M ARTS Page 10 Sunday, June 17, 1984 The Michigan Daily 'Beat Street' takes a wrong turn By Phillip K. Lawes uite a bit of hype preceeded the release of Beat Street. By all accounts, producer Harry Belafonte went into the film with the noblest of in- tentions. In addition to being exciting and entertaining, we were told, the film would go beyond just showing break dancing, to exposing the culture and the sociological realities of the South Bronx. It was ,a labor of love for Belafonte, not just a film project. Social relevance and top-flight enter- tainment are a rather tall order for one film, even under the best of circum- stances. Beat Street doesn't seem to have been blessed with the best of cir- cumstances, so the results do not live up to the expectations generated by the film's hype. In spite of the producer's lofty inten- tions (and in large part it seems, because of them), Beat Street is an ab- solute mess. Virtually everything that could have been done wrong on this. picture was done wrong. Rather than a plot, we are presented with a mass of plot strands and story ideas which pop up without warning, iDVIDUAL TEATR~fl ve ofle61r71-97 DALY 1:00 P.M. SHOW $2.00 1 WEEK RETURN ENGAGEMENTI "A SPECTACULAR FUSION OF GE AND SOUND" -Newsday "RICH IN IDEAS AND OVER- POWERING BEAUTY" -Gene Siskei and none of which are carried through the length of the picture. Instead of characters wer are given character types - aspiring artists, the worried mother, the street hustler, etc. These basic character types are credible in the environment on which the film focuses, but none of them are developed into people. We are given quantity as a poor substitute for quality. Stan Lathan's direction is, at best, run-of-the-mill, generally missing the visual and emotional possibilities of the events in the film. In addition, the editing is simply awful. It is difficult to believe that you are watching a major studio release when the scenes begin and end as abruptly as they do here. At the very least, they largely avoided the temptation to get avant-garde in editing the dance scenes, thus allowing the dancing to stand on its own. The filmmakers make their crucial mistake in their heavy-handed pursuit of some form of social relevance. The fault is not necessarily in the goal, but in the technique used to get to it. Lathan doesn't hesitate to cut form whatever action is in progress to show some panoramic shot of the ghetto. These shots elbow you in the ribs and tell you "Things are really rough here." However, the South Bronx speaks eloquently of its own grimness. There is no need to chop up the movie to point that out to us. From time to time, the characters also tell us how tough things are. Kenny (Guy Davis) speaks of his older brother, killed in a gang fight. That is certainly plausible - violent death is not exactly unheard-of in the South Bronx. The problem is that we've heard that before, in a thousand other movies. When a sketchily written character starts delivering cliches the film star- ts looking silly. That happens a lot in Beat Street. The film's excesses and incompeten- 764-0558 0 Despite an honest attempt, Harry Belafonte failed to motivate these break dancers in his new produciton, 'Beat Street,' a tepid story about youth gangs in the South Bronx. ces usually trivialize whatever serious Beat Street works best when it gives content the filmmakers may have been you something to look at - Rae Dawn trying to deliver. For example, when Chong, (Quest for Fire), for example, Ramo (Jon Chardiet), a young grafitti who isn't given much to do, or the dan- artist defends his subway murals (lots cing, of which there isn't nearly of people call them acts of vandalism, enough. he calls them art), he ends up sounding Harry Belafonte's good intentions laughable, since his lines are overwrit- have been betrayed but Beat Street is ten, and his acting skills are weak to worth seeing for its sporadic demon- begin with. strations of spectacular break dancing. Joe's opens up its stage for charity . SUN. 1:05, 3:05, 5:05, 7:05, 9:05 MON. 1:0:00, 9:05 "A PURE DELIGHT" -The DetritNews "THE FUNNIEST FRENCH FILM SINCE 'LA CAGE AUX FOLLES' AND A LOT BROADER IN ITS APPEAL" --Newhouse Newspapers PIERRE GERARD RKHARD DEPARDIEU A film by FRANCIS VEBER SUN. 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:20 MON. 1:00, 7:20, 9:20 Whether you want to help the Medieval Festival kick off its fund raising campaign, or whether you just want to have a plain old good time, Joe's Star Lounge will be the place for you this Sunday, June 17. The action begins at 8 p.m. with a dinner buffet and an open mike. An open mike is an invitation to anyone in the audience who wants to sing a song, strum a melody, or just tell a joke. At 9: p.m., such well known Ann Arbor folk singers as Michael Smith, Jay Stielstra, Sally Horvath, Kevin Lynch, and David Menefee and Cheryl Dawdy will take over the mike and provide some live folk entertain- ment. After 10 p.m., there will be dan- cing to the music of What If Thinking, a Detroit area rock band. For those coming to dance to What If Thinking, a $3 cover will be charged at the door. For those who are in- terested in the entire evening, which includes the buffet, the folk music, and the dancing, tickets may be pur- chased for $5 at the Performance Network, 408 W. Washington, in Ann Arbor. Joe's Star Lounge is located at 109 N. Main St., Ann Arbor. The Ann Arbor Medieval Festival is a fair that runs the first two weekends of August each year. The festival has a medieval theme and includes music, theater, dance, and crafts from the Middle Ages. The fair, which is free to all, is held outdoors in the Ann Arbor city parks and at the University's School of Music. This year will mark the fifteenth consecutive summer that the Medieval Festival has taken place. The Festival is primarily financed by private and business donations. So if you want to help keep the Medieval Festival tradition strong in Ann Ar- bor, show your support by having a good time at Joe's Star Lounge on Sunday night. -Jeff Frooman 01