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college tribune entertainment supplement 25.10.11 CHRIS O’DOWD UCD alumnus talks to e Siren STEPHEN MERCHANT CATCHER IN THE RYE MELANCHOLIA STYLE ON CAMPUS

The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

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Issue 4 of The Siren. Interviews with Chris O'Dowd and Stephen Merchant

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Page 1: The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

college tribune entertainment supplement25.10.11

CHRIS O’DOWDUCD alumnus talks to � e Siren

STEPHEN MERCHANT CATCHER IN THE RYE MELANCHOLIA STYLE ON CAMPUS

Page 2: The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

[email protected]

PLAYLIST: REBEKAH RENNICK

Bombay Bicycle Club – Video Games (Lana Del Rey Cover – Radio 1 Live Lounge)When the words ‘Live Lounge’ and ‘Bombay Bicy-cle Club’ come to together, you know you’re in for a treat, and this cover cer-tainly delivers. Taking Del Rey’s husky-voiced, nostal-gia-ridden ballad, the boys (plus Lucy Rose) make it their own with cresend-ing drums entwined with their trademark enchating harmonies. Better then the original? With that xylo-phone; perhaps.

Nightbox – Bears Born and bred in Wicklow, these Irish fellows have been spending the last year making their name in Toronto. Spreading their musical wings in the same land that produced Bieber himself, this fi ercly trendy and endearingly funk-fi lled tune, threatening to get you up and throwing the shapes, makes you hope they’ll come back again soon, before Usher gets a hold of them.

Lady Gaga – You and I (Wild Beasts Remix) While the opening of this song does certainly sound like an interlude of one of Gaga’s concerts, everything changes with the inclusion of Wild Beasts’ frontman Hayden Thorpe’s tinkling piano notes. Stripped of the country-western twang, Gaga as a man and repeti-tive verses; Thorpe takes the points where her vocals are really something spe-cial and turns it into a hazy, moody and all round chilled delight.

Jessie Ware - Strangest Feeling Rising from the under-ground, you might be more acquainted with this girl than you know; hav-ing provided the vocals for ‘post-dubstep’ producer SBTRKT’s track ‘Nervous’. Breaking away from the masked DJ sees her fully embracing her amazing vo-cals. Over drumbeats her voice is like syrup, fl owing from one word to another and as the synthesizer leads the way to the end, you fi nd yourself already clicking back to the start for another

listen.

KEITH LEMATTI

CIARAN LEINSTER

MUSIC2

The 1990s saw a great deal of change, inven-tiveness and rebellion

against auto-tuned groups, Brit-Pop’s rise and the re-creation of the Pixies. In an era that was framed by Nirvana’s intense re-devel-opment of rasping guitars, which undermined broken up lyrics rather than shap-ing them, a host of bands would break the oppression of this noise driven ideology. Post-rock was yet to be es-tablished, yet a genre, whose image would soon be diluted by Mogwai’s lyric-less instru-mentation, was brewing in the United States. Ambigu-ous is one description tossed around by many to demean the persona of slowcore. Its obscurity takes most by the scruff, either they believe that it is a positive reaction to the racket of Grunge, or they don’t. The genre’s infl uence can be found in Galaxie 500, reverie/dream-pop extraor-dinaires who took bold steps forward in the aftermath of early R.E.M. LPs.

Slowdive, slowcore’s next of kin artist who pre-date the genre, hail from Reading.

England’s response to My Bloody Valentine re-created an approach to ‘shoegazing’ bands.

A short record producing lifespan as well as closeness in sound suggest a similar-ity between the Irish kings of coarse yet subtle guitars and Nick Chaplin’s assem-bly. However, focused more on delusional back-drop gui-tars and strings, Slowdive’s brand of dream-pop was in a world of its own.

Just 4 years later in Min-nesota, 1993, Alan Sparhawk brought together the collabo-ration between Mimi Parker (his wife) and John Nichols. Slowcore was created out of no hatred for their disparate

Low’s fi rst full length release, did not take the world by storm. Despite this, through long winded tours and the grace of ICLIH, and with its use of downtrodden lyrics and the fresh voices of one of the most under-rated cou-ples to ever perform together, Low established themselves upon their innovativeness, garnering independent criti-cal acclaim.

It may have taken over 5 years to break through the great musical divide, nevertheless, Minnesota’s minstrels created possibly music’s fi rst new-original Christmas EP, featuring songs such as ‘Little Drum-mer Boy’ and ‘Silent Night’. The sometimes bleak mini-malistic take on festiv-ity shocked and forced awe amongst the media, from alternative to mainstream. What makes the album is the use of reverberated gui-tar, which produces incred-ible sleigh bell-esque noise, pouncing vocals and bleak turned optimistic lyrics (see ‘Just Like Christmas’). The record produces a typically Low sounding apogee for Christmas cover records. Fi-nally, (in relation to Low’s

Seattle rockers, rather a need for an opposing sound of simplicity in alternative rock. Though they have dabbled in electro-pop sounds and quick tempo guitar tracks, Low will forever be known for their literal creation of slowcore, a genre not known to many. In particular, I have fallen in love with the sparse vocals which are blended be-tween Sparhawk and spouse, Parker, crafting luscious har-monies sweeping through their string-like guitars. The idea of Low’s creation was heightened yet slow-paced guitars constructed upon plenty of reverb, backing these ornate vocals.

I Could Live In Hope,

more recent records) if any album deserved the accolade of defi ning a genre, Things We Lost in the Fire takes the award home. From its care-fully aligned guitars in open-er ‘Sunfl ower’, Sparhawk ignites mystery and loss within the hearts of listeners. ‘Whore’s’ disheveled female vocal takes nothing away from the alternation between picked arpeggios and meas-ured, dwindling strumming. “What is the whore you’re living for?”

Forgive me for focus-ing too much on Sparhawk & Co., as not only did they invent slowcore, they also maintained it (almost sin-gle-handedly). However, a signifi cant ascent of art-ists whose styles are deeply rooted in Slowcore and Low infl uenced techniques have emerged to top the list of new alternative bands. Red House Painters experimented in over-the-top levels of calm in their music, while minimal-istic contemporaries, even as mainstream as Death Cab for Cutie show dedications to slowcore’s architects. Slow-core’s reach has been both varied and immense, and can grasp even the most unlikely observer into the fascinating world of this under appreci-ated genre.

Magnum Opus - The Stone RosesWith the news last

week that Man-chester band The

Stone Roses are due to re-form, beginning with two sold out gigs in Manchester in June, followed by a world tour and quite possibly new material, now is as good a time as any to refl ect on the benchmark that any future work will be held up against – their eponymous 1989 de-but album.

From the slow, grinding, industrial build up of ‘I Wan-na Be Adored’, to the breath-taking outro that concludes ‘I Am the Resurrection’, The Stone Roses is a nigh-on fl awless record, and quite possibly the one of the great-est debuts ever made. Held up (alongside the Happy Mondays’ Pills ‘n’ Thrills and Bellyaches) as the epitome of the late-‘80s ‘Madchester’/Acid House scene, it begins the fusion of guitar pop and dance music that would later

be expanded on by Primal Scream on Screamadelica in 1991.

The majority of the album was written by lead singer Ian Brown and guitarist John Squire, but both bass player Gary ‘Mani’ Mountfi eld (later of Primal Scream) and drum-mer Alan ‘Reni’ Wren (fa-mous for his distinctive hat) received writing credits, as well befi ts one of the all-time great rhythm sections in mu-sic. Despite all members hav-ing a punk rock background

(Brown and Squire originally bonded over a mutual love of The Clash), The Stone Roses is more immediately infl u-enced by 1960s pop and West Coast psychedelia. That’s not to say the band shed their anarchistic views, as can be heard on the four-line track ‘Elizabeth My Dear’, where Brown sings about Queen Elizabeth II; “Tear me apart, and boil my bones, I’ll not rest ‘til she’s lost her throne, My aim is true, my message is clear, It’s curtains for you,

Elizabeth my dear”. He also stated in an interview around the release of the album that he’d like to put a bag over the Queen Mother’s head and shoot her, so it’s fair to say that they didn’t entirely buy into the peace and love mes-sage of the music that infl u-enced them.

