Sattjj ®ar sbri ‘Heart’ shoots beyond sports flick fare, scores BY RACHEL BRODY STAFF WRITER “The Heart of the Game” has enough game to be interesting and enough heart to be inspira tional, without being sappy. Director Ward Serrill fol lows the Roosevelt High School Rough Riders girls’ basketball team for seven years and pieces together a moving collection of the importance of teamwork and the strength of one’s self. Rap artist Ludacris narrates the Seattle high school team’s every move, on and off the court. Enter Bill Resler, a tubby, white-bearded tax law professor at the University of Washington. As the new head coach of the women’s varsity basketball team, Resler leaves the X-and-0 strate gies on the chalkboard and instead focuses on the “inner circle” the teams’ confidential pow-wows free from parental input and even Resler’s guidance. Resler’s unorthodox tactics transform the dwindling bas ketball program to undefeated champions with a packed house. This story might seem like just another heartwarming tale of the underdog team, with an eccentric coach who challenges his play ers, leads them to victory and then walks away with the Coach of the Year award after only one season. But it’s only the first quarter, the movie still has a long way to go “ The Heart of the Game” can not be denied the touching and inspirational feel associated with great sports flicks, but the film CULT MOVIES FROM PAGE 7 Once the word is out, then, everyone in the cult might as well drink their metaphorical Kool- Aid. In the meantime, however, cult movies simply step in to fill a void mainstream film studios cannot. They make viewers feel like part of some secret club, one that meets in whatever basement has the moist Ed Wood posters and whose only password is, “Dude, I finally saw Peter Jackson’s ‘Braindead.’” Cameron Price, a local filmmak er who works with 301films.com, says the appeal of cult movies is all about leveling the terrain. “It’s their ability to connect with an audience, because these direc tors are people who got their start basically by making movies for no money with their friends. So you watch Peter Jackson’s first movie that could have been done by any body,” Price says. “He just had the time and the energy to do it.” The Internet made “Snakes on lA# rT I A AI & BAR OPENS NIGHTLY AT BPM WETLANDS mi iimi.h !■ *a*etla r, cl SCI) apel hi IP com ,•. ,. ’fcmmmlmiSSSm THE NEW ME Sept 7 ERIC. CHOIR 98 QUEER CABARET KUNGFU DYKES. > 4 doors open at 7pm ~| | .r— in> i irvi . THE GRAVEYARD BOULEVARD I :*.% 14 !>!’ I :] ITTH ■Hh b>lb>Lll\JCj 9 9 RACHEL sage, girls make MESSES BENEFIT for the TRIANGLE BLUES SOCIETY NONCANNON 9 „ ME wU WES^jVr^M^GILCHRIST. __ , _ _ DAVIDERA f-g, B CJ CJ f\/l 912 PALEO THE SCOURGE OF THE SEA LGBTQI DANCE PARTY 913 .. C .L.... ~E URE TUFF LUVS >N\. 9.14 100 YORKTOWN. THE END OF DETROIT, —e. ■ the GET DOWN SEQUENCE r%El\r ■ 9 15... THE WALKERS.PURITAN RODEO SHOW, r MEMPHIS Downtown Chapel Hill TEMPTATION ■ TT | qj www.wetlandschapelhill.com Bread Cot 3est whole grain breads in town!! Whole grain sweets!! Cinnamon Rolls available at 7am Daily!! www.freshbakedbread.com Open Tuesday - Saturday 7am - 6pm Village Plaza, 2295. Elliott Rd, Chape! Hill • Ph:932-1112 • Fax:s42-2264 goes beyond warm fuzzies and stays grounded in the nuances of reality. Resler not only pushes the physical strength of the team but adds a very mental aspect to the team’s strategy. Each season Resler selects a theme that the players use to visualize strategies and psych themselves. When the girls are the “Pack of Wolves,” they talk about smelling players’ weaknesses and moving in for the kill. Some of the most humorous parts come from pre-game chants of “draw blood!” —a shock to many parents who came to watch their little girls play ball. And then the coach scoots by screaming, “Look them in the eyes! Go for the kill!” The Rough Riders are unique and surprise those outside