M|KlPH|| nCCKGIHI ia Preview The following is a brief list of weekend events. Please call the venue for more information. CONCERTS Creighton Lied Education Centerfor the Arts, 24th and Cass streets Friday: Creighton University Orchestra Duggan s Pub, 440 S. IIth St. Friday and Saturday: The Grateful Dudes Lied Center for Performing Arts, 301N. 12th St. Saturday: Comhusker Marching Band Sunday: “A Judy Collins Christmas” O ’Donell Auditorium, 50and Huntington streets Sunday: Lincoln Civic Choir Royal Grove, 340 W. Comhusker Highway Friday: Black Light Sunshine Saturday: Big Bad Voodoo Daddy St. Mark’s, 8550 Pioneers Blvd. Sunday: A Nebraska Brass Christinas The Zoo Bar, 136~N. l4ihsT Friday: The Paladins, The Mezcal Brothers Saturday: Shawn Pittman THEATER: Lincoln Community Playhouse, 2500 S. 56th St. All weekend: “Mr. Scrooge” Lied Centerfor Performing Arts, 301N. 12th St. All weekend: Big Apple Circus Mary Riepma Ross FilmTheater, Sheldon Art Gallery, 12th and R streets All weekend: “fyirin Falls Idaho” Star City Dinner Theatre, 8th and Q streets All weekend: “Pump Boys and Dinettes” GALLERIES: Gallery 9,124 S. Ninth St. -— - All weekend: Allen Busch, Judy Greff and Barbara Sullivan Great Plains Art Collection, Love Library Rm. 215,13th and R streets All weekend: “Wind and Water on the Land”: Karen Dienstbier, Karen Kune, Christina McPhee, Linda Meigs and Susan Puelz Haydon Gallery, 335 N. Eighth St. All weekend: “Small Treasures,” all Haydon artists Lentz Center, Morrill Hall, 14th and U streets . All weekend: paintings by Shi Hu Robert Hillestad Textiles Gallery, Home Economics Building, Rm. 231 East Campus All weekend: “EastMeetsWest,” an apparel collection by Hong YounKim The Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, 12th and R streets All weekend: “Black Image and Identity,” “Robert Colescott; Recent Paintings,” “Judy Burton: Visual Nuances” and “Eugene Atget’s Views of Paris” Students direct performances By Josh Nichols Staff writer They’ve been working all semester, and now they get a chance to show their stuff. This weekend, student directors in the University ofNebraska-Lincoln the ater department will get die opportunity to direct a play for the publicfe eye. Today and tomorrow in the Studio Theatre, UNL students from Directing 1 will be directing single scenes from dif ferent full-length plays, and students in Directing II will be directing one-act plays. Tonight’s performance will feature two single-scene productions and two one-act plays, while tomorrow’s will feature two single-scene productions along with a one-act play. Visiting professor Ken McCulough, who teaches the two classes, said die students chose their own material and tried to make it contemporary work. What they came up with was a vari ety of stage productions. One of the one acts is about a famous Russian poet and the oppression she experienced under the rule of Stalin, while another is a Shakespeare sonnet about gay relations. “They are all different in style and subject matter,” McCulough said. “These productions show what fbe stu dents did to transfer the work onto die stage. What die directors did with the scenes is interesting.” McCulough also pointed out that the productions are unique because they required that the students direct their peers in the theater department “The performances that are the most successful usually are a result of the directors being able to be profes sional in directing their peers,” he said. “Many are able to do that in a very mature way.” Kyle Johnston, a student in the Directing I class, said overall, he thought it was nice working with stu dent actors. It was kind of difficult working with people my age because of the rela tionships we hold in taking classes together mid having experiences outside the department together;** he said. “I sometimes found it difficult to assert myself as a director, but I found that I could collaborate with diem and draw more from them because of the relationship we have.” He said the more informal process involved a little more “screwing around” than usual and resulted in many good laughs. As much as he enjoyed it, Johnston said he would have liked to have had even more time to work with the play. Trying to balance his scene produc Please see DIRECTORS on 13 Sharon Kolbet/DN play based on the words and writings of Jack Kerouac. LEFT: CARMEN BAILEY and Chad Brawn pause during their Saturday afternoon rehearsal. Bailey and Brown volunteered to worfc under the direction of fel low theater student Greg Peters as part of Peters’directing class final project. . 