The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 25, 2413 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, November 25, 2013 - 7A 'Makawalu' to bring Hawaii to A2 Let's talk about sex Internationally renowned artists to perform By KATHLEEN DAVIS Daily Arts Writer In a practice that seamlessly intertwines the spiritual, eco- logical and visually stunning, not many cre- ative outlets Makawalu: are as complex The Concert or beautiful as native Hawai- Monday at ian music and 7 p.M. dance. After an elongat- Mendelssohn ed planning process, the Free University is hosting a two-day event to bring indigenous Hawaiian culture to Ann Arbor free to the public. Monday, the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre will host "Makawalu: The Concert," featuring internationally renowned native Hawaiian artists Kekuhi Kealiikanaka- oleohaililani and Kaumakaiwa Kanaka'ole. The mother-child duo will be making their Ann Arbor debut after several shows on the east coast. The event is spearheaded by Amy Stillman and Susan Naji- ta, who are both Asian/Pacific Islander Studies Program pro- fessors at the University. "There is, to this day, a core of native Hawaiian knowledge and cultural practices and ways of being that have persisted," Stillman said. "These two art- ists are two of the most con- summate exemplars of a truly indigenous way of being in the 21st century." Kekuhi and Kaumakaiwa's music style is a showcase of what native Hawaiian artists are about. Featuring dramatic melodies, passionate lyrics and ancient 'oli chants, Stillman and Najita are confident that the concert will be worth see- ing, even for those with little knowledge of Hawaiian culture. "You are transported into a different reality (during their concerts)," Najita said. "People go to the movies for that." Directly translated, "makawalu" means "eight eyes" and encourages people to devel- op multiple perspectives. The concert will be followed by a lecture the next morning at 10 in 3512 Haven Hall. The lecture will focus on hula as a global phenomenon and the concurrent spiritual, social, psychological and ecological impacts. "In this part of the country, there's still a lot of stereotypes and misperceptions about who native Hawaiians are as peo- ple," Stillman said. "For us to bring to campus two artists that are renowned internationally as 21st century native Hawaiians is extraordinary." The events are sponsored by a wide array of programs and indi- viduals within the University. "(Native Hawaiian culture) speaks to many different potential interlockers," Najita said. "There's a literature side of things, an American culture side of things, there's performance and a gender studies side of things." Both Stillman and Najita hope the events educate individuals who may not have much knowl- edge about Hawaiian culture. "I'd like to think that there will be a greater awareness and appre- ciation for indigenous people and indigenous heritages in the United States and locally," Stillman said. "And more attentiontothe value of indigenous knowledge to 21st cen- tury living." "Umm ... it's really geomet- ric." That's the first response featured in a Posture article asking lesbians to reevaluate sex scenes in the much- acclaimed yet con- troversial new French drama, "Blue Is the Warm- est Color." AKSHAY The next SETH bit of analy- sis comes from an equally unsure inter- viewee, who pauses, looks at her cat, before hesitantly admitting, "I thought it was hot at the beginning, and then it got kind of ridiculous when they started switching sex positions every five seconds. It made it look like an infomercial for a kitchen product where they're trying to showcase all the things it can do." It's an interesting analogy that, in more direct terms, harkens back to a classic cri- tique of most sloppily executed love-making scenes: They're a cursory way of fast-forwarding through intimacy. By mash- ing together a weird potpourri of shots, usually lacking any guiding context, the scenes become oddly detached from the subject matter they look to examine. And there's the catch - something as intensely inti- mate as porking on the kitchen counter shouldn't stick out like gym-short boners in films generally defined by their strict adherence to structure. Don't blow a gasket, love-story aficionados. Every movie is still a beautiful and unique snowflake, and though I'm not saying cinema designed to tug at the heartstrings is all the same, it's hard to deny the fact that most real-world depiction of doe-eyed love waltzes to a similar tune: initial sparks ser- enaded by lustful discussions of the future, ultimately cul- minating in reconsiderations stemming from far-fetched prospects of commitment. Given "Blue" 's three-hour runtime, it's an interesting choice by director Abdellatif Kechiche - who invests 10 minutes in his longest uninter- rupted sex scene - to shoot his