their tight inner circle. When Damellia Russell enrolls at Roosevelt, she feels out of place but is in no way out of her league. MOVIE SHORTS Gabrielle French director Patrice Chereau’s adaptation of Joseph Conrad’s short story “The Return” is more like a single episode of a daytime soap opera with subtitles than what it aims to be: a drama about setting love aside once you find it Gabrielle (Isabelle Huppert) is the trophy wife of bourgeois Jean Hervey (Pascal Greggory), and she a Plane” what it is today (if that’s a compliment). Without that world wide series of tubes, “Snakes,” would have been a late-summer joke. To feed the frenzy, a vast buffet of Internet message boards allow cult movie hounds to find one another and swap random titles no normal moviegoer would ever touch. But while the Internet certain ly can bring past titles to promi nence, it almost can be the death of upcoming ones. Cult films existed long before the Internet, whether they be “This Is Spinal Tap,” “Plan 9 From Outer Space” or to go back to 1932, Tod Browning’s “Freaks.” What unites those seemingly random titles, Price says, is the manner in which they grew by pure, slow-moving word of mouth among friends, as opposed to the Internet superhighway, where the speed limit has no name. “In the old days, what made a cult movie was the fact that you couldn’t see it,” Price says. “Like with Tod Browning’s ‘Freaks’, there Diversions MGVItREVIEW THE HEART OF THE GAME Her mother placed Russell, a black freshman good enough to make the women’s varsity team, in the mostly white high school because of its academic reputa tion and athletic program. The film turns its focus from the team at this point and places a great emphasis on Russell and her relationship with Resler. This shift unfortunately cuts connections to the other players, but Russell’s story is one worth telling. Like all sports films before it, the game is a metaphor, and you don’t have to be a die-hard fan to get it But the film needs no celebrities or pumped-up pep rally music to draw audiences in and make them care. Contact the Diversions Editor at dive@unc.edu. eventually becomes completely apathetic toward her husband because his business success is his main priority. She feels he possess es her instead of loving her. Huppert and Greggory’s perfor mances are mediocre, with a lack of chemistry between the characters, even when they’re fighting. It is simply a filming of Conrad’s short story, but does not move the story along as fast as it could have. - Shelly Fullwood was a 30- or 40-year period when that movie wasn’t even available. Things never will be like that again because when something is put out there once, on the opening night, it’s discussed on the Internet, so you can’t build up that word of mouth in the same way.” Whether cult movies still can be bom is up for grabs, but the ones audiences laugh at but secretly love never will fade away. “These movies think outside the mainstream Hollywood box office, and there’s a lot of film fans who like that, because they’re sick of seeing ‘Mission Impossible: Part 73,’” Gamble says. “You have people who love those big blockbusters and don’t veer off that path very much, but then you’ll always have filmgoers who really seek those smaller films out.” For those people, someone’s already made a direct-to-video release of “Snakes on a lYain.” And God bless them for it Contact the Diversions Editor atdive@unc.edu. Superchunk: Live from rocks heyday You hear it all the time: Back in the day, Chapel Hill had all the trappings to become the next Seattle. We’d fostered Ben Folds. We had the seedy local clubs, the' breeding grounds of independent rock music. We had spawned Superchunk —and a subsequent recording label from frontman Mac McCaughan and bassist Laura Ballance, Merge Records. Way back 10 to 12 years ago, riding the last breaths of grunge from the Pacific Northwest, the climate for new