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Thursday, May 7
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Coppola's war

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Encompassing over a calendar year of principal photography in the Philippines and nearly two years of post-production in director Francis Ford Coppola's Zoetrope labs, 1979's "Apocalypse Now" remains one of the few greatest cinematic achievements of all time. Based on Joseph Conrad's 1902 story "Heart of Darkness," "Apocalypse" delves into the dark heart of man versus man and the ugly, subversive politics of war. It succeeds better than any film before or since.


"Brick" boldly reinvents noir

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Film noir has always been the genre most precious to me, so when I was informed of a certain "Brick" generating an appreciation that spread like wildfire at last year's Sundance Film Festival, I needed to get the lowdown. I'm not sure how writer/director Rian Johnson came up with the idea to take all the elements that make noir so great and place them in a high school setting, but the only word I can reply with is brilliant. The dark alleys of the city are transformed into dimly lit, locker-filled hallways. Heavies become jocks and the ever beautiful yet deadly femme fatale isn't a woman smoking a cigarette in some nightclub -- she is the head of the theatre and drama department.


The Indiana Daily Student

Spike gets 'inside' Hollywood

·

Spike Lee directing a heist thriller? It's hard to imagine the same man who made "Do the Right Thing" and "Malcolm X" tackling such a genre. Rest easy; within the first 10 minutes my skepticism had subsided entirely. Meet Dalton Russell (played by the ever cool Clive Owen, "Sin City"), a man who never repeats himself and speaks as if every word out of his mouth has been memorized and planned for more than a year. He swears he is about to conduct the perfect bank heist and by the end of his to-the-point introduction, you'd dare not even doubt him for a second. With the bank held-up and every hostage suited up in outfits and masks to make everyone look like the robbers, the frenzy stirs Detective Keith Frazier (Denzel Washington) into action and it is clear from the start if anyone is going to play Russell's game, Frazier is the man to do it.


The Indiana Daily Student

"Dead" rises to gory occasion

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Admit it: You've sat around at least once with your friends and had a discussion about how to survive when the zombies come. It's OK; we've all done it. Really.And if you haven't, then they'll just eat your brains first. Zombie apocalypse planning is just as important as preparing for a tornado, flood or terrorist attack.For those of us who know it's not a matter of if, but when the undead attack, there's perhaps no better survival simulator available today than "Dead Rising."

Trice's sophomore album leaves potential untapped

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Apparently, the general public just doesn't understand Obie Trice. Obie is quoted on his official Web site as saying, "I just want them to get an idea of the things that go on in Obie Trice's head and see who I am ..." Well, his fans get a chance to see just that on his sophomore album, Second Round's on Me. The second album continues Obie's "bar theme" and follows up his platinum debut, Cheers. Simply put, the thing that makes Obie's rap style effective is when he goes against the grain. He has several songs on his new album that are so generically gangsta it's painful. For example, you know how you'll see "Scarface" memorabilia in every rapper's homes while watching MTV's 'Cribs'? Obie takes it a step further when he samples a "Scarface" quote in his appropriately titled song, "Kill Me a Mutha". The sample has so much swearing it would make Richard Pryor blush.


Bite not as big as hiss

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The Internet buzz over "Snakes on a Plane" turned out to be nothing to hiss about. The high-flying thriller preceded by months of unprecedented Web buildup technically debuted as the No. 1 movie, but with a modest $13.8 million opening weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. With its campy, tell-it-like-it-is title and the star power of lead actor Samuel L. Jackson, "Snakes on a Plane" became an online phenomenon, prompting endless Web chat and parodies long before anyone saw the movie. That buzz proved fairly hollow when it came to showtime, with the debut weekend a respectable but unremarkable return for a movie with a production budget of a little more than $30 million.


The Indiana Daily Student

Teacher strike disrupts Gary schools

GARY -- Unionized school bus drivers refused to cross picket lines on the first day of school Wednesday as striking teachers carried protest signs and handed out fliers to parents in the first work stoppage in the district in 22 years.




The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD officer remembers friends

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IU Police Department Lt. Greg Butler's job has never allowed him to complete the entire 1,100 miles of the Concerns of Police Survivors charity ride, but he always participates as much as he can.


The Indiana Daily Student

New Eats

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More than a dozen new restaurants have sprouted up in Bloomington this summer. Owners are eager to introduce their menus to returning students. IU senior Todd Schear is a shift manager at D.P. Dough at 107 N. Dunn St. The franchise specializes in calzones ($6) and offers more than 40 varieties. The restaurant offers free delivery with a minimum purchase of $5. Schear says since the opening last month, the staff prepares about 100 orders per day. Once classes are in session, he says he expects orders to double.


The Indiana Daily Student

You know what time it is

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Every few years, there's a TV event that not only changes your life and your world but your very notion of what you thought the medium could do. On Aug. 6, a lovely (read: "horrifying") lady with the moniker "Somethin'" crapping on the floor of Flavor Flav's mansion in the premiere of Season 2 of "The Flavor of Love." It's unclear exactly what lead up to this earth-shattering moment, as it rarely is clear as to how exactly poop ends up on anyone's floor. The 14 women vying to be Flav's new main squeeze had gotten through the first elimination ceremony and "gathered 'round your man" after a brief party. Then they all started to smell something rotten, and the next thing you know there's a turd on the ground (which, in a rare classy moment, VH1 did not show on camera). The second episode didn't answer the questions about the turd, but Somethin' (who's 200 pounds if she's an ounce) said she was glad she had shat on the floor because it made her stand out. This is just one of the many examples of the absolute lunacy that has taken place on "The Flavor of Love" since it premiered in January.


