The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, November 13 2014 - 3B 'Interstellar' falls By JAMIE BIRCOLL Daily Film Editor Warning: Major spoilers for "Inception," "Interstellar" and "The Dark Knight Rises" and mild spoilersfor "ThePrestige"follow. Akshay Seth is a brilliant film writer; he is eloquent, thoughtful and can turn a phrase like no other writer I have ever met. Every other week his film column ranks among the top five most-read articles on The Michigan Daily's website. For this reason, he will be referred to as Mr. Seth for the remainder of this article, out of my respect for him. I've been discussing film with Mr. Seth for nearly two years now, and each day brings new ideas. And after reading his most recent column on Christopher Nolan and "Interstellar," I have never disagreed with him more, which is a new phenomenon for me. He writes of "Interstellar" as Nolan's self-criticism, but "Interstellar" is the exactsame shtick we've come to expect fromthe acclaimed director, and everyone knows it; it's why an animated marshmallow-like robot beathim at the box office this weekend. Nolan specializes in cerebral filmmaking-the kindoffilms that demand an active viewer. He works with concepts that possess an inherently complicated structure and can only really be made sense of after multiple viewings. These films are often advertised as such: "Interstellar" as tackling the very fabric of space-time, "Inception" as delving into the deepest recesses of the mind in an attempt to discern what is real and what is imagined, etc. That's all well and good, and I, more than most, love a challenging viewing experience, but Nolan's films so often get worked up in the "what" and the "how" that the heartofthe matterisultimatelylost. There'sareasonwhythemassesare discussingNolan'suse ofblackholes as mechanisms to warp space and time rather thanthe soulofhis film: that love transcends dimensions. Mr. Seth has addressed this as Nolan's attempt at cynical self- reference, but that's giving Nolan too much credit. Cynicism is not in Nolan's nature; he is a cold, methodical, calculating, albeit incredibly successful director (and that term "director" as applied to Nolan is sometimes a stretch), but cynical he is not. Cynicism implies skepticism and, in a way, hopelessness; Nolan's films, especially his more recent endeavors, are filled with hope, or at least theyexpect the audience to be hopeful and naturally curious, looking for answers, attempting (and failing)to figure out the puzzle that Nolanhaslaid beforethem.For Nolan, film is a magic trick, all the more fitting because back in 1895, filmwasnothingmorethanamagic trick (see "Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat"). Nolan tackled this notion directly in "The Prestige," a film about two warring magicians. Michael Caine tells us in voiceover at both the beginning and end of the film: "Every magic trick consists of three parts, or acts. The first part is called the pledge: the magician shows you something ordinary. The second act is called the turn: the magician takes the ordinarysomethingand makesinto something extraordinary. But you wouldn't clap yet because making something disappear isn't enough, you have to bringit back." Nolan is obviously the magician; his filmisthe trick, and everyfilmof his follows the exact same format, the same acts, as any good magician should. For example, in "Inception" the acts are as follows: the pledge establishestherulesofCobb'sworld, including extraction (unorthodox rules, but rules nonetheless) and his detachment after the death of his wife; the turn upends the rules by the introduction of the idea of inception and the action that follows; the prestige: Cobb's return to humanity (in the dream world or otherwise). The same logic can be applied to every other Nolan film startingwith"The Prestige' Now the pledge of each of Nolan's films tends to be the most interesting because only Christopher Nolan has the sort of intellectualpowertotakeotherwise ordinary situations and make them extraordinary, as in "Memento": a man musttrack downthe murderer of his wife (ordinary, in filmterms), except he has retrograde amnesia and loses his memory every few minutes (extraordinary). His setups are always fantastic; it's the execution of his second and third acts that always falter. The turn of a Nolan film tends to involveanextendedactionsequence or several more brief action sequences that more often than not are a cluttered assemblage of quick cuts that distract from the overall flow of the sequence and very often don't abide by the rules of physics or spatial relations (there's a great study of the car chase scene in "The DarkKnight"by JimEmmersonon this). Nolan essentiallyuses edits to distract from these discontinuous flows, and the cuts are so quick that the audience doesn't totally realize they've witnessed an illogical sequence, but their brains still -register something as off. "Memento" took this quick-utting concept and applied it to an entire film,resultingin a fragmentedstory mirroring that of our fragmented protagonist; the method can be forgivenhere because a)it'sbrilliant and b) the cuts occur so quickly and in such small segments that we try to piece the story back together instead of tackling the glaring plot holes. One cannot be so forgiving with "Interstellar" and Nolan's latter works. There's a French filmography term called mise-en-scene that, while difficult to define, essentially refers to everything before the camera and how it is arranged within the shot of the camera; so a shot