music in the Triangle was exciting and fresh, says Frank Heath, owner of Cat’s Cradle. “There was sort of a buzz, partly because there was a buzz in Seattle,” he says. On Friday local music fans will get a chance to wax nostalgic for the old school when Superchunk takes the Cradle stage to celebrate the Orange County Social Club’s five-year anniversary. Jim Wilbur, Superchunk’s guitarist since its second album, 1991’s No Pocky for Kitty, says the band’s success —and all the town buzz it fed was a pleasant surprise. “At least when we started, there wasn’t really like a concept of suc cess ... there was no really driving force,” he says. “There was that desire there, but it was so not a viable reality at that point,” Wilbur says of bands setting out to make records and— as Superchunk did inadver tently make it big. At the Cat’s Cradle show, the group will play music that is now, as it always has been, created in the spirit of having fun, Wilbur says. The band has been on semi hiatus for the last five years and has taken projects as they’ve come along. But Wilbur says Superchunk’s long-term goals are as relative now as ever: “There’s no grand plan, and there never really has been.” Last spring the group repre sented Merge at the annual South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas. In November the band will play for “The Daily Show” with Jon Stewart’s anniver sary party. About 15 years after the group’s initial Chapel Hill indie-baby glory, Wilbur says the decelera- Ijnlm!aSßAD?!(Wbutet^^TTFn i ARTICLE" Michoel Jackson) SIO |6FR BE YOUR OWN PET / BLACK LIPS" ($10) 7SA THE OLD CEREMONY (CD IFR SUPERCHUNK w/TENEMENT Release) w/ Special Guest HALLS (OCSC ivyear Roman Candle" $7 “ sr s " asssssr 4MO CHEYENNE KIMBALL (S10) 11 &12 (WE/TH) BUILT TO SPILL w/ 7TH JERRY DOUGLAS w/DONNA Camper Van Beethoven and HUGHES" Helvetia" (SlB/S2O) BFR A TRIBUTE TO JOSEPH HILL & 13 FR DEL THE FUNKY HOMOSAPIEN CUTURE REGGAE BAND "(sl6/$18) featuring Mickey Mills and MSA THE BACKBEAT (Benefit for Steel, & more Piedmont Wildltfe Center)” $8 |N GS"(SWO) , SSU SAYANYTHING.MEWITHdUT 10 SU Comedlons Of Comedy ‘ you pipraify* ,7TU CROSS CANADIAN mX(sls) RAGWEED" (SlO/Sl3) 11 MOFLICKER (Local short films) $3 18 WE BIG SANDY & HIS FLY RITE 12 TU RUSTED ROOT w/ Salvador BOYS w/ Sarah Borges Santana Band" ($23/325) 19 TH AMOS LEE" 13 WE JAY CLIFFORD w/ Meghan 20 FR JUNIOR BROWN" (sl6) ~ . 21 SA MUTEMATH w / Shiny Toy Guns m vnn^nL™r /Chad & jonezetta" (sl2) 15 FR 22SU OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW HoovervMe" (SB/$10) 16 SA EASY STAR ALLSTARS - 23 MOBETTIE SERVEERT" (SlO/Sl2) Radiodread Tour" (sl2) 24 TU THE MELVINS w/ Big Business" w/ guest Dubconscious ($ 14) 17 SU ROGUE WAVE w/ Jason 25 WE MOJAVE 3w/ Tim O'Reagan Collett" (SlO/Sl2) ”(sls) IBMOWEARESaENTBTS/ART 2 6TH JEDI MIND TRICKS w/ R. A. The 19TU ftwd Man. Outospace" 20WESSSw/SeyHar 283 A ALEJANDROKOVEDOw/ (sl4) Tres Chicas (sls) 21 TH JOSE GONZALEZ w/ Death 29 SU METHOD MAN w/ Saigon" Vessel" (sl2) ($25) 22 FR CITIZEN COPE w/ Alice Smith 30 MODRAGONSHIP w/ Special ”(S2O) guest Mitch Easter 23 SA VIRGINA COALITION" ■■mTTTTTTTTCTMi 24 SU CARRBORO MUSIC FESTIVAL "■ L} D A T [ (tree show) 7TU ROBERT EARL KEEN w/Kevin 25 MO ELECTRIC 6, Aberdeen City, Fo^er" THE BLUE VAN 9TH BLACK KEYS" 26 TU THE ENGLISH BEAT, featuring 17 FR MOUNTAIN HEART" (sl2/514) Lynval Golding of the 18 SA CURSIVE w/ The Cope" Specials, and Pauline Black (sl2/514) „ 28TU ANATHALLO 27 WE RAKIM w/ Kid Capri and ■■TT'TTTT'nmBH Brother All" (522/525) Mill I 1 1 1 1 1 11 I 1 1 Mill 28 TH JOHN SHAIN TRIO 11 FR STEEP CANYON RANGERS" 29 FR WXYC 80s Dance Tickets sold I ($10) kr advance @UNC-Pit') |7TH EDDIE FROM OHO" (sls/$ 17) 30 SA Perpetual Groove" (sl2/sls) |l4 TH BOUNCING SOULS, Street Dogs, Holy Bread World lsu HE IS LEGEND" I Inferno Friendship Society" 3TU SERENA MANEESHw/ I (sl4) Wovenhand & Evangelicals 116 SA SOUTHERN C.ULTURE ON THE _ " ($10) 1 SKIDS" ($10) I "Advance ticket sales at SchodKlds (Chapel Hill, Raleigh), CD Alley (CH). Avid Video (Durham) & Gate City Noise (Greensboro). 