The Cadre - 10 March 1998 Foreign Film Review Lamerica BY DAVID MACDONALD america is an lialian film made about a year or two ago, and it deals with a couple of con men trying to take advantage of war-torn Albania's government and people by opening a shoe production plant, with the intentions of running off with the government investment and the profits. They feel they've come up with a great idea: pick up an old, homeless, senile Albanian and have him look and act as “president” of the company. This way the investors will feel more confident in having a local run the business, and also will be the one who is blamed whenever it will be found that it is a scam. However, things don’t go as planned. The old man is held in an overcrowded and overworked institution for safe-keeping. One day he decides to take a walk and not return. Of course, the young Italian is rather pissed off when he comes to fetch the old guy -- he has some more swindling of the Albanians left to do. This leads to a search for the old man by the young Italian. The Italian discovers the state of the Albanian people as some villagers rip the wheels off his jeepandall he can do is hitch rides with truckloads of Albanians trying to escape the country to Italy. He hears the people asking him about what makes Italy better than Albania: are the soccer teams good, what are the roads like, are the girls prettier, are the whores better, and so on. The Albanians see an idealized, hedonistic view of Italy, offsetting the hardships and unhappiness they experience at home. The young Italian sees the slums where many families live in one broken-down house. He sees people grow sick and die in front of him. And he also finds out by accident that the old man is in fact not Albanian, but an Italian jailed for 40 years in an Albanian prison. The old man has lost memory of these fourty years, and still believes that he is a twenty-year old Italian, and is still at home in Italy, even as the two men are making their way through the Albanian landscape. In the final shot of the movie, both men are on a boat back to Italy. The old man believes they are actually travelling to America (he still thinks he’s in Italy, remember) and this seems to make the point that it isn’t just Albanians who dream ofa better place than their own, but so do Italians, and possibly everyone else as well. This is definitely a movie about politics, and therefore not recommended for someone looking for action or romance. However, as a portrait of a society, this film is certainly worth the time. ** +9, 088° * 6d mere e eee seme Edge players pr 15 oduction of Extremeties @ UPEI barn BY JOHN KELLY a ao March 26, 27, and 28, ge Players will be per- formin the full length produc- tion illiam Mastrosimone's Extremities. Extremities is a contemporary piece about the issues of sexual assault and I security. A stalker is overcome by his own victim and finds himself at the mercy of his vengeful target until her bewildered roommates return home to find a man trapped, beaten, in their fireplace. Joining Extremities will also bea uction of the one act play written and directed by Randy Burrows--The Questioning, a police drama. Prior to this production, the group staged Reservoir Dogs and Glengarry Glen Ross on the UPEI campus. Mike Farrell, Robin Hewitt, Jill McRae, and Francois Weber star in Extremities. Mike Farrell, Tony Larder, Luke Leunes, Janet MacDonald, and Jill McRae star in the one act. Trahan. Extremities is the fourth full length play by the Edge Players, an independent thea- oo an prema ed st Its members bring a wide range of experience and credits to the ~_— — operas, London's West film projects, dinner theatres, and scores of community thea- tre productions all fit some- where into the *scollec- tive(and growing) list of cred- its. The Edge Players are currently developing three fu- ture projects. A uction for the Atlantic tre Fringe Festival in Halifax,a feature video project, and a muscial staging of A Clockwork Orange. They are an ambitious group not afraid of risk-taking in cither financial aspects or subject matter, Their productions have delved into a brand of theatre unique to the commu- All are UPEI students. Other nity members include Matt . Tim Mossey, and Paul Ed Mc The Edge Players have developed a theatre product whereby audience members are invited to walk on the set before the show and to sit prac- tically on it during the show, in avery close proximity to actors in very intense situations. This environment creates unusually intimate relationship between viewer and actor. Furthermore, the group has thrown caution to the wind interms of its controversy. Both Reservoir Dogs and Glen- garry Glen Ross garnered a style of dialogue that employed a great deal of profanity and introduced characters that were mired in biases and bigotry. With Extremities, the group again has developed a produc- tion in the round (where the audience envelopes, in close quarters, the stage and actors) and again is tackling the themes of human depravity. This time though, the quirkiness and humor of the dialogue and char- acters have been replaced by the sobering and solemn themes of stalking and victimization. | aa PASTAS Ee; 7g Ly s* Sy OSS eet POESEIILIO: eR O RR Ee a SOP CECE REEHAECHE HAO “ee