The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, January 15, 2013 - 9 Global climate change explored in 'Chasing' You can't sit with us!" p Overcrowded story, ongoing mystery keep PLL complex By BRIANNE JOHNSON SeniorArts Editor "Pretty Little Liars" is a nev- er-ending game of Clue. Hints from opponents mean noth- ing, the culprit changes with each toss of the dice and Pro- Pretty fessor Plum is a hot-for-stu- dent ex-teacher Midseason who aspires to Fitzgerald- Tuesdaysag 8 esque great- ABC Family ness. And yet, no one can bear to quit the game - or stop watching. Two years after the death of Alison DiLaurentis (Sasha Piet- erse), the mystery of her mur- der continues to unravel. But the truth has been tangled in a web of vengeful best friends and boyfriends, masked - often lit- erally - as the omniscient trou- blemaker dubbed 'A.' As Aria (Lucy Hale), Emily (Shay Mitch- ell), Hanna (Ashley Benson) and Spencer (Troian Bellisario) dig into their friends', parents' and neighbors' pasts (and back- gets murky yards), the girls are forced to friend-turned-stalker, mental confront their own skeletons. patient, free woman and now That is, unless 'A' gets to them sympathetic role model, Mona is first. complex in comparison with her But who is 'A'? Rather, who fellow A-teamers. Polished and are 'A'? This question is both the smug, yet desperate for accep- nail-biting highlight of "PLL" 's tance, her character teeters third season and its most frus- between a fallen-from-grace Blair trating failure. Was it Garrett Waldorf and a powerless Carrie Reynolds (Yani Gellman) in the White (cue: pig's blood). Mona hall with the candlestick? What may exhibit sociopathic behav- about Mona (Janel Parrish) in the ior, but at least her motives seem kitchen with the revolver? Toby well-intentioned -ier, sometimes. (relative newcomer Keegan Allen) What's your excuse, Toby? in the hot tub with the six-pack? Revealed tobe one of the many There is no one answer. 'A' is faces of 'A,' Rosewood's resident like 'Gossip Girl' 's little sister: bad-boy-gone-good appears to equally as well-dressed, and as have contracted rabies since senseless and inconsistent as the the last episode. OK, maybe show's plot. not rabies. But Toby Cavana- Though crowded casts are ugh, Spencer's protective, dark a common issue in television prince, suffers a bout of overact- (refer to any season of "Glee"), ingsince his abrupt transitionto the "PLL" writers seem to have the A-team. He's the snarling, recruited the entire population flexing psycho-boyfriend whose of Rosewood for their pretty little evil abs have received their own game. The 'A-Team' more accu- character description since rately resembles a small village escaping the (probably also evil) - albeit a mentally unstable and black hoodie. If not even Mona violent village with perfect hair - can compete with a classic Toby than a "team." While pin-the-tail- glare, how can viewers expect on-the-murderer does make for "PLL" 's quartet of high-fashion a fun weeknight,,this undeniable heroines to drag themselves out clutter of characters threatens the of Rosewood alive? storyline's consistency and the But it's this dwindling bit of audience's patience. hope for answers - yes, this However, Mona's evolution week we'll know! OK, maybe throughout "PLL" revives the next week! - that lures viewers sense of mystery dulled by the in. After all, mustn't every game show's pace. As the jealous best- declare a winner? By NATALIE GADBOIS Daily Arts Writer Our world is obviously chang- ing - in the past three months we've seen beloved towns destroyed by Hurricane Sandy, wild- fires tear Chasing Ice through Cali- fornia and just At the last Saturday in Michigan Ann Arbor we experienced Exposure a peak tem- perature of 58 degrees (much to the happiness of syllabus week revelers). In the documentary, "Chasing Ice," photographer and adventurer James Balog ("ICE: Portraits of the World's Vanishing Glaciers") sets out to prove to naysayers that human influence is the explanation to climate change, and denial is not an option. In 2007, Balog traveled to more than 30 glaciers in Iceland, Greenland, Alaska and Montana and set up time-lapse cameras to chronicle the chillingly rapid decay of these glaciers, which he argues is ultimately the result of CO2 and other chemi- cal emissions. Through visu- ally arresting videography and easy-to-understand expert opin- ions, "Chasing Ice" reaffirms the proverb "seeing is believing" and gives us a bleak outlook for the fut The group, theyjo desola answer ice. Th and in the fil: point; and "a sobere er, dir Strang Haqq" stark r shots c bluster that ca Thoug politic refer I images ciersr - the: yearsa ure. casually and (almost smugly) film follows Balog and his admits - due to the rate of glacial "Extreme Ice Survey," as decay and a steadily rising ocean urney to these hauntingly - within the next 75 years, more te places, striving to find than 300-million people around rs in the disappearingblue the coastlines of the world will he views are breathtaking be displaced. Using identifiable describable, and at times and comprehendible statistics, m fails to come back to its the film avoids political pander- we are too busy "oohing" ing and persuasion through mis- ahing" to remember to be information. d and frightened. Howev- A frequent guest speaker ector Jeff Orlowski ("The in national and geographic ;e Case of Salman Abd Al news, Balog has given us the ) brings focus back to the visual proof, and it is unavoid- eality by cutting between able. Where the film falters is of miles of melting ice with with what we should do about ring FOX News reports it. There is a pervading feel- all global warming a hoax. ing of helplessness, which is h obviously biased in this expounded when a woodsy pro- al debate, the filmmakers fessor admits that this change back to these time-lapsed is inevitable. We have reached s that concretely show gla- the tipping point, once consid- melting at alarming rates ered impossible, and scientists same amount in the last 10 believe the glaciers will contin- as the prior 100. ue receding at a disquieting rate. The film harkens back to the PBS programs we were so happy Beautiful to watch in elementary school in place of doing ouf multiplication mages can't tables, and at times the familiarly dry expert interviews take away iask lack of from the immediacy of the issue. But, while inthirdgrade we could answers. forget the bearded man's confus- ingwords,we nowhaveasobering responsibility to do something. But what? While visually and staggering to have some- emotionally stunning, "Chasing as basic as ice show us why Ice" couldn't provide answers to orld is imploding. As Balog lingering questions. it n It's thing: our we JOIN THE DAILY! COME TO OUR MASS MEETINGS Wed., Jan. 16 at 7:30 p.m. Sun., Jan. 20 at 7:30 pm. Thurs., Jan. 24 at 7:30 p.m. ALL MEETINGS ARE AT 420-MAYNARD STREET. Skills for College, Career, and Beyond sec. 001: Monday, Wednesday, Friday 9-10 am Designed for LSA sophomores and juniors, this course develop skills to help with a job search. Course work includes a wide variety of educational and career settings (multimedia presentations, public speaking, digital research, website design, statistical and data literacy), and a few "wildcard" topics that will be helpful in both career and life outside career (personal finance; sen- sitivi to cultural, hstoricaI and linguisti backgrounds). S f