The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 19, 2013 - 7 FINE ARTS COLUMN Night on the Dnepr is worth the search CINEDIGM There is no spoon. Young actors shine in 'Short Term 12' Cretton captures It fills him and the audience with trepidation - what goes on inside long-term those doors? The world within Short Term suffering of youth 12 is filmed with incredible ten- derness; warmth pervades the By KAREN YUAN entire movie. The first look inside Daily Arts Writer the building is a montage of chil- dren, and it feels as if we're spy- "Short Term 12" has a happy ing on something private, as if ending. This isn't a spoiler: You we're rifling through a stranger's can tell from the start. Set at childhood diary. Through door- a foster care ways, we watch each room's facility, the A inhabitants wake up: A girl sits movie revolves at a bathtub, slowly shaving her around Grace Short leg; a tall teen sprinkles food into (Brie Larson, a fishbowl, watching it intently; a "Don Jon"), tiny boy with red hair lies curled the hardened At the up and facing the wall. yet maternal Michigan Earlier, Grace finds out from 20-something her doctor that she's pregnant. supervisor and Cinedigm This is not good news; she sched- her relation- ules an abortion immediately, ships with the even though her interactions kids she cares for and her fellow with the kids tell the audience supervisor and boyfriend Mason she should keep the baby. (John Gallagher Jr., "Margaret"). Larson stands out in this con- The film opens with new- flicted role, but the child actors comer Nate (Rami Malek, "The are the film's silver lining. Jayden Master") arriving for his first (Kaitlyn Dever, "The Spectacu- day of work at the facility, Short lar Now") is at once caustic and Term 12, named for the year-long vulnerable, and ultimately the period the children officially one to reconcile Grace with her stay for, though many stay much pregnancy. Marcus is all wound- longer. Standing outside the up tension and dark brooding, building with Grace and Mason, played by Keith Stanfield in his Nate's told to lose his tie and to break-out role. remember to say "no" to the kids. Stanfield is an unexpected gem. In one scene, he expresses his hurt to Mason through a rap written by the actor him- self, which makes it all the more impressive and a unique contend- er for Best Original Song at the Oscars. It's raw, emotional and expletive-heavy, with the camera slowly edging toward his eyes. It's also the first take shot for the scene. Director Destin Cretton ("I Am Not a Hipster") adds montage after montage of the characters doing small, mundane activities that never actually grow tire- some. Time passes. The vignettes are parentheses of quiet in the terrible lives the characters have endured. The cinematography, with its washed-out primary col- ors, is gorgeous. Then, there are moments of pure catharsis. Grace and Jayden vandalize the car of the latter's abusive father together. The red- haired kid from earlier, Sammy (newcomer Alex Calloway), breaks out of the building again and again to flee past its gate. Each time, he hollers joyously, and each time he lets himself get tackled by the supervisors pursu- ing him. The message is a little cheesy: People heal each other. But we embrace these movies with bleeding hearts because it's true. he first time I saw Kuindzhi's Night on the Dnepr, I was 10 and had just landed a few days prior in a snowy St. Petersburg airport, a week before Christmas. It was the first time I W had seen the Russian city under a blan- ket of frost. I had spent ANNA summer SADOVSKAYA after sum- mer walk- ing up and down the banks of the Neva River, watching tour groups ushered on and off cruise liners, but I had never seen the water so cold and dark. That day we were running late as always, and while my mother tried (to little avail) stuffing my 5-year-old brother into a snowsuit, my grandma read us the history of St. Petersburg's largest collection of fine Russian art: The State Russian Museum. I was highly skeptical when my grandmother promised me it would be one of the most exciting days of my life. Filled with a decade's worth of angst, I moped and pleaded to go back to the circus instead. I had vis- ited St. Petersburg three times before, always for a couple months at a time, yet, somehow, I managed to evade the Russian Museum until my 10th birth- day, something my grandmoth- er was astounded to learn. Soon, we were climbing from the depths of the bustling metro station, battling a gust of wind. Already exhausted from the grueling 15-minute ride, I began making up reasons why the Russian Museum was a huge mistake. Seeing as I felt myself a con- noisseur of the city and had never visited the infamous arts center, the tim how co would I to barri of the g storm o and gra hear m well-fo ued on1 brighty distanc I pre away in partake um hau the sec welcom I decid' within vased w do b Thef exactly ings of empero graced elry wi light. T the str painter all stoo unimpr Bidin for a se my way adornec scapes; Already nearlyn Its p ed only rays, m, and unl colored it was simply not worth pick out shapes within the still- e. Also, considering ness of its night, but only cobbled ld and snowy it was, we cabins and a glowing river took probably end up having form. The light looked so soft. icade ourselves in one It looked so dimly bright that I alleries, waiting out the wanted to run to the next con- vernight. My mother venience store and recreate the andmother