Local concert jazzes up the holidays, big-band style BY CASEY JOHNSON Bing Crosby, Old Blue Eyes and most Christmas specials Elvis did always had Christmas music with a big band orchestra, and this year Lincolnites can hear local musicians perform it that way again. The Nebraska Jazz Orchestra will fill the Cornhusker Hotel tonight with big band Christmas cheer with a concert titled “Christmas and All That Jazz,” the orchestra’s first concert of the 2000-2001 season. The lists of acclaimed musi cians who have played with the Nebraska Jazz Orchestra is* impressive, and the orchestra has produced many musicians - including Rex Cadawallader, Ryan Kaisor and Matt Wallace - who have gone on to national success. Ed Love, musical director and saxophonist for the orchestra, said die reason the orchestra has been so successful is because of the members’ immense experi ence. "We are the only professional big band in the area,” he said. "Every high school around has a big band, but we are the guys that never stopped playing after high school. So when people come to see us, they are going to hear a very high-quality product” The Nebraska Jazz Orchestra has a new home at the Comhusker Hotel, 333 S. 13th St, for this season; Love said the location should help draw a bet ter crowd. “This is more centrally locat ed and closer in proximity to restaurants and things for people to do before or after a concert,” he said. “It gives people a better opportunity to come out and enjoy an evening.” Pam Kalal and her husband, Jim, will be performing with the orchestra in the program. Pam Kalal is a long-time pro fessional singer who has sung and appeared in hundreds of radio and television commer cials, she said. She was the voice for the “How do they make it taste so good?” jingle on Robert’s Dairy commercials. Her work includes a long-time stint on Godfather’s Pizza commercials. “We are the guys that never stopped playing after high school Ed Love Lincoln Jazz Orchestra Perhaps some of Pam Kalal’s greatest success has come from singing background vocals for nationally recognized artists such as C.W. McCall and Chip Davis from Mannheim Steamroller. She performed with McCall on the hit title track for the movie "Convoy.” Jim Kalal, who will be per forming with her tonight, also is a bit of a celebrity from commer cials. He has appeared in televi sion commercials for Paul Gerber Auto Sales, Cox Cable and the syndicated television show “MAS.H.” on Fox 42. But tonight’s show is not about commercials - it’s about the music. Pam Kalal said she looks forward to performing with an orchestra because it is some thing she rarely gets to do. “It is an honor to be asked to perform with (the Nebraska Jazz Orchestra) because they have so Performance Preview Christmas and All That Jazz -C Where: Comhusker Hotel -333 S. 13th —(When: Tonight @ 7:30 Cost: $15, $7 for dents - many great musicians,” she said. “I have worked with some of them before, but to work with an entire orchestra is really quite a thrill.” Top films vie for attention on shelves at video-rental shops ■“The War Zone,'one of the best movies this year, skipped the theaters and went straight to the stores. Other high quality movies follow suit BY SAMUEL MCKEWON The video release of the sum mer epic “Gladiator” is one of those “raid the shelves” ‘ moments at your local movie mega-rental store, where the 47 or so copies of Russell Crowe’s glistening six-pack are swal lowed whole by the barely-legal to-drive set, who will freeze frame the scene where Maximus guts that Bengal tiger over as many times as there are videos. So woe the 11 p.m. video hunter, who's most certainly / missed out on the prime cut of Rome, and maybe oh the glut of "X-Men” cassettes, too. But not far from that metallic X is that one copy of Hm Roth’s “The War Zone,” stocked full as usual, waiting for the discerning mind to peruse its back coven And even then that viewer won’t discover that one of last year’s best films is contained inside, though it received zero press outside the major cities, much less a tiny run in the Lincoln or Omaha metro area. • There's a Blockbuster (or Hollywood, or Audio-Visual) full of movies toiling under such obscurity, even on the new releases rack, which mostly cov ers 1999 and 2000 films released theatrically, along with a few sex minded straight-to-video selec tions and pay-cable movies that mainstream television audi ences never tasted. And the 1999 slate of films, some of the best in a few decades, still has a few quirky, unknown titles that