The Michigan Daily - michigahdaily.com Wedesnday, April 10, 2013 - 5A urassic Park' keeps magic in 3-D Re-release of dinosaur classic as dynamic as ever By MAYANK MATHUR Daily Arts Writer The re-release of "Juras- sic Park" in 3-D prompts a very simple, yet essential question ... "Why?" Why re- release the film? A- Won't it be the same movie all JUraSsiC over again? Why Park 3-D make a trip to the cinema to At Quality16 see a movie that and Rave can be viewed in the comfort of Universal your room? Why would a rational consumer be will- ing to spend money for something that can now be enjoyed for free? Why, indeed. Because, as a movie buff, you are not a "rational consumer." Because, when a T-Rex stares right at you, you still take Dr. Grant's advice and dare not move a muscle. Because, watching two velociraptors stalk two children in a kitchen is still scary enough to give you goosebumps. Because, hearing the words "Welcome to Jurassic Park" accompanied by that ineffable music is still one of the most magical moments you've experienced as a viewer. Because that shot of the T-Rex roaring in the visitor's center as the banner falls still screams "AWESOME." Because, "Jurassic Park" is still "Jurassic Park." Relish the chance as you are once again invited to embark on a fantastic adventure with added 3-D effects, which completes the experience in a truly satisfying manner. Given thatthe filmis a re- release, itwould be extremely sur- prising if the original cast didn't reprise their roles. Ride along with familiar faces: paleontologists Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill, "The Hunt for Red October") and Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern, "Every- Womp wowsm Miastering the macabre He just wants to be your friend. thing Must Go"), the charismatic and quirky mathematician Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum, "Inde- pendence Day") and the delusion- al-yet-lovable John Hammond, played by Richard Attenborough ("Joseph and the Amazing Tech- nicolor Dreamcoat"). The plot. remains the same throughout its running time of two hours and unfortunately for all hopefulfans, the film does not contain any spe- cial or added scenes. The phrase "big-screen movie" does get thrown around a lot more than it should, and oftentimes films are unreasonably lauded for the added impact they have in a movie theater. However, if there ever was a movie meant for the big screen, itis "Jurassic Park 3-D." The3-Deffectscombine brilliantly with the extraordinary CGI, add- ing a new dimension to cinematic experience, catapulting the thrill of walking (sometimes, running and screaming) with dinosaurs to a new level. Scenes such as the T-Rex's attack onthe occupants, of two helpless cars in the middle of a thunderstorm and the veloci- raptor's assault on Dr. Sattler in the dark of a control room base- ment are especially riveting. If, as a child, you weren't petrified when the T-Rex lowered its head to look at you through a car window, chances are, you're going to come out.of this movie feeling a lot dif- ferent. Though it might seem like a pointless excursion, watching "Jurassic Park 3-D" is truly a magi- calexperience. Rightfromthefirst scene, viewers are guaranteed to shed their reservations and will ultimately allow themselves to enjoy the movie that thrilled them as ayounger audience. Yes, the film can be seen any- where else for free and yes, it is the exact same film ... but that's what makes the experience so special. The same story is still so captivating and the brilliant CGI effects still hold up to this date. However, the most endearing quality about this film is the sense of joy and excitement you get as the gates of "Jurassic Park" swing open and Ian Malcolm remarks, "What have they got in there, King Kong?" That is truly a priceless feel- ing. So, go ahead, give yourself a chance to enjoy what you did as a child; you won't regret it. Embrace the experience like never before; just take one word of advice: "Hold on to your butts." By KELLY ETZ Daily Arts Writer As atired NBC strains to makeit to finale week - steadfastly drag- ging its repeated flops, from "Do No Harm" to the rapidly dwin- ' dling "Smash" - viewers are Hannibal continually left Thursdays disenchanted. When the new at 10 p.m. prequel series NBC "Hannibal" was announced, the initial hype was optimistic, but as Greenblatt and Co. prove time and again, the network can't be trust- ed. Sure, the series boasts incred- ible acting chops, but how much more can be picked off the carcass of the Hannibal legacy? As a new spin, the series will take place before the events of* the 1981 novel "Red Dragon." In "Hannibal," the renowned psy- chiatrist Hannibal Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen, "Clash of the Titans") hasn't been caught, and the FBI unwittingly seeks his counsel in profiling various serial killers. The series will focus on the relation- ship between Lecter and Will Gra- ham (Hugh Dancy, "The Big C"), an FBI profiler. At first blush, "Hannibal" ful- fills expectations stunningly. The visual world it creates is darkly riv- eting - a delicate balance struck between the morbid and the artis- tic. The overall tone is just off-put- ting enough to arouse unease until the bod young'w antlers: blood. Bryan dizzying "Pushin vate wh FBI pro of the of hoist motion tension- intensif ity. The tive kee prey to heighte Do: After geously crafts fo bit. Lik constan show al somethi thing. Conv most ob banking edge of a-cannil much w A, tete and Le scrambl ies are revealed, invariably with intended symbolism. "I don't romen, shorn through with find you that interesting," Gra- and drippingclaret-colored ham says. "You will," is Lecter's counter. Besides straining to hear n Fuller, known for the anything behind Mikkelsen's g Technicolor splendor of thick accent and habit of dramatic ig Daises," manages