REVIEW: Second City at the Ark

If you weren’t one of the many people that packed the Ark Friday night, hopefully it is because you bought a ticket to Saturday’s show. If not, you may still have a chance to steal a ticket, or at the very least sneak in, because this show is not to be missed.

The typical set-up for all Second City shows is as follows: an even number of people in gender-balanced pairs (in this case, 6 people split into three men and three women). For the next two hours, this little comedy troupe puts on micro-skits, macro-skits, and improvisational comedy (including music!) for the audience to enjoy.

Although the gender equality was refreshing, the lack of diversity to offset the white cast led to much of the comedy being geared towards white suburban-class folks. Since this is Ann Arbor, I guess we can’t complain. Still, besides the occasional religious joke, the comedy focused on topics like quality education, gluten intolerance, and politics. Nothing on police brutality was mentioned, nor immigration, or anything about the Middle East save one joke in bad taste. Were they simply being respectful, or simply unable to come up with jokes in good taste?

One joke that stuck with me (along these lines): What is gluten intolerance? Something that upper middle class people have.

Let us not forget that these people are professionals. They have their skits and their tunes and their improv down to an art. At several points a cast member would ask the audience for objects, locations, or simply random words, and the rest of the cast would create an entire story out of that small premise. Just thinking about doing that on stage would make any mere human crumble–these people were grizzled veterans of the field.

It is always refreshing to see people unafraid to make mistakes or attempt to sing when they cannot sing. As the audience, we laugh along with them not only because of an executed joke, but because we also support their work. One cast member pranced around because he was half human-half Gargoyle. Not only were his antics hilarious, his acting was spot-on. I’m sure that’s what any half-Gargoyle youth would act…

My sole critique of the performance was the reliance on Ohio State Jokes. After spending three years in Ann Arbor attending the University of Michigan, I get it, people do not like OSU. Making a joke about Ohio becomes cheap and a way to make everyone laugh when you have run out of fresh comedy–this is why The Second City’s OSU jokes seemed a little stale. They heard or read in the news about the U of M — OSU Big Ten Rivalry so they made no less than THREE jokes about it. Come on guys, I already hear those jokes at least five times a week.

But disregard the last paragraph as the ramblings of an elderly man. Instead, see The Second City and become a happier person.

The Second City

Review: Space Jam – SOLD OUT!!!

Before the film started one of the ushers at The State Theater told the audience “We had to convince our booker to show this film, he didn’t think anyone would come. We’ve had to turn 50 people away tonight!” The audience of late-night moviegoers cheered in various states of sobriety.

State Theater Saturday midnights are really quite an experience, especially with a film as iconic and ridiculous as Space Jam. There was no moment without the sound of laughter, callbacks to the screen with many “That’s what she said” moments. People quoted lines, heckled actors and athletes, and most importantly sang along with the timeless sound track of 1996 popular culture.

Space Jam is a hilarious, ridiculous and somewhat scandalous film about Michael Jordan, cartoon aliens and the Looney Tunes! (Oh and of course Bill Murray)

Space Jam

The audience cheered, booed and laughed together for 88 minutes. Some of us relived our first time seeing Space Jam in the theaters in ’96, others harkened back to the first time their lives were altered by this film.

If you have never witnessed the phenomenon that is Space Jam, get a bunch of friends together, gather some popcorn, Furbies, Pogs and push pops, maybe some treasure trolls, pigtails with butterfly hairclips, and press play.

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For future Saturday midnights go to The State Theater’s website.

Review: The Drop – Well played sir.

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The Drop approaches a common subject in an original and surprising way. Dennis Lehane (Mystic River, Shutter Island) has crafted another brilliant crime narrative that shies away from cliché and common narrative tropes that tend to pepper cross-cultural, urban crime plots.

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The film follows Bob Saginowski (Tom Hardy) who tends bar at a local bar in Brooklyn owned by his ‘cousin Marv’ (James Gandolfini). Cousin Marv’s bar occasionally acts as a cash drop for the local Chechen mob. Two amateur thieves rob the bar, which creates tension between Marv and the Chechen mob, putting the lives of Bob and Marv at risk if they aren’t able to recover the stolen money.

Throughout the film we learn more about Marv and Bob’s pasts, their attempt and ultimate failure at establishing a gang when they were young and Marv’s reverberating desire to be infamous. Family ties play an important role in Marv and Bob’s relationship as they work to ensure their own survival.

