Wednesday, May 26, 1993 - The Michign Daiy Summer Week y-9 'Posse' rewrites the western hometown.Theposseis, asrequiredin ensemble cast films, a collection of very different characters - Jessie's chasing his own demons; Weezie (Charles Lane) is the wimpy former servant to the colonel; Obobo (Tiny Lister, Jr.) is very innocent and built like a wall; Father Time (Big Daddy Kane) is the gambler; and Little J (Steven Baldwin) is the white guy. The filmshifts fromagang-on-the- run story (common for westems) to a small-town-against-the system tale (alsocommon).Intheend, themovieis full of shoot-outs, knife-play, knife throwing and fist fights. Tables get broken, banisters smashed and bottles brokenonheads.Itis, forallintents and purposes, astandard westem. And that is not a bad thing. In a case such as "Posse," where a filmisseekingtosettherecordstraight, there can be a tendency to overdo the point. The fact that our heroes are African American could have been shoveddown the audience's throatuntil they gagged, but that did not happen. Thepointisclear,butnotoverbear- ing. In fact, change two percent of the dialoguemakeminorchangestoaplot device and everyone could have been white, which is how most westems have portrayed the Old West. This is Van Peebles' ("New Jack City") second feature, and the weight on his shoulders was probably great- "Unforgiven"isfreshinpeople's minds as the ultimate western. Also, his fa- ther,Melvin,whowasalandmarkfilm- maker in the'70s, wason the set work- ing as an actor. But Van Peebles handles these in- fluences well. He is trying to make a pointaboutthetruehistoryoftheWest. And,allthingsconsidered,VanPeebles does an excellent job. While much of the plot is standard western fodder, he creates an above-average western. Some of his shots seem a little out of place, but the film quickly moves past those moments, making the tale clear and easy to follow. Overlookingthefactthatmostchar- acters are too black and white (no pun intended, I swear), which is so com- mon in this genre that it is a forgivable sin, "Posse" is a fine film. Any audi- ence that likes westerns will love this film. And it just might make them rethink history according to Holly- wood. POSSE is playing at Showcase. cueposseu s keis way to the Mario Van Peebles struts his stuff in his revisionist western. American frontier, to Jessie Lee's 20m CENTURY Continued from page 8 Lily Garland (Julia Broxholm), to sign a contract with him to star in his new play. From here we learn that Oscar and Lily once had a romantic relationship that went sour and she left him to star inmotionpictures.Therestof the show focuses on the couple and the strange inhabitants of the train. The set is important to the show because many of the comic scenes center around the claustrophobic con- finement one encounters while travel- ing long distances on a train. Christine Reising's art deco, geo- metric set-design was rather interest- ing. Two cramped train compartments and a bar car were pushed up against each other to emphasize the lack of space on board the train. During one flashback sequence, the train split in half and moved aside torevealhow Lily actually got her big break from Oscar. Thesong"Veronique"marksLily's transformation from the young, naive Mildred Platka to the sexy, sultry Lily Garland. Broxholm made this trans- formation wonderfully by simply us- ing her voice. At first she spoke tim- idly, then she burst out yelling how sexy and talented she was. Cy Coleman's bold and brassy scorefor"On the20th Century"isvery rhythmic. Every song starts out slow and steadily speeds up, just like a train as it departs a station. In "Life is Like a Train" this is very evident.Four tap dancing porters, in tight unison, introduce the scene, and by using their feet create sounds similar to the ones a train makes. The Civic Theatre took the largest risk by giving the role of the religious nut, Letitia Peabody Primrose, to Uni- versity junior Kara Pawlowski. Traditionally, this part is played by an older woman, but in this production Primrose,asplayed by Pawlowski, was more like a young prude than a crotch- ety old maid.This break from tradition worked very favorably. During "Repent" Pawlowski sang of "dirty doings going on" while she ran around the train, cackling like a psychopathandslappingreligiousstick- ers on people. With its high comedy and musical genius, "On the 20th Century" is fairly difficult to improve upon. The Civic Theatre took a few chances and made a few changes that added new excite- ment to the original musical. CH INA GARDEN Restaurant Szechuan, Hunan, & Peking Cuisine 15% OFF Dinner and Carry-Out Menu OFFER EXPIRES MAY 31,1993 Reservations 971-0970 3035 Washtenaw, Ann Arbor Open Mon-Thur. 11:30-10, Fri. 11:30-11, Sat. Noon-11, Sun. Noon-10 Free Parking! LA 1 Health Foods. 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