can really be broken down into that which is within the frame and that which is outside of it. Nolan focuses on that which is within the frame and tends to ignore that which is outside it (thus his incredibly limited shot palette consistingofmainlymediumshots). Hegetsawaywiththisbyconstantly cutting, with shots rarely lasting longer than four or five seconds but usuallyno more thanthree seconds. Nolan ultimately amounts to an editor-writer who gets to play with the camera rather than a director. There's this other French term (last one, I promise) called mise en abyme literally "placed into abyss." It refers to a play-within-a-play or a dream-within-a-dream or dimensions-within-dimensions. It serves as a parallel to the film itself, a doubling of images. Nolan uses this quite often, whether in his entire set-up or placing his fight sequences on stage-like structures (as in"The Dark Knight Rises").It's anotherillusoryeffect, and it always plays into the third act of a Nolan film- inthe Nolan method, it'sthe thingthat makes you questionwhat you've seen. The trick with the third act, the prestige, of a Nolan film is that twist he throws onto the end of every film: Cobb remains locked in a dream; Bruce Wayne survives a nuclear explosion, etc. In "Interstellar," Coop's activities within the multiple dimensions of the black hole and reunion with his daughter serve as the prestige. We're led to believe that after the tesseract collapsed, Coop was left adrift in space - and then a fade to white, which is never a sure sign of survival for the protagonist. When Coop comes to, he looks out the window where he realizes he's on the gyroscopic space station thing from Earth, which is itself an allusion to "Inception," with it's city folded on top of itself We are left to contemplate if love or chance or intelligent design brought Coop back to his daughter or if the whole sequence was merely the final thoughts of dying man deprived of oxygen. This is supposed to be the prestige, the part where we start askingthe questions, contemplating the themes, replaying the film over again in our heads. And for the first time in a Nolan film, I truly didn't care. There's supposed to be a payoff; instead, the only part of "Interstellar" that truly blew me awaywere the breathtakingshotsof Saturn, the black holes, the massive celestial bodies. They were more magic tricks, distractions to the chunky editing, minimally fleshed- out characters, often-spotty narrative structure,etc. So Mr.Sethiscorrectinascribing "Interstellar" as Nolan's once again folding the film to his will, which admittedly he has always done. But he's done the same thing time and time again. And as a result, whether or not Mr. Seth is correct ,in establishing "Interstellar" as self-criticism proves moot because Nolan merely reworked his system, doing what he always does, the samemagictrick.Thatjustwon'tfly anymore. The last line of "The Prestige" continues that aforementioned Michael Caine voiceover, "Now you're looking for the secret. But you won't find it because, of course, you're not really looking. You don't really want to work it out ... you want to be fooled." I do want to be fooled, and that's why I see Nolan films, usually more than once - but not this time. This time, I know his secrets, his maneuvers; I saw the prestige before the turn had reached halfway; I've seen his sleight of hand, it's not fooling anyone anymore. DIA's Friday Night Live! brings interactivity to arts By PAIGE PFLEGER Daily Detroit Arts Columnist Even though Friday Night Live! happens every Friday night at the DIA, Friday Nov. 7th was an especially special one - Detroit's bankruptcy plan had just been approved by the courts, and the DIA was a star of the proceedings. "The DIA stands at the center of the city as an invaluable beacon of culture," Judge Steven Rhodes said during his ruling. "To sell the DIA art would be to forfeit the city's future." That declaration was significant in many ways: it secured the DIA's future as well as asserted that the DIA was a cultural epicenter for the city, a gem that needed to be preserved, according to Rhodes, "for the benefit of the people in the city and the state." And, after attending Friday Night Live!, it was blaringly obvious that Rhodes' statement is true. Friday Night Live! is a program that began at the DIA years ago as a way to encourage more interaction with museum-goers and the art at the DIA. The museum stays open late and boasts live music, drawing in the galleries, art-making workshops and more. If this Friday was any indication, the program is wildly popular - the DIA was packed, with people sipping drinks in the renovated Kresge Court and filling all the seats in the Rivera courtyard to listen to the night's musical guest, Huun Huur Tu, a Tuvan acoustic quartet. Huun Huur Tu was interesting for a myriad of reasons - they draw from ancient Tuvan songs and using traditional instrumentation, they incorporate 20th century inspirations to make a funky, electronic sounding music that's kind of reminiscent of the Blue Man Group, in a way. The four men sat in front of Diego Rivera's iconic mural of the Detroit auto industry, and played their traditional Tuvan music to an eclectic audience of Detroiters: there were families, couples on a date, children and elderly people. In one corner of the room, a baby girl swayed back and forth to the music, shoving raisins in her mouth and staring up at the ceiling covered in sheets of beaded crystal. It was impossible to ignore the conglomeration of cultures that were brought together