Early on in the film Bob finds an abused puppy in a garbage can one night on his way home from work. This is how he comes to know Nadia (Noomi Rapace) a young woman with a troubled past and problematic ex. The puppy, who Bob names Rocco, is a catalase for Bob and Nadia’s friendship.

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I would hate to say too much more about the plot for fear of spoiling your experience of the complexities of these characters and the many layers at play throughout the plot.

The Drop is a very well crafted script directed with precision by Michaël R. Roskam (Bullhead) in his English-language directing debut. Hardy, Rapace and Gandolfini bring expertly bring Dennis Lehane’s narrative to life. This film is extremely satisfying to watch, I highly recommend it.

Currently showing at The State Theater and other nearby locations.

PREVIEW: Second City Comes to the Ark

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The Second City is an improv comedy group founded in Chicago. It has been a beginning for comedians ranging from Tina Fey (Mean Girls, 30 Rock) to Stephen Colbert (The Colbert Report). Need I say more about this group’s ability to make people laugh?

When: The Ark, Friday 9/26 and Saturday 9/27 at 8 pm

Cost: If you show student ID, tickets are only $20! (At MUTO or the Ark)

Why: Exams coming up next week? Take a break from studying. Car broke down on the highway? Walk to the Ark and buy tickets to Second City. Disheartened that Michigan may have a losing football season? Nurse your pain with comedy tickets.

Finally, a video preview here: https://www.youtube.com/user/secondcity

Preview: The Skeleton Twins

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What: The Skeleton Twins

Where: The Michigan Theater

When: Opens Friday 26 September

How Much: $8 for students and veterans, $10 general admission

 

Starring Kristen Wiig (SNL, Brides Maids), Bill Hader (SNL), Ty Burrell (Modern Family) and Luke Wilson (The Royal Tenenbaums, Legally Blonde).

The Skeleton Twins is about the reuniting of estranged twins Maggie (Wiig) and Milo (Hader) who are each struggling in their individual lives. Together they trace back to where things went so wrong for each of them and realize that repairing their relationship with one another could provide the solution to fixing everything.

1 hour, 33 minutes, rated R.

 

Preview: Carter Lezman at The World of Beer

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What: The Musical Talents of Carter Lezman

Where: The World of Beer on South University St.

When: Thursday 25 September, 9:00pm

How Much: FREE

21+ Event

 

Carter Lezman is a senior at The University of Michigan. For the purposes of this article I contacted him to ask him about his musical inspirations, geographic origins and why he would recommend you attend his first concert in Ann Arbor this Thursday.

 

WatsonSauce: Where are you from?

Carter Lezmand: I am from Holland, MI, a beautiful town right on the shore of Lake Michigan

 

WS: What do you study at U of M?

CL: I am currently pursuing a bachelors in History and Political Science with a minor in Classical Civilizations.

 

WS: When did you start learning to play music, when did you start writing your own music?

CL: I got my first guitar when I was 10, and have been playing music ever since.  Since then, I have learned how to play several other instruments, including piano, drums, bass guitar, ukelele, and of course learned how to sing!

 

WS: Who are your musical inspirations?

CL: First and foremost is God.  Growing up in church and playing in the worship team allowed me the opportunity to get better at music.  Even now, I may not write “Christian music,” but I write songs that make people feel a little better about themselves.  I have God to thank for my musical gift.

My second inspiration is my mom.  She is the one who drove me to band practice, encouraged me when I just was starting, and even now is my biggest fan.  I would not be the person or musician I am today without her inspiration.

 

WS: Who are some of your favorite bands to listen to?

CL: My favorite bands… uh this is a tough one… I would say that U2 probably tops the chart for me, but I also enjoy Coldplay, Mat Kearney, John Mayer, Maroon 5, and Bastille.

 

WS: What would you say to a potential audience member/ why should people come and hear you play!?

CL: The first thing I would say to a potential audience member is have fun!!  That is the sole reason why I got into music, it is fun!  Have a good time: laugh, clap, sing, cry, do whatever it is that defines your personage best.  I will sing my heart out, share some songs that you maybe haven’t heard yet but will love, and most of all give you a sound that is unique and 100% original.

I will be doing both covers and original work, so I think there will be something great for everyone.

 

Visit Carter Lezman’s FaceBook, BandCamp and/or YouTube Channel.

RSVP to this event and ‘share’ it with your friends HERE.

 

A little preview: