6A - Wednesday, January 23, 2013 'Bedroom Farce' to explore sex, love The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com D or Ay Wh Logun tions last p expec was Math Profe: gan Logue been for . Brow ors I clay fall 2012, first at th sity. No perfor first p edy " which follow bedro their3 Brown humo tions, irector to add In the first act, newlyweds, Malcolm (Brown) and Kate host iginal humor to a housewarming party in an attempt to prove how great their ckbourn's work new life is to their friends. Unfor- tunately, things start to go awry By LENA FINKEL when couple Susannah (Logue) Daily Arts Writer and Trevor begin fighting. The situation quickly escalates as the ien LSA junior Molly sexual tension amplifies between e walked into the audi- past lovers Trevor and Jan. for "Bedroom Farce," the Needless to say, the whole play erson she soon turns into chaos. ted to see Bednom "At its heart, it's really a com- Assistant edy about sex, which any stu- ematics Farce dent would find humor in," said ssor Mor- Thursday, Logue. Brown. Fridayand "The first time the cast read e had Saturdayat it out loud, they couldn't stop a grader 8 p.m.and laughing," Brown added. Professor Sundaat This was the first stage play n's Hon-2p Brown has done since high Calculus school and, after reigniting his ss during AnnArborCivic passion for acting in graduate semester Theatre school at Berkeley, he wanted to Brown's continue acting in Ann Arbor. semester From$11 Logue, on the other hand, e univer- has been acting since she was young. As a child, she participat- w, Logue and Brown will ed in plays produced by Young rm side by side in A2CT's People's Theater in Ann Arbor roduction of 2013, the com- and also performed with The Bedroom Farce." The play, Heron Players, a regional group takes place in the '70s, of actors who write and produce vs four couples in three their own plays. noms as they try to sort out When Logue got the part of marital woes. According to Susannah - whom Logue calls n, "Bedroom Farce" brings "an emotional and dramatic girl r by taking "serious situa- with a horrible marriage"- she and making them absurd." knew the role would be difficult. "It's been challenging for me because (Susannah) can be so dramatic and needy," said Logue. "It's a challenge to find a sympathetic side to her." However, Logue later admit- ted that it was fun to play a char- acter so different from herself. Director Paul Bianchi really helped Logue in understanding Susannah. "His vision for the charac- ter was the right vision. He was a huge help in guiding me to where she needed to be," Logue explained. "Susannah is my character, but it's definitely been a collaboration between me and Paul." Bianchi, who's been acting with A2CT for 10 years, is com- mitted to keeping the play and the characters authentic to how the playwright Alan Ayckbourn originally wanted it. "As a director, my job is first and foremost to tell a story that the playwright intended," he said. But that didn't stop Bianchi from adding his own personal touch onto the play. He added a few "funny bits" into the play that he felt would fit in line with the characters. Pleased with how the actors had worked with his vision over- all, Bianchi said, "I couldn't have asked for a better cast; they've really brought it alive." 1 "These pics will look great in the re-election posters' Schwarzenegger is back in eXiing 'ast Stand' WANT TO EXPLORE THE DIVERSE ART COMMUNITY OF ANN ARBOR? JOIN DAILY ARTS AS A COMMUNITY CULTURE WRITER! To request an application, e-mail arts@michigandaily.com. By MATT EASTON Daily Arts Writer "The Last Stand" is American. Sure, its director is the South Korean Jee-woon Kim, and its hero the Aus- trian Arnold Schwarzeneg- ger - but you'd The Last be challenged $tand to find a movie more red, white At Qualityl6 and blue (at and Rave least until "A Good Day to Lionsgate Die Hard" is released). "The Last Stand" pos- sesses all the necessary elements: ridiculously fast cars (a Corvette, of course - this ain't "Skyfall"), liberal interpretations of 2nd- Amendment rights, high-cho- lesterol diners and that weirdly stirring spirit of defending what's yours. "The Last Stand" is American, whether we like it or not. The plot, while seemingly con- trived, is actually original and inherently exciting: An escaped drug cartel leader is racingrtoward the U.S.-Mexican border from Arizona, with the intent of escap- ing the FBI, in a hyper-fast car (and the sense of speed is palpa- ble). The final obstacle in his path is Schwarzenegger and a band of inept-ish deputies. Director Jee- woon Kim ("The Good, the Bad, the Weird") paces the story well, and there's a sense of franticness even if the film occasionally drags toward the ultimate showdown. Schwarzenegger ("The Expendables 2"), as Ray Owens (which is as ridiculous a name one could ever give someone who looks and sounds like Schwar- zenegger), is a sort of patriarch in the film. The town he protects treats him as such, and his depu- ties confide in him and admit intimate fears. Schwarzeneg- ger is no longer just a hero; he's a father. This gives legitimacy toward his actions, and while his motivations warp later in the film toward slightly more mundane "revenge" and "justice" arche- types, he still radiates an oddly comforting protective aura. The rest of the cast is some- what overloaded (there seem to be about 15 supplementary char- acters), but never stifling. Each personality, from Forest Whitak- er's ("The Last King of Scotland") stressed-out FBI agent to Jaimie Alexander's ("Thor") hardy dep- uty, is predictable but still pos- sesses certain tidbits that elicit some emotional connection. In a perfect world, action films would exchange their pacirig and excite- ment for fulfilling characters, but "The Last Stand" does a decent job nevertheless. As for the action, it follows the ubiquitous action-comedy formu- la seen in "The Expendables" or "The Avengers." Sadly, "The Last Stand" doesn't really ever live up to those standards. Yeah, it's fun to see ol' man Schwarzenegger creakily wrestle, poking fun at, while also reviving, old-school action standards, but the "joke" is getting a bit ... antiquated. Still though, "The Last Stand" is pun- filled in all the right ways, and it's hard not to laugh. Also, some scenes have a little spark of genius hidden within (a slow-chase in a corn field, a magnetic escape from the police), and Jee-woon smoothly and confidently works his way through the flurry of bul- lets and cars. 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