pretended to priceless work with a 15-ruble e out as I presented my paint set. unded case and contin- The painting, in all honesty, their way toward the is not the most stirring use of yellow building in the technique; it doesn't possess e. intricate details or the whimsical pared to sit the time imagination of its artist, yet it's zthe lobby, refusing to still unlike any I've seen. Kuin- e in the day-long muse- dzhi's paintbrush has created :l. Somehow, though, something so masterful it ended urity guards were less up ina world-renowned museum wing than the cold, so and something simple enough to ed to find a safer seat interest a cold and grumpy little the confines of the can- kid. Halls. It's surprising: As much as the history of art interests me, I rarely become attached to a certain painter or his work. I prefer to revel in the collective )flt have to beauty of fine art, to experience firsthand the hypnotic effect of a e flashy to room hushed by the presence of centuries worth of artists' lives. inspire. Whenever I stumble upon another piece of work that careens me back in time, to the December day in a nearly empty first few rooms were Russian Museum, I know that what I expected: Paint- I've found another painting wealthy lords, haughty to add to my tiny collection of rs and princesses favorites. the walls, their jew- That day, I looked for Kunid- nking in the drawn-on zhi's work in every room. My heir faces harsh with grandmother saw my piqued skes of an experienced interest and began plotting my ,the men and women full cultural immersion into d, solemn, regal. I was Russian art immediately. But for essed. me, it never was, and still isn't, g my time and searching about technicality. It's not about at to curl up in, I found finding the most talked-about into a smalle- room, one painting, the most famous art- d with beautiful land- ists. It will always be about me, and grandiose still-lives. a small girl at heart, running turning the corner, I around searching for a feeling missed the dark canvas. she got from staring at a drawing itch-black sky, highlight- of the moon. - j 1 by an eerie moon's green ade the painting new ike all the gaudy, richly compositions. I tried to Sadovskaya is painting. To critique her, e-mail asado@umich.edu. Bronson Is Bugg the new Bob? yJOSH FRAZI DailyArts Writer By HANNAH WEINER Daily Arts Writer Jake Bugg is 19. At 19, he has released two albums, neither tee- ny-hopper stuff or acoustic songs drenched in sappy love say- [3 ings. At 19, he's had two mature, Shangri La distinguished albums resign- JakeBugg ing themselves Island to a corner of rock 'n' roll. At 19, Bugg has already been com- Bugg finds his wings. pared to Bob Dylan by critics. easily be the soundtrack for girls But let's not get ahead of our- in colorful dresses, smoking ciga- selves. rettes on shag carpet. Which isn't Jake Bugg's self-titled first to say its only appeal is nostalgia; album was released in late 2012 Bugg's musical talent is utterly and, sincethen, theEnglishsinger- undeniable, especially considering songwriter has received incredible his age. critical acclaim. Jake Bugg sky- Yet, as an album, the tracks feel rocketed to No. 1 in the UK charts. less than cohesive. Bugg's sound So, where did that leave Bugg? constantly jumps from decade to Thirteen months later, for the decade. Most startling is his tran- release of Shangri La, Bugg teams sition from angsty pop-punk in up with Rick Rubin, the master- "What Doesn't KillYou"to a sound ful music producer who produced that channels gentle 1970s singer- Kanye's Yeezus and Eminem's The songwriters in "Me and You." Marshall Mathers LP 2 this year. Bugg somehow goes from, "What Funnily enough, Rubin's sound doesn't hurt / Sometimes you feel doesn't quite mesh with Bugg's you're up against the world," to original sound on his debut album, "We can wait so patiently /'Cause on which he sang profound and they won't catch you and me." It's insightful lines like, "Something's hard to tell what he's feeling or changing, changing, changing" what message he wanted to send. (sound familiar?). But Bugg's indecision seems to convey something deeper about being misunderstood. His frus- is tration comes in all shapes and Shangri L a s forms on Shangri La: lyrically in tim eless, the sophisticated love songs, soni- cally in his abrasive moments of punk-rock and even transition- ally when he just can't decide what Shangri La has a spunk and story he wants his album to tell. liveliness that his debut album Bugg's aggravation in being mis- lacked. It's rooted in a sound from understood slaps listeners in the the 1960s; the first track, "There's face, as if he's completely rejecting a Beast and We All Feed It," could the label of "East Midland's Bob So far, this has been a stellar yet problematic year for hip-hop fans. The rap landscape features artists as diverse and varied as ever.Aging, creative talents like Pusha T and Danny Brown dropped their major label debut albums. Southern rap and auto-tuned crooning converge in artists like Future and Rich Homie Quan to create an exciting subgenre. From the polarizingly JAKE creative Yeezus to the resurgent BUGG comeback of Marshall Mathers, IS LAND long-time music industry heavy- weights have returned with trium- phant comeback albums. Dylan." Despite this surge of creativity, Even despite his refusal of the tone of mainstream rap music the Dylan label, Bugg speaks to remains unfortunately similar to a generation of frustration