escaped the mainstream despite of the suc cess that artful, dramatic fare that "Being John Malkovich” and “American Beauty” enjoyed dur ing their theatrical funs. Here's a survey of the best that never came to Lincoln’s the aters, along with a star rating of out of four for quality. Nearly all can be found in any of the three video stores listed above, though they’re less likely to be available for purchase. Go online to make it a keepsake or gift “The War Zone” Actor Tim Roth’s directorial debut is reminiscent of Swedish genius Ingmar Bergman, and that’s no faint phrase to throw around without reason. But “The War Zone” - a stunning, spare, gut-wrenching drama of family incest - is no faint film. Set against the bare English coastal countryside, it succeeds where many movies concerning rape fail - by transforming a morality tale into something larger, with implication and empathy involved. Here is one convincing portrait of an unspeakable act It starts with a relocated EngUsh family-a father, a moth er, son and daughter - in search of a “fresh start” as the matri arch, played by Danish beauty Tilda Swinton (of “Orlando” fame). It’s never made obviously clear what the fresh start entails, only that it includes the birth of another child into the family quite soon into the film, which occurs in a panic sequence cen tered on a car crash. It isn’t long after that the 15 year-old Tom (Freddie Cuncliffe, awash in adolescent acne) dis covers, through the back win dow of the isolated family stead, the last bit of an intimate, naked act between father (Ray Winsome) and 18-year-old daughter Jessie (Lara Belmont, a young mirror of Swinton’s physi cality). What follows is Tom's quiet, building journey through the gamut of painful emotion^, and. the equally quiet steps Jessie takes to stop the truth from arriving, for her escape to college is only months Winsome plays his character full of body and is caring and decent except for his one basic, appallingly indecent trait. We sense he acts out in spite of his better inclination not to. That it plays so cold and understated makes the scenes of violence play more violently and better illuminates the pain of family rape. “The War Zone” becomes exceedingly hard to watch with feeling raw with hurt for the situation; one particular scene between Tom and Jessie is a test for how much built-up hurt an audience can endure. Movies are rarely made like this, and even more rarely do they find away, and there s the boyfriend to consider. And beyond keeping, the secret, Roth does depict a fami ly of fortunate rela tions; early scenes may as well be out of a Rockwell por trait. What Tom is up against is not only pain, but the very keystone of his nuclear structure staying together. Horrible things have been done to Jessie, and yet, Tom observes, as do we, that she seems to have taken it in some sort of main stream audience. And yet it's small and resonating well after the credits have run. Its straight, simple presenta tion is filmed poetry with a sad, endless soul of hurt. ★★★★ oumc ouii ui cujjuig duiuC) iu uic point where her casual nudity in the presence of younger brother is no worry. Which isn't to say “The War Zone" has taken the father's side in the matter; rather it’s simply an honest portrayal - JL lie LiUlICy Before Steven Soderbergh made “Erin Brockovich,” he made “The Limey,” the best kind of crime film, a stylish, smooth action picture that features Soderbergh's style of telling the Give the Perfect Gift This Season a Custom Color Calendar from copyworkf Deluxe 12-Month Calendar Theme Calendars Year-at-a-Glance Calendar Monthly Tear-Off Calendar *Add personalized dates! 1320 Q. Street • Lincoln (next to University Bookstore) 477-7400 • OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY, 7 DAYS A WEEK story out of sequence. It’s a pic ture a hard-boiled James Bond might like: shaken and stirred. Still tastefully dressed. Terance Stamp, “Zod” from “Superman 2,” is a Cockney ex con named Wilson - a limey, as it were, who flies to LA simply to know who’s Joseph's childhood with over protective, neurotic French Julia Child of a mother, feels more like cinematic reactions, with instant flash-forwards and back wards, without change in film quality. It's challenging, but absorbing; the pieces come together well killed his daughter, and why. He encounters her ex after the movie ends. “Journey” is uncommonly flush and green, boytriena, Terry Valentine, a showy record producer on his decline (Peter Fonda), along with an assortment of