michigandaily.com/arts A R T S MONDAY JUNE 7, 2004 'Flower Poet' disappoints Cute hoodie, Hermione. By Raquel Laned Daily Arts Writer MOVIE REVIEW When Hogwarts fans learned who was to direct the third chapter of the . Harry Potter series, there were many Harry Potter raised eyebrows: and the "Alfonso Cuarn? d Isn't he the one that Prisoner of did that porno?" Azkaban Yes, Cuar6n At Showcase directed the steamy, Wamer Bros. unrated "Y Tu Mami Tambiin," but if any of these doubters had seen "Y Tu Mama ... ," they would have known that Cuar6n's expert eye for color and meticulous attention to tone would be a perfect match for J.K. Rowling's bewitching novel. "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" may upset the strictly-by- the-book Potter fans, but it's the first of the series to feel like a film, rather than a movie version of the book. Instead of trying to fill "Azkaban" with as many details from the book as possible, Cuar6n focuses on establish- ing mood. The result: Hogwarts has never looked so beautiful - or creepy. The opening scenes are shrouded in perpetual rain. A surrealistic bus ride that looks like it came straight from a Jean-Pierre Jeunet film ("The City of Lost Children") leads to a train haunt- ed by dementors, which resemble translucent grim reapers. When the train finally pulls into Hogwarts, accompanied by a children's choir eerily chanting "Something wicked this way comes," you know this isn't a typical kid's flick. While the previous two films in the series treat Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) and his pals Ron and Hermione (Rupert Grint and Emma Watson) as one entity , "Azkaban" orbits more around Harry alone, and he spends more time in introspective solitude or talking to newfound mentor Professor Lupin (David Thewlis, "The Big Lebowski"). The young wizard has much more to cope with here - his life is threatened by runaway convict Sirius Black (Gary Oldman, "The Fifth Element"). Harry's personal struggle also shows that these little witches are no longer children, but are on the cusp of adolescence. Harry's nemesis Draco Malfoy (Tom Felton) delivers low blows that in the first two films are merely mean; here they challenge Harry's masculinity. Cuar6n also adds sexual tension between Ron and Hermione, who play their romantic parts with a perfect blend of awkward- ness and fear. Of course, England's all-star cast - including Maggie Smith and Alan Rickman - give spectacular perform- ances. Newcomers Emma Thompson as a flighty mystic, Thewlis as the kind yet mischievous Lupin and quintessen- tial bad-guy Oldman are welcome additions to the cast and play their fan- tastical characters with a touch of human vulnerability that makes them seem real. While Ron's comic antics and a few subplots from the book may be missed by die-hard fans, Cuaron suc- ceeds in fusing entertainment and artistry with "Azkaban." A grownup filmmaker is exactly what the Harry Potter series needed. By Melissa Runstrom Daily Arts Writer In her debut novel, "Apprentice to the Flower Poet Z.," Debra Weinstein prom- ises a story of blind ambition, Apprentice to lust, competition the Flower and decadence. Poet Z. But the author falls short, By Debra Weinstein skimping on the Random House characterization of the book's quirky academics. The story opens as the protagonist, an aspiring poet named Annabelle, real- izes her dream of working with the famous poet Z. But Annabelle's tyranni- cal idol has a weak grasp of ethics, and Annabelle is destined for disappoint- ment - or even worse. Weinstein constructs an intriguing framwork for Annabelle's coming-of- age: A fresh transfer from a Long Island community college, she's a naive junior at New York University on a poetry scholarship. Z. is adulterous, demanding, dictatorial and petty. As an assistant to Z., Annabelle expects to learn from a top literary mind; instead, she finds the faculty's daily interactions have little to do with poetry or literature and is relegated to running errands and doing research for her mentor. After this initial letdown, Annabelle looks for guidance elsewhere - from another NYU instructor who just happens to be Z.'s archenemy. The scene is set for Annabelle's jarring fall from academic and emotional naivete. But "Apprentice to the Flower Poet Z." fails as a fully developed work. Weinstein describes circumstances and events well, but does not develop many characters, including her protagonist, sufficiently. Even though Annabelle narrates the story with a strong voice, she remains someone the reader never really knows, and the reader is rarely shown her motivations. Weinstein slights her supporting characters, like Annabelle's James Joyce-obsessed boyfriend, with only minimal charac- terization. Even Z., whom Weinsten develops more fully, doesn't get the treatment she deserves: The interest- ing parts of her life - incest, adultery and other family secrets - are merely touched upon, hanging limp without adding intrigue to the plot. To Weinstein's credit, she has creat- ed an easy-to-read first novel. But at the end of her tale, the reader is disap- pointed: She doesn't establish an emotional connection between readers and characters. The book is a com- mentary on the dog-eat-dog world of literary academia when it could have , been a rich exploration of literary ver- sus emotional life. P