and years past. What all of these artists misunderstandings - a genera- have in common is extremely dark, tion that has been denied their sometimes violent, often misogy- own. He's more than just Dylan; nistic content. The glorification of he's all of the Brit-rock musicians money and violence coupled with who spoke truisms to an exasper- the degradation of women has been ated youth. Among electrically a familiar trope in rap music for far charged songs, Bugg's sage words too long. Rap music has ceased to seem to delve into the poetry that be fun. inundated the songs from the Enter: Action Bronson, the most 1960s. enjoyable rapper making music A song about youthful love? today. Check. A song about lower-class Casual rap fans might recognize desperation? Check. A song about the Queens-based emcee from his the insincerity of society? Check. verse on "1 Train," the A$AP Rocky In a single album, Bugg creates an posse cut that features Bronson encyclopedia for this generation's rapping about fixing college foot- problems - even though they've ballgamesandcomparingawoman been paralleled from generation to a Chilean horse. This nonsensi- to generation. cal, off-the-cuff style is an uncon- This revival of the idea of "gen- ventional staple for Bronson, as his eration to generation" came at the stream of consciousness lyrics are right time for Bugg. And even if absurdly detailed, and often, quite he's not exploiting it, he's just a frankly, absurd. His recent col- talented, young dude with a gui- laboration mixtape with producer tar singing really graceful and Party Supplies, Blue Chips 2, is one poignant lyrics about growing up. ofthe mostengaging rap releases of That might just be enough for all the year. of us who are "one 'n' the same," Bronson is not your typical rap- feeding "a beast eating every bit of per. The son of Albanian immi- beauty." grants, the bearded, overweight And Jake Bugg, he's the one emcee is a former chef with apas- who "better speak it." sion for food and humorous anec- subverts rap tropes dotes. He draws comparisons to subject matter;his lyrics are full of Ghostface Killah for his similar chauvinistic statements, conspicu- voice, delivery and storytelling ous consumption and criminal abilities, but his ability to transport activity. The difference between listeners into his bizarre world is many mainstream rappers and unparalleled. Bronsolino, as he calls himself, is In one verse on "Flip Ya," Bron- the lighthearted nature of his lyr- son's references drift fromAladdin, ics. Bronson injects humor into to Vanna White, to "Saved by the stereotypical rap content, and his Bell," demonstrating his spontane- combination of storytelling abil- ous delivery and eccentric subject ity and his entertaining delivery matter.ActionBronson'sbeatselec- allows otherwise played-out sce- tion also setshim apart fromhis rap narios to become hilariously vivid. peers. Calling his instrumentals Bronson makes no attempt to be unusual is a dramatic understate- taken seriously by his audience, yet ment: They are downright weird. his abilities demand that hip-hop Blue Chips2 sees him sample sourc- fans respect his talent. es as diverse as John Mellencamp, Other rappers are paying atten- Allen Iverson's infamous "practice" tion. LL Cool J, Lloyd Banks and rant and aPhil Mickelson commer- Styles P are some prominent New cial, among other unlikely inspira- Yorkers who have been featured tions. Bronson's charm comes from on Bronson tracks within the last his creativity and unpredictability. year. Blue Chips 2 features guest verses from contemporary stars like Ab-Soul and Mac Miller, further Chef turned solidifying Bronson's credibility as a rapper. One guest verse on the lat- est mixtape stands out more than any other. "Rolling Thunder" prom- ised to feature a "legendary special guest," and when a Cam'ron appear- There is a certain cult of per- ance fell through, Bronson found a sonality that surrounds Action worthy replacement: himself. That's Bronson's larger-than-life persona. right, there is a track onBlue Chips2 His lyrics are so over the top, so by ActionBronson, featuringAction detached from everyday life that Bronson. The average rapper can't they create an entertaining distrac- get away with such a bold yet inane tion from the mundane. Bronson's proclamation oftalent. exaggerated storytelling is clearly His commitment to his well- embellished, yet its intense detail crafted persona is full of bragga- allows the listener to visualize docio, yet Bronson has the natural his world, creating a reality truer ability and the originality to back than the gritty portrayal of street up his boasts of greatness. Talent- life found on so many other rap ed rappers are a dime a dozen, but records. Bronson soundslike he has where Bronson shines as an artist fun in the studio, and his easygo- is in his role as an entertainer full ing demeanor and gripping stories of imagination. Action Bronson's demand the listener's attention. talent persists despite his comedic Rhymes about excessive spend- tone and constant punchlines; he ing, drug dealing and exotic women is too good tobe a joke. Anyone can are extremely common in rap vers- rap about success and women, but es today, a typical point of criticism only one man can have credibility about rap's lack of thoughtful con- while rapping about having a past tent. Bronson makes no attempt to life as a rabbi and teaching a dol- stray away from this stereotypical phin how to shoot a gun. d t