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Tuesday, May 19
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


Hollywood Labor

The soundtrack of my life!

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You may or may not notice how often music is being played when you watch a movie, whether it's a theme song or a pop song. Music is almost as essential to a movie as the plot. It sets the mood in different scenes and, when done well, it can evoke a very emotional reaction. Soundtracks have long been a way for moviegoers to take that mesh of music and film outside of the theater and place it into their lives. They help us reminisce a hero saving the day, a team winning a game and a group of friends simply enjoying each other's company. There are basically two different types of soundtracks.


The Indiana Daily Student

It's a new year and a new band

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For those about to rock, these guys salute you. In their first step toward bringing back the 1980s, Story of the Year emblazoned the cover to In The Wake of Determination with the band's moniker in neon green, a staple of the hair-metal superstars Poison. With song titles like "Take Me Back" and "Taste the Poison," the album finds a band wearing its collective childhood hair-metal allegiance on its sleeve.


The Indiana Daily Student

Student could face 1 year in prison for hit-and-run

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An IU student driver accused of striking another student walking across a street on campus Sept. 25 could face as much as one year in prison for fleeing the scene, then denying his involvement in the accident. The charges leveled against sophomore Eliot Delunas are Class A and Class B misdemeanors for fleeing and false informing. He will appear in court Dec. 7 for pre-trial conference, possibly resulting in a plea bargain.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kids that should be expelled

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A group of high school students come together to override their dictating principal. Sound familiar? That's probably because you saw a movie similar to it back in the late 90s. "Kids in America" missed the boat by about six years and really should have come out circa "Ten Things I Hate About You" and "She's All That."

Huckabee 2008

Depeche Mode back to its roots

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Playing the Angel begins with a loud, warbling, distorted noise that will make your neighbors wonder why they hear a bomb raid siren. It's sounding the alarm that Depeche Mode is back, and they're leading a 52-minute assault on good moods everywhere. The new album is much edgier, angstier and more aggressive than its sleepy, ironically-titled predecessor, Exciter. But does a little extra energy make a better album? You're damn right it does.


Daniel Herman

Bonding by the 'campfire'

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For three anxious years Boards of Canada fans have anticipated the follow-up to 2002's highly praised Geogaddi, and the wait should come with much satisfaction. The Campfire Headphase is a beautifully nostalgic album, striking an eerie familiarity in the listener that evokes sounds and images of a forgotten time. The Scottish electronic music duo has an admitted fascination with reminiscence, and The Campfire Headphase successfully articulates this fascination.


Ted Somerville

Nothing gets out alive

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I remember when I was a moody adolescent, I'd go over to my buddy's house where he and I would spend hours playing a popular, ultra-violent video game on his dad's computer. This summer, when I was a much more well-adjusted college student, I sat in front of my television for hours playing a similarly popular, ultra-violent video game by the same name on my Xbox. I guess some things never change. You can imagine my surprise when the powers that be decided to grace us with a live action version of countless hours wasted.


The Indiana Daily Student

Weller's career on a single album

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Paul Weller's 8th solo effort, As Is Now, isn't much of a departure from his 1992 self-titled solo debut. As Is Now, much like its 1992 counterpart, draws upon much of Weller's roots and influences, including punk, mod rock, 1960s and 70s U.S. rhythm and blues, soul, jazz and funk. Although not a hot commodity in the U.S., Weller is revered as a musical icon in the UK and his soulful singing has drawn many similarities to Steve Winwood.


Garrett Lawton

Batman 'begins' all over again

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The last time we laid eyes on the caped crusader he was flying through the tacky neon jungles of director Joel Schumacher's poorly crafted "Batman & Robin" -- a sure sign that in 1997 the death knell had sounded for the Dark Knight. And yet this past summer, "Batman Begins" sounded the trumpets of resurrection as the film became a blockbuster smash, proving that all the character needed was a major overhaul. With "Begins" we are given the origins of not only Batman but the man behind the mask, Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale).


The Indiana Daily Student

Making love in 'times of romance'

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The Lovemakers, a racy three-person band from California with Scott Blonde (vocals, guitar, programming); Lisa Light (vocals, violin, bass instrument, programming) and Jason Proctor (keyboards, programming), seem to be trying to popularize 80s new wave dance in this modern age. The Lovemakers' style flirts with the thin boundary between "hip" and "cheesy."


