Best Actor Best Actress ;z S I I couri tes fWarneur Broth Nicole Kidman starred with husband Tom Cruise in "Eyes Wide Shut" and proved that she is one of the best actresses around. John Cusack soared in the air traffic controller romantic comedy even though the film fell apart in the last 20 minutes. isning Tin," I Entertainme The summer th "Limbo" represented both the best and worst of film this summer. "Deep Blue Sea" proved fun and excit- ing, if not a little bit low brow Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress By Ed Sholinsky and Adlin Rosli Daily Arts Iditors Summer is a time to relax, kick back and not work too hard. For students espe- cially, summer is a time to turn off our brains and clear out space for the barrage of information that the coming semester has to offer. And this brain drain of sorts applies to the arts as well. During the summer peo- ple anticipate summer blockbusters, catchy music, beach books and reruns. At the movies people had the option between a slew of bad movies with big explosions and plots so over used that even toddlers are starting to recognize them. For weeks this summer people had the choice between seeing "Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace" again or catching "Tarzan" or "Wild Wild West" or "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Audiences didn't stay away either. Rather they went to the movies in droves -- even though "Wild Wild West" still couldn't turn a profit - though most of the movies that people saw were quickly forgotten. Honestly, does anyone remem- ber "Lost and Found" or "The 13th Floor'?" Even art house theaters, which are a haven during the summer months, pro- duced rather dry fare. There were over praised films like "The Dreamlife of Angels" or "Limbo," but again, most were like "This is My Father" or "Lovers of the Arctic Circle," forgettable. Sure, there were some definite artistic statements, from Stanley Kubrick's "Eyes Wide Shut" to Mike Figgis' "The Loss of Sexual Innocence," but neither lit up the box office (even with Tom Cruise starring in the former). Audience rewarded simpler fare like "Big Daddy" and the excellent "Star Wars: Enisode I - The Phantom Menace" instead of going for more difficult and heady movies. Not that this is unusual for the summer, but it still bares mentioning. Following in the footsteps of moviego- ers, the music scene this summer wa: also a hotbed for unchallenging and saff music. To prove this, the music work this summer went "pop!" The Backstreet Boys, N' Sync, 98' Jordan Knight, Joe McIntyre, Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, to name few, dominated the radio airwaves, M concert venues and Billboard sales a through summer. Sadly, thanks to current populatior trends, there is a large demographic o puberty stricken youths in America wit large allowances who promise that this current fixation of boy bands and good looking youth-targeted singers will no end anytime soon. With the economy presently flirti with a tax cut, be warned that the you allowance may grow and may prolong the musical mediocrity affliction we ar currently facing. An undeniable trend that became this summer was rock bands fronted by rap ping singers. This was ushered by the success of groups like limp Bizkit an Kid Rock. Although both acts loaded up very thinly on substance and meaningfu lyrics, the middle-class suburban males of America lapped it up. This group of youths finally found at anthem through Limp Bizkit thanks t the group's single, "Nookie," where the group proclaimed, "I did it all for the Nookie," and single handedly summed i all for its fan base. Other rock offerings this summer such as Lit's debut album and Suga Ray's new album, left the impression tha the genre should not have bothere4 offer anything at all. The Latin music community crashet this summer's music scene in full force when Ricky Martin made "Livin' Le Vida Loca" an inescapable hit song The vine snapped early for Disney's ani- mated version of "Tarzan," and it land- ed on our Worst of the Summer list. HaC setJnsourtes of Holywood Pictures Haley Osment Jones In "The Sixth Sense." Toni Collette In "The Sixth Sense."