Planting “psychological bombs”, as Mani later de-scribed the above comments, is all well and good, but The Stone Roses had the music to back up their swagger, having no fi ller on the album could have spawned 8 or 9 singles from this album alone. ‘She Bangs the Drums’ is a de-lightful slab of pure pop with lyrics that slightly betray the feeling of the music (“I feel my needle hit the groove... Kiss me where the sun don’t shine”), ‘Made Of Stone’ is another gritty-sounding an-them with a glorious, cyclical guitar hook intro, and ‘I Am The Resurrection’ contains wonderfully cocky lyrics (“I am the resurrection, and I am the light”), followed by a four-minute jam which ends the album on a deliriously ecstatic note.

The songs mentioned so far were all singles, but the remaining album tracks were of no lesser quality.

‘Bye Bye Badman’, written about the 1968 Paris riots, is a scathing polemicdrenched in pop bliss, ‘(Song For My) Sugar Spun Sister’ is so psy-chedelic it claims that “every member of Parliament trips on glue”, ‘Shoot You Down’ is just wonderful, jazzy pop with Brown’s typically soft vocals over the top, and ‘This Is The One’ gets you so pumped it’s almost a shame it comes as the penultimate track on the album.

So, even in one of the most eagerly awaited come-backs of recent times comes something of a damp squib; Brown’s voice seems to have deteriorated almost daily since 1989 and Reni and Squire haven’t played pub-licly in years. Not to worry, even if the Resurrection is underwhelming, there is al-ways this absolute classic to return too; where the Stone Roses remain frozen in time with all the hope, talent and bravado to take on the world. 22 years later, Brown has stated that as their goal, and with the success they de-served denied to them fi rst time round, here’s hoping they succeed next year.

The Specialist – Slowcore

Page 3: The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

[email protected]

Lou Reed & MetallicaLulu

JusticeAudio, Video, Disco

1/10 7/10

MUSIC

Back in June, the news that Lou Reed was col-laborating with Me-

tallica on a studio album of pre-war German show tunes garnered a reaction about which nothing original can now be said. The metal world shrugged, while more con-ventional musical authori-ties were lost for an opinion. However, those who saw potential in the (admittedly strange) pairing could be forgiven for expecting great things- if Green Day could pull off a bombastic rock op-era, so could Loutallica. But they didn’t.

It is obvious that Metalli-ca’s willingness to work with Reed was born of delusions of grandeur more than any-thing else. Possibly think-ing that they might fi nally be taken seriously in the

high-society circles they now move in, Metallica allowed themselves to bend to the septuagenarian art-rocker’s direction-to ad-lib as Reed rambled about German pros-titutes. Teaser single ‘The View’ received positive feed-back from the Irish Times, partly out of spite to “meat-headed heavy metal fans” who had rubbished the track worldwide. But it is these same fans that know Metal-lica’s work and know exactly what they are capable of, and it is more than this.

The album opens strong-ly with a grandiose chord progression on ‘Branden-burg Gate’, but this is also its last hurrah. Third-rate plodders like “Iced Honey” serve only as a platform for a game of Where’s Kirk Hammett, while the album’s

lowest ebb, the God-awful ‘Mistress Dread’, sees the band rattling away for seven minutes while Reed gibbers in the corner. His pleasant synths and string passages almost give the album a sav-ing grace, but we can barely appreciate them before they are fl attened by more leaden riffs; despite this irritating dynamic, orchestra conduc-tor Hal Willner’s clueless production makes the whole album sound like wasps in a biscuit tin.

There will be posers who will claim to fi nd something here to praise, be it Reed’s pseudo-poetic mumbling or the quaint, shouty music he chose to include. However, those who know anything about heavy metal (and that is, essentially, what Lulu is) are the ones to trust on this subject. In the opinion of someone in the know, this is dog shit. Avoid and forget.

GRAHAM LUBY STEPHEN MILLER

It’s been four years since Justice’s debut album, an age in music terms, so to

say Audio, Video, Disco has been eagerly anticipated is a massive understatement. That’s not to say that Gas-pard Augé and Xavier de Rosnay haven’t been keeping busy. Since 2007’s Cross, they have released a live re-cord (A Cross the Universe) and remixed tracks for bands like U2, Lenny Kravitz and MGMT (for which they won no less than a Grammy). A mix for a Dior Homme fash-ion show was also recorded during that time (‘Plani-sphère’ appears as an iTunes bonus track).

On fi rst listening it sounds like the French duo have been infl uenced by the hair-spray loving glam rock era and try to replicate its sound

on tracks like ‘Horsepower, Canon’ and the mischievous ‘Brianvision’ (think gui-tar solos on synths). Fans of their earlier ‘poptronica’ sound may be disappointed with the album, but they must be credited for not re-producing their debut. While it doesn’t have the brilliance of ‘D.A.N.C.E.’ or funk of ‘Genesis’, the Parisian outfi t manage to keep their sound that made them a household name.

Having said that, Audio, Video, Disco doesn’t reach the same heights as Cross and for the most part the al-bum remains a slow paced affair. The pick of the tracks is undoubtedly ‘Civilization’ which features vocals from Ali Love, who also did the vo-cals for The Chemical Broth-ers’ ‘Do It Again’. The album

is improved by the penulti-mate ‘Helix’, which somehow successfully manages to fuse the 1970’s krautrock sound of bands like Harmonia, with the aforementioned stadium rock sound that consist-ently appears throughout. The über-catchy fi nal track, ‘Audio, Video, Disco’, man-ages to fi nally up the tempo in what is probably the most radio friendly track. With Queen-esque handclaps fused with vocoded vocals, ‘Parade’ also deserves a men-tion.

On the whole, the term ‘second album syndrome’ springs to mind, but in years to come AVD may be classed as the better of other albums with the lofty ambition of following up over-whelming debuts. Having said this, Au-dio, Video, Disco can be con-sidered a slow burner and merits repeated listening.

3

Surfer BloodTarot Classics

Kelly ClarksonStronger

8/10 5/10

LORNA VERDON

Nearly two years after the release of their critically-acclaimed

debut album, Astro Coast, Surfer Blood have returned with a short teaser of new material, in the form of EP, Tarot Classics.

The four-piece have made a bold move away from the cheerful summer vibes which coursed through Astro Coast and saw them placed along-side Beach House and The Drums as the new wave of in-die rock. Perhaps the group are actively trying to dis-tance themselves from their contemporaries, or maybe they’ve been feeling the cold snap as much as the rest of us, but it’s clear that there is a new-found sharpness and polish to the Surfer Blood aesthetic.

Without a doubt Kelly Clarkson is the most suc-

cessful American Idol alum. Her debut album Thankful reached the Number 1 spot on the Billboard charts in the US and her sophomore album Breakaway spawned four top ten singles and won two Grammy awards. She received further chart suc-cess with her following two albums and seems set to achieve this success again with her release Stronger, despite the lacklustre music on offer.

Stronger is another pop-rock post-break-up record which Clarkson claims is infl uenced by Prince, Tina Turner and Radiohead. It is generally a decent effort, however, there is very little

‘I’m Not Ready’ sets the tone from the outset – John Paul Pitts’ vocals take precedent over a simple melodic line and pared-down percussion, a far cry from the hectic, dis-torted sounds of their debut. Although the lyrics may not be poetic, the fast-paced de-livery is insanely catchy – a stylistic trait which is relent-less across the record, as Pitts seems to barely pause for breath throughout.

With ‘Miranda’, the boys already have a hit. All the ingredients of a commercial pop sensation are there – a stomping “woah-oh” accom-paniment, a chanting chorus, and a girl’s name in the title.Some might say it’s a bit early to start referencing your own work on a second release, but that’s what ‘Voyager Re-

that separates this album from every other one cur-rently on the market. The fi rst single from the album ‘Mr. Know It All’ has already reached #2 on the Billboard charts in the US and is her second best selling single. It’s your typical break-up inspired pop song featur-ing repetitive lyrics and a pretty generic chord pro-gression. It is a catchy song, but doesn’t feature anything special. Furthermore, ‘Love Me’, clearly the Prince infl u-enced song, features some 80’s style guitar riffs, but lacks originality and features lyrics that you’d be forgiven for thinking you’ve heard the song previously on the album.

However, Clarkson does provide some decent songs.

prise’ is built upon. With el-ements of the previous two songs incorporated into its melodies, the result is rather repetitive, and can feel over-whelming when you consider that there are just four songs on the record. However, the use of keyboards and strings save it from feeling stale, and are hopefully a sign of more experimentation on their up-coming sophomore LP.

Closing track ‘Drinking Problem’ is a slower-paced, sing-along lament with a se-rious undertone – a step in the right direction for a group which is evidently trying to escape from the pigeon-hole of trendy surf pop.

