The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 - 5A Felicity 2.0. 'Americans' brings thrills to Cold War HUNGRY MAN* Leave the gun, take the fish. Acclaimed live-action shorts tell big tales Ke up Alre most c on tel fied" a of Ana seems anothe its ha "The cans."; backdr later the C "The cans" to be with.' an int ture fr origin. Russel star c clever withoa it pilot "Th KGB s ing th admin and ifM & Sist lip Jen averag behind memb. netwo ing to ri Russell heats the American government. Noah Emmerich ("Super 8") plays with dynamic counterintelligence FBI agent Stan Beeman, who complicates performance the Jennings' cover when he and his family move in across the By ALEC STERN street. For the Daily What makes "The Ameri- cans" so compelling isn't the eady home to some of the Cold War setting, but the rela- ritically acclaimed dramas tionship between Elizabeth and evision, including "Justi- Phillip. In just one episode, their nd "Sons marriage is already one of the rchy," FX most complicated and captivat- to have ing in all of television, reminis- er hit on The cent of "Breaking Bad" 's Walter Ands with and Skyler White. Throughout Ameri- A the feature-length pilot, Phillip Set in the Pilot questions his future as a Russian -op of the spy, while Elizabeth is as dedi- years of Wednesdays cated to the motherland as ever. old War, at 10 p.m. Their romantic relationship Ameri- FX is problematic as well. It's clear is a force that the two have a devotion reckoned to one another, but Elizabeth's The pilot episode provides strong allegiance to the KGB riguing, emotional depar- and her complex past prevents om most of the other, less complete commitment to her al programs out there. Keri partner. Keri Russell's nuanced, 1 ("Felicity") leads an all- Emmy-caliber performance is ast in this powerful and reason enough to tune in for a espionage thriller that's, second episode, while Matthew, ut a doubt, the best dramat- Rhys's Phillip will have you t of the year. - rooting for the wrong side. e Americans" follows two In addition to the multifac- pies living in America dur- eted relationship between the e early years of the Reagan two spies, the action sequences istration. Played by Russell in "The Americans" are superb. datthew Rhys ("Brothers Elizabeth and Phillip make for a ers"), Elizabeth and Phil- formidable team in the nail-bit- nings may seem like your ing opening in which they kid- e American family - but nap a U.S. government liaison. I closed doors, they're The Jennings continue to cause ers of an interconnected trouble throughout, and the jux- rk of Russian agents work- taposition of the two sides of infiltrate and take down Russell's character (both badass Russian spy and doting mother of two) gives "The Americans" another layer of exhilarating drama. Throughout its first season, "The Americans" will have to overcome the inevitable com- parisons to Showtime's beloved "Homeland." Though the FX drama is set three decades prior to the time of Carrie and Brody, the counterintelligence and behind-enemy-lines aspects will no doubt draw similarities. However, what "The Ameri- cans" has going for it is a high level of quality, both in cast and content, that stands on its own. "The Americans" has every- thing you want from a dramatic pilot. Sharp writing and sure- handed storytelling make this series the must-watch show of the season. Russell's portrayal of the enigmatic Elizabeth, alongside strong supporting players Rhys and Emmerich, should have audiences aching for another hour just as this one ends. While FX is a good home. for the series, it could just as easily be on Showtime or HBO's programming lineup. In fact, the pilot episode of "The Ameri- cans" is just as good, if not bet- ter, than anything "Homeland" did in it§ second seaso'. While this may seem like high praise for just one episode, the pilot sets up what should be a mysterious and thrilling journey well worth taking. "The Ameri- cans" is so fully realized and sure of its vision that it seems destined to become one of tele- vision's great dramas. By ANDREW MCCLURE DailyArts Writer Short films are tough. Twenty minutes to shine or be outshined. Like in poetry, every word and every frame counts - evoking extreme emotional temperature. This year, nothing disappointed. Disparate like mismatched socks, each film gently shakes hands with its audience and then builds realrapport. They're about death, erasers, - acceptance, conformity and ambition, respectively. With specificity, they cover the after- life, memory