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- REVIEWS, Page 73Short Takes
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- CINEMA
- Smoking Gun, Nonstop Excess
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- It's sweet of Murtaugh (Danny Glover) to keep pulling
- unlighted cigarettes out of his partner's mouth. Since the cops'
- lives are a nonstop succession of explosions, fire fights and
- car chases, lung cancer is probably the last thing Riggs (Mel
- Gibson) needs to worry about. The last thing the makers of
- LETHAL WEAPON 3 worried about was a complex story -- it's simply
- about stolen guns. The idea was to push the action to a level
- of excess where it turns parodistically comic, and this is done
- expertly. They've brought back Joe Pesci as a goofy cop buff,
- added Rene Russo as the love interest for Riggs -- a policewoman
- as crazily brave as he is -- and made a cheerfully amoral