Overall, Tarot Classics is an excellent sample of the maturity and focus of the Floridian quartet, and will certainly tide fans over until the release of their second al-bum next year.

The title track ‘What Doesn’t Kill You (Stronger)’ features anthemic lyrics, catchy syn-thesiser and outshines all the other tracks on the album, all the while burying itself in your memory in a not unpleasant way. It is a clear effort by Clarkson to com-pete with the current elec-tro-pop trend in the charts and is bound to achieve her some success. ‘The War Is Over’ and ‘Dark Side’ are two honourable mentions as they stood out from the other standard poppy love and heartache songs on the album.

Clarkson is clearly a great singer with a powerful voice. Stronger is an enjoyable listen with a few stand out tracks, however, there is very little that is new or original on this album. Although it is bound to achieve moderate chart success, there is noth-ing new or groundbreaking here, she was on American Idol after all.

KARLA CHUBB

25.10.11

Page 4: The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

[email protected]

4

You’re a college student. You’re reading the Arts section. You should by

all accounts be an intelli-gent, capable person. So, the question is…have you read this yet?Every issue the College Tribune will bring you a featured literary work that you should read in order to solidify your position as an intelligent, to-be-taken- se-riously academic.(If you’ve stumbled upon this section on your way to Sport, this goes for you as well!) So get your spectacles out and read on.

The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger.

Holden Caulfi eld has just been expelled from his fourth prep school for poor per-formance. After an violent

tussle with his philandering roommate, Holden decides to leave early for a sojourn to the city, ‘a little vacation’ as he calls it, to ease his nerves, before the inevitable face-off with his parents later in the

empathizing with this disen-chanted young Flâneur.

The story is told in fi rst person stream of conscious-ness, a style which allows us to identify more with the narrator who is able to de-scribe his feelings in a way we would miss, if the story was told from a objective third person point of view. The story underlines that diffi cult angst-fi lled mid-teen period of alienation that many have experienced, as they come to grips with the challenges and perceived hypocrisies of the adult world.

As the hours and days wind on Caulfi eld’s behav-iour becomes increasingly er-ratic and self-destructive as he careers through a boozed-fuelled New York weekend. He gets hustled by a whore and socked in the guts by her pimp, has a bust-up with his girlfriend when she refuses to elope with him, discusses

The Bard with a duo of nuns and has a weird encounter with an old teacher, while never managing to fi nd out where the ducks go when the lake freezes over in central park…

We hear a lot about his 10 year old sister Phoebe throughout, but don‘t meet her until towards the end. He describes her wise beyond her years, whom he adores as much as he did his deceased brother. Will her affection and loyalty be enough to save him from himself in the end?

So dear reader, this writer suggests you take a sojourn of your own into the world of Holden Caulfi eld and see if he doesn’t get you question-ing the often perplexing na-ture of the human condition.

adults that irritate him but also his girlfriend Sally who is too eager to enter the adult world of superfi ciality and his roommate Stradlater (a play on ‘Straddle‘?) who seems singularly concerned with adding notches to his bedpost. His brother D. B. has just written a success-ful book of short stories and Holden considers him the best writer. He condemns him for later prostituting his talents out to Hollywood.

This distrust of Holly-wood was shared by the au-thor who never allowed his book to be fi lmed. Holden begins to imagine himself as a purveyor of innocence, the catcher in the rye; as the children play at the cliff edge, he will save them from falling into a sea of impurity.

Holden’s adolescent ram-blings may irritate some, and while he is self-contradictory on occasion, we cannot help

week. The book was written in

1951 by J. D. Salinger, a short story writer from New York. Catcher in the Rye was his fi rst and only novel. Upon its publication it was met with immediate popular suc-cess yet critics were divided. Lauded by some as a brilliant fi rst novel, the religious press complained about its use of profanity.

Now considered a classic, Holden Caulfi eld shares cen-tre stage with Huck Finn and Jay Gatsby.

The novel’s main confl ict is between Holden and the grown-up world. He feels that most adults he knows hide behind a social veneer, concealing their true selves. He calls them ‘phonies‘. (Ah -ha, now I know who that guy was, on Family Guy shouting ‘Big Fat Phonie’ at Peter Grif-fi n).

However it not only the

COLM RYAN

25.10.11ARTS

Have you read this yet?

EVENT GUIDE

16 Possible Glimpses-Marina Carr

The Abbey Theatre30th September – 29th Oc-tober

Monday – Saturday:8pm

Saturday matinee:2.30pm

Marina Carr’s latest play deals with the life and times of Chekhov. Having been

told he has a mere fi ve min-utes to live, Chekov witness-es a selection of scenes from his short life. Starring Pat-rick O’Kane, the play shows Chekhov as a traveller, re-turning from his exploits overseas; it shows Chekhov as a doctor of medicine, and as an ailing patient; it shows Chekhov as a family man, and as a lover. But, fi rst and foremost, it shows Chekhov as a writer. Cathy Belton plays the role of Chekhov’s wife. “16 Possible Glimpses” is running in the Abbey The-atre until 29th October, as part of the Ulster Bank Dub-lin Theatre Festival.Ticket prices range from €13 – €25. Tickets are on sale at abbeytheare.ie

B For Baby- Carmel Winters

The Abbey Theatre2nd November – 19th No-vember

Monday – Saturday:8pm

Saturday matinee:2.30pm

Set mostly in a care home for intellectually disabled peo-

ple, this play focuses on the lives of B (Louis Lovett) and Dee (Michele Moran), both of whom are residents in the care home, as well as carer Mrs C (Moran), and also D (Lovett). The play shows the subtle aspects of their eve-ryday lives, and, in the pro-cess, it allows both actors to demonstrate their versatility at their craft. Ticket prices range from €13 to €25, and are on sale from abbeythea-tre.ie

Scheherazade-

The Gaiety Theatre25th October – 29th October

Monday – Saturday:7.30pm

Saturday matinee:2.30pm

King Shahriyar has been betrayed by his wife. To en-sure that this does not hap-pen again, he determines to wed a new bride each and every night, and have them beheaded before they have a chance to betray him. Hav-ing done this for thousands of nights (and having killed thousands of women), he marries a lady named Sche-herazade. Knowing she is about to be beheaded, she asks for permission to tell a story before facing her doom. King Shahriyar is so intrigued by her story that he decides not to execute her. This happens again for 1001 nights, before King Shahri-yar decides not to kill Scheh-erazade, and instead to make her his queen. Ticket prices range from €22.50 to €40, and are on sale at ticketmas-ter.ie

Contagion

Medical experts through-out the world are perplexed by a deadly infection that is spreading globally in this high budget thriller. Faced with this pandemic, society begins to crumble while ur-gent attempts are made to fi nd a cure. Directed by Ste-ven Soderbergh (who also directed Traffi c and Erin Brockovich), the fi lm was well received when it pre-miered at the Venice Film Festival earlier this year. With a star-studded cast in-cluding Marion Cotillard, Matt Damon, Laurence Fish-burne, Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow and Kate Winslet, the fi lm’s tremendous suc-cess in the Box Offi ce since its US release just over a month ago comes as no sur-prise. “Contagion” can be seen in Irish cinemas from the 21st October.

PLAYS

FILMS

Paranormal Activity 3

Set 18 years before the pre-vious “Paranormal Activity” fi lms, this third instalment in the series sees sisters Ka-tie and Kristi (Katie Feath-erson and Sprague Grayden) haunted by a supernatural being. Although it appears harmless at fi rst, the entity

soon becomes a problem for Katie and Kristi, as well as their families. This fi lm, which was directed by Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost, will be of particular interest to fans of the “Paranormal Activity” formula. “Paranor-mal Activity 3” will be show-ing in cinemas nationwide from October 21st.

We Need to Talk About Kevin

Based on the novel by Li-onel Shriver, this fi lm deals with the events leading up to the massacre of a school by a young man named Kevin (played by Ezra Miller, Jasper Newell, and Rocky Duer), from the perspective of the boy’s mother. “We Need to Talk About Kevin” was premiered earlier this year at the Cannes Film Fes-tival, where it was met with praise from critics. It was di-rected by Lynne Ramsey, and it stars Tilda Swinton and John C. Reilly. Release in the UK and Ireland is set for the 21st of October.

SHANE MEAGHER

Page 5: The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

[email protected]

5

me. I don’t do anything for recognition, I do it because I love writing or performing or directing. I wanted to make TV and fi lms when I was a kid and so I spent years learning the craft. I did it because it interested me, not because I wanted to be in Heat Magazine.”

