6 - Tuesday, February 12, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6 - Tuesday, February 12, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Eye-opening short documentaries Sorrow seeps through Oscar- nominated films By NATALIE GADBOIS DailyArts Writer Albert Einstein, once said, "Any fool can know. The point is to understand." Good documen- taries give us the opportunity to do just that, experience life from very different perspectives and understand the depths of human strength. As an upper-middle- class, educated and healthy Uni- versity student, I know that awful things occur in the world. But before watching the 2013 Oscar- nominated short documentaries, I never would've known what it's like to be a homeless teenage art- ist, an 85-year-old slowly accept- ing the inevitability of death or a mother diagnosed with breast cancer facing the loss of her femi- ninity and sense of beauty. Now, I almostrunderstand. This year the Michigan Theatre is air- ing the five nominated documen- taries in two parts, dividing up a program that would have lasted almost four hours. "Part A" began with "Kings Point," a film that looked at elder- ly people (mainly former New Yorkers) who live in a Florida retirement community, where they act cranky and play mah- jong. Although the premise seems amusing, the film shows the lone- liness and disconnection that comes with old age. This film harshly contradicts the image of old people living itup Florida, so often perpetuated in advertising. (Apparently, retire- ment ain't one big ol' party, Taco Bell.) Instead, growing old with- out your loved ones can be dismal and lonely. "Kings" eloquently proves the fine line between inde- pendence and solitude. Perhaps in an attempt to emo- tionally'wttndlt e entire theater, "Mondays at Racine" followed "Kings," a look at women with aggressive cancer as they lose their hair, and with it some sense of their own womanhood. It chroniclesCynthia and Rachel, sister hairdressers in Long Island, who reserve one day every month to give free beauty care to these cancer sufferers. Cancer stories are unfortu- nately common in our society, but -rarely do we get to see the real pain and loss cancer suffer- ers feel - what we get are stoic, strong individuals heroically ris- ing above their pain. "Mondays at Racine" finds tragic beauty in the real breakdowns of these women, and its effects strike a cord. I fortunately am not close to anyone who has had cancer, but watching Cambria, a young mother of two, shave her head was nothing short of sorrowful. She isn't defiant. She doesn't tout the overdone power anthems of cancer victims. She quietly cries, accepting her loss in a way that transcends the "normal" cancer conventions. This film does just that, cuts away cancer tropes to identify the core emotion of these women. "Part A" rounded out with "Ino- cente," an intensely personal and luminous look at a colorful, radi- ant young artist (named Inocente), who also happens to be homeless. Her story is told through the can- vasses of her fantastical and incan- descent paintings. This underdog tale is told with careful fragility and weight, focusing just as much on Ino- cente's tragic past as her inspiring future. The visuals are stunning, contrasting the protagonist's neon art and bright face with the decrepit areas in which she is forced to live. Tears are entirely justified, as sas the resounding applause that filled the audience as Inocente's laughing face faded from the screen. "Part B" features two films, "Redemption" and "Open Heart," both of which kept up with the theme of showcasing the breadth of human strength. "Redemption" followed New Yorkers (both native and immi- grant) who, because of the econ- omy and layoffs, are forced to collect cans from the street in order to make a living. The film meanders, not identifying with the canners until the second half, when we see them all huddled together at the redeemingsite - a sad family of people better than its current condition. This film forces you to really consider the value of money and the useless things we buy. A two- dollar cup of tea from Espresso Royale is a bagful of 40 cans, an hour of digging through gar- bage. Though thought provok- ing, "Redemption" is the bleakest of the five, as it offers no hope of improvement or any real redemp- tion. "Open Heart" seems the most conventional of documentaries; it follows Rwandan children as they travel thousands of miles to receive necessary heart surgeries. Keywords: Africa, children, life- threatening disease. But "Heart" finds its own heart not in unfor- tunate backstories, but in the sus- penseful joy of discovering what perils and successes follow these endearing kids. Thousands of kids in Africa are diagnosed every year with rheu- matic heart disease, an illness that has' been eradicated from most developed countries. Eight of those afflicted'children are spe- cifically chosen to fly 2,500 miles from their villages in Rwanda to the Salam Center in Sudan, the only cardiovascular surgery hos- pital on the continent. There they undergo intensive surgery, get a visit from Suda- nese president (dictator) Omar al-Bashir and easily win our affections. "Open Heart" deftly shows the pain that comes with being a sick child and the harder feelings of inadequacy being a parent of that child, but it never loses its hope or its joy. These films are at times too powerful; watching five heart- breaking stories in succession makes for an emotionally drain- ing evening. However, they all have something to say about the human condition. These short documentaries tell their messages with simplicity and passion, so that everyone can understand. 