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- CINEMA, Page 73Rushes
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- MEN DON'T LEAVE
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- Dad's a swell guy. He has an easy rapport with his two sons
- that their tense mom (Jessica Lange) can't match. If he has a
- flaw, it's that he dies 15 minutes into a movie that is as
- tender and strained as his newly widowed wife. Men Don't Leave,
- written by Barbara Benedek and director Paul Brickman, gets
- promising when Lange lurches toward psychotic withdrawal from
- this grave new world, even as her kids accommodate themselves
- to it quickly. But a TV-movie moral awaits at the end, as
- comforting and predictable as a public-service commercial. For
- the real goods on women without men, and on the hold the dead
- have over the living, skip Men Don't Leave and catch up with
- its thrilling, high-fantasy counterpart, Always, still playing
- at a theater near you.
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- EVERYBODY WINS
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- In his time, Karel Reisz directed Morgan!, The Loves of
- Isadora and The French Lieutenant's Woman. In his day, Arthur
- Miller wrote Death of a Salesman. What, then, are they doing
- in a small Connecticut town, mixing up with hookers and private
- eyes? Don't ask them. Don't ask anyone who has seen the result
- of their collaboration, Everybody Wins. At times it promises
- to be a study in miscarried justice -- an innocent youth
- imprisoned for a murder he did not commit. At other times it
- seems to be about all-encompassing municipal corruption. There
- are moments between the detective (Nick Nolte) and the flaky
- strumpet (Debra Winger) when it edges toward, of all things,
- screwball comedy. But it never settles for long on any style
- or viewpoint, and it arrives at no dramatic conclusion. In
- other words, it is a lot like ordinary life, which accounts for
- its occasional charms. But it is never much like a movie, which
- accounts for its failure to sustain the viewer's attention.
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- INTERNAL AFFAIRS
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- Dennis Peck (Richard Gere) has so many wives and children
- by his various marriages that he doesn't know what to do.
- Except steal to support them. And, for relaxation, lure other
- men's wives into extramarital affairs. He may be the most
- thoroughly corrupt (and corrupting) cop in an overcrowded movie
- field. His response to a departmental investigation is to
- threaten to seduce the wife of head detective Raymond Avila
- (Andy Garcia) if Avila doesn't quash the case. No question about
- it, Internal Affairs is a nasty, sometimes brutal, piece of
- work. But Gere is hypnotic, writer Henry Bean's construction
- is entertainingly intricate, and director Mike Figgis knows how
- to turn on a subtle, authentic erotic heat.
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