Obama 2008

The marriage of music and film

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Cameron Crowe is the kind of director who values music almost as importantly as the acting, script and cinematography in film. In an interview about the choice of music in his films from the "Elizabethtown" Web site (www.elizabethtown.com) Crowe said, "There is nothing more powerful than when the right piece of music marries with the right piece of film." Like other music-savvy filmmakers (Quentin Tarantino, Martin Scorsese, Wes Anderson) Crowe seems to have a knack for using music and songs to help project the mood of his films.


Robbie Olson

Smarties to Shots

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At age 10, most of us gathered around in living rooms late Halloween night, admiring our piles of Sour Patch Kids, Snickers and Pixie Stix. Many of us are still getting together on All Hallow's Eve in college, but this time, it's about hoarding red plastic cups and shot glasses, and in many cases, it's being done while some of us are scantily clad in revealing costumes. Whatever the setting, getting your trick-or-treat bag filled to the brim is a concern of the past for IU students.


Robbie Olson

BE JUST & FEAR NOT

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"It's just a jump to the left, and a step to the right; put your hands on your hips and bend your knees in tight; now it's the pelvic thrust that really drives you insane." Do you know what these are instructions for? If you're a hardcore "Rocky Horror Picture Show" fan, you know exactly what they are. They're instructions on how to do "The Time Warp," a dance that the cast of the movie performs.


COURTESY PHOTO

Touching movie for the family

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Yes, it's about a horse, and a family, and love, but it's those exact elements that make "Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story" a winner. Admit it, everybody loves animals in films, and even more when the animal struggles against incredible odds. "Dreamer" is a heartwarming story about a father and daughter that come together by helping to heal an injured racehorse. Dakota Fanning and Kurt Russell star as the father and daughter duo. Dakota is Cale Crane, a strong, caring young girl who yearns for her father's love and finds true friendship with her horse, Sonador, (Spanish for "dreamer").


The Indiana Daily Student

More than just noise

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San Francisco's Deerhoof is one of those bands that incite strong feelings of either love or hate depending on who's speaking about them. On one hand you have inventive, off-kilter pop fireworks and thoroughly challenging and yet exciting music. On the other, you have a weirdo Japanese girl mumbling, screeching and blithering baby-talk lyrics over improper-fraction time signatures and loud, loud noises. When they played at last summer's Intonation Festival in Chicago, the Chicago Tribune referred to their performance as "band practice with the Muppets."


Coline Sperling

Suspense and brilliance

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No stranger to suspense, Henri-George Clouzot delivered a masterpiece with "The Wages of Fear." As a contemporary of Alfred Hitchcock, Clouzot's thriller does more than keep its audience on the edge of their seat; he also offers a critical look at the darker side of humanity.


The Indiana Daily Student

Destruction of art

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When it comes to reports of vandalism on the IU campuses, University officials agree it's been a quiet year -- so far -- and they'd like to keep it that way. Sherry Rouse, IU's curator of campus art, hesitantly admitted it has been "a very good year so far" in regard to the defacement of art on all eight IU campuses. Rouse said in the grand scheme of things, IU students have been generally been respectful of the art and sculptures on the IUB campus. "Historically, we're pretty lucky," Rouse said.


The Indiana Daily Student

BE JUST & FEAR NOT

·

"It's just a jump to the left, and a step to the right; put your hands on your hips and bend your knees in tight; now it's the pelvic thrust that really drives you insane." Do you know what these are instructions for? If you're a hardcore "Rocky Horror Picture Show" fan, you know exactly what they are. They're instructions on how to do "The Time Warp," a dance that the cast of the movie performs.


The Indiana Daily Student

Smarties to Shots

·

At age 10, most of us gathered around in living rooms late Halloween night, admiring our piles of Sour Patch Kids, Snickers and Pixie Stix. Many of us are still getting together on All Hallow's Eve in college, but this time, it's about hoarding red plastic cups and shot glasses, and in many cases, it's being done while some of us are scantily clad in revealing costumes. Whatever the setting, getting your trick-or-treat bag filled to the brim is a concern of the past for IU students.


The Indiana Daily Student

The soundtrack of my life!

·

You may or may not notice how often music is being played when you watch a movie, whether it's a theme song or a pop song. Music is almost as essential to a movie as the plot. It sets the mood in different scenes and, when done well, it can evoke a very emotional reaction. Soundtracks have long been a way for moviegoers to take that mesh of music and film outside of the theater and place it into their lives. They help us reminisce a hero saving the day, a team winning a game and a group of friends simply enjoying each other's company. There are basically two different types of soundtracks.