schtiiping leading ladies in a format completely at odds with the rest of the movie. This film, unlike so many recent love stories, is about inter- mittence. The boring, forced moments in which Keniche makes us stare into Adele's expressionless face as it sucks on spaghetti are meant to be lead-ins - lead-ins toward raw emotion that never seems to surface in the film's sweaty displays of bodies smacking against each other. Keniche builds close to an hour of tedium around his protagonist's first sexual encounter with a woman. Intermittently, he sprinkles more time between each following encounter. Inter- mittently, he decreases the length of those encounters. And intermittently, he dilutes the emotional weight of what those encounters signify, until finally, they're blan- keted by irrelevance. There's never any meaningful fore- play, just uncomfortable talks about the future and vague attempts to hide the relation- ship. Doing this throws the relationship, in the eyes of the audience, into limbo - the protagonists are just holding onto each other for the sake of sex. It's a simple yet effective way to look at the decom- position of love, and indeed, Keniche succeeds in convinc- ingly picking apart the implied interdependence of his two protagonists by the time the credits roll. Still, it's the sex scenes that stick with you when you walk out the door. And they stick with you for the wrong reasons. In every illustration of inti- macy, Keniche pulls us back from the frame and presents his subjects with a noticeable objectivity reeking of a lack of understanding. He follows sce and be tion in edging of unn and ga ing org togeth close u wring dor fro screen, Postur is like pornoc the Val Freem Uns scene t functo one to' the fil a fram the "pa that's 1 Ratl uncont film, t] scenes objecti close-s frame examp in fem movies male it straigh treatm endo o autifies every palpita- there will be inherent differ- their writhing bodies, ences in how the sex scenes each shot with thwaps are approached. Neverthe- ecessary butt-spanking less, the brilliance of director sps of breathy, moan- Derek Cianfrance is evident asms. Keniche splices in how accurately he's able to er multiple angles and showcase the skidding rela- ps in an attempt to tionship using the bedroom as some unearthly splen- a tool, not a consequence. m what's unfolding on He does it by setting up , but the effect, as that two scenes, both geared to e interviewee describes, identical portrayals of cun- watching an odd lesbian nilingus, almost immediately documentary ("Beyond after one another. The first g-hole with Morgan scene, fixed around the time an"). the marriage is already beyond urprisingly, the only sex repair, shows an uninterested, hat doesn't feel per- sad Michelle Williams simply ry is the heterosexual going through the motions, ward the beginning of thinking about the first time m that Keniche sets as she received oral sex from her e of reference for all husband. Cianfrance uses that assionate" love-making transition to jump back into to follow. the past, where he's able to her than inject a raw, give us a peek at a healthier trollable lust into the stage in their relationship he majority of the through their more passionate do nothing more than love-making. ify. The slow, panning It works because the sex ups over Adele's arched scenes aren't detached from are comically obvious the format the rest of the film les of male gaze, an idea follows, letting the mirrored inist film theory that framework create a feeling of s directed by a straight authenticity. nadvertently cater to a A lesbian film that presents it male audience in their sex in a similarly sincere light ent of sex, sexual innu- is "The Watermelon Woman," r female bodies. written and directed by les- bian filmmaker Cheryl Dunye. The movie highlights the aspiring director's (Dunye, gaze playing herself) attempt to makes sex make a documentary about a Black actress from the '30s and nes in 'Blue' '40s who frequently portrayed a "mammy" figure, only going too blue. by the credit of Watermelon Woman. An intriguing examination of racism and sexism's habit t of the love-making of reverberating down gen- ie" is presented in a erations, the film reveals that that's likely to keep the titular character, a les- it men in the cinema bian woman struggling to tell ued to their seats. Even her story in an environment intention is tertiary, it's drowned out by the major- t the moment Keniche ity voice, is an extension of s to spend upwards of Dunye. The themes are heavy, onds plastering the cam- serious examinations of race Adele's breasts while and gender politics, but the sturbates. These shots reason I'm talking about it in hing more than put the this column has to do with body on a pedestal how casually the film treats ng high above normalcy, sex despite its weighty agenda. vorshipped and valued Sex, more so than in