The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 3, 2014 - 5 Burlesque comes back to Michigan ' FOX Ilam the danter.' Teopid 'Gracepoint' FO ri Re televi try t from origin wasai andju like lived "Viva Other way out o turn the l Offic episoc ten e which reinv or se more "Gr the I and in th Grac Dann Davit from Gunn detec X's 'Broadchurch' investigatingthe crime. There's a lot that's worth 'emake fine but celebrating in "Gracepoint." The show features a vast cast of unnecessary interesting characters who fill out the small.town. Each member By ALEXINTNER of the ensemble, which includes DailyArts Writer a grumbling and heartbreaking performance from Nick Nolte makes are tricky beasts. In ("Luck") in the David Bradley sion, some of them don't role and an eerie performance o advance from Jacki Weaver ("Silver what the Linings Playbook"), brings their nal series character to life in a way that imingto do Gracepont makes each of them pop in the ustsitthere, proper moment. The show nails the short- Thursdays what it's like to live in a small remake of at 9 p.m. town where everyone knows Laughlin." FOX everyone. The show's locations rs find a are also highlights. Shot in to break British Columbia, standing in f the original's model and for California, the locations the into something great, like show uses are gorgeous and the ong-running comedy "The directors work to make sure that e." After seeing seven they feature in each shot in those des out of "Gracepoint" 's scenes. pisode run, it's still unclear Ultimately, the best aspects h path it will follow, either of the show are Tennant and teting the original's idea Gunn. Tennant, despite being ttling for something much saddled with an unfortunate generic. American accent, gives a great racepoint," is a remake of performance. And, like Olivia TV drama "Broadchurch," Colman in "Broadchurch," focuses on what happens Gunn is the beating heart of he small beach town of "Gracepoint." As she grows into epoint when 12 year old the role, she gives an increasingly :y Solano turns up dead. heartbreaking performance. d Tennant (reprisinghis role Their relationship starts out with "Broadchurch") and Anna tension between the characters ("Breaking Bad") play the but as their friendship evolves, tives who are taske4 wita their scenes become the best parts of the show. The big issue, however, is that "Gracepoint" is too similar tothe alreadyexcellent"Broadchurch." Everything great about the show is something that the British version did just as well, if not better. After seeing "Broadchurch," every twist and turn in the first half of the series seems familiar instead of surprising. According to former FOXChairmanofEntertainment Kevin Reilly, the ending will be different, and the show starts to hint at differences in episode seven. But that doesn't stop the first half from feeling like a less- subtle version of "Broadchurch" or help the fact that Tennant is giving a performance that's nearly identical to his in the British version. The accent is different but a lot of the quirks and characteristics are the same. It's really unfortunate that's the case, because on its own "Gracepoint" is actually quite good. However, given "Broadchurch" 's recent run, which hits a lot of the same points in a much more subtle fashion, it's hard to give a full recommendation to "Gracepoint." That may change at the end of the season with the different ending, but for now, "Gracepoint" can't be given all the credit it might otherwise deserve - and stays firmly in the shadow of the original. ByKATHLEEN DAVIS DailyArts Writer Striking a balance between beauty and strength is difficult, and one that in many ways defines the feminine experience. This balancing act is explored in a unique way during shows like "Pick a Card: A Burlesque Exploration of Tarot," spearheaded by Ann Arbor native and burlesque dancer Elizabeth Lottman. A 16-act burlesque variety show and multimedia experience, the event brought together a multitude of national and international performers in a one-night exploration of the mysticism of occult tarot cards. Lottman, who performs under the pseudonym Gala Delicious, is a student at Eastern Michigan University who has been performing burlesque in Ann Arbor for about four and a half years. She previously performed with Ann Arbor-based burlesque troupe Tickled Fancy until its recent disintegration. Lottman has been a dancer her whole life, attending Ann Arbor Community High School's program Dance Body Company, where she dedicated three hours a day, five days a week to classical dance. It was during this time that Lottman's Dance Body teacher urged her to begin choreographing her own dances. After graduating from Community and losing the opportunity to dance on such an intensive level, she felt the need to get back into dancing as part of her creative outlet. A friend and MC at Tickled Fancy suggested she come to a show and possibly consider tryouts later that week. After sitting thrdugh a performarnce, Lottman .,said she was overwhelmed by the need she felt to try burlesque herself. "I've always been a little audacious, and I've always pushed boundaries, and I've also been interested in exploring what it meant to be a woman and what I was allowed to do as a woman," Lottman said. "In high school that's a really skewed and messed up perspective that's put on you, so I saw (burlesque) and ran with it." Through Tickled Fancy, Lottman formed a solid group of dancer friends and formed the basis for the performers appearing in "Pick a Card." In conceptualizing the show, Lottman had her heart set on two things: a burlesque show involving tarot and the to be communicating about Michigan Theater as its venue. it for a long time. This show After consulting with her is performers from all over co-producer, Lottman picked coming together for a common up the phone and booked the goal." date immediately. Lottman notes that thi.s "I thought, 'You know what? "long time" had been a This is going to be a really big collaborative communication test of everything, but I want and development since to do it,' " Lottman said. "I January, with Lottman and was just trying to put together her team, plus the performers, what was actually preventing communicating via email, me from doing this? And the text messages and Google only thing I could come up Hangout sessions due to the with was money. And if we geographic distances between can put this together and find everyone involved in ""Pick the money we need, I know at a Card." Lottman also notes least someone wants to see the that burlesque is an art that show." cannot fully support a person, save Roxi D'Lite, so everyone involved was working ik Cbetween heavy work or school C r schedules. featured 16-act Lottman . wants people to know that burlesque is variety show not all feathers, fans and gowns, and "nothing like that terrible movie with Cher and Christina Aguilera." None of With the help of two the performances in "Pick a friends, Lottman decided to Card" are considered truly start a Kickstarter campaign traditional style burlesque, to fund "Pick a Card." Their but rather neo-burlesque. first attempt failed, falling Neo-burlesque, largely made $1,000 short of their goal, but a famous by artist Dita von revamped campaign raised the Teese, focuses more on self- funds before deadline. expression of the dancer rather The performers of "Pick than the sexual gratification of a Card" come from varying the audience. experience in burlesque, from a "Sometimes, burlesque is formerbellydancer - for whom an intimidating form of art on last Friday night's performance paper, for women especially, will mark her second burlesque but I know for a fact that show - to Roxi D'Lite, Miss everyone in this show comes Exotic World 2010 (the most from a very strong, feminist prestigious award in the world perspective," Lottman said. of burlesque). Many of the "This is reclaiming my body, dancers are Michigan-based, this is also sharing what a and nearly all come from different form of beauty is. classical dance backgrounds. It's so much more than really For each of the 16 acts in talented people stripping." "Pick a Card," the performer "A lot of (the dancers) bring or performers of the act chose a really deep passion for one occult tarot card they women and magic," Lottman want to repredetic during their' added: "The two dombhied are piece, with complete creative what this show is about. It's a freedom. Due to financial force offemininity from every constraints, the sets of the angle as well as a chance to show remained relatively daydream about magic." simple but the costumes could An incredibly important be as elaborate or as simple as aspect of "Pick a Card" was needed. the ability for Lottman to Lottman notes that the bring burlesque bak to the performer's geographical Michigan Theater. diversity set "Pick a Card" "A lot of people don't know apart from other burlesque what modern burlesque is, shows. This diverse coming and we (the "Pick a Card" together typically only occurs organizers) come from a in festival settings, which are very historical perspective. based on a panel choosing The Michigan Theater was a handful of best acts out originally built as a vaudeville of hundreds, with minimal theater which went hand communication between in hand with burlesque, but performers and organizers. we're the first large scale, "I wanted this show to be a multi-performer production. collaborative effort between There's a really strong feeling all the performers, and I of bringing burlesque back to wanted all the performers the Michigan Theater." 'BoxtrollIs' del ights ByNOAH COHEN heroics). All of these, cobbled DailyArts Writer into a functional package of cute A boy (Isaac Hempstead- Wright, "Game of Thrones") grows up thinking he's a boxtroll, living underground in the madcap boxtroll grotto. The Thanks to coincidence, BXtrolls the daughter At Rave and of a Victorian Quality16 aristocrat (Elie Fanning, Laika "Maleficent") finds him aboveground and, a la "Titanic," teaches him how to pass for a boy from the upper crust of Cheesebridge. The two of them form a bond and shenanigans ensue. Their friendship, put to the test by the conniving atrocities of Archibald Snatcher, changes their respective ways of life. The power of the claymation as a medium and the synergetic creativity of co-directors Graham Annable and Anthony Stacchi, make this movie unique, weird and exciting. Think "Wallace and Grommit," but less inexplicably creepy. Eggs, the human boy who grows up as a boxtroll, is your everyboy. He and his composite, Winnie, aren't very interesting in and of themselves, but the world of the movie is like a dirty, dystopian Hogwarts. Totally enchanting. The plot, though warm and easy as a standalone, is chock full of higher-order jokes for adult viewers. The dramatic arc feels like a jamboree of crowd favorites: there are hints of "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," "Hercules" and "Tarzan" (where do I belong?); handsome dollops of"The Lion King" and "Tangled" (important child lost until adulthood, reclaims supremacy with help from friends); and even minor brushes with "Ratatouille," "Despicable Me" and "Frozen," (pint-size quasi- humans performing communal nonsense. It's fun to pick apart the borrowed bits, but even without intentional deconstruction, the morals of the story are very clear and unsullied by reuse. Putting the community before the pleasures of the aristocracy is Good and self-indulgence at the expense of the townspeople is Bad. The moral dichotomy is lampshaded by the Bad Guys themselves, who say at one point, "...they're running from us because they're the Bad guys and we're the Good guys!" This is a joke written for an adult that a child can laugh at. Well done; it's Calvin & Hobbes-ian, and that's high praise. In this definitely-a-children's- movie, there are so many symbols, political allegories and philosophical asides that I, in my pretentious, twenty- two-year-old glory, felt like an included audience member. The screenplay occasionally slips in words like "dichotomy" and the old-school cartoons are clever and referentially detailed. For example: the swelling of the lips of the Bad Guys? That's probably an allusion to gout, the "rich man's disease"; in the Victorian era, people mistakenly thought that too rich a diet led to tissue inflammation. And the white hat? A snarky poke at the idiom "to don the white hat," a saying indicating the wearer assumes the role of Righteousness. In the case of"The Boxtrolls," the white hat is a symbol of aristocratic power, and to the upper crust of Cheesebridge, "might is right." The white hat, in Boxtrolls, is the golden idol serving as a grail for the antagonists while the protagonists , pursue greater, community-oriented dreams. Why boxes? It's unclear. The most central symbol of the movie is the most difficult to unravel. We imagine it has something to do with class and Eggs' dubious self-identification, which makes a cute subplot, but maybe it's not a childish question. Maybe we each need to decide for ourselves what our "box" is, in our own lives, and then, after deciding that, decide whether or not to take it off. This movie provides us with sweet, easy answers and endings, but on the sly, offers some very complex and difficult questions. Not an extraordinary movie, but a curious one. You won't care for the plot, but you'll remember how you felt when Eggs licked the fat lady's wrist. 1 }ea 4 AL1IK N H GERALDR. FORD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY LAIKA UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN w * Life is likea box of trolls. It's creepy as fuck. A & i IV I