“Cult status? I thought I was a household name?” says Stephen Merchant, returning to stand-up performance after nearly a decade’s absence. The writer and star of Extras and The Offi ce, Merchant has taken to the stage for his new tour “Hello Ladies...” about the geeky stars escapades and his search for love and companionship. “The show is about my failed search for a wife and how I thought fame would be the answer to everything and it isn’t. My life has always revolved around my search for a mate and the show explores every aspect of that, from teenage hopelessness, to the time I got thrown out of a wedding. It’s very confessional. I don’t use chat-up lines but if I did it would be, ‘Would you like to meet Karl Pilkington?’”

So why after so much success in relation to the Offi ce, Extras and co-presenting The Ricky Gervais show, has he decided to re-attempt the daunting task of a stand-up tour? “Well, originally I did stand-up after I left university and I was a fi nalist in some comedy competitions. I was good enough to get paid, I used to gig regularly, but somewhere along the line I lost interest. Once The Offi ce took off, it just seemed easier not do it. I didn’t get enough of a kick from performing to warrant driving up and down the motorway to gigs, eating Ginsters in service stations at midnight. I used to look at Ricky doing stand-up and think, ‘Why’s he bothering? It’s so much effort.’ Then I just woke up one day and I had the itch again. I felt I’d never really nailed stand-up. So I started doing fi ve or ten minute slots here and there and I’ve been pottering around the circuit for a few years now. This tour is the result of that itch.”

After his many collaborations with friend Ricky Gervais, many critics have found it diffi cult to separate the pair as independent sources of comedy and after asking Stephen if he found it diffi cult to be recognised in his own right?, he said that “It doesn’t concern

“I don’t use chat-up lines but if I did it would be, ‘Would you like to meet Karl Pilkington?’”

Stephen’s modesty fl ows from the off and he speaks of how he never expected

the offi ce to take off to the heights of acclaim that it has achieved and how his time on XFM helped him develop his ideas as well as meeting fellow popular co-stars Ricky Gervais and Karl Pilkington. “Ricky had a boss character that he would sometimes perform for me in our offi ce at the radio station.

After I got a job at the

BBC we were able to develop that character into an entire show. We thought it would be popular with a small cult audience - we never imagined it would go global in the way it has. Nobody predicted that. Ricky and I were fi red from XFM but after our TV success we got invited back to host a radio show. Karl was our producer and once we started asking him questions on air we realized he was a comedy goldmine.”

“When I visit my parents my mum still makes me unload the dishwasher and peg out laundry like she always did.”

For all Stephen Merchant’s success as co-writer and director of The Offi ce and Extras, writing and directing his fi rst feature fi lm ‘Cemetery Junction’, there is something deliciously modest and level headed about the 32-year-old. He tells us that people at home still treat him the same “When I visit my parents my mum still makes me unload the dishwasher and peg out laundry like she always did.” Looking at his life, the evidence is piling up that he is becoming a hugely infl uential fi gure in British comedy, with aspects of his writings extending to America. He feels that stand up is yet to be a form of entertainment yet to be conquered. “Yes, stand-up is really diffi cult. It’s also very raw and direct. There is nowhere to hide. I wanted to step out of my comfort zone and challenge myself

by getting back to what I had started my career doing. It seems to have gone well so far.”

He notes his infl uences as a child being a little more obscure, even though highly popular names in comedy. His love for Woody Allen and John Cleese, have had an infl uence on his style and material. “I’m sure I have learned from the people I’ve worked with but I was doing stand-up long before I worked in TV or fi lms, so I developed my style a long time ago.”

Merchant has been compared both in height and in features to footballer Peter Crouch, when asked was he equally as bad at football Stephen replied, “Crouch is great at football. Look at his strike rate for England. He’s scored 22 goals in 42 appearances. Wayne Rooney has only 28 in 73 appearances. The stats don’t lie. Peter is also an incredibly handsome man.”

His resume is ever expanding and the awards are tallying up. Stephen tells the College Tribune that he has done a new sitcom called “Life’s Too Short” starring Ricky Gervais and dwarf actor Warwick Davis. “In the show Warwick is hustling for work and contending with a divorce, a failing career, a giant tax bill and the fact that he is only 3’6”. Warwick is exceptional in it : great at comedy and drama, tremendous at physical comedy as well. Big stars pop up on occasion such Johnny Depp, Liam Neeson and Sting are all in the show.

Stephen Merchant plays Dublin’s Vicar Street on 22nd November 2011

25.10.11

Hello Ladies...ARTSARTS

Stephen Merchant talks to Ryan Cullen about his stand-up, The Offi ce and Karl Pilkington

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At the age of 32, Chris O’Dowd has an im-pressive set of fi lms

under his belt. Aswell as roles in big Hollywood blockbust-ers like Bridesmaids, Gul-liver’s Travels and Dinner for Schmucks, Irish and British audiences know him from his role as Roy in the Channel 4 show “The IT Crowd.” But life hasn’t always been rosy for the Roscommon man – he once lived in Belgrove.

O’Dowd stud-ied sociology and politics in UCD - “I didn’t fi n-ish my de-gree. The politics part of it was fi ne, but I

was doing sociology as-well and I could never bring my-self to fi nd an interest in it. “Confronted with the pros-pect of returning to fi nish his degree as a mature student, O’Dowd laughed,”oh yeah, so fucking mature!”“Seriously though, I have thought about coming back to fi nish the degree a lot. It doesn’t bother me really, but it would be kind of nice, I have never fi nished anything – at some stage it would be good to fi nish something.”Like many the UCD student, O’Dowd found the move from rural Ireland to Dublin somewhat a culture shock when he fi rst came to the university.

“What I found weird [about UCD] until I found

my clan. It’s so fuck-ing Donnybrook. I found it strange to feel so instantly ridi-culed for my accent. But then I started becoming friends

with loads of guys from Ag Soc and then I could ridicule them for their accents. It was just kind of a vicious circle.”

O’Dowd who lived in digs in his fi rst year before mov-ing onto campus for his second and third year was

highly involved in an array of societies on campus: “I found out quite early on that it is the best way to go through college for free. I think in my second year I was on eight different committees and I never bought a pint.”“I think I was the head of de-bating for C&E, I mean most of them couldn’t spell debat-ing,” he laughs.O’Dowd however was a real debater and was a prominent fi gure in the L&H - “I feel like the only time I saw the inside

of Theatre L was when I was doing a debate. Taking the piss out of world leaders.”

O’Dowd recounts one oc-casion when his role as L&H record’s secretary got him in some hot water. “I remember one time when I was on the

L&H committee and I was the guy who would introduce people.

We had F.W. De Klerk on. My feelings about F. W. De Klerk aren’t great. I al-ways thought he was the guy who decided he wasn’t racist when it looked bad. So armed with that and a few drinks to calm my nerves I decided to welcome him to the packed Theatre L in front of national media by doing the national anthemn of South Africa and I asked everyone to sing it

as he came down the steps. The song that I sang was push a palm tree get a co-conut. I guess it was pretty disrespectful, a lot of people booed, but there was still a good two dozen people who sang it.”

As-well as the L&H, O’Dowd said he spent much of his time in UCD “under the ground” in the Dram Soc theatre. O’Dowd thought the society had moved to its new base in the student centre, but when he was informed that this was not the case and they were still in the base-ment, he joked - “it’s the fucking best place for them.”

The College Tribune re-minded Chris of a mini-soap he made while on campus called “Melgrove Place.” The

video which is on YouTube has less than 600 views, in-volves a young Chris, with his top off, engaging in what appears to be some form of Tai Chi on the Merville foot-ball pitches. Chris can’t recall making the fi lm but joked “I

imagine it’s amazing, I was a big dude then as-well.” (The video can be seen on col-legetribune.ie)

O’Dowd made very few mistakes as he progressed to a glittering career in show business, however one poor decision does stand out – he once wrote for the Univer-sity Observer. “I don’t think I ever held a position at the paper, I would just contrib-ute occasionally, I can’t really remember.”

Asked did he ever con-

STANDING OUT FROM THE CROWD

Donie O’Sullivan talks to Bridesmaids star and former UCD student Chris O’Dowd. Described as one of Hollywood’s “leading men,” O’Dowd recounts his time in UCD, his involvement with the L&H and offers students one very important piece of advice - “Don’t sleep in bushes!”