1 Buy tickets on-line: www.etlx.com I For Credit Cord orders CALL 919-967-9053 I CARRBORO CALLING tion toward unglamorous, inher ent when musical trends change and band members start having babies, was a welcome shift. How does a band that codified what it meant to be from Chapel Hill go from being all the rage to being almost 40 years old? “It’s funny how quickly you go from being cutting edge to lame,” Wilbur says. Dated or not, Superchunk has cemented a spot on the list of acts whose surge to the popular spot light brought a college town along for the ride. And while talented bands are still bountiful in Chapel Hill, Heath says, the audience for music has grown larger and more complex making it harder to find that devoted fan base. “I think the average clubgoer’s interests are rrfore diversified ... there are not as many people who are sort of concentrating on local bands or one particular type of music,” Heath says. As Chapel Hill has grown, Wilbur says, its music patronage might have lost that 1990s tight knit feel. “It used to be you’d go down to the Cradle, and you’d know every body,” he says. The bond might still be there, Wilbur adds, but it’s been a while since his last night on the town. For Superchunk it’s OK to be no longer considered the driving force that would make Chapel Hill the next Emerald City. The shifting scale of media approval for alternative music is created largely by music reviews, Wilbur says. And many rock crit ics, he says, are young only vaguely cognizant of the time when the quartet was the East Coast “it” band. “The impetus was never to be cool,” Wilbur said. “It was just being honest to what we were and what we are.” V X Contact Margaret Hair at mhair@unc.edu. m £ ' *■ < f . t • % WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 CALEXICO m>s. mtmmtmmm - ..Aim,,,. THURSDAY, SEPT 21 JOSE GONZALEZ SATURDAY, SEPT 2 BRUCE CO.CXEHIHN f. L FRIDAY. SEPT 22 CITIZEN COPE TUESUAY, SEPT I I M WOHli mm "WbK - ■ atr a TH[ * jjg| )r * * ' * ci ■ ■■■ f wttwkwmt iwwwjrwr foCTwiwuus SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 COMEDIANS OF COMEDY WE ARE ALSO PRESENTING... ■■ i ! i —§ www.catscradle.com - BEST thursday, august 31,2006 DI VERECOMMENDS Album bom the Vaults: Sonny's Crib - Sonny ClaricThis five song set from one of jazz piano's understated bigmen is, listen after listen, a lesson in careful note choice and just the right amount of swing.'Come Rain or Come Shine'is a solid track. Movie Rental Pick: "Repo Man": Emilio Estevez plays a young punk rocker turned repo man. Also featuring: aliens, conspiracy theories and a killer soundtrack with Black Flag. Something Random: Mrs. Freshley's pastries:These vend ing machine standbys are absolute ly delicious. Check out the Jumbo Honey Bun or Texas Cinnamon Roll. Events: TODAY ► The Old Ceremony ► West End Wine Bar | The self described pop-noir'group will play two sets, led by Django Haskins on guitar. 10 p.m. $3. FRIDAY ► Superchunk with Tenement Halls ► Cat's Cradle | The band that gave Chapel Hill most of its indie-rock cred in the '9os plays for the Orange County Social Club's anniversary bash. 8:30 p.m. sl2 advance, sls at the door. SATURDAY ► The Presidents of the United States of America ► Moore Square Park, Raleigh |* Continuing the "Hey, remember these guys? They're still playing!" line of Raleigh's Downtown Live series. 9 p.m. FREE MONDAY ► SkyTerrian Hip Hop ► The Library | DJ Merlin and DJ Forge pump it out for the first Monday of the month dance party. 10 p.m. FREE. WEDNESDAY ► Cities, Grey Young - The Reservoir | Guitary quartet —and UNC alums Cities play the Carrboro set. 10 p.m. No cover, 21 and up with club membership. Movies in the Union: None. Happy Labor Day! Contact the Diversions Editor atdive@unc.edu. 9