acquaintanc es and bag men. Let it be said that Wilson quietly makes his way full of wide shots and abstract pres entation. And yet it feels quite small, as Joseph quietly "nices” his way into Felicia's life, making up phony dead wife stories, becoming her boarder in his elaborately Lip U1L luUUvl of knowledge, all the way to the top. Can a movie capture California any better? No, proba bly not, which makes Stamp's fish-out-of-water presence even better. like Lee Marvin in “Point Blank," his Wilson just wants a few answers, not too many, then he’ll be along. If only they'd offer the answers... Soderbergh is one of best directors going, and his exceed ing talent to cast and shoot gor geous women of any kind - in this case, a beachy, California daydreamer who hangs around as Terry’s girlfriend - shows again here. It’s not just the story fool, but the style, and Soderbergh’s got dibs on it, again and again. There’s a crime pic ture this year any sweeter than this 90-minute smoothie, not by a shot long (that's Soderbergh for long shot). ★★★★ “Felicia’s Journey” Atom Egoyan made a film much like "The War Zone” with his 1997 effort "The Sweet Hereafter,” about the aftermath of small-town school bus crash. His follow-up was last year’s “Felicia's Journey,” a provocative, lush study of an Irish girl (Elaine Cassidy) who has run out of spurned loves and places to go and a serial killer Joseph (Bob Hoskins) who lives his day hours as lead chef at an industrial fac tory and quietly becomes her mentor and suitor, videotaping his exchanges with Felicia, just as he has other girls before her. Egoyan has a specific talent to tell a story in fragmented time, rather than chronology, which works as a sort of mental frame work operating outside the action events of the films. It is conventional to be viewed straight ahead, and yet "Journey,” which spends a large amount of time doting on riu slirts today! Flu vaccines will be given at the University Health Center from 8 am - 2 pm. No appointment is necessary! Cost is $8 (cash or check). SSES™ |For appointments 1 tall 472-5000 www uni edu/health 11 ItACU" U p home. It works to a fine conclu sion, staying honest with its title: The movie is a journey, the key the girl, the killer, played with devilish understatement by Hoskins, a traveler within it. It helps make the conclusion come together. Pleasure for the entire film lasts much longer. ★★★ Vz "Liberty Heights” Barry Levinson is an accom plished director with two sides: the big budget showman (“Toys,” “Wag The Dog,” “Bugsy”) and the smaller, more personal films he makes about his hometown of Baltimore (“Diner,” “Avalon”). “Liberty Heights” released around last Christmas, is in the latter catego ry, a story set in the 1950s, chron icling the love life of two Jewish brothers (Ben Foster and Adrien Brody) who choose separate paths toward love. Ben (Foster) seems taken with the outwardly forbidden love of a black girl (Rebekah Johnson), the daughter of a wealthy, prominent doctor who’s no more pleased than Ben's par ents (Bebe Neuwirth and Joe Mantegna) are upon discovery. Van (Brody) veers in another socially unacceptable direction by courting the debutante beau ty, appropriately named Dubbie, played by fashion model Carolyn Murphy in an uncommonly good acting debut. While it isn’t Levinson's best film, or his most entertaining, it contains the typical intelligent wit of a fine script and uses long period set pieces (a James Brown concert is particularly good) to fine effect. And Frank Sinatra lovers will find a kindred spirit in “Liberty Heights.” ★★★ “The Minus Man” A peculiar, strangely attrac tive drama about serial killer (“Rushmore” screenwriter Owen Wilson, in a fine dramatic turn) who works his way into small town life and murders almost randomly, and without warning, by way of a small vial of poison he pours in a victim’s drink. Try to fit gloves on this movie, which co-stars Mercedes Ruehl, Brian Cox and Janeane Garofalo. Directed by Hampton Fancher (writer of “Blade Runner"), the movie seems at times shot delib erately bright, so the movie takes on almost a TV-movie quality. Many scenes, especially those that show the killer working as a mailman, seem almost hyper real, as an odd jingling music plays on the soundtrack. Wilson is good, unassuming in his per formance; he seems as unper plexed at his popularity as we do. And when he stumbles into troubles that might be beyond him, he conjures up fictional detectives, both his saviors and deepest critics. Weird, but it works. ★★★ Vz