decay, saving grace, paternal discipline and cheerful buoyancy. "Death of a Shadow" (Belgium) As its contenders all tell great stories, "Death" creates one. The core of its creative plotline finds itself ina sort of museum of pho- tographed deathshadows. Think: silhouettes of shadows. Con- fused? That's what I'm here for. Our unassuming mustached pro- tagonist plays the photographer, a dead man repaying his "debt" by photographing the shadows of people as they die. Our photographer's problem bifurcates: hate for his afterlife profession and love for his aban- doned wife. His dilemma wors- ens. Director Tom Van Avermaet works in sync with his produc- tion designer to illustrate a pur- gatory where fun comes to die. Upon reaching a thousand cap- funny yet socially suggestive. The opening aerial shot of our hero bathing in a tub of murky blood-water unlocks the door to an unconventional narrative. Seconds from deleting himself with a blade, a corded telephone rings. It's Iis hateful sister. She's in desperate need of his help, reiterating how much of a "last, last resort" he is. He somehow agrees, "OK." Sis needs him to watch over her adorable, sassy daughter. Meeting her uncle for the first time, the girl is not having it. She insists on following "the list" of permitted places and inquires about his pathetic life. Seasoned short-story writer Shawn Christensen, who also plays our hero, tells the tale of the familyoutcast we all could tell but dance around. Deeper, he expli- cates how easily relationships can be sever yet also abandon consider you mor what "C Th On in "Buzka red (or never even spark). can be rekindled. Never a loved ones, all things red, because they need. re than they know. That's urfew" teaches. ere's always e tearjerker i the batch. shi Boys" (Afghani- stan) game played with a dead goat instead of a ball). Both boys inspired by the guts and kinesis of the game, the urchin declares his newly minted pursuit tojoin the ranks of Buzkashi riders. The less ambitious boy concedes to workingunder his blacksmith father forever. Creator Sam French leverages current-day Afghan landscape (and the apparent approval of the Afghanistan Ministry of Information and Culture) to color a crude drawing of how many lives are spent entirely under a parent's tutelage. There seems tobe little range of move- ment for innovation or recre- ation. But sometimes, someone just needs solid teaching to locate his talents. Asad (South Africa) A good drama infused with timely laughs:creates first-rate motion pictures. A brief banana in linear lips can do wonders: a smile. "Asad" is not bereft of laughs, even with its solemn set- ting in war-ridden Somalia. As his older friends set sail as pirates to overtake yachts and other ships, Asad is stuck - too young for combat, He claims some of the older soldiers are "novices" while he knows the topography and currents better than his seniors. He finally gets his chance to chase his "magnificent catch" using an elder's boat. His course randomly leads him to a yacht where he finds something he can only title "a white lion." Commercial director Bryan Buckley creates tangible value in the form of laughs and smiles with "Asad." He enlightens audiences that although the Somali people "have lost their country," they hold onto "their sense ofhope." Places like Soma- lia need Asads. They need hope because there is still so much to be thankful for. Defogging your pessimism goggles is the hard part. New 'Harm' keeps it simple By PROMA KHOSLA Daily Arts Writer Ever since Hippocrates wrote "do no harm" in ancient Greece, the three words have echoed ominously in Western soci- ety. In NBC's new Thursday Do No Harm night drama, the title has a Pilot few layers of Thursdays meaning. at10 p.m. It alludes to the Hippocrat- NBC ic Oath taken by all doctors from the Hippocratic Corpus. It refers to the protagonist's work as chief of neurosurgery and his promise to always do right by his patients. But most of all, it haunts every scene with the threat that harm may befall these characters, and that it will be anything but an accident. "Do No Harm" tells the story of Steven Pasquale's ("Rescue Me") Dr. Jason Cole (or as it says on the door to his office, J. Cole), a classic, well-intentioned doc- tor with all the promise of Jack Shephard but a whole new trove of demons. His problem? A par- ticularly venomous case of Dis- sociative Identity Disorder. For 12 hours a day, Jason Cole ceases to exist. In his place is Ian Price, a rough and vengeful identity Cole