behrcolls@aol.com Diesel falls 'Apart' by Jackie Loohauis Milwaukee Journal Sentinel les" a good thing for the makers of "AMan Apart" that Vin Diesel can al ways be counted on to inject some oc tane into a film. Because Diesel is one of the few things that really plays in this movie, thich has been held out of theatrical Iblease for two years. One might have hoped that Direc- F. Gary Gray had used that time wisely to adjust the picture. Instead, Gray and his first-time screenwriters simply sat on a flawed project, one with a plot seen so often that audience members could have chanted it out together. Tough, eccentric cop Sean Vetter (Diesel) does the right thing by bust ing a drug cartel kingpin named Lucero (Geno Silva). But Vetter pays for his devotion to duty when gunmen murder his beloved wife. The question is, who ordered the kill: Lucero or a mysterious new drug lord named El Diablo? Another question is: Could the scriptwriters have come up with a lamer villain's name than "El Diablo"? Probably not,, given the lack of imagi nation displayed in the rest of this screenplay. Vetter teams up with Lucero to find (sigh) El Diablo, and finds himself bat tling not only vicious drug dealers but his own mental anguish. It's a race to see what will unravel first, Vetter's mental stability or the story. Bet on Vetter. This plot has holes in it you could drive a Hummer through, but Diesel soldiers on trying to hold it all together. The most watchable action-star to come along in years, he combines muscular good looks with edgy humor JUST BECAUSE IT'S ON SALE DOESN'T MEAN YOU CAN AFFORD IT. Learning responsible financial behavior now will keep you out of trouble In the future. Find out how to manage debt, avoid default on your student loan and live comfortably within your means at the online source for smart students. cunt 77,71117777771111 Vin Diesel and Larenz Tate dish-out justice, execution-style. and brings the movie the only air o street-smart believability it can boast. Cinematographer Jack N. Green does give "A Man Apart" an interest ing look, gray and grimy as the inside of an old warehouse. And Gray pro vides the requisite number of shootouts and car crashes to keep action fans happy. But the movie is overlong, filled with so much narration and explana tory datelines ("Baja, Mexico") that it begins to feel like a travelogue. The soft ending has the scent of an after thought. In short, this is a production yearn ing for DVD release. And we can bet it won't take two years to happen. "A Man Apart" directed by F. Gary Gary, star ring Vin Diesel and Larenz Tate is now playing at Tinsletown. *tom out of 4 stars -" --- " •M , ::'.". , OK , * ~•,.:•,,,,„ •.i-: - 'i - ::e. ...:.:.,'..,-..........;!.;.......,,,,., -r , .. ir, j oi r ,., • .;.-4010,3 •. m" " , ',-- ,' , mi. 4" . '''''., Friday, April 4, 2003 Grateful Dead lyricist forges out on his own Few major bands have divided listeners as decisively as the Grateful Dead once did. The San Francisco prank sters attracted a legion of rabid followers and repelled just about everybody else who didn't have the patience to plumb the intricacies of their one-of-a-kind sound: coun try, folk, blues and rock as viewed through the kaleido scope of psychedelia. . . Their style favored lengthy jams and winding improvi sation, but underneath the noodling was a sturdy founda tion: melodic songs, usually with lyrics written by Robert Hunter. Though not a band member, Hunter was Dead patriarch Jerry Garcia's closest musical collaborator and friend. Hunter's often profound words gave the Dead's tunes a depth that eluded even the most ambitious rock bands. Alongside such '6os icons as Bob Dylan, Pete Townshend, Lou Reed and a handful of others, Hunter opened a new world for rock lyricism with his surreal wordplay, evocative imagery and cosmic Beat-inspired poetry. The songs he wrote with and for the Dead-" Dark Star," "Uncle John's Band," "Ripple," "Bertha," "Casey Jones," "China Cat Sunflower," "U.S. Blues," the epic "Terrapin Station," "Touch of Grey" - are the foundation of the hand's legacy. That legacy lives on, even after Garcia's death in 1995. The survivors have regrouped as the Dead, and will tour this summer. Meanwhile, Hunter has forged a solo career. In an interview from the road, the guitar-playing trouba dour assessed the state of his world, and ours: Guitar playing: "I practice two to four hours a day, and my fingers are obeying me at long last. I started at 15 which makes 45-plus years of practice. I figure I'm a late bloomer. I've been driving across the country listening to Miles Davis and John Coltrane. I could never borrow from them, but the freedom with which they approach their instruments is sinking in. They're giving me permission to go ahead and just open it up. The other night I discovered three new melodic possibilities in 'Reuben and Cerise,' just letting my fingers go where they wanna go." by Greg Kot Chicago Tribune Do you want to join the Beacon? The following positions will be available Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor News Editors Sports Editors Editorial Editor The Beacon provides a great place, for all majors, to get real world experience. Letters of application for the edKop.inachief position are to be submitted to: Ken Miller / Office of Student Affairs by April 11th at 5 p.m. Letters of application for all other positions should be submitted to the Beacon office. Touring during wartime: "There is a fear, a nervousness about us congregating. But I feel we need to be out there. It's important to be out there. There's nothing more impor tant than to be playing music in these dangerous days. I guess my statement, to be quite hippie dippy about it, is that we are all one, and half of me is beating the hell out of the other half of me. I have not turned on the television once. I did that during the last war, and wrote a book about it (' A Strange Music'). From what I read and what I hear about this one, it's the same war." Protest songs: "I usually start my sets with 'Standing on the Moon,' which I wrote around the time of the (1991 Persian) last Gulf war: 'I see a shadow on the sun/Stand ing on the moon/The stars go fading one by one/I hear a cry of victory/And another of defeat/A scrap of age old lullaby/Down some forgotten street.' That just addresses it. I can pour all my feelings into that." The Internet: "If music is free, less crap will be made. I hope it will become less market-oriented, where music will make it on its individual merits rather than its commercial push. This could auger augur a golden era for music. But it will kill the record companies, and I'm delighted to see them crumble." The Dead without Garcia: "When I was writing songs for him, I was writing songs that he could wrap his mind around. They weren't just a bunch of wild turkeys. Now there is a weeding-out process of songs of mine the hand can and can't handle. I'm doing a lot of the things they're not doing, like 'Days Between' or 'Candyman,' real lyric heavy songs. Vocally, the Dead aren't as strong as they might be, so they're going to take Joan Osborne out on the summer tour. She can add to them. The new band is about as close as we're going to get to what it was without Jerry's sweet melodic guitar thing behind it." Writing with Garcia: "Telepathy? There was a lot of un spoken communication. But for (the Dead's classic 1970 album) ' Workingman's Dead,' we were living in the same house, and I was banging away on guitar, writing songs like 'Dire Wolf upstairs. By the time I'd give him the lyr ics, he'd already thought of a better approach to the melody. That wasn't exactly telepathy. It was more like thin walls." for the Fall 2003 semester: The Behrend Beacon Features Editor Advertising Manager Calendar Page Editor Distribution Manager Public Relations Staff Writers Page 9