Page 8-The Michigan Daily- Friday, April 5,1991 Townsend doo-wops and fails The Five Heartbeats dir. Robert Townsend by Gregg Flaxman It cannot be denied that the Five Heartbeats, Robert Townsend's lat- est film, brims with that ac- tor/writer/director's ebullience and enthusiasm. If the first scene were indicative of the entire movie, Townsend might have successfully translated his inspiration - the story of a proto-Motown group's ascendancy to fame - to the screen. Scheduled to appear as the last act of a local music talent hunt, the Five Heartbeats are reduced to two. Dresser (Harry J. Lennix) and Choir Boy (Tico Wells) impatiently wait in the wings for the scattered others - Eddie (Michale Wright) playing cards, J.T. (Leon) up to his usual promiscuity and Duck (Robert Townsend) getting J.T.'s attention - to materialize. The Five Heart- beats converge on the club in dra- matic fashion and sing in a raw, un- polished, yet electrified fervor. Though the group fails to win the contest, they do catch the eye of Jimmy Potter (Chuch Patterson), talent scout and manager extraordi- naire. Their progress is slow and jerky, but under the watchful eyes of Jimmy, his wife Eleanor (Dianhann Carroll) and Sarge (Harold Nicholas), their break- through seems inevitable. It is not only a rapid succession of events, but a tendency to wash over details or totally lose sight of itself that most characterizes The Five Heartbeats. The film spans from 1965 to what is presumably the present, a period far too exten- sive to adequately explore the tribulations and elations of the group - not to mention the fact that in over two decades, no member of the band visibly ages. Townsend and co-writer Keenen Ivory Wayans have their audience invest themselves in the film, only to jolt them with enormous temporal leaps - as if the penchant to press the fast-forward button were too much. One minute, Dresser, the group's alto, is considering his girlfriend's pregnancy, his own relative poverty and the possibility of abortion; the next minute, all five Heartbeats are cruising in convertibles. The lapses serve not so much to disorient as to disengage. If anything is gleaned from Townsend's film, it's that in the gamut of influences and the multi- plicity of stories, The Five Heart- beats was destined to come off as a hodge-podge of sort:. Certain scenes retain the seriousness that's at the core of a film about a hip, black group struggling in a world of white taste and simultaneously struggling with themselves. Other scenes revert to the parodic urges that made Townsend's first effort, Hollywood Shuffle, a cult film. But where Hollywood Shuffle, a send-up comedy, could encapsulate so much diversity in a non-linear structure, The Five Heartbeats de- mands a tightness and fluidity that is beyond Townsend's limited expe- rience. Always earnest, the film doesn't suffer so much from the conventions that Townsend draws in - the cocaine, the back-stabbing - as from the stylistic incongruity that plagues it. When Duck strug- gles with a new song and his sister picks up the discarded scraps, only to begin belting out a song, you might think you've beamed into a Vincent Minelli musical. The Five Heartbeats don't get a thumbs up, but they aren't given the finger, either. We set the standard in recycling. kinko'is Recycles Uses Recycled Materials! The scene feels right at the time, but in the context of a film in which Big Red (Hawthorne James), a record company president, dangles a band's lead singer out a six-story window; in the context of a film in which the choreography rehaul is established in black and white stills that might have captured the likes of Alvin Ailey; in the context of a film in which drugs ravage the lead singer - the scene never quite fits. Yet, for all its flaws, The Five Heartbeats never bores or fails to deliver focused, vivacious perfor- mances. Even in the midst of the most sketchily-written scenes and in the tangle of the most derivative dialogue, the actors maintain a sur- prising strength. Wright, whose taut and redeemed Eddie represents the most cutting and potent charac- ter in the film, is a real find. And Leon (despite his lack of a surname), also rises above the film's cut-and- paste feel. The Five Heartbeats is better watched in the confines of a, learning experience than as a cohe- sive, dramatic effort. THE FIVE HEARTBEATS is shown at Showcase. being r U I U DAILY ARTS NEEDS WRITERS ------- Folk Jawz Classical Music Dame. Book An Trephcm 763-0379fo ramorer ib ma Save the LP! . Daily Arts The University Activities Center Presents: IB IL 1E U of M's Co-Ed A Cappella Singing Ensemble's Spring Concert Open 24 Hours 540 E. Liberty 761-4539 Open 7 Days Michigan Union 662-1222 Open 24 Hours 1220 S. University 747-9070 Featuring music including Doo-Wop, Classical Take-Offs, Current Hits and: Jazz, more. p I The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC Friday, April 5 8:00 p.m. Union Ballroom 3 General Admission Tickets available at the Michigan Union Ticket Office or any Ticketron Outlet. Ticket information call 763-TKTS For more information on Amazin' Blue call 763-1 107 Sun. Apr. 7 Tue. Apr. 9 Thu.-Sun. Apr. 11-14 Fri. Apr. 12 Contemporary Directions Ensemble H. Robert Reynolds, director Lutoslawski: Chain I Music by Bassett and Steiger Rackham Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. Campus Orchestra Cindy Egolf-Sham Rao, conductor Matthew Savery, assistant conductor Brahms: Symphony no. 2 in D-Major Mendelssohn: Fingal's Cave, op. 26 Liszt: Les Preludes Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. University Players Maeterlinck: Pelleas and Melisande, an adaptation Tickets: $9 and $5 (students) (764-0450) Trueblood Theatre, Frieze Building 8 p.m. (Thu.-Sa.), 2 p.m. (Su.) Symphony Band and Concert Band H. Robert Reynolds, Gary Lewis, Dennis Glocke, conductors Andrew Hisey, piano Schoenberg: Theme and Variations, op. 43a Prokofiev: Athletic Festival March Stravinsky: Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments Respighi: Hunting-Tower Ballad Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. U-M Women's Glee Club Earl Coleman, director Hardyk: I Never Saw Another Butterfly Folksongs, Michigan songs, and selections from The Wiz Tickets: $5 and $3 (students) Rackham Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. \\..'.\ \ ....,C.. ^ ? ' ti:" - S. "- .. .ti - ". .. 'titi .. 1 ::. _ . ii ti L \ I DEMONSTRATE YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH This SUAfMER for as little as ... ;. n- Y v e it F+ 9M % , ag zk A- ISRAEL SOLIDARITY SUMMER-1991 a unique study and touring program WHEN 1st 4-Week Session: May 27-June 27. 2nd 4-Week Session: June 26-July 26. Full Session: May 27-July 26. WHAT 1. A comprehensive introduction to Talmudic and Biblical analysis, Jewish history and philosophy, and contemporary theological, ethical and political issues taught by an internationally-renowned staff of scholars. 2. Specially designed tours of Jerusalem, the Galilee, the Golan Heights, Masada, the Dead Sea, and the Negev. 3. Comprehensive instruction in Hebrew language. 4. An opportunity to demonstrate your solidarity and concem for Israel. WHERE The program is based at the modem Jerusalem campus of Ohr Somayach. WHO Jewish men between the ages of 19- Sun. Apr. 14 Afro-American Music Collection: The Uptown String Quartet " an electrifying fusion of jazz, gospel, blues, and contemporary sounds" Diane Monroe, violin; Lesa Terry, violin; Maxine Roach, viola; Eileen M. Folson, cello Tickets: $15, $10, $7 (763-TKTS) Patron tickets : $100 (couple), $75 (single) __11,'74 I I I '.b