The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 11, 1991 - Page 9 'People Dancing!a People Dancing proves with sur- real charm that they are a more than just A Lot of Talk. In their concert this weekend, choreogra- pher Whitley Setrakian (airborne above) continues her innovative combination of text and dance. "A lot of Talk" will be performed Jan- 'iary 11-13 at the Performance Net- Work. The troupe will debut the .conclusion of Mother and Child Were Saved, a haunting medita- tion on the history of midwifery. ;Setrakian will reprise her interpre- htion of Shakespeare's Twelfth RNight, combining contemporary cynicism with timeless wit. The concert also promises Setrakian's vacky humor and personalized physicality. Tickets are $10, $8 for students and seniors at the Michigan Theater Box Office. Showtime is 8:00 p.m. tonight through Saturday and a matinee 2:00 p.m. on Sunday. RECORDS Continued from page 7 style of her predecessor while the clearly mechanical drum pattern fights her all of the way. This for- mula yields an excitingly different sub-genre for McIntosh to play with, abstractly fascinating to listen to without the kitschy disco romanti- cism of a certain few members of his competition. Distinctly great tracks on the aptly titled Look How Long include "Love's Got Me," charging vital new pacing into classic hooks and composition with a drum track rem- iniscent of "The Funky Drummer." The song ends with an obvious pointer to fab producers Foster and McElroy, sampling En Vogue's "Hold On." And "Hold Tight," midway through the album,. is an absolute Loose Ends classic. Belying its steady pace, the sensuous groove simply saunters through the speakers with a slow, stubborn piano line and a harmonious chanting of the cho- rus, "Hold tight to your dreams/ your time... will come." McIntosh chooses captivating sounds to build his song up: his own idiosyncratic singing voice, the sound of sea gull from "Pacific State," his backup singers and trumpeter Byron Wallen. As the groove forms with a simply hypnotic power, Wallen's solo dances over its steady heartbeat so scantily that it burns. At long last, Loose Ends is back. Look How Long it took, but listen: it was worth the wait. -Forrest Green III Need the hot news fast? Find it in the Daily. ICLASSIFIED ADS! Call 76440 Campus essentials. PONFIRE Continued from page 8 Olo. Without ever knowing it, Sherman McCoy is nominated and seconded. e De Palma's film sheds the so- cially attuned pose of Wolfe's novel: realism is eighty-sixed as if this were a warehouse clearing on social relevance. Whatever was prophetic and insightful in Wolfe's book about New York and urban reality is lost De Palma opts for a heavy-handed "Tumor that never works. Wolfe's sly, undercutting satire is trans- formed into a subconscious contest tb see which character can come 4cross as the biggest imbecile. Mc- coy's wife, Judy (Kim Cattral), whines her way through the film as if she had perpetual P.M.S. And Griffith's southern twang grows so grating that it too prompts the ques- on: why does Sherman ever bother ith her in the first place? If the an- swer is sex, then never has a man #aid so high nor so aggravating a price for knowledge in the biblical tense. As for the rest of the cast, only Hanks eludes the overbearing and rolly humorless tendencies that in- t the performances. Falling from Wall Street prestige to incarceration a Bronx courthouse, Hank's be- ;sildered glare is worth more than any of the previous hype that De ilma works so hard to create. When ha returns to his Park Avenue pad (&vhich is the size of a small mu- gum) after his arrest, Sherman finds a black-tie gala in progress. His Life, serving hors d'oeuvres, an- Obunces that she is divorcing him - 'fter the party, that is. Sherman fi- Wally erupts in a kind of funny, fed- p, gun-toting frenzy that brightens te film for the first and only time. Hank's Sherman is a fitting victim, yet the ambivalence that he should have embodied - his yearly cash haul isn't far from the GNP of certain third world nations, and he is iver out to do anything but protect himself- is whitewashed. He comes *0 t smelling far too rosy as the re- stlt of the unintentional forfeiture on the part of the rest of the cast: the Eolective garish New York elite and transparent social rectifiers. Sherman the least offensive, least carica- tured figure in the film. The penchant to judge De Palma's latest film in comparison with Wolfe's novel is probably un- rair. Fortunately, the film is bad *eenough on its own to warrant the mbuse. And, in this case, it may be an advantage to haveread Wolfe's Took before entering the theater: the daughter of the novel proves more iteresting than anything that hap- jens on screen. In the wake of all the hyperbole, fudge White's (Morgan Freeman) ea at the end to "be decent" is like drying to impose morality on Heckle Sand Jeckle. The characters are too far tone to be redeemed. This film, in e end, is a cartoon, but audiences could be better served catching The impsons (yes, even re-runs) than t ekking out to see The Bonfire of (le Vanities. THE BONFIRE OF THE VANITIES is being shown at rhowcase. AI SANDUSKY, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 4 Cedar Point Park Attractions Office Rehearsal Studios Registration: 1:30 - 4:30 p.m. COLUMBUS, OHIO: Thursday, Jan. 10 Ohio State University Drake Union Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. BEREA, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 11 Baldwin-Wallace College Kulas Musical Arts Building Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN: Monday, Jan. 14 University of Michigan Michigan Union - Anderson Room Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. MT. PLEASANT, MICHIGAN: Tuesday, Jan. 15 Central Michigan University Norvall C. Bovee University Center Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN: Wednesday, Jan. 16 University Inn 1100 Trowbridge Rd. (Rts. 496 & 127) Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN: Thursday, Jan. 17 Western Michigan University Dalton Center, School of Music (Park at Miller Auditorium) Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. JSICIANS RFORMERS CHNICIANS DECATUR, ILLINOIS: Tuesday, Jan. 22 Millikin University Richards Treat University Center Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA: Wednesday, Jan. 23 Indiana University Memorial Union - Solarium Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. MUNCIE, INDIANA: Thursday, Jan. 24 Signature Inn Corner of McGalliard & Bethel Rds. Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. BOWLING GREEN, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 25 Bowling Green State University University Union - Ohio Suite Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. PITTSBURGH, PA: Monday, Jan. 28 Point Park College Studio #4, Registration: 3:00 - 6:00 p.m. KENT, OHIO: Tuesday, Jan. 29 Kent State University Student Center - Third Floor Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. SANDUSKY, OHIO: Wednesday, Jan. 30 Cedar Point Park Attractions Office Rehearsal Studios Registration: 1:30 - 4:30 p.m. . 'y / A few hints for getting through college: study hard, bring your laundry home on weekends and get yourself acquainted with Michigan National Bank. Aside from being the number one provider of student loans in Michigan, we offer services with students in mind. Like Independence Checking, a low-cost, no minimum balance checking account. And the Michigan Money' card, free with your checking or savings account. So stop in or phone 1-800-CALL-MNB. We can make campus life easier. Student banking. 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