throughout the track. It's catchy, no doubt, but nothing more than that - especially when you factor in Serengeti's mediocre lyrics ("Double double triple dare / Yeah let's get out of here") and forced rhymes that flop in every verse. -CHLOE STACHOWIAK You might say the whole ter, sliding into the role of wry, thing is a long listof'80s action sarcastic action star with ease. tropes. And you'd be right. But He's got great chemistry with the trailer imparts so much Grace, there's a creepy yet personality that it doesn't mat- mildly charming Irish villain ter. and things blow up real nice. Pearce does Kurt Russell, What more can you ask for? but, if you can believe it, bet- -DAVID TAO EPISODE REVIEW TRAILER REVIEW Not for the first time, "Once Upon A Time" presented an episode based on the mistaken presump- tion that the audience cares about Once Upon an obscure a Time peripheral character. Season 1 Certainly D ,m the evolution "Steamy" of Grumpy ABC fhe dwarf isn't nearly as trying as the genesis of Jiminy Cricket (what even happened to him?), but it feels like filler nonethe- less. Lee Arenberg does a fine job as the aforementioned protag- onist, who at the beginning of the episode goes by the name "Dreamy" - hence the episode title - until he's disillusioned by the pain of love. Unfortunately, it's tough The only thingthat's keeping "The Amazing Spider-Man" from the hype it deserves is the fact that it's just too soon. The abomi- nation of The "Spider-Man 3" is a fresh wound that's $pider-Man not even five years old, and Columbia its predeces- sors were solid films that don't need rebooting. Still, the team behind "The Amazing Spider-Man" looks to have repackaged the franchise fittingly for the post-"Dark Knight" world, adding a lot more raw action and a conspic- uously darker tone (and the word "vigilante," in case the comparison just wasn't clear enough). Andrew Garfield brings his signature sincer- ity to a high-school-age Peter *I to carry the episode when his love interest, a fairy named Nova (Amy Acker) is such a ditzy damsel. Contrastingly, the team of Leeroy - Grumpy's Story- brook alter-ego - and Mary Margaret (Ginnifer Goodwin), or Snow White in the parallel universe of Storybrook, is sur- prisingly successful. The two emerge as a clever pair and set the stage for future episodes with Snow White and the dwarves. -PROMA KHOSLA Parker infatuated with Gwen Stacy (the ironically blonde Emma Stone), as he takes on all of New York City's criminal baggage, including a promis- ingly disturbed Rhys Ifans, playing a researcher with con- nections to Parker's past. The movie will also incor- porate Spidey's homemade web slingers from the original Marvel comics, suggesting that the new franchise will benefit from rediscovering its roots in "The Amazing Spider-Man." -PROMA KHOSLA