2B - Thursday, January 12, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2B - Thursday, January12, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 0 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. "Wainy Days" David Wain's comedy web series "Wainy Days" is the perfect cure for these dreadful rainy days. The series presents a fictionalized version of Wain's day-to-day life as he tries to meet women and discusses his problems with his sweatshop coworkers. Guest stars include Jorma Taccone, Lizzy Caplan and Ken Marino. All four seasons are available on My Damn Channel. MY DAMN CHANNEL Making Mirrors - Gotye There are two certainties that come with the new year - the coming flurries are inevitable and the work will pick up with a fury ... in a week or two. So find Making Mirrors by Australian indie star Gotye and turn it up - the record's lulls and frenzies will match the upcoming blizzards' tem- posAto atee. UNIVERSAL REPUBLIC DropAdd R Let's face it. At least one of your classes sucks. Instead of wallowing in boredom, choose one of these artsy classes instead! I 0 "Twelfth Night" William Shakespeare Jan. 5marked the official feast of Twelfth Night - so why not read the Shakespeare masterpiece it inspired? True love, intrigue and cross-dressing make for a delightful storytelling combination. Too busy to read it? See the 1996 film adaptation. A young Helena Bonham Carter and Ben Kingsley make it totally worth it. "Wag the Dog" It's election year and headlines are filled with news of who the Republicans will put up against Barack Obama come fall. In theaters, too, politics pervade. 2011 gave us "The Ides of March." But political deception can't top the duo of Robert De Niro and Dustin Hoffman in "Wag the Dog." What beats a fabricated war for the sake of covering up some presidential sexual harassment? Apocalypse When? The Arts of the Apocalypse ENGLISH 313 Whether you're preparing for the Maya's supposed prediction or the newest Rapture guess, no survivalist would be safe without proper knowl- edge of the "Arts of the Apocalypse." Taught by the legendary Prof. Ralph G. Williams (who had a role in 2010's "Answer This!"), the required reading features such heartwarming tomes as "Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth's Last Days," "The Late Great Planet Earth" and a veritable classic - the Bible itself! The Horror Film after Psycho SAC 336.001 Do you enjoy taking classes that ter- rify you, but you missed your spot in "Advanced Honors Calculus ill"? Prof. Mark Kligerman has the pulse-pound- ing, bone-chilling, stomach-churning answer to your pleas: He'll be giv- ing a few brave souls a peek into the darker side of film in SAC 336: "The Horror Film after Psycho." The class will cover theoretical, cultural and industrial influences that emerged fol- lowing the release of the classic 1960 horror flick. Photography RCARTS 285 Want to be like Ansel Adams? Don't miss your chance to take a class in the one and only dark room on campus. That's right. The class is open to any University student interested in the old medium of film development - the kind where you watch the print evolve before your eyes. This back- to-basics course in traditional black and white as well as color photog- raphy is taught by RC Prof. Michael Hannum. So leave behind Facebook and iPhones, Adobe Photoshop and Bridge, and learn.where it all began. Creative Adaptation RCHUMS 242 This semester, the Residential Col- lege is offering a creative writing class focused on the idea of adaptation. "Creative Adaptation" is centered not around the commonly held idea that you should write what you know, but rather on the concept that you should write what you learn. The class, taught by Prof. Laura Thomas, seeks to help writers find their voices and effectively combine their stories with the messages they wish to impart. 0 NEW LINE CINEMA People are obsessed with their own demise. So, it's no surprise that movie theaters and DVD col- lections are full of post- apocalyptic The Divide thrillers and cheesy sci- Anchor Bay fi dramas. But, here is a trailer promising something other than frightening aliens and awful illness: reality. Xavier Gens's ("Hitman") "The Divide" follows the story of nine New York tenants living in a high-rise apartment dur- ing a nuclear attack. As audi- ences meet the protagonists, they learn the characters have survived by hiding out in the bunker-like basement of the building, and are now stranded. As the trailer reaches a peak and unleashes shot after shot of crazed, hungry individuals 0