MOVIES Continued from page 6 second,astuteviewing thethought-pro- vokingfilmwillmakemuchmoresense. ThoughDaughtersoftheDust could be grouped with Prospero's Books as the mostintolerableartfilmoftheyear, this complicated, evasive piece of work, with a little effort, will be the more worthwhile of the two. Daughters of the Dust plays at the Michigan Theater through Thursday. weet nothings it's whispering Annette Petruso Allen3 dir. David Fincher Yukko! After the breathless Alien2 that kept every viewer on the edge of his/herseat,directorDavidFincher went haywire with Sigourney Weaver's Lt. Ripleycharacterandthewholesenseof what one should expect from a film in the Alien series. After notoriously go- ing through four writers, millions overbudget, and an almost unheard of twoweeksofreshoots,Fincher'svision of theAlien-infested future necessarily becamemuddledandmurky.Few char- acters in the prison on the edge of the universe that Ripley's pod crashes on livelong enough todevelopintopeople rather than symbols. Though Dillon (Roc's CharlesS.Dutton)lasts formost of the movie, evenhehasless than two- dimensionstohispersonality.Thisprob. lemforcestheviewer'sfocusonRipley, the plot, and the film's imagery none of which held up their individual end. Weaver, as always, is excellent with what she has to work with, but the plot positions her character as vulnerable and less in control than in previous films. For example, the gratuitous sex scene between her and Dr. Clemens (Charles Dance)doesn'teven fit within this film's incomplete jigsaw puzzle. Though many critics find the darkness ofAlien3problematic, it is not so much thistoneandsetting thatisquestionable Crust Crust Trance Syndicate Recipe for the Crust musical deli- cacy: mix a globof Foetus with a quart ofLubricatedGoatextractandaslightly masticated piece of Throbbing Gristle and allow to fester. Although this might sound revolt- ingly appetizing to those of you who cravegratuitouslybelligerentnoiseand proto-industrial slop, stop drooling. Crust doesn't exactly match the grind- ing grandeur of the Dry Lungs compi- lations but, in fairness, they seem to be more strongly influenced (disturbed) by the likes of Killdozer and their kin. Crust's firstrelease-a7"ofnoise, darkness, and tape loops - seemed so promising. On this, their first LP, they naively attemptto vocalize their primi- tive inner stirrings, bogging down al- ready sludgy tunes. They seem to have compromised the integrity of their mu- sical soundscapes and assemblages. Then again, there is something endear- ing about a band that opens their album with an answering machine message about a friend's problem with head lice (so much for confidentiality). Crust's "sound" is rather elusive. Close as the lack of gripping action. The little suspense in Alien' comes at the very end, and even that is given away by the preview; and the poster. Fincher tried desperately to create something new, foreboding and exciting, but instead ends up running in slowly cut circles around a Ripley character who doesn't even die very heroically. Hopefully Fincher's poor film debut ensures that he will never make another film again. SeeAlien,if youdare,atShowcaseand Briarwood. -Annette Petruso rangingfromtotallyamorphous,throb- bing guitar noise with delightfully ago- nizing screams to deceptively docile songscenteredaroundquirkytapeloops. Maybe it's the cover photo of a mucus laden eye and shimmering entrails or songslike"HardStool,"butthesepained teensseemtobepreoccupiedwithbodily (dis)functions. Even their cover of "Feelings" is maligned by their perversion, integrat- ingaconfessionofaserialkillerintothe lumbering dirge. Their playful descrip- tion of typical cafeteria slop on "Diet Tray" is reminiscent of glib King Mis- sile banter. The remaining songs round out the dark, distorted mutterings of these tortured souls. -Chris Wy(do Iwaste my time)rod Cracker Cracker Virgin One aspect of Cracker screams out to the first-time listener: this band con- tains David Lowery, one of the leaders of the former Camper Van Beethoven. Even though Cracker is a completely differentband, this fact demands atten- tion before any appreciation of Cracker %-PRn oanc P oP 1 I '' . H angst like "Hard Stool,: can you biame Crust for abusing guitars?