“I think I was the head of debating for C&E, I mean most of them couldn’t spell debating,”

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ARTS

sider writing for the College Tribune, O’Dowd quickly re-plied, “I didn’t, only because I had self-respect.”

O’Dowd also dabbled in student politics while he was here but never ran for a posi-tion himself.“I am sure I always backed some candidate in an elec-tion, because there was al-ways the chance of free beer

coming out of it.”“I didn’t have, as I don’t

now, any big political al-legiances. I always found it strange when I saw people who were like young Fianna Fail there. How could you be young Fianna Fail? They stand for everything young people should hate, it always seems so weird to me.”

As is the case with some SU sabbatical candidates even today, O’Dowd said he considered running for Ents offi cer when he realised he

wasn’t going to pass his ex-ams - “As my fi nals were fast approaching and I realised I wasn’t going to pass them I would have done anything to get out of the fi ring line re-ally.

“I think I ran a campaign or two. I got Niall Donnelly elected. He was an Ents of-fi cer who ran his year at the greatest loss of any year.

“I hadn’t seen him since col-lege and randomly I was in a bar in LA three months ago and bumped into him.“He runs a bar and is a really successful entrepreneur. We have been hanging out, he’s fucking great craic!”

O’Dowd said he managed to get through college with-out getting a part time job by scamming some of the university’s biggest socie-ties, “I managed to work out another scam. My dad is a graphic designer and I would

get him to make all the soci-eties’ brochures their Fresh-ers’ kind of stuff at the week-ends . So that would sort me for the year and would mean I wouldn’t have to get a real job.”

Speaking about his me-teoric rise to fame, O’Dowd explained that appearing on shows like Conan O’Brien is quite a surreal experience.

“My life is surreal, it has changed a lot in a reasonably short amount of time. I am really enjoying it though.”

“I have been shooting a couple of fi lms for the past month or so. I was doing one in Australia and Vietnam called “Sapphire.” It’s based on a true story about three Aboriginal girls who end up almost becoming an Austral-ian version of the Supremes.

I play an Irish entertain-ment offi cer who brings them on tour of the America

air force bases during the Vi-etnam war.”

Sapphire won’t be in Irish cinemas until later next year, but in the meantime we can expect to see Chris in “Friends with Kids,” which also stars Kristen Wiig. Wiig and O’Dowd proved to be a formidable pair in the summer hit “Bridesmaids” - “Bridesmaids was so funny

and just so on the money and I always think American hu-mour is more close to Irish humour than British humour is. There is a very similar mentality.”

Images of O’Dowd in a swimming pool with Megan Fox and Jason Segel ap-peared in newspapers and magazine all around the world last month. Fox will also feature in “Friends with Kids” and also alongside Chris in Judd Apatow’s “This is Forty.” On Fox Chris said,

“what can I say, she loves to swim.

Weirdly the last two fi lms I’ve been in, she has been in them too, she just insists on it now,” he laughs.O’Dowd, who has starred in four series of the IT Crowd says that although they may not have time to make an-other series “we will defi -nitely do a special, or a few specials.”

“I am writing and starring in a TV show in Boyle, which I am just fi nishing off writ-ing now with my mate from Kilkenny. We are going to be shooting it in January and it will be on next summer on Sky One – I think it will be really funny.”

O’Dowd is a Twitter en-thusiast and has almost 70,000 followers, “I have to say I’m not that great at re-plying to everybody. I just use it as a platform to write jokes and say stupid things. It’s hard to get exactly what it’s for.”

He expressed his disap-pointment at the lack of abuse he receives on Twitter

and has challenged Tweet-ers - “I really want people to have the balls to give me more shit.”

O’Dowd offers a refresh-ing form of humour, is very humble and his vivid memo-ries of UCD show he hasn’t forgot where he came from – surely the L&H will reward one of their most enthusias-tic former members with a James Joyce award in the not too distant future.

Asked to offer one piece of advise to new UCD students, O’Dowd, speaking with expe-rience, gave a very important tip - “Don’t sleep in bushes - it always feels like ‘oh it’s fi ne, it’s one in the morn-ing, it’s so far to walk back to Dundrum,’ or whatever but at four and fi ve in the morning when it gets so cold you’re going to regret it. Just go around knocking on doors , like a cute Longford whore!”

On not writing for the Tribune: “I didn’t, only because I had self-respect.”

Scan QR code to watch Chris in “Melgrove Place”

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Usually dark with ru-ral undertones, Ma-rina Carr’s plays have

been captivating Irish audi-

qualities give vitality to the performance that perhaps otherwise would be a bit camp and dull.

For fans of Carr and eve-ryone else, this production is a must see. A new wave of Carr’s work is put onstage.

tion in this piece. Carr is writing not about

the work of the artist but about the life of the artist. It allows the audience to wit-ness both the preparation and the inspiration involved in producing works of great art.

The audience is spoilt for choice on where to look onstage. The cinematic

discussion between Chekhov and Tolstoy, involves the dis-cussions of semicolons and sentence structure. “I have a feeling that when I killed Karenina, I killed a vital part of myself”, Tolstoy admits. The dialogue between Chek-hov and Tolstoy is witty, raw and artistic in its delivery. The emphasis is on artistic preparation not just inspira-

with women both romanti-cally and familially. The title eludes the sixteen glimpses that the audience receives of Chekhov’s life. These non-linear ‘glimpses’ cover him from man to death.

However this play, written by one playwright about an-other, is mostly an explora-tion of art and the artist. The most humorous scene, the

ences since the late 80’s. ’16 Possible Glimpses’ continues to captivate in a style new to Carr on the Peacock Stage.

‘16 Possible Glimpses’ il-luminates the life of Anton Chekhov, focusing primar-ily on his personal life rath-er than his written works. Checkov played by Patrick O’ Kane is haunted by an eerie grim reaper fi gure, The Black Monk, who tries to guide him through his days. The women in his life can never seem to agree on what is best for him and their relation-ships are fraught with trag-edy, unrequited love and joy.

The relationship between Chekhov and his sister Ma-sha in this piece is turbulent. It allows the audience to wit-ness Chekov’s relationship

Review - Contagion

Contagion is Steven Soderbergh’s new medical thriller which

follows the rapid spread of lethal virus which kills in days and has the potential to wipe out a substantial chunk of the world’s population.

The movie follows sev-eral different characters over a number of weeks dur-ing which they deal with the initial outbreak up until the possible vaccine. As the pan-demic grows and people be-gin to panic, the worldwide

medical and health commu-nity struggle for a cure. All the while society is falling apart as people look to avoid what seems like inevitable infection.

The movie begins with Beth Emhoff (Gwyeneth Pal-trow) who is in Hong Kong on a business trip. We follow her as she has a night out in a fancy restaurant where she tries some delicious pork, then onto Chicago where she sleeps with an ex-boyfriend before going home to her lov-ing husband (Matt Damon).

The movie then moves up a gear when Beth and her son suddenly become ill and die with shocking suddenness. A confused Damon looks for answers, but at fi rst nobody seems to realise that this is the beginning of a virus. That is until it begins to rap-idly spread from Hong Kong, Chicago and Minneapolis to being a worldwide problem.

For this movie, Soder-bergh has enlisted quite an all star cast. The movie could have worked without the fa-mous faces but they do pro-

vide some great portrayals of some very interesting char-acters. After losing his wife and son, Matt Damon plays the confused everyman who still has to protect his daugh-ter.

In a traditional disaster movie, his character would be combined with Lawrence Fishburn’s head of the CDC. But it adds realism that he is exactly like what most of the world would be – powerless and scared.

Fishburn along with Kate Winslet, Jennifer Ehle and Elliot Gould portray the lead-ing scientist/doctors who battle to fi gure out a vaccine

Review: 16 Possible GlimpsesBy: Marina Carr

Directed by: Wayne Jordan

Venue: The Peacock

Dates: 30th Sept – 29th October

Cast Includes; Patrick O’ Kane, Malcolm Adams, Cathy Belton, Michael James Ford, and Deirdre Mul-lins.

Price: €13-25.

CIARA MURPHY

DONAL LUCEYDirected BySteven Soderbergh.

Starring Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Jude Law, Gwyenth Paltrow, Lawrence Fishburn, Marion Cotillard, Jennifer Ehle.

106 mins.

3/5

for this virus. Fishburn plays his character well, illustrat-ing the dilemmas facing any-one who holds privileged in-formation that can affect the ones closest to him. Finally, one of the most interesting characters is the Journalist Alan played by Jude Law. He is a blogger with a loyal online fan base and contro-versial ideas concerning the virus.