under the DIA's roof. Downstairs in the African American gallery, the Drawing in the Gallery workshop was taking place. Housed in a different exhibit each week, Drawing in the Gallery supplies guests with drawing materials for free, and encourages them to take a seat at an easel and take more time to engage with a piece of art. "Want to draw?" a lady sitting at a desk asks. "It's free!" Her name is Catherine Peet, and she's an artist that runs the Drawing in the Gallery workshop for the DIA. She has a shock of grey hair and a friendly smile. "People come in and just observe the art, and pick out something that stimulates them or is interesting to them to draw, and we set it up for them," Peet said, gesturing around the gallery at the people perched on easels, sketching different statues and pictures. "And they just do their thing. We just encourage people to enjoy t they se Dra' usually from 2 can dr six un; previo requir "We explain there, years. She seated sculpt side of headpl pulled and wi perche His1 Garcia to the the DI yearsr he said starter after o how de progra see pe "It o shows That's purpo Garcia here t, what's helpin The worki - he's shade he art objects that of drop-in drawing, Garcia ee." said. It creates an entirely wing in the Gallery different interaction y brings in anywhere between museum-goers and 5 to 100 people who the art itself. op in anytime from "People actually learn to til nine to draw. No engage with the artwork in us experience is a different level than just ed to participate. going by it," he said. "When get a variety," Peet you sit down and you look at ned. "Like Ricky over it, you take into account how he's been coming for much time it took to be done, because if it takes you an gestures at a man hour to do your drawing, you in front of a wooden say how much time would it ure on the other take the artist to create that the gallery. He has piece. You start bonding with hones in, his hair is the artist." back into a ponytail Friday Night Live! offers ire-framed glasses are a drop-in drawing class d on his nose. for kids, as well as an name is Ricardo instructional workshop , and he's been coming taught by a variety of drop-in drawing at different artists in different A for more than six mediums. now, "religiously," In his book, "My Art, My d, "every Friday." He Life," Diego Rivera said, d working for the DIA "As I rode back to Detroit, :rganizers noticed a vision of Henry Ford's edicated he was to the industrial empire kept sm. passing before my eyes. In my ears, I heard the wonderful symphony which came from his factories It opens up where metals were shaped into tools for men's service. img. It shows Itwas a new music, waiting for the composer with 'ople how to genius enough to give it see communicable form." se .This music that Rivera heard inspired the mural that is the backdrop for live music on Friday nights, and opens up seeing, it the creation that this music people how to see. inspired can be seen on basically what the the easels of artists sitting se of the program is," in front of a Degas or a said. "We are not Michelangelo. o instruct or to tell you That's the beauty of the wrong or right. We are DIA, and the beauty of these g you see." Friday nights: it's proof that piece Garcia is Detroit's cultural epicenter ng on is immaculate will continue to thrive, and using a pencil to that the spirit of Detroit is in the contours of the very much alive. African statue in front of him, and every line looks meticulously thought out. That's part of the beauty Pfleger is tearing it up at Friday Night Live! To tag along, e-mail psfleg@umich.edu. TRAILER REVIEW Though it starts off inno- cently enough, "Whiplash" 's trailer quickly escalates and mim- ics whiplash itself. Andrew (Miles Teller, 'Whiplash' "The Spectac- ular Now") Nov.14 cuddles with Sony Pictures his girlfriend Classic in a diner. The mood is light as an upbeat jazz piece kicks off the start of classes at Andrew's prestigious music school. "I wanna be great," he tells his girlfriend. But then comes her fate- ful reply: "And you're not." Andrew's budding music career comes to a halt just as quickly as it was introduced. His teacher, Fletcher (J.K. Simmons, "Men, Women & Children") accuses him of rushing the beat, and the next thing you know, he's calling Andrew a worthless pansy ass and physically slapping him on the face. It's a little dramatic. Actu- ally, it's really dramatic, and therein lies doubt and hope simultaneously. Such fervent verbal and physical abuse seems unrealistic, and it runs the risk of hyperbole. Regard- less, scenes oflgut-wrenching emotional tension glimmer with promise. Director Damien Chazelle (screenwriter of "The Last Exorcism II") voiced hopes that this would play out like a thriller, and it certainly seems that way. Teller's act- ing looks incredible. His slow drum roll is interspersed with scenes of his sacrifice and hard work to improve asa musi- cian. The drums and the shots rapidly increase pace to show his frustration and grit, and your heartbeat and excitement speed up alongside it. If the film turns out to have that the same spasmodic energy, it'll shine. - VANESSA WONG In conjunction with Dead Man Walking, the School of Music, Theatre & Dance welcomes author Sister Helen Prejean, CSJ, for two events: Sally Fleming Master Class "Dead Man Walking, the Journey Continues" November 13 at 3 PM - Rackham Auditorium Free and open to the pubhlc Post-Show Discussion following the Thursday evening performance of Dead Man Walking SCHOOLAOF MUS I T H E ATRE & DANCE t