has spent his life trying to stifle. At the outset of the pilot, we find Cole during a peaceful peri- od. He mental into su that Pr (when. alities that Pri nity to1 is now: "Do strengt it simpl tent sur excessi patient the pat: tic aba introdu to Ian introdu sibility teaming lives - perhap: plan is allow I his life. for all. has been trying experi- Olivia serves as the only anchor in drugs which put him Ian Price's personality; his obses- ch a deep sleep at night sion with her bordered on stalk- 'ice is unable to awaken ing and his resurgence threatens do these dueling person- her life as much as Cole's. sleep?). It so transpires Other than that, there are few ice has built up his immu- characters introduced to over- the drugs and the demon whelm the audience or subtract unleashed. from the gravitas of Cole's pre- No Harm" 's greatest dicament. Phylicia Rashad ("The h is that the show keeps Cosby Show") shines in her few e. Cole is a highly compe- moments as Cole's boss, com- geon, but we don't spend manding the screen with envi- ve time with him and his able presence in every scene she s. The one time we do, inhabits. ient is a victim of domes- The best part is the first time use, and Cole cleverly we witness Cole's transforma- ces her abusive husband tion into Ian Price: He's in the Price's fists. That scene shower at a dingy motel when ces the intriguing pos- he begins to tremble. Panicked, of these battling minds Cole turns to the steam-covered g up to better each other's door and begins to write with a plotline for the future, his fingers: "DO NO HARM." It s. In the meantime, Cole's should be the tackiest interpel- to strike up a truce, to lation of a show title in the his- Price to once again live tory of pilots - but right before only to end it once and he completes the "M" a hand swipes across the condensation, wiping away the words of Hip- pocrates and leaving in their whole new place the rancorous counte- nance of Ian Price. leaning to At its worst, "Do No Harm" could fall victim to formula, )ctor Jekyll. dragging-week to week between Cole's life as -a daylight doctor and Price's nighttime escapades and terrifying trips to Olivia's e's also the mysterious house. At its best, the show has (Ruta Gedmintas, "The the potential tobea truly memo- "), an ex-girlfriend who rable drama, unencumbered by ed with both sides of embellishments and unafraid of dentity and ultimately had causing the characters a little away to start her life over. harm. tured shadows (fastened to a wall We've seen it a million space by large daggers), his "mas- times: Stringently fathered boy ter" will allow him reentry to the befriends free-spirited bastard. world. With this added existen- Why do filmmakers continue tialistic layer, a tragic love story to spin this tired tale? Because emerges. audiences find common ground, no matter their "cool" or "lame" "Henry" (Canada) parental backgrounds. "Buz- kashi" delivers two Afghani There's always at least one boys, a blacksmith's son and a tearjerker in the short film cat- street urchin, who learn from egory. "Henry" is it. All too often each other's stark differences. do "sophisticated" moviegoers One day, the urchin takes his reject this emotion of salty dis- conservative friend to a match charges - they call it "cheap" of Buzkashi (a rough polo-like and "mawkish." Viewer tears are almost always legitimate. Henry, an aged pianist, plans for his final recital duet with his wife, Maria, an adroit violinist. His lovely daughter will attend and a culminat- ing moment will unfold. Then he wakes up. Told his Maria passed away last year, Henry is prgam t m e'n daC beside himself. DepartmentfDance21 Filmmaker Yan England sets two of music's most beau- tiful instruments in perfect ah.egah . y Bil T.JI e harmony with the respective faut Am' hvse esc owners - lovers. It uplifts and Sandra Torijano despite all the dementia and senility associated with old age because it dives into high- lighting the good memories by using the bad ones as crutches. February 8 & 9 at8P "Have I been a good man?" February 10 at 2 PM Henry begs to his daughter, Power Center barely recallingher own name. Intrepid questions like these make "Henry" exactly that: intrepid. "Curfew" (USA) USA! USA! USA! The rawest of them all, "Curfew" tackles Students"1 with 1 themes head-on and without Legu Tike ff* remorse. Not unlike the guy 734-764-2538 who shows up to a wedding tickets.music.umich.edu rocking a tuxedo t-shirt, it's A n DC Ther Olivia Borgias interact Cole's is to move