Soderbergh has a sub-stantial amount of experi-ence handling large ensem-ble casts, having directed three Ocean fi lms and the Oscar winning Traffi c, so it was a surprise for me feeling

that he had not got the best out of the characters and ac-tors at his disposal. The fi lm has so many characters and subplots that there just is not enough screen time available to do them justice.

Every time it feels like the audience could begin to con-nect with Jude Law’s charac-ter, the movie is pulled away to Asia or some other less im-portant part of the story. By the end of the fi lm, the audi-ence is none the wiser as to whether he is meant to be a truth teller or a con man. So too the tale of the epidemi-ologist portrayed by Marion Cotillard, who shows hero-

ism while trying to help the people of a small Chinese vil-lage. Her fate remains frus-tratingly open ended.

There are a lot of good aspects about Scott Z Burns script. Unlike a lot of pan-demic movies, this one tries to focus on the human drama of the disaster. There are no big explosions or CGI pay-offs. It doesn’t surprisingly turn out to be a corrupt phar-maceutical company’s exper-iments gone wrong. Instead, all we get is a frighteningly realistic depiction of how an unknown virus could spread so easily worldwide and catch even our best doctors and scientists completely off guard.

With the recent panic over Bird Flu and Swine Flu, Soderbergh’s movie evokes a unnerving fear in us. This fi lm offers a realism that is not seen often in these kinds of fi lms. It has been praised for its ability to stay true to scientifi c plausibility and not forsake it for dramatic purposes. But, I believe the structure of this fi lm ham-pers it. Too many times are we whipped around the world instead of a more in depth focus on a character. With so many characters and such a broad scope, too may times I felt myself thinking that this would have been better in a TV mini-series format.

“Don’t talk to me about happiness – it’s for other people”

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Director: Lars von Trier

Stars: Alexander Skarsgard, Brady Corbet,Charlotte Gainsbourg, Charlotte Rampling, John Hurt, Kiefer Sutherland, Kirsten Dunst, Stellan Skarsgard

Runtime: 130mins Cert: 15

Out now selected release

Review - MelancholiaDARRAGH O’ CONNOR

What can be said about Lars von Trier that would

encompass his career with-out getting into a detailed discussion? I think someone who is constantly is pushing the boarders of ‘accepted art house’ will do for now.

That said Melancholia is an enjoyable movie despite

itself. On the surface it is a disaster movie about a rogue planet that is set to crash into the Earth, thus wiping out all life. The whole plot of the movie is revealed in the movie’s spectacular opening sequence, so no spoilers here folks. Set against this back-drop is the tale of two sis-ters, Justine (Kirsten Dunst) and Claire (Charlotte Gains-bourg). This device allows the movie to split into two chapters and explore each character in-depth.

The fi rst part of the movie is focused on Justine, a young woman suffering from severe depression. The fi rst section of the movie follows her lav-ish wedding reception. Her personal troubles plague her throughout course of the day as her depression en-folds her. The veneer of joy and fake happiness slowly tears apart, and then fi nally shatters in a glorious Diony-

sian romp on the hotel’s golf course.

The second half focuses on the other sister Claire and her family life. It is here that we see that Claire also suc-cumbs to her fears and her own personal melancholia. One focused on the arrival of the “fl y-by” planet, the bag-gage of Justine and her rela-tionship with her increasing distant husband, played by Kiefer Sutherland.

The most striking aspect of this move is the scenes that serve to link the movie with the opening sequence or overture (the music of which is Richard Wagner’s prel-ude to his opera Tristan und Isolde). You are left unsure if these are actually occurring or rather internal confl icts of Justine’s mind. Von Trier is genius in his presentation. Wagner is used through-out the movie to remind the viewer of what he has seen in

the overture, and where the movie will end. The overture itself is a weird and distorted vision of the narrative. At the fi lms climax, we come full circle and everything makes sense. It is interest-ing that the horror of a global holocaust becomes an after-thought. The viewer is in-stead focused on the emotion of the protagonists, the panic of Claire and the stoic relief of Justine. It is chilling!

The cast are superb. The outstanding performance of Dunst should leave no doubt of her acting ability. She is truly haunting during her descent into madness. There also some entertaining cam-eos including Udo Kier as the obsessive wedding planner. Kier well known for his vast corpus of B-movie roles and is a nice treat. As a sidebar, Kier will be appearing in Iron Sky (set for release in 2012), two words...Space Nazis! An-

Review - ‘Pirates of the Carib-bean: On Stranger Tides’. DVDAIFRIC NÍ RUAIRC

Pirates of the Caribbe-an: On Stranger Tides sends Johnny Depp’s

Captain Jack Sparrow reluc-tantly rattling off on another, vaguely supernatural high-seas adventure.

This time Jack is setting forth in search of the Foun-tain of Youth and all the usual Pirates staples appear; ghostly ships loom out of the mist, Jack barely escapes ex-ecution in a wildly over-the-top action sequence, people still forget to address him as “Captain” and the annoying monkey is still annoying.

The difference between On Stranger Tides and the previous incarnations of the Pirates franchise is that Keira Knightly and Orlando Bloom are gone and have taken the overly sentimental romantic plots with them.

This frees the fi lm up and allows for a shorter, action-packed, lighter fi lm. Gone too is Gore Verbinski who directed the fi rst three fi lms

with Rob Marshall at the helm instead.

On Stranger Tides is a vehicle for Depp and his swaggering Keith Richards impression (and confusingly Richards pops up in a cameo doing his best Johnny Depp impression) and the fi lm is free of the baggage previous plots have brought.

The fi lm is a constant stream of gun-fi re explosions and swashbuckling sword-fi ghts and throughout Depp leaps from scene to scene, carrying the fi lm with his wry smiles and cocky one-liners.

Despite this there is a cer-tain staleness to Depp’s Cap-tain Jack which, after four fi lms, is to be expected and it is diffi cult to see where the character can take the fran-chise in the future. To further develop the character would be to ruin Captain Jack’s mystery yet there is only so far this character can take us before becoming a parody.

The fi lm also sees Geof-frey Rush return to his role of the pirate, Captain Bar-bossa and it is this perfor-mance that truly saves On

Stranger Tides. Rush is light and humorous and fi lls the sparse plot with charm and wit. Rush and Depp together make a wonderful pair, not quite friends and not quite enemies, butting heads at every chance and almost transforming the fi lm into a buddy movie.

The moments when they are together highlight the tri-umph the fi lm could have be-come if only there had been more opportunity for their crackling chemistry to devel-op. Rush once again proves that comedy is not beyond him and he truly is a worthy character actor.

With the addition of Ian McShane as Captain Black-beard there are now so many pirate Captains staggering around the fi lm in inch-thick eyeliner that it is a delight to when Penelope Crus pops up as Jack’s former fl ame An-gelica Teach.

Crus has proven herself recently in a string of won-derful performances, partic-ularly in director Pedro Alm-odovar’s Volver and initially it seems that she has been of-

fered a chance to shine here.Her character (literally)

turns up as a female Captain Jack which suggests that she will parade the same charm as her male counterpoint. However it soon becomes clear Teach is nothing more than a wooden stereotype and does not afford Crus the same opportunities as Depp and Rush. Once again Hol-lywood seems unable to of-fer the same calibre of roles to women as European fi lms have in recent years.

Rob Marshall utilises his skill as a musical director (he previously directed musicals Chicago and Nine) to ensure the fi lm fl ows quickly and the fi ght scenes are smoothly choreographed. With the shortest running time of the series and the simplicity of the plot Tides is the most light-hearted, fast-paced and fun fi lm the Pirates fi lms have seen since Curse of the Black Pearl.

It still has many faults but its seems as though the fi lm franchise may have been set back on course,, DVD extras include a blooper reel, some

Lego shorts and an annoying feature in which Timon and Pumbaa of Lion King fame try to fl og 3D Blu Ray to chil-

dren. Presenting this an ex-tra on a newly bought DVD seems manipulative and un-ethical.

other noteworthy cameo is that of John Hurt, as the di-shevelled father of Claire and Justine.

There are various theories regarding the meaning of the fi lm, and I have no doubt much ink will be spilt on this

subject. I will just say that Melancholia is the least of-fensive of Von Trier’s works, and in my opinion his best. As I have stated, despite its gloomy content Melancholia is an enjoyable movie.

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FASHIONMan, I Feel Like A WomanCiara-Louise Murphy discusses fashion’s latest fi xation: the androgynous look.