The Indiana Daily Student

It's all in the game

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What makes a good television show? Is it the powerful narratives, rich characters and twisty cliffhangers that keep us coming back for more? Or is it the ease and accessibility of television that we crave? Take a show like "The Simpsons" that requires mindless and casual watching instead of dedication? Whatever draws us to escape into a show on a weekly basis or throw down $50 for an entire season on DVD, television series, when done right, have the ability to take us to places that film often can't touch. Now while I could probably sit down and pour out a list of great shows of the past and present, I am writing to praise one particular program that you are most likely unaware of or haven't yet given a shot. Why devote an entire column to one show you ask? Because television just doesn't get any better than this.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bite not as big as hiss

·

The Internet buzz over "Snakes on a Plane" turned out to be nothing to hiss about. The high-flying thriller preceded by months of unprecedented Web buildup technically debuted as the No. 1 movie, but with a modest $13.8 million opening weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. With its campy, tell-it-like-it-is title and the star power of lead actor Samuel L. Jackson, "Snakes on a Plane" became an online phenomenon, prompting endless Web chat and parodies long before anyone saw the movie. That buzz proved fairly hollow when it came to showtime, with the debut weekend a respectable but unremarkable return for a movie with a production budget of a little more than $30 million.


The Indiana Daily Student

He's Not that tired of Snakes

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He's been a gangster and a hit man, a distraught father and a disgraced police officer, a scientist and a Jedi. In his latest role, Samuel L. Jackson is a snake-killer. Jackson stars in one of the summer's most anticipated movies, the title-says-it-all thriller "Snakes on a Plane". He helped promote the movie last month at the San Diego's biggest comic book convention, San Diego Comic-Con, by wearing an albino Burmese python around his neck. It's the closest he came to his slithery screen companions (agent's orders, he says). Still, Jackson was as cool as Jules Winnfield, the scripture-spouting hit man he played in 1994's "Pulp Fiction" that earned him an Academy Award nomination.


The Indiana Daily Student

Live album bridges Waters and Stones

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Whoever said rock music's supergroups never reach their potential missed The Yardbirds. The rough and sloppy blues of their Five Live Yardbirds connects the dots between Muddy Waters and the Rolling Stones. The group earns the term "super" with one-time members Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck, though all three were never in the band at the same time. Clapton would soon be replaced by Beck (who would later invite and be fired by Page), but not before recording Five Live. He wasn't "slow hands" yet, thankfully; his later song-writing tendencies had yet to take full shape. With Clapton romping through the set, the band tears through mostly short songs for a long, frenetic album. The band plays like bees trapped in a glass box filling with smoke -- no one has any idea where they are going, but they are sure as shit going to knock themselves out trying. Is this pop? Blues? Rock? Folk? Who cares? They are burning down the walls of traditional music, exploring instrumentation that would become Led Zeppelin and so many others.


The Indiana Daily Student

Trice's sophomore album leaves potential untapped

·

Apparently, the general public just doesn't understand Obie Trice. Obie is quoted on his official Web site as saying, "I just want them to get an idea of the things that go on in Obie Trice's head and see who I am ..." Well, his fans get a chance to see just that on his sophomore album, Second Round's on Me. The second album continues Obie's "bar theme" and follows up his platinum debut, Cheers. Simply put, the thing that makes Obie's rap style effective is when he goes against the grain. He has several songs on his new album that are so generically gangsta it's painful. For example, you know how you'll see "Scarface" memorabilia in every rapper's homes while watching MTV's 'Cribs'? Obie takes it a step further when he samples a "Scarface" quote in his appropriately titled song, "Kill Me a Mutha". The sample has so much swearing it would make Richard Pryor blush.


The Indiana Daily Student

Aguilera impresses in return to form

·

Full disclosure: I've been saying Christina should do the whole 1940s-Betty Boop-swing thing for years. She's got the perfect voice for this kind of stuff and she's the one who should be releasing albums of American standards, not Rod Stewart. Aguilera starts out by thanking all the musicians of that era who have inspired and influenced her, yet she does it more literally than musically. While she sings "I've waited some time/to get inside the minds/of every legend I've wanted to stand beside," she doesn't quite get "back to basics." Instead, the first part of the album has more of a contemporary R&B sound.


The Indiana Daily Student

Coppola's war

·

Encompassing over a calendar year of principal photography in the Philippines and nearly two years of post-production in director Francis Ford Coppola's Zoetrope labs, 1979's "Apocalypse Now" remains one of the few greatest cinematic achievements of all time. Based on Joseph Conrad's 1902 story "Heart of Darkness," "Apocalypse" delves into the dark heart of man versus man and the ugly, subversive politics of war. It succeeds better than any film before or since.


The Indiana Daily Student

Spike gets 'inside' Hollywood

·

Spike Lee directing a heist thriller? It's hard to imagine the same man who made "Do the Right Thing" and "Malcolm X" tackling such a genre. Rest easy; within the first 10 minutes my skepticism had subsided entirely. Meet Dalton Russell (played by the ever cool Clive Owen, "Sin City"), a man who never repeats himself and speaks as if every word out of his mouth has been memorized and planned for more than a year. He swears he is about to conduct the perfect bank heist and by the end of his to-the-point introduction, you'd dare not even doubt him for a second. With the bank held-up and every hostage suited up in outfits and masks to make everyone look like the robbers, the frenzy stirs Detective Keith Frazier (Denzel Washington) into action and it is clear from the start if anyone is going to play Russell's game, Frazier is the man to do it.