Monday, June 7, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 9 SHAKESPEARE From Page 8 vate for the sake of innovation when what we had was so wonderful." Indeed, Shakespeare in the Arb has become an Ann Arbor tradition largely because of the first two summers of "A Midsummer Night's Dream." It primarily casts University students, but year-round Ann Arborites are the core audience. This year, the produc- tion put up tiny posters in Ann Arbor's fabled fairy doors sprinkled across downtown. "It (has) exceeded my expecta- tions," Gray said of Shakespeare in the Arb's reputation in the community. "I think it (has) really grown to be some- thing that's this - Ann Arbor institu- tion." The University also considers it to be an institution. The Office of the Provost funds Mendeloff to bring back the summer's production for orienta- tion weekend each September. Mende- loff considers every chance to produce in the Arb a treat. "It's such a privilege to be able to have access to this beautiful, beautiful place and to make a contribution to my community," she said. "As a director, you're creating tableaus, images, and I'm able to do it on this fantastic scale, which I could never do anywhere else." Neighbors' is hell on earth By SHARON JACOBS ManagingArts Editor Perhaps "Neighbors From Hell" functions within a state of existential irony. The show's basic conceit concerns the Hellmans, a family "Neighbors of demons exiled to From Hell" Earth. Together, the Hellmans must Mondays at deal with the cul- 10 p.m. ture shock of being TBS among the humans as they try to destroy a drill that would encroach on Hell. So it's somewhat fitting, then, that the experience of watching "Neigh- bors" is hellish itself, and that view- ers will experience culture shock in acclimating to the show's outdated references and the odd behavior of its human characters. Unfortunately, high-concept irony is probably not what the late-night TBS guys were thinking when they agreed to pro- mote this unfunny piece of animated crap. Bummer. "Neighbors" opens with a scene of Hellman patriarch Balthazar con- demning some poor soul to "feel the pain of a thousand deaths" by listen- ing to "Oops I Did It Again." Interest- ing choice, considering the wealth of more timely hellish hits. "Party In The USA," "Tik Tok," even Circus- era Britney - any of these would cer- tainly signify eternal damnation. Soon, Satan summons our hero and sends him and his family to Earth for watching TV for enjoy- ment. "Eww, that's where Ugg boots come from," daughter Mandy com- plains. Yeah, and also Crocs, moc- casins - you know, shoe fads that people still actually wear. More irksome than the show's misguided references, though, is the behavior of the Hellmans' human acquaintances. Next-door neighbor Marjoe first appears cleaning up after her dog Champers. "Hey you!" she squeals, holding Champers's excrement in her bare hand. Marjoe turns out to be a classic Texan housewife, making out with her dog and revealing how she taught her kids about sex by screwing her husband in front of them one morn- 1 1 1 ing - wait, what? Is this, like, stan- are a few laugh-out-loud lines: Upon dard human behavior that viewers finding out the Hellmans' true iden- are supposed to find humorous when tity, drugged-out and homeless- seen through an outsider's perspec- looking neighbor Tammy exclaims, tive? "Wait, you're demons? I thought you No, because if "Neighbors From had green shiny skin'cause you were Hell" was actually about an un- Jewish!" Regarding voice actors, Pat- Earthly family trying to blend in, ton Oswalt ("Ratatouille") has an then it'd just be an animated version endearing turn as badass pet Pazu- of "3rd Rock from the Sun." zu, and SNL's Molly Shannon scores some laughs as spiky, spicy Hellman mother Tina. It's just too bad these actors have Even Jew jokes so little to work with. Given the bland writing and general pointless- can't save it. ness of "Neighbors," its characters tend to come off as unmemorable annoyances rather than overblown societal commentators. Instead, "Neighbors" negates its Maybe there once was a place in own relevance by making its human TV for this show, but somewhere in characters unrealistic and its demons the storyboard process, producer obnoxious and unsympathetic. Pam Brady ("South Park") seems to Besides, if Balthazar is really the have forgotten what "Neighbors" pop-culture almanac he's written as, was supposed to be about. There's then his knowledge should be used, a slight possibility that it could be TV parallels made, movie parodies reworked in the future to be enter- construed and pop stars ridiculed. taining and relevant, but for now, But disregarding its conceptual these neighbors should go back fail, "Neighbors" isn't awful. There where they came from.