This daring trend of women imitating men in their choice of dress

is seen on many of the high fashion runways around the world, but one must ask; is this trend often too daring to wear on the high street? If we look at the catwalk in-spired creations using this manly look we can see that

they often team its mascu-linity with heavy smoky eyes and lashings of bronzer to create Gaga inspired cheeks.

This however isn’t feasible for even the biggest makeup enthusiasts among us, but does toning down this edgy daring look mean that we are no longer dressing as an-drogyny? How much, is too

much and when do we cross the line into androgynous style without venturing into the realms of the transsexual with its stereotypical theatri-cal dramatics.

Anyone who has stepped into Pennys, New Look, A-wear and top shop can see that the item to have and cherish is the billowing blouse with its full throat buttoning, this is often paired with brogue shoes and a satchel bag which are then classifi ed as the an-drogynous look. This style is far more easily replicated than the slicked back hair to rival a greaser and the tux to match that we often associ-ate as androgynous thanks to the catwalks. We have formed our own masculine inspired style on the high streets which incorporates as much femininity as possible to soften this harsh look and make it more attractive and appealing to the eye. Long locks or cute hairpieces are a must with this street style as they liven up the starch stiff seams of a blazer or shirt and

allow a playful tone to ring through. Topman has also become a female favourite cloth store as many of the stores quirky jumpers can be seen on women worn to perfection with cute skirts or tight jeans and various femi-nine fl airs in the form of hair accessories scarf’s or jewel-lery. It is easy to replicate an androgynous look while re-maining feminine with these additions as it seems the high street and people in general are not ready for fully fl edged masculine tailoring and a matching male glare.

Last week also saw many women “Suit Up” for inter-national suit up day and as I took part myself I found that my choice of suit was a little too masculine for peoples’ liking as I received many strange looks and sec-ond glances for my full white shirt, blazer and bow tie combination. In future I will take a leaf out of Ellie Gould-ing’s style guide and add a feminine twist of stockings, heels and a more modest neck piece.

Ladies we Love: Juno TempleFrom fashion to fi lm, Emma Nolan explains exactly why we worship Juno Temple.

This week we’re loving Juno Temple. This style savvy chica is

best known for her roles in critically acclaimed movies like Kaboom, Atonement and Cracks, to name a few.

At the moment she’s in the spotlight for her upcoming roles in The Three Musket-eers, The Dark Knight Rises and Dirty Girl in which she plays the leading role. But her recent Dazed and Con-fused cover and her edgy photo-shoots for controver-sial celebrity photographer Tyler Shields have our style senses tingling about this one.

The 22 year old has us fas-cinated by her own quirky image, she seems utterly fearless in her approach to dressing and choices of at-tire; an admirable quality.

Juno is a self-confessed “homeless person” when it comes to her everyday per-sonal aesthetic, which is true, but her daring yet careless

attitude towards fashion is what results in her personal style being so intriguing.

This “hobo-chic” Temple so effortlessly carries off consists of her carefully se-lecting different textures and layering them in a creative way which demonstrates her natural fl are for style. Still the hobo look isn’t all Juno

has to offer when it comes to what she’s wearing. Her more polished award show looks never fail to disappoint us, pretty much hitting the nail on the head every time. As a Miu Miu ambassador, her wardrobe is ladened with the brand, and its infl uence on her is noteworthy in her own clothing personality.

defi nitely a fan. Like most girls though, she

is a huge fan of heels. Pair-ing them with the shabbiest ensembles to add an unex-pected feminine touch, and the higher the better. Key elements in Juno’s wardrobe are leopard print pieces and her leather jacket (a girl after my own heart), which will add that bad girl element to any outfi t.

Her unconventional sense of style, her talent, beauty and all round alluring charis-ma is why we’re loving Juno Temple this week; defi nitely one to watch.

Juno’s beloved Miu Miu, fea-tured lavish designs in their runway shows. From the humble polka dot, to ornate swirls and elaborate fl orals, this is a trend which can be achieved easily from the high street and from a root through your favourite char-ity shops to attain that Tem-ple fl are.

Juno loves to mix her tex-tures, combining woollen pieces with silks and mesh, in the same colour. This is a terrifi c way to add depth to an outfi t. The same tech-nique can be applied for mix-ing patterns too, and Juno is

Miu Miu the label itself perfectly encapsulates Juno Temple’s unique style with its modern and sensual aura, it, like Temple is playful yet refi ned, possessing an eccen-tric demeanour whilst main-taining that sophistication she so abundantly radiates.

Favouring a taste for fi lm roles on the quirkier side, Juno shows that she’s not your run of the mill generic Hollywood girl. She enticed us as Lola Quincey in Atone-ment and her portrayal of the jealous Di in Cracks was superb.

These serious roles dem-onstrate her stunning acting ability while her more playful roles in comedies Year One, Wildchild and St. Trinians show us a different side to her and illustrate her versa-tility as an actress. Some of her more obscure, yet highly praised fi lms in which she starred include Mr. Nobody with Jared Leto, Glorious 39, and Kaboom.

On screen and off, she fas-cinates; her ethereal beauty combined with her edgy style and interesting roles serve to cement her “it-girl” status.

How to get Juno Temple’s look you ask? To achieve Ju-no’s distinctive style, aim for bold patterns. She is a huge fan of decorative prints and patterns. Evoking a sense of decadent luxury, this sea-son designers such as Mary Katrantzou, Balenciaga and Miu Miu Resort ‘12 Puff-Sleeve printed Dress, Cruise Collection

Rochas Autumn 2011 Strapless Gown

A typical catwalk androgynous look complete with heavy set make up.

Page 11: The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

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1125.10.11

FASHIONChic

EEK

Say goodbye to leopard and tiger prints and prowl around in some real exotic designs. Peacock plumage will also suffi ce.

Parrot Feathers

Zooey Deschanel

Marci Klein

The New Girl star is back and her Christmas album ‘A Very She & Him Christmas’ is out today.

“Every time I go to bed with some guy, I’m looking at my dad’s name on their underwear.”

Frankie Cocozza

Hayley Joel Osment

Hangovers

The Anti-Christ of pop culture, not only has he the vocal chords of a donkey but a face to match too.

“I… see… fat people” – Stop looking in the mirror Hayley.

So last year. Eradicate that headache with some ‘magic-juice’ (i.e. a screwdriver with Pharmaton).

The perfect men’s tie can be what makes or breaks an outfi t. But

with the countless amounts of fabrics, patterns, and col-ours to choose from we are left with a diffi cult decision which often goes wrong. For most of us, the result is a small collection of similar, simple and safe coloured ties. While there is nothing wrong with choosing this easy look, with the correct styling can inject some charm which is essential for most ‘classic’ men’s looks.

A solid coloured tie is the easiest style to match. Sim-ply select a block-coloured tie and match it to one of the colours in your outfi t and you’re ready for a sophisti-cated night out on the town. Beware though, along with this minimalism comes the danger of over coordination, a faux pas which is prefer-ably avoided. Avoid black tie/black shirt combinations and instead pick something which can live up your attire;

oxblood, cobalt blue even a metallic-coloured tie can achieve this.

Equally classic is the men’s stripe tie, which is easily matched with solid suits and shirts by selecting a stripe that compliments. In the case of a patterned jacket, shirt, or both, the key is to maintain colours that compliment and add a sense of harmony to your outfi t. A fi nely pinstriped suit calls for a boldly striped tie, while a strong checked shirt would be better suited by a more subdued stripe. One note of caution about striped ties: ensure your colours don’t af-fi liate with any local college-colours (I’m all for pride and patronage but you will end up looking like an extra in Hogwarts).

Polka dots, paisley, and fi gure – ties which consist of small repeating images and patterns – have become much more common over the years. If chosen with good taste, shunning osten-

tatious colours and designs, these ties can enliven any solid-coloured shirt. Ties like these should be coordinated in your outfi t by their prima-ry colour, with attention paid to avoiding secondary col-ours that visibly clash with the shirt.

A great statement-fabric when organizing a politi-cal march, the knitted-tie is back and it’s here to stay. This should be worn with the plainest shirt as possible and become the focal point of your outfi t.

Always look for qual-ity material and decent con-struction when choosing a tie, and avoid anything that appears poorly made. A good tie can last a lifetime. The most common tie textile is silk, and for most it is con-sidered unequal in its fi eld. Beware of cheap polyester impostors (the devil in dis-guise); polyester doesn’t hold the same drape as silk, and has a sheen that leaves a lot to be desired.