any of aesthetic appeal. In the the movies I've spoken about, t of lesbian sex, the only just happens. Romances spring 'Blue" is able to accom- up around it, but the blas s distance it from "nor- manner in which sex is simply ," hetero-relationships a natural consequence of life is takeaway becomes "look reminiscent of films featuring tense those orgasms solely heterosexual relation- ships. he film's warped view, There's a natural simplic- n sex is something to be ity in letting that figurative d toward, not something gap between hetero and homo mal as everyday life, as close - a simplicity "Blue" sexual schnooking. never manages to echo. It's ugh it's not a perfect still a moving example of love's rison, a film that treats boundlessness. If only I could nestly enough to show say the same for sex. Mos in "Blu format straigh hall gh if that eviden decide 10 sec era to) she ma do not] female standi to be w for its contex thing' plish i mative - the t how in are!" In ti lesbiai aspire: as norr hetero Tho compa sex ho it fall: "Blue' wrong is abou FOx The male gaze. 'Human' delivers on story despite lack of innovation By ALEC STERN Daily Arts Writer Amid the surplus of failing programs currently airing on FOX, from "The Mindy Project" to "Dads" to "The X Factor," the network's Monday night Almost has become a Human steady threat to behemoth Pilot Monday com- panion "The atndaysM Voice" and the more modestly FOX rated CBS sit- coms. Its lat- est offering, "Almost Human," hopes to continue FOX's good fortune on the night and become a much-needed hit for the network. From J.J. Abrams's appropriately titled Bad Robot Productions, the series is a futuristic procedural, pairing human cops with robot part- ners. Though far from ground- breaking television, "Almost Human" is a strong sci-fi entry that should pair well with fresh- man success, "Sleepy Hollow." In the year 2048, when the crime rate skyrockets by 400 percent, all law enforcement agents must be paired with an android - extremely life-like, highly efficient robot officers, devoid of any human emotions. This proves to be a struggle for Detective John Kennex (Karl Urban, "Dredd"), a rough and tough officer who is less than cooperative with his futuris- tic con Captai Taylor Kenne Ealy," a lineo that w the ne' emotio if you day Ni AgentI A se though the ba acher's "Almos Anders tion, r on the the las cycles, ers anc explan much. ing te appare ing the Focus! look fo Nev a fl for, It g "Almos simply the ma before, workers. For this reason, "Almost Human" is equal parts n Sandra Maldonado (Lili "Total Recall," "A.I. Artificial "The Conjuring") pairs Intelligence" and "I, Robot." For x with Dorian (Michael a minute, the series also goes Californication"), part of full "Saw" during the search if recalled android models and rescue of a fellow agent. As ere "made to feel." Unlike Kennex looks up at the surveil- w models, Dorian is full of lance camera in the corner of n - he's almost human, the room, you can almost hear will. Minka Kelly ("Fri- Tobin Bell eerily deliver Jig- ght Lights") also stars as saw's catchphrase, "I want to Valerie Stahl. play a game." ries 35 years in the future, Originality issues aside, for some reason set in "Almost Human" is a fun show, ickdrop of Joel Schum- striking the right balance campy, 1990s Gotham, between good action, good act- st Human" features Brad ing and snarky humor. Urban son's heavy-handed direc- and Kelly make great leads, but epeatedly over-delivering it's Ealy who steals the show as futuristic imagery. With the re-commissioned android er guns, hovering motor- partner. He plays the part with LED-infused toilet flush- great nuance, delivering a stand- d introductory narrative out performance that can only ation, it's all a bit too be described as almost human. And despite all this amaz- The episode also ends shortly chnology, in the future, after a thrilling climax, teasing ntly we will still be driv- the audience to come back for e fully loaded 2014 Ford more. So that's something to The bottom line: The pilot rward to. episode of "Almost Human" is a good hour of television, perfect- ly on-brand for the network that SFOX lot' brought viewers the short-lived FW X pl s "Terra Nova," the underappreci- in but easily ated "Alcatraz" and, of course, "24." However, in the year 2048, gotten sCi-fi. will people remember anything about "Almost Human?" For a series lacking much original- ity or substance, it's hard to oes without saying that believe the answer is yes. But as st Human" is a story that for 2013, it's definitely an enjoy- does not exist without able ride - one that should get a ny sci-fi films that came passing grade from most fans of , both good and bad. sci-fi television. apart organically is Valentine." Don't get me - I get that this movie it a hetero marriage, so Seth is smashing the male gaze. To assist, e-mail akse@umich.edu. t