12 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, June 17, 2002 Eliot indie-rocks GR with hot new grooves -ARTS By Jeremy J. Peters For theDaily Finishing up a two and a half week tour of the East Coast and the Midwest, indie torch-bearing quartet Elliott (no, not Elliott Smith) rolled into Grand Rapids, bring the bands Christiansen, and Baltimore natives, The Liars Academy in tow. After their second stop in Michigan, the tour ended the next day in Chicago. Elliott was touring early this summer in ELLIOT support of their CHRISTI upcoming and as of yet untitled release, slated Pop! to hit the streets in Grand November. The band's June 7 at website (wwwxelliottin- transit.com) professes that the release was originally meant to be an EP released right around now however, the members were so enthralled in the process that they decided to record more tracks and release it as an LP. In their first foray back on the road since, essentially their early 2001 foray to Europe, the Louisville, Kent group has had quite a string of twists and turns. Last summer, Elliott was' scheduled to support the Toadies on their U.S. tour, only to leave soon after it began due to management differ- T CI. .'C l :7 ences. As for personnel, only singer Chris Higdon and drummer Kevin Ratterman remain of the group that recorded their heralded 2000 Revela- tion Records release, False Cathe- drals. Bassist Jason Skaggs (formerly of Eleven Eleven) has replaced Jay Palumbo, and Benny Clark (of the Loved) takes Jonathan Mobley's place on guitar. New members and non-existant tour outings aside, Elliott sounds much like the same Elliott T WSG that came to Detroit in IANSEN November of 2000. Managing to play Cafe expansive, orchestrated Rapids and not orchestral, 7:30 p.m. emotive rock and roll (read: not emo, because what IS emo anyways?) with only two guitars, an effects rack, a drummer and a bass, Elliott is much the same as it was, only with new songs in hand. Higdon's vocals, light and high to begin with, were unintelligible as ever thanks to the poor quality PA system at the venue. Strangely enough, this wasn't annoy- ing. Higdon's tenor ended up sound- ing like another instrument added to the surging ebb and floe of Elliott's contribution. Upstarts Christiansen and Liars Academy, in supporting roles for the most part, did well to compliment More guitar for your money. the performance they foreshadowed. The Liars Academy, late to the gig due to constuction on 1-96, played a condensed set of what was good honest Get Up Kids-ish songs. Christiansen, however, seemed un- focused and overly anti-climactic, almost as if their instruments were getting in the way of what they were trying to do. The small, bohemian, hole in the wall-ish Pop!Caf6 had only a small stage tucked in the corner of the room, just slightly elevated above the concert-goers. The resulting effect was having the band perform right in to your face, at times only two feet from you. For lucky fans who staked out a place in front, this venue pro- vided for what rock and roll should be: Loud, intimate and an experience. Sadly, the concert was sparsely attended with the crowd being main- ly populated by those who have either been with the band from the start or who are devotees to the national independent music scene. If you are into intelligent inde- pendent rock, look for Elliott to be back on tour for a longer stint around the United States after the release of their upcoming album. For those looking to fill that aching hole in their hearts, this is this stuff. Or at least, you can rock along with those who seem to feel that way. BOURNE gives the number and adress of a Contnue fro Pae 1Swiss bank account (I'm not kid- Contnue 1mmPag 1.ding). two bullets in his back and a bad Bourne heads to the bank, which case of amnesia. His mental and alerts the CIA to his stilt-alive physical abilities are superior, and whereabouts. In his saftey deposit he can't remember how he acquired box, he finds loads of passports his razor-sharp skills ... (all different, naturally) loads of The audience, of course, knows money from loads of countries and that he works black-ops for the a gun. After a little authority-skirt- CIA, and he was shot after a failed ing, Bourne pays a beautiful, assassination attempt. down-on-her-luck hot- He's a super-trained tie (Famke Potente, killer who doesn't "Run Lola Run") thou- exist and blah, blah, ** sands of dollars to blah. All of this is Tdrive him to France. revealed to the audi- THE BOURNE She balks, but needs ence within moments, IDENTITY the money. They have and all of the dark hot sexual tension. The intrigue one expects At Showcase and CIA follow. Bourne from a spy flick is Quality 16 kills some bad-ass destroyed by excess Universal operatives. Sex is had, exposition. This is not original The film begins with Jason stuff, but the talented Damon and , Bourne (the most-used name in Potente make it bearable, until the Damon's multi-monikered exis- brain-insulting climax. tence) floating aimlessly (and boat- This film also wastes three of the lessly) along the Mediteranian. He more talented character actors is rescued from certain death by a working today in nearly-pointless group of fishermen who pull two supporting roles. Brian Cox bullets out of his back and a mini ("Rushmore")who looks nervous flashlight-thing out of his pelvis, and does little else as CIA higher- When the flashlight is shone, it up, has spent years honing and per- fecting his acting chops. Check out his take on Hannibal Lector in 1986s "Manhunter." Clive Owen ("Croupier," "Gosford Park,") is an up-and-comer who is nearly wordless as another super-CIA agent. Julia Stiles ("O") spends about three minutes making phone calls at the assassin switchboard. One expects more from director Doug Liman, who helmed both "Swingers" and "Pulp Fiction"- knockoff "Go." While Liman for- goes much of his usual creativity to show the studio he can be a "major action director," there is the occasional glimmer of hope. In a few scenes where the film seems to be overcome by its own self-serv- ing absurdity, Limon winks at the audience. He understands his film is Hollywood hokem, slight and not to be taken seriously. He can make Courtesy ofUniversal a big budget movie that's just dull Yeah, she wants me, enough to appeal to the masses. This may be good for his career, _ but it's a shame for filmgoers who 4 4