With attention to detail and an eye for sophistica-tion, you can quickly become a master at selecting the per-

fect tie to complete your sav-vy ensemble. While the solid silk option is a safe and clas-sic choice, don’t be afraid to take a risk with bold designs and textured fabrics.

Ties made of tweed are a great way of mixing up the heritage trend with a more formal aspect. Novelty ties are best avoided, unless you’re dressing up as ‘off-trend’ this Halloween. If you really want to impress, the Keeling Gallery have a range of hand-painted bow-ties from Jack Kirwan with a range of designs from Gogh’s Starry Night to Monet’s Pop-pies. These require a certain sense of swag to pull off but are remarkable accoutre-ments nonetheless.

Knit Picking: Textbook Ties

When Fierce Becomes Freak: Nicki MinajWith Minaj possibly at the height of her ca-reer, Laura Donohoe debates the highs and lows of the bi-polar fashionista.

Nicki Minaj- the name which sparks intense debate. The girl is

everywhere, she’s inescap-able, arguably more so for her eccentric fashion choices than her music.

She’s shown more fl esh than a Vegas stripper, though it can be forgiven with that killer body, and she’s often found in the best and worst dressed lists. What makes her so odd is her in-constancy- her fi rst appear-ance on the Ellen DeGeneres show, she looked stunning in a black body con dress and statement heels, but as her fame progressed, she became more of a circus act, with outrageous colours, themes and face paint make up. Now she looks to be the weirder Lady Gaga of Hip Hop, with downright weird ensembles, emblazoned with some form of tack or trash.

Looking at her outfi t at MTV’s VMAs 2011- This is easily one of the most offen-sive outfi t’s the girl has ever worn to date. She literally

looks like she selected the most scary statement pieces and then put them all to-gether. There is a cacophony of colour and texture which most designers wouldn’t see in six seasons.

The welded dress, the pink tutu, star printed leg-gings, white over-the-knee socks, clutching a giant bird-like teddy, while rocking an obnoxious ice cream cone necklace and a printed sur-gery mask. Even one of these would be reason enough to be sent off to the loony bin, combined, she looks like the modern day female version of Willy Wonka. It’s hard to describe how or where she discovered this look, but for the sake of the children, let us hope it stays there.

Nicki also shocked at Os-car de la Renta and Carolina Herrera’s shows. Minaj ex-plodes in with neon colours and looks absolutely obscene seated next to the cool and aloof Vogue’s editor in chief. Surprisingly, most accounts at the event revealed the two

were having a chin wag, de-spite Nicki having the show being put on hold in anticipa-tion of her arrival, and pho-tos of Anna looking repulsed by the cartoon character sat beside her.

Nicki tweeted from the show, sporting a multitude of bizarre colours, blended with her interpretation of Hara-juku style. Had she been an ordinary person, people would assume that she’s mix-ing medications.

While difference should be embraced and celebrated,

Miss Minaj appears to actu-ally try to be beyond differ-ent, which is as counterpro-ductive as a unique person trying to appear ‘normal’. Her strange array of style and her revealing she takes on multiple alter egos just suggests she may not be of sound mind, or simply put, a bit of a freak! Nicki, pick one of your personalities and remain that way, as of the moment, you look like a one woman show of bat crap crazy.

Whether for an interview, night-out or for-mal event, Cathal O’ Gara explains the im-portance in choosing the perfect neck-tie.

Page 12: The Siren, Issue 4, Volume XXV

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1225.10.11

FASHIONTop Five Budget Beauty Buys for Under a Tenner

As much as we wish it, more often than not our student budgets

don’t cover the cost of ne-cessities such as MAC eye-shadow quads, Chanel nail varnishes and Bobbi Brown Shimmer Bricks. Le sigh. So instead left with is a choice of affordable brands. I know, for some this may be a step too far; and I’m not sug-gesting that all high-street brands are good; but every now and then you can fi nd a little gem that means you can eat for the week instead of forking out on its high-end counterpart. Here lies before you the top fi ve best budget beauty buys for under a ten-ner. Thank me later!

Mavala Nail Polish: Because sometimes Chanel is just too bloody expensive. The Ma-

vala range is available in most pharmacies, has a huge range of colours and textures and costs under €6 for a bot-tle; so whether it’s a dupe of an expensive nail polish, a dream to create ombre nails or just a little spend thrift, you can’t really go wrong.

Sleek Storm Eyeshad-ow Palette: W h e t h e r it’s an unas-suming day-time look you’re after or a dark smokey eye; this twelve shadow pal-ette has it all. Shimmers, mattes and the odd base colour thrown in means your €8.50 will be very, very well spent. Avail-able from Sleek-makeup.com

Maybelline Falsies Vol-ume Mascara Black: Because,

let’s face it, mascara isn’t something we want to spend loads of money on. Or share with any-one. Ever. Available in Boots for €10.

B o u r -jois Pas-tel Joues Blusher: The packaging isn’t that bad and there is a great range of col-ours to choose from. Favour-ites for this season are Brun Cuivre and Rose Frisson, for just €9.

And last but not least Rimmel Lasting Finish Lipstick: One, because Kate Moss de-signed them. Two, because they come in great bright shades that will set you apart from the nude-lipped posse. And three, because they come in at just under €8. Go forth, my friends, and spend, spend, spend!

CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS STYLESTYLESTYLE

CAMPUS CAMPUS STYLESTYLESTYLE

Name: Sam McGovern

Course: 3rd Year English & Drama

Store of choice: Harlequin & Topman

Style Icon: Franz Ferdinand

Name: Mante Ramoskaite

Course: 1st Year Psychology, Film & Classics

Store of choice: Zara, UO, River Island.

Style Icon: Alexa Chung

Name: Lauren Moore

Course: 1st Year English

Store of choice: Topshop, H&M, Forever 21.Style Icon: Kate Moss

CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS STYLESTYLE

CAMPUS CAMPUS STYLESTYLE

Course: 3rd Year English & Drama

Store of choice: Harlequin & Topman

Style Icon: Franz Ferdinand

Course: 1st Year Psychology, Film & Classics

Store of choice: Zara, UO, River Island.

Store of choice: Topshop, H&M,

CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS STYLESTYLESTYLE

CAMPUS CAMPUS STYLESTYLE

Course: 3rd Year English & Drama

Store of choice: Harlequin & Topman

Style Icon: Franz Ferdinand

Course: 1st Year Psychology, Film & Classics

Store of choice: Zara, UO, River Island.

Store of choice: Topshop, H&M,

JULIE KIRWAN

Hallowe’en EyesIf you’re dressing as a Sexy

Nurse, Snow White or Schoolgirl for Hallowe’en

this year, I suggest you stop reading now. If, however, you’re a bit sick of the slutty Hallowe’en outfi t clichés and want to attempt something a bit more creative, or even borderline scary, then this may be the place for you. I’m under no allusion that any-one will want to put much effort into their outfi t, but if dressing up really isn’t for you – play with your face. And this spiderweb look is actually quite pretty.

After your base has been set (foundation, concealer, bronzer etc), take any matte black eyeshadow and sweep it across the lid. Then tak-ing a fl uffy blending brush, blend the edges out so there are no harsh lines. Taking the same black shadow on a thin angled brush, start to draw lines up from the eye-socket towards the forehead

and smaller lines under the eye towards the cheek, mak-ing sure they are not perfect-ly straight.

Once this is done, take the product and draw horizontal curved lines to link up with the vertical ones, creating a spiderweb shape. With a white eyeliner pencil draw small circles throughout the ‘web’ and then taking a black eyeliner pencil, line the in-ner rims of the eye and apply false eyelashes to the top and bottom lashes (for the bot-tom lashes, just turn normal

lashes upside down and glue along the lashline). Penney’s have a packet of fi ve lashes for €8 which would be per-fect for this look. Then, take a silver eyeshadow or glitter pigment and apply it to the inner corners of the eyes to open them up. Apply a salm-on-pink lipstick like Sleeks ‘Milkshake’ Lip Tar (€5.70, available at beautyempo-rium.ie) and you’re all set to go. That’s it, simples. And you don’t look like every oth-er girl this Hallowe’en, which has to be a plus. Yes?

Julie Kirwan of brokenblush.blogspot.com shows you how to get the perfect spider-eyes for Hallowe’en

Sleek Storm Eyeshad-

very, very well spent. Avail-

is just too bloody

ites for this season are Brun Cuivre and Rose Frisson,

And last but

loads of money on. Or share