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- <text id=91TT1272>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Smiles (and Yuks) Of a Summer Night
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 66
- Smiles (and Yuks) Of a Summer Night
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By RICHARD SCHICKEL
- </p>
- <p> SOAPDISH
- </p>
- <p> We sometimes forget that besides providing merriment for
- us yokels, show business performs an even more valuable social
- function. It provides livelihoods and a home for thousands of
- certifiable lunatics. The savings to our overburdened
- health-care system are simply incalculable.
- </p>
- <p> Case in point: the cast and staff of The Sun Also Sets, a
- soap opera of transcendent tackiness. Its reigning diva is
- Celeste Talbert (Sally Field), so insecure that she must
- periodically journey to New Jersey shopping malls so she can be
- fawned over by her fans.
- </p>
- <p> Supporting player Montana Moorehead (Cathy Moriarty) is
- scheming to supplant Celeste, and has enlisted snaky, horny
- David Barnes (Robert Downey Jr.), the show's line producer, in
- a plot to bring back Jeffrey Anderson (Kevin Kline), once the
- soap's leading man and the star's lover. Reduced to playing
- Willy Loman at a Florida dinner theater, he is eager for a
- comeback. This presents a practical problem: Jeffrey was rather
- definitely written out of the soap when his character was
- decapitated.
- </p>
- <p> In the Robert Harling-Andrew Bergman script, loopy life
- contrives to imitate trashy art with marvelous fidelity. There
- are moments when the plot of The Sun Also Sets seems marginally
- more realistic--or anyway more temperate--than the lives of
- its performers. For Soapdish is something the movies rarely
- attempt: a flat-out farce, all slamming doors, thrown objects,
- misplaced emotions and terrific timing by a wonderful ensemble
- of actors. Field has an unsuspected gift for comic malevolence,
- and Kline has a way of putting a soft, almost endearing spin on
- egomania. No one has ever acted bad acting better than these
- two, and cool Michael Hoffman is a director who never misses the
- point or rattles on past it.
- </p>
- <p> Show biz may be full of nut cases, but it has this saving
- grace: an ability to pull itself up short, take a hard look in
- the mirror and bust out laughing. When the danger of inside
- jokiness is avoided, the result can be Tootsie or Noises Off.
- Or Soapdish.
- </p>
- <p> CITY SLICKERS
- </p>
- <p> Late thirtysomething and first mid-life crisis loom for
- three urban types lovingly played by Billy Crystal, Daniel Stern
- and Bruno Kirby. What better cure for their variegated blues
- than a dude cattle drive? Joining with other frustrated
- fantasists, they move a herd from point A to point B under the
- supervision of a hilariously traditional cowman (Jack Palance).
- The script acknowledges a structural debt to Red River, but its
- spin is strictly Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel: sharply turned
- observations on contemporary angst blended with agreeable
- sentiments by Parenthood's writers. O.K., it would be nice if
- this film paused to sniff the locoweed, but director Ron
- Underwood yippee-ki-yos the yuppies quite smartly along a pretty
- fresh trail.
- </p>
- <p> HUDSON HAWK
- </p>
- <p> By common consent, it's Ishtar for the '90s, an
- overpriced, overproduced comedy that has critics blustering
- moral outrage. But if you can see past the thicket of dollar
- signs surrounding Hudson Hawk, you may discern quite a funny
- movie--sort of an Indiana Jones send-up with a hip undertone
- all its own. Bruce Willis is the title cat burglar, recruited
- against his will to steal the secrets of alchemy from the
- various sites where Leonardo da Vinci long ago secreted them.
- His employers, Richard E. Grant and Sandra Bernhard, are
- viciously funny caricatures of excessive wealth; his sidekick
- is a streetwise Danny Aiello. Sacred cattle, ranging from the
- CIA to the Vatican, are prodded by the Steven E. de Souza-Daniel
- Waters script, and director Michael Lehmann's action set pieces
- are intricately developed. In other words, Hudson Hawk is a
- high-budget movie full of low-budget eccentricity. Any movie in
- which a heavy is caught reading Dr. Seuss books just can't be
- all bad.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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