20 - The Michigan Daily - Orientation Edition 2004 ARTS 0 Offering... " An amazing collection-including more than seven million books, journals, maps, manuscripts, videos, and more! " Easy access to online material-including Mirlyn, the library catalog, plus reference sources, journals and maga- zines, books, images, and much more from any networked computer. " A knowledgeable and welcoming staff to help you with your research. " Convenient hours-at all ig libraries. The Shapiro Under- graduate Library is open from 8 a.m. to 5 a.m. daily. . Study areas for quiet as well as group study. . Job opportunities-flexible shifts in various locations. Personalized Services such as... " RCP-one-on-one, uninterrupted research consultations www.lib.umich.edu/ugl/services/rcp/ . Ask Us-IM or email a reference librarian www.lib.umich.edu/askus/ " Peer Information Counseling-one-on-one assistance L- www.lib.umich.edu/ug/PIC 6 Guns, swords - Freudian much? Second Bill takes it slow April 16, 2004 By Alex Woisky Daily Arts Writer K LL BLL: VOL. 2 * First things first: "Kill Bill: Vol. 2" isn't a perfect film - neither was "Vol. 1." The final piece of Quentin Tarantino's pulp puzzle comes together in full force as The Bride (Uma Thur- man) inflicts final punishment on II those who wronged her. Under- Kill Bill: neath all the shogun violence and Vol. 2 blood lies a film so dense in both Miramax history and culture, one can't help to be amazedby Tarantino's ambition. With a dense network of references in the sec- ond installment, Tarantino is on one hand playing a game with his audience, while on the other mak- ing a point - demonstrating how East and West have influenced each other over the past few years. Just as Japanese director Akira Kurosawa openly brought the American Western to his 1954 epic, "The Seven Samurai," Italian director Sergio Leone brought Kurosawa's influence to the Euro- pean market with "A Fistful of Dollars." Finally, Tarantino has connected all three points with "Kill Bill" He melds the Eastern, European and Ameri- can points-of-view into a raucous meta-film. "Vol. 2" draws most heavily on the American Western. Where the first film was a transition from East to West, the second film is solely focused on The Bride's journey through the barren, cavernous Texas landscape in search of her final enemies - Budd (Michael Madsen), Elle Driver (Darryl Han- nah) and, of course, Bill (David Carradine). Because "Kill Bill" has such a thin plot, the per- formance of the characters comes to the forefront. And, as The Bride drives the story, the secondary characters become the most important feature of the film. Their peculiarities and nuances make the characters memorable and more fleshed out than they were in "Vol. 1" Darryl Hannah, who had a fairly limited role in "Vol. 1," returns as the manipulative Elle Driver. Elle plaintively acts as a foil - her character, by contrast, enhances the distinctive characteristics of The Bride. Hannah marvelously plays "The Bride Gone Bad," carefully alluded to in her dialogue from "Vol. 1." Hannah's flawless execution of the role transcends the film's self-referential nature, as she becomes a unique entity. Michael Madsen portrays Bill's brother Budd, an ironic, absurdist role as a once-deadly assassin turned bouncer at a lonely, Barstow, Cal. topless bar. Madsen brings the disillusioned swordfighter to life. He's a man who has turned to Barstow for a solitary life, only to be brought out of retirementby The Bride's quest for revenge. And, then there's The Bride and Bill's unfinished business. Carradine - who plays the masterful Bill, all but non-existent in the first film - becomes all-too-human in the second. Tarantino's conscious move to not reflect the character in a negative manner works effectively, and by the final battle royale, the audience empathizes with Bill. Interwoven in between tense, well-crafted scenes of Bill and The Bride are flashbacks into the life of The Bride including a hilarious homage to '70s kung fu detailing her training with the white- browed Pai Mei (Chia Hui Liu). The nefarious Bill - known onlyby the tenor of his voice in the first film - proves to be a master of not just martial arts, but long-winded bullshit. The anti-climactic third act of "Vol. 2" acts as a microcosm for the entire film, slanted toward dia- logue as opposed to combat. It will upset those who enjoyed the first volume's violence. Unlike "Vol. 1," which felt like a visceral dagger to the jugular, the second installment is an exploration in charac- ter study and dialogue. Nearly every fight sequence in "Vol. 2" is framed by long, drawn-out conversa- tions which slow, but don't hinder the film. The structure of "Kill Bill" seems off, however. At times, scenes from "Vol. 1" seem like they would fit better later in the film. Tarantino appears to have reshuffled "Kill Bill" for the sake of reshuffling the film, not because it emphasizes a critical point or thematic issue as in his earlier work, "Pulp Fiction." That being said, the films work best together. In the way that "Vol. 1" seemed rushed and aimless, "Vol. 2" seems slow and cerebral. With the release of "Kill Bill: Vol. 2," Taranti- no's grand design becomes clear: The first part of his epic took place under the sign of the East, the second part is largely devoted to the West - that is, American and European revenge flicks, particu- larly the spaghetti Western. And it does so with a panache and style unlike any other film this year. University Library... A World Within A World...