home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- CINEMA, Page 70Sinderella
-
-
- PRETTY WOMAN
- Directed by Garry Marshall
- Screenplay by J.F. Lawton
-
-
- No one has yet made a romantic comedy in which, say, a
- toxic-waste dumper falls for a terrorist hijacker. (They meet
- cute in an airport check-in line, and she's got a bomb in her
- luggage.) But Pretty Woman comes close to finding the least
- admirable characters to build a feel-good movie around. Richard
- Gere is Edward, a corporate raider who gobbles up companies and
- spits them out in divestible chunks. Julia Roberts is Vivian,
- a Los Angeles hooker whom Edward hires as his some-sex, no-love
- escort for the week.
-
- J.F. Lawton's script sweats bullets to prove that these two
- are lovable folks with much to teach each other in matters of
- class and conscience. But Edward has them pegged: "We both
- screw people for money." So does this movie. A ticket to Pretty
- Woman buys you mechanical titillation and predictable twists.
- Is Vivian thrown out of a snooty Rodeo Drive boutique? Count
- the minutes (which seem like hours) before she sails back with
- Edward and the store's clerks are toadying to her.
-
- Last year Garry Marshall directed a brisk, witty movie
- starring Bette Midler as a lottery winner who chases her
- elusive ticket through Manhattan. The film, shown daily at
- Disney-MGM Studios park in Florida, lasts three minutes. Beyond
- that length Marshall has trouble freshening a familiar theme.
- But maybe predictability is the point of Pretty Woman, which
- may be a hit just because it descends to its audience's
- expectations. This is old-fashioned, assembly-line moviemaking
- without the old panache. It makes one ask, Can't the Japanese
- do it better? Couldn't anybody?
-
-
- By Richard Corliss.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-