6 - Friday, March 22, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6 - Friday, March 22, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Paradigm Shift to give artists opportunities "Sir, have you tried plugging it in?" 'The Call ' horrifies LE OVE "T cal traun veter gency name (Hall "X-M Last as sh best a gi Case Miss her a "88 love trans huma Ha point stress film walk heard she w ater t from minu watch huma ing c itimate scares of human predation makes the film terribly compelling. rCome excessive For Breslin, a rising face in the crowd of cute, blonde child plot holes actresses since "Sunshine," this will almost certainly be the By NOAH COHEN movie to knock her out of the Daily Arts Writer child typecast. Even terrified out of her wits, she's very much he Call" is a psychologi- a fighter of an abductee and does thriller that follows the a commendable job of balancing na of a her portrayal of abject fear with an emer- that of a substantial character. y operator Watching Berry talk her down d Jordan The Call from senseless bawling into des- e Berry, tultl perate action is acutely believ- en: The Aand y6 able The chemistry between the Stand") and Rave two women is crisp and unre- e does her TriStar lenting. to guide Our Villain-with-a-capital- rl named "V," Eklund, strays so close to y (Abigail Breslin, "Little Buffalo Bill of "The Silence of Sunshine") to safety from the Lambs" that "The Call" ibductor (Michael Eklund, might aptly be accused of pla- Minutes"), whose perverse giarism, but the partial flesh- for his deceased sister has ing-out of his tragic backstory formed him into a pretend- is enough to differentiate him tn freak. as his own psychopath. He suc- ille Berry never disap- ceeds magnificently as a mani- s. She portrays mounting festation of the kind of man we s so convincingly in this all would dearly love to beat to that the audience could death with a shovel. Truly, the away with PTSD. I over- acting in "The Call" isn't where I one woman complain as it stumbles. vas walking out of the the- What degrades this film are that she had neck cramps believability issues that stem cringing perpetually for 96 from out-of-character scripting tes. It's not an easy film to near the end. The house that the h; it's a movie that doesn't police search and then abandon tnize evil, and its unflinch- would never have been simply ommitment to the horrors abandoned during a real federal abduction investigation; they expect you to believe that the known abductor's creepy-ass country house would have been left untouched by the police, mid-abduction? That the police really would have said, "There's nothing here, boys, let's all just leave everything as we found it. We'll investigate in the morning, maybe"? The emulation of police pro- tocol is absurd. Furthermore, it's absolutely out of character for Berry to go as rogue as she did, armed only with a flash- light and an iPhone. Even more ridiculous, when Berry connects the dots in her mind, realiz- ing she's in the general vicinity of the "Silence of the Lambs"- like hideout of her psychopath, she doesn't immediately call for backup, which is so stupidly contrived that it nearly ruins the movie right then and there. Were they hoping we wouldn't notice? We notice. Aside from the problems with the script, the emulated expe- rience is modern and realistic. When Breslin sobs to Berry from the trunk of a car about how she wants Berry to relay a mes- sage to her mother in case she's murdered, tears will likely have By PAIGE PFLEGER Daily Arts Writer The Paradigm Shift Chamber Orchestra is one of the newest musical groups in Ann Arbor. Composed of 20 string play- Paradigm ers, the orches-S tra is a mix of students from Chamber the School of Orchestra Music as well as players in Saturday the Ann Arbor at 8 p.m. area. It gives performers the Fitst BaptistChurch opportunity to Free participate in a cooperative- style group in which everyone's opinions and suggestions are of equal value. School of Music junior Jake Woollen is the founder and orga- nizer of the group, with help from Assistant Professor of Con- ducting and Associate Director of Orchestras Christopher Lees. "The idea really germinated this summer at the Aspen Music Festival in Colorado," Woollen said. "I was there as a cellist, and several other Michigan peo- ple were there too - Chris Lees and several other string players - and that's really where the idealistic air of Colorado really allowed these ideas to flourish." Woollen further developed his dream during the fall semes- ter while he studied abroad in Paris. He began planning and organizing the group and was heavily inspired by the art of music-making as practiced in Europe. "The general attitude towards music-making in Europe is quite different from here," much extrer makin comph in per a tend really a mus That's to bri intens ness at One Wooll, to plac frustr opport certos the Sc certo c four st digm S studen form music Woollen said. "They are towards the conductor as a facil- less embarrassed to be itator; he is just one of many bril- mely earnest about music- liant artistic minds in the room." g. There is no fear about Along with shared artistic etely baring their soul power and collective invest- forming. Here, there is ment, Woollen places a heavy lency to be reluctant to emphasis on taking a proactive let your guard down as stance toward education. sician and a performer. "Why do we sit around and something I wanted wait for people to teach us ng back with me - this things that we can very eas- e excitement and earnest- ily proactively go out and learn bout music." ourselves?" he asked. "I think of the many reasons that when you're at university, it has en founded the group was so many incredible resources, cate orchestral musicians' but so often there is a passive ations over the lack of academic mindset. We think of tunities to perform con- ourselves as students learning with an orchestra. While from professors, as opposed to hool of Music has a con- professors guiding us in teach- competition annually, only ing ourselves. I've found that udents can win. The Para- in all areas of my life, espe- thift seeks to provide more cially music, I learn much more its an opportunity to per- effectively when I make a men- and shift in how classical tal switch from 'I'm going to functions. learn this' to 'I'm going to teach myself this.'" The group has succeeded thus far in accomplishing just that. The musicians meet every Sun- 'sponsibilit day morning - not for pay, not Y for academic credit, but simply for the love of music. Their first r your music concert was at the beginning of education February, and they're looking forward to performing again at their upcoming concert - titled "Eight Seasons" - which fea- e wanted to experiment tures Vivaldi's Four Seasons as artistic authority," Wool- well as Piazzolla's Four Seasons. aid. "Traditionally, the "All of us as musicians are a gm was the all-knowing conglomeration of musicians ious male conductor, who that we've been around or grew run their orchestras like up with, and we all take some- arian states. The musi- thing from each of them," Wool- and the orchestra were len said. "Instead of all of us ly factory workers - they learning from one conductor, all 't artists, they were arti- of us are learning from all of us. And what we are seeing We are taking responsibility for s a shift away from that, our own musical education." re fol S 0 "We witha len s paradi imperi would totalit cians basica weren' sans. r now is WINNING YOUR BRACKET POOL? ALREADY OUT OF 0 to be brushed awa "The Call" exploits at outline, it holds an throughout. It's not f it's damn scary. ry. Though tired movie YOUR d horrifies JOIN FELLOW CHAMPIONS IN lawless, but DAILY ARTS! BRACKET POOL? 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