to ele- murmuring, the whole conversa- at could have beenaroutine tion is tiresome and overdone. If cedural into a masterpiece this relationship is the supposed macabre. Panning shots foundation of the series, the writ- ed bodies, intricate slow- ers have alongwayto go. reversals and a stealthy, At least the campy dialogue inducing soundtrack all doesn't stifle the actors too badly. y the dreamlike qual- Though it may be hard for sea- slowly unfolding narra- soned Hannibal fans to separate ps "Hannibal" from falling this Graham and Lecter from simple shock factor and those found in "Red Dragon," the ns every chilling detail. majority of the acting is superb. Dancy plays a mesmeric Will Graham, awkwardly brilliant and ? intensely tormented (the series n t m ess this labels his condition as "pure up NBC. empathy"), ,while Mikkelsen's version of Lecter is intriguingly divorced from Anthony Hop- kins's Oscar-winning portrayal. r viewers get past the gor- There is the sense that this is a grotesque scenery Fuller Lecter not yet fully given over to or them, the pilot falters a his darker ambitions; he is in com- e the dubious meat Lecter plete control, the psychotic ele- tly dishes up, leave the ment pleasantly suppressed under little too long and there's neat three-piece suits. ing off about the whole With a prime time slot and an ,above average pilot, "Hanni- oluted dialogue is the bal" might just be NBC's Hail vious problem. The series, Mary pass. But what looks like an g on prior viewer knowl- unqualified success one week can f the whole Hannibal-is- plummet in ratings the next. If bal business, infuses too "Hannibal" is shaping up to be as reight behind every word. well executed (and not just visu- a-tete between Graham ally) as "Pushing Daises," then its cter . over mystery meat biggest threat is imminent cancel- le is practically dripping lation. Anne Carson follows up novel with masterful sequel By MAX RADWIN Daily Arts Writer More than any other living writer, Anne Carson thrusts against the confines of genre, language and poetic conven- A tion, generat- ing something Red DoC> that, however dne ad Anne Carson dense and difficult, is Knopf spectacularly thought-pro- voking. "Red Doc>," a sequel to "Autobiography of Red," is yet another example of Carson's supreme ability to incinerate literary preconceptions and, out of their ashes, produce a mas- terful piece of writing. In Greek mythology, Herak- les's 10th labor was to capture the cattle of Geryon, a red- winged giant. In "Autobiogra- phy of Red," Carson reimagines them as lovers - Geryon as a timid, winged photographer and Herakles as his older, heartbreaking counterpart - living in suburban America (or perhaps, considering that Car- son is from Toronto, suburban Canada). "Recently I began to wonder what happened to them in later life," Carson writes in the author's note on "Red Doc>" 's front sleeve. "To live past the end of your myth is a perilous thing." "Red Doc>" begins with Geryon - now much older and going simply by the name G - visiting his sick mother in the hospital. Later, after being hit over the head with a two-by- four, G is reunited with Her- akles, now named Sad (he has returned from the army with PTSD). They take a road trip together with a girl named Ida, where they encounter another volcano and stumble upon an ice cave containing ice bats "the gives the book an uncomfort- able sense of urgency, claustro- phobia and personality. Getting through the whole work, or even just one section, feels like coming out of a long dark tun- size of a car g they a hospit Cars thesef especi Some o ly sh less be "When stones are he refrain G's mo the be work. and co HitE esp fi In a biogra choose rectan throug At fir; space - surroui a con the bo tations "Autob will ul toasters." After a stint in nel. arage and a mental clinic, Carson has been using genre, 11 visit G's mother in the more or less, to put readers in al. the dark throughout her writ- son is at her best during ing career. But it's this not quite final scenes of the book, being able to see, this grasping ally in the last 15 pages. a hand forward for a wall or f the poems are extreme- object to hold onto for balance ort, though nonethe- but never actually regaining eautiful and perplexing: it, that makes her writing so he is there / they lift the effective. In "Red Doc>," Car- together. / The stones son tends to her words with the r lungs." The concluding care of a poet but constructs its of "Wife of Brain," after narrative with the imperfect ther has died, is maybe hand of a novelist. The resulting st passage of the entire product is disorienting at times, It's deceptively simple emotional at others, and almost uld move you to tears. always sublime. While "Autobiography of Red" - with its long lines and arson crafts plain syntax - seemed like prose on the verge of verse, it is erary magic, the poetry that wins out as the overly dominating force in "Red ecially in the Doc>." Very often, fragments of sentences stand alone without a ilnal pages. verb, without a subject or with- out providing any expository information or clear reference to plot. Every section functions stark contrast to "Auto- like a poem but is functionally phy of Red," Carson not a poem; most turn in a pow- s to pack words into tidy erful way often unseen in the gular columns that shoot prose-y "Autobiography," but h the center of the page. their individual existence fully st, it looks like unused depends on sequence and con- - all that blank whiteness text like chapters from a novel. nding the text seems like For this reason, it will be hard stant reminder of what to return to any memorable pas- ok is not, that any expec- sage in "Red Doc>" and feel the going in, having read force of its first reading. It's iography of Red" or not, kind of bittersweet, and per- timately be shattered. It haps kind of the point.