ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, April 12, 1991 Page 5 *Harris' Street has good karma Chameleon Street dir. Wendell Harris 1 t 1 by Jen Bilik and Gregg Flaxman 64 W illiam Douglas Street, Jr. Born in a log cabin in the backwoods of Kentucky, young Douglas soon elevated himself from field hand to Tiger, from Tiger to reporter, from reporter to doctor, from doctor to coed, from coed to attorney from at- torney to congressman, from con- greg ;man to president... Yeah, I could play president." As he biographs himself in the O third person, Doug Street (Wendell Harris) marvels at his elusiveness. Delivered at the end of the ac- tor/screenwriter/director's sly new film Chameleon Street, the words -epresent both Harris' brilliant, self-aware ponderings and his own epitaph. Chameleon Street, recent winner of the Jury's Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, finds its rhythmic *guide in Doug Street's wicked and beguiling narration - in the actor's deep voice, which becomes the film's bass line. His gravelly, se- ductive narration defies retrospec- tion, becoming a sort of running commentary on the sequence of events that others facilitate by their trusting stupidity. Oddly intelligent, Street glides iito various identities with ease and credibility, minus the pathology of multiple personalities; he always maintains an underlying sense of witty, insightful observation that structures the film's shifts. Just be- cause it's about an African- American man assuming various identities, it's not the ebony Zelig. The movie is entirely different, ultimately something charming, disturbing and amusing. Constructed in the vein of stu- dent films and low-budget first fea. tures, Chameleon Street utilizes technological innovation, such as slow-motion and distorting shots, to compensate for cheap set design. Where some aspiring films appear pretentious and facile in their use of #on-hollywood techniques, Harris fprges a style that remains consis- tent yet surprising, using form to alert the audience to content. Angel Heart lost potential popularity to controversy over Cosby wunderkind Lisa Bonet's foray into the grotesque, one in- stance where complaints about moral content didn't guarantee a blockbuster hit. It's actually a fine movie: suspenseful, exciting and tricky, and charactered by a disori- enting world of misread signs and symbols, much like last year's less intelligent Jacob's Ladder. The film's significance comes less from metaphor itself than from the tempting impossibility of making meaning at all. Mickey Rourke plays a detective (hired by a cryptic Robert DeNiro) patterned after the Oedipus model, searching for the solution to a mys- tery that turns out to be himself. Alan Parker grapples with the con- vention of self-searching, staging the difficulties of being both inves- tigator and investigated, illustrat- ing the confusion of a seemingly disordered world where self and other become fused amidst a sea of false clues. The Louisiana setting is both ex- pressionistic and realistic, a con- temporary New Orleans that serves as a facade for backyard voodoo. Fans spin eerily from every ceiling, coming to represent the cyclical, nested quality of Rourke's search. Rourke delivers a compelling per- formance, giving credence to his idolization in the eyes of the French, though they still contend that Jerry Lewis is a brilliant comic actor. Never can tell about those French. Angel heart will be shown to- morrow at 7:30 in MLB 4. -Jen Bilik One deftest of Alfred Hitchcock's thrillers, Strangers on a See CAMPUS, Page 8 - q Michigander Wendell Harris directed and stars in Chameleon Street, his new film about a con artist who gets into all sorts of crazy situations. It sounds kind of like Fetch, except it's witty and well-done. Street starts out working for his father's burglary alarm installation business, and in a burst of exuberant scheming, decides to blackmail a Detroit Tiger player's wife by falsely revealing her husband's infi- delities. But his accomplice sends the letter to two newspapers, sign- ing Street's name and catapulting him into an odd instant of brief fame that leads to a career as a sports writer. Realizing the utility of well-de- veloped lies, Street applies as a Harvard Med School graduate for an internship at a Michigan hospital.. With no credentials, he performs a successful hysterectomy before be- ing discovered as a fraud. Thus the film progresses through Street's various identities, each of which calling for special expertise which he somehow feigns convincingly. Street's success functions as a martial art: he performs on the weaknesses of his opponents, who, in most cases, are white profession- als all too ready to accept Street's exotic talents. The racial subtext is subtle; rather than pitting black versus white, Street's manipula- tions rest on his ability to assess gullibility. In one scene, a seedy white man intrudes on Street's ro- mantic dinner with his wife, asking how much she "costs." Street is re- luctant to respond until the man grammatically misuses the verb "fuck," after which he goes into a litany of proper uses for the exple- tive. It's suave, it's articulate and it earns him a punch in the mouth. Chameleon Street is a very liter- ary film, not in a superimposed way, but because it reflects Street's char- acter as one who reads and finds rel- evance in literature, art and pop cul- ture. He's equally comfortable re- lating to his non-literate friends (who note his skill with words) as he is with over-intellectualized Yale students (Harris used various Ann Arbor locations to depict New Haven, Connecticut.) Street's relationships with women, particularly his wife, his girlfriend and his daughter (whose Barbie doll he spray paints black), are cryptic - he appreciates their intelligence and femininity, but seems confused by their expecta- tions of him, which makes him very self-aware. In sessions with prison psychologists, Street analyzes him- self in their terminology, ascribing his chameleon nature to giving peo- ple what they want - and simulta- See STREET, Page 8 Jane's Addiction LIVE at Kalamazoo Wings Stadium, Friday, May 10 at 8PM. Tickets on sale now at all Michigan Ticketmaster locations and the Wings Stadium Box Office. TE LECHARGE: Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo (616) 456-3333. Lansing (616) 484-5656. Battle Creek (616) 963-8080. Detroit (616) 645-6666. 338 SOUTH STATE STREET, ANN ARBOR 996-9191 WARM POKUII