0 6 "She doesn't even go here.' Foals fails to bring heat on latest release ' Fire' By KENDALL RUSS Online Arts Editor When Foals released its 2008 debut, Antidotes, to much fan- fare, NME's review tested the Oxford quin- tet's buzz-wor- thiness with four lessons on Holy Fire "How To Deal Foals With Hype." The final les- Transgressive son went some- thing like this: "Make a really good album but not a great one. Alert everyone to your potential but don't ful- fill it." And while Antidotes aced that test, its 2010 follow-up, Total Life Forever, ditched the insidi- ous droning for more compelling melodies to great effect. But with its latest release, Holy Fire, Foals falls short of the admittedly lofty benchmark set by its preceding work. Where Total Life Forever seized the jar- ring intensity of Antidotes and harnessed it brilliantly, Holy Fire is sedated in nearly every aspect. The encouraging "Prelude" and "Inhaler" - among the album's sole highlights - quickly give way to a convoluted and confused body of work. When frontman Yannis Philippakis mockingly chanted a Lacoste advertising slogan ("Un peu d'air sur la terre") on Anti- dotes opener "The French Open," the criticism of commercial society was evident. He dumbs. it down on the radio-ready "My Number," though, delivering a toothless track that's catchy but inane. In place of biting and intelligent social commentary, Philippakis blandly rambles about naive love for the better part of Holy Fire. The uninspired lyricism on Holy Fire's weakest moments further manifests itself through uncharacteristically lethargic guitar play. The urgen- cy that once made Foals so capti- vating is nowhere to be found. Indeed, Holy Fire contains far too many insipid moments to make it a memorable record. The melancholy introspection of "Bad Habit" and the chill- I Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com RELEASE DATE- Tuesday, February 12, 2013 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 3 Xbox.battle game 35Congeals 55 Foot bones 1 Employment 4 Told to go 36 Target practice 56 Letter carrier's agency listings 5Asian tie supply org. 5 Fried Cajunveggie 6 Barbie's guy 37 "... one giant._ 57 Leave speechless 9 WWI conference 7 Grating voice for mankind" 58 Marine eagle site 8 One might get 42Cunning 60 Vegas event 14 Billion extension stuck in ajam 45 Washington 61 Kindergartner's 15Steady guy 9 Video-sharing Monument, for reward 16 He hunted with a website one 63 Tiny bit clubinthe 10 Radius's limb 49 Universal blood 65 Wanted-poster "Odyssey" 11 Committed type, for short letters 17 Club used as a perjury 50 Related to flying 66 Sailor's pronoun weapon, say - 12 Randall who 54 Had lunch in 67 Attila, notably 20 Nonagenarian played Felix actress White Unger ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 21 YeatsorKeats 13Chipinachip D 0 F F GAPS W A N E S 22Color, as Easter 18Supermodel E 0 F F G A E N B A N O gs Banks ECR00 OWE N A LAMO 23 Summer 19Marshstalk L I A R FAL R I P U P quencher 25Tolsts H O M E M O R T G A G E 24 Dorm VIPs Karenina N S T R E T A NNE D 27 Where Lux. is 26 Snowmobile 29 Kid-friendly brand A M I SEI E M AI comfortfood 28'_and weep!': M IGS TEL MEMORE 36 Soothing additive poker winner's a M A T 1 0 I L S E M I S 38Riverthrough . cry C 0 M M 0 N D A Y T I E S Sedan 30Take back Y M M U YETSIH E S 39 Country rocker 31 Smart guy? 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Instead of thetightly wound pulsing of Antidotes or the robust funk of Total Life Forever, we get a dull and unmotivated collec- tion of elementary beats. By the closing track, "Moon," Bevan is entirely absent. Foals under- standably would want to tweak its sound on the third album, but abandoning perhaps its strongest quality to date as a focal point is as incomprehensible as it's inef- fective. Scottish band loses emotional punch. Despite the genuine quality of "Inhaler" and "Milk & Black Spi- ders," neither track suffiiently supports the rest of Holy Fire's dead weight. The latter pairs a haunting guitar and Bevan's (finally!) pounding percussion with Philippakis's reverberating vocals to brilliantly capture the emotive longing Holy Fire all-too- infrequently taps into. Where the scintillating "Inhaler" bruises and bullies, bringing the Foals way forward with menace, the band expands laterally on"Milk & Black Spiders," incorporating an eerie synth and a distinguishably darker vibe. Unfortunately, such lateral growth occurs sparingly, if at all, across the album. Holy Fire's fatal problem, though, is the glaring absence of any cogent, cohesive identity. It features unexciting, gushy love songs with spritely pop-infused hooks; more sorrowful accounts of distant and lost love; even blaring and clumsy grunge with no intelligible theme. Conclud- ing with its two softest songs after its loudest and most clut- tered merely highlights the album's thematic, lyrical and musical disunity throughout. The single criticism direct- ed at Foals's angular, bizarre debut centered on its obdurate rigidity and its inaccessibility. The band artfully addressed these concerns on its follow-up, exchanging the atonal chant- ing for a fuller but often more withdrawn sound. Holy Fire struggles to strike that balance, often going for far too much or far too little. It results in a spo- radic effort at best, and a con- fused, defensive step backward, at worst. With a self-assured lyrical and vocal composure, Philippakis dropped the bark but still maintained the vicious bite of Foals' debut on Total Life Forever. Holy Fire hardly even amounts to a growl. *I 0 By Melanie Miler (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 02/12113