00 Twin Falls Idaho’ a worthy debut effort mM m , - --- . .... By JoshEsaitter Senior staff writer The Polish Brothers’ debut film, ‘Twin Falls Idaho,” will undoubtedly draw a lot of comparisons to a couple of Davids - Lynch and Cronenberg - . but aside from a few surface similari ties, the film inhabits a world of its own. So, let’s get those surface similari ties over with. The cinematography owes more than a little to Lynch. Dark blues, greens and browns color dimly lit rooms, calling to mind “Blue Velvet” and “Twin Peaks.” Oddball peripheral characters pepper the film, but unlike Lynch films, the effect is not dreamlike. And “Twin Falls Idaho” shares Cronenberg’s obsession with biological mutation and its effects on sexuality and psychology. But that’s about it “Twin Falls Idaho” is about a pair of Siamese twins, Blake and Francis Falls, who begin to pick apart their co dependent lives together when they meet a prostitute named Penny, played by fashion model Michele Hicks (why are all prostitutes in films portrayed by gorgeous women?), in her first film role. Francis is ailing, and his heart is weaker than Blake’s. Blake could live if the two were separated, but Francis couldn’t He relies on Blake to survive. The film could have easily been a hey-look-at-the-freaks display of weirdness for weirdness’ sake. But the Polish brothers, Michael and Mark, have an intimate knowledge of the sub ject matter that makes the film human. The brothers are real-life identical twins with their own synchronous habits and language. In a press release, Mark said he and his brother didn’t' Clint DauIaiu ■ Hill HHWIH1V Ha Facts TOto: Twin Falls Idaho’ Director: Michael Polish Stare: Michael Polish, Mark Polish, Michele Hicks Rating: R (language, mild violence) Grade: B Five Words: Offbeat film bizarre, yet human need to complete their sentences to communicate. They had to be enrolled in speech therapy before they started school because they had developed such an impenetrable language between die two of than. They said the film is specifically about their relation ship. The Polish brothers, who starred in and wrote die film (Michael directed it), were able to convincingly portray the conjoined twins and their special language. Blake and Francis speak in low whispers to each other and talk to others in a slow, careful monotone. Each twin is seen as a separate per son with his own identity but also as half of one entity. The complexity of this role is handled extremely well by the real-life twins. Hicks is also very good as Penny. She manages to avoid the hooker-with a-heart-of-gold trappings of ho* role fay playing it simply, quietly and honestly. “Twin Falls” carves out its own niche with strong performances, sub tlety and unusual structure. The film is set up as a series of anecdotes. Something happens, the screen fades to black, then something else happens. The only narratives running through the film are Francis’ failing health and Blake’s increasingly romantic relation ship with Penny. Courtesy Photo IN “TWIN FALLS IDAHO,” Marie and Michael Polish play Siamese twins who befriend a prostitute, played by Michele Hicks. The Polish brothers also wrote the film, and Michael directed it. Dialogue is sparse, and the look of the film doesn’t connect it to any cer tain period of time. The film is simulta neously claustrophobic and full of space, allowing the audience to get to know the characters’ speech patterns, movements and mannerisms as well as their personalities. Even in dramatic moments such as Francis’jealous reaction to Blake and Penny’s relationship and Francis’ ill ness, die actors stay grounded in reali ty. There are no uncomfortable moments of overacting. The film does have several prob lems though, but most can be attrib uted to the brothers’ inexperience as feature filmmakers. The peripheral characters aren’t as well-written, and many are stereotypical, with ham-fist ed dialogue, such as an extremely effeminate gay photographer and a sleazy entertainment lawyer who wants to make money off the twins in the circus. TV has-beens Garret Morris (“Saturday Night Live”) and William Katt (“The Greatest American Hero”) are given cameos as a nutcase who thinks he’s Jesus and an insensitive doctor, respectively. These cameos have nothing to do with the film and seem to be thrown in to make fun of Morris and Katt. And the film gets slightly preachy and cutesy toward the end, contrasting with the dark, pensive mood and subtle message of the rest of the film. Despite these qualms, the rest of the film is a unique, bizarre trip that also manages to remain human. The Polish brothers have made an interest ing film that deserves to be seen, if for no other reason than to get acquainted with filmmakers who will make a great film in the future.