LOU’S VIEWS: ‘Pump Boys,’ the IMA’s ‘Memory Cloud,’ and Tarantino’s latest

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This week, “Pump Boys and Dinettes” returns, new lobby artwork at the IMA invites revisits, and Tarantino disappoints.

__________

The stereotype of a community theater production is time-tested material presented by
less-than-top-notch talent. I’m not saying that’s always or even usually the case, but it’s usually best
to expect that going in.

That assumption was turned on its head by “Pump Boys and Dinettes,” which
recently played a weekend stint at Indianapolis Civic Theatre.

There, a cast that had been performing the show
off and on for 20 years handled the chores well, gleefully, supplying the music on piano, guitars, accordion and even pots
and pans. Their experience with the roles helped considerably—these characters are best served seasoned, not fresh.
Particularly effective and endearing was Karen Frye, who both typified and transcended the diner waitress caricature.

The goodwill generated by the cast, unfortunately, couldn’t make up for deficits in the show itself. I somehow missed
“Pump Boys and Dinettes” through the years, and my first encounter, I hoped, would at least find it at least in
the company of such other small-cast, single-set stalwarts as “Nunsense” and “Forever Plaid.”

But despite decent-enough music and a simple, charming gas station/diner milieu, the book and lyric writing consistently
left me shaking my head, wondering why more effort wasn’t made by the show’s initial creators. Song after song
wandered until it hit the wall (the worst, a would-be introspective “Sister,” proved to be the most out-of-place
show song I’ve heard in years). Line after line of dialogue took matters nowhere.

I don’t mind if a
show aims low, but give me something.

__________

It’s great to see the lobby of the Indianapolis
Museum of Art brightened again (good riddance, black rope stacks), thanks to Judith G. Levy’s “Memory Cloud,”
a joyful and sad evocation of the things we remember—and the things we’ve forgotten.

Consisting of
hundreds of small plastic photo viewers, some within reach and some beyond, it’s a strong, emotional, interactive installation
that keeps drawing me back to the IMA with family members and friends in tow.

You have until Jan. 24 to experience
it.

__________

I usually avoid talking about mainstream movies in this column. After all, film and
TV seems to have eaten away at arts coverage in so many places, why make such concessions here? But while I’ve had many
disappointments in movie theaters, it’s been a long time since I’ve felt as let down by a movie as I did with
Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglourious Basterds” (the spelling errors are deliberate, by the way), so forgive
me for taking some space here to vent.

“Inglourious Basterds” is awful not just as action-adventure
(the climactic plot relies too much on coincidence and unbelievably poor security on the part of the Nazis), and as a character
piece (nobody evolves in any way and few have any memorable personalities), but also as a Tarantino exercise. Where’s
the perverse fun that made “Pulp Fiction” work? Where’s the playfulness that balances the gore and makes
the brutal journey worthwhile? Where’s the wit?

And what should we make of a film where the ragtag group
of Allies are as cruel as the Nazis—one in which we witness far more atrocities committed by Jews than Germans? No,
it’s not a message movie—and there’s no sign that Tarantino expects us to think about the nature of violence.
But it’s difficult to avoid feeling sickened by a movie that so clearly celebrates mutilation and blood lust. Tarantino
seems to want the audience to take pleasure in the machine-gunning of already doomed German civilians. I couldn’t.•

__________

Visit ibj.com/arts for additional reviews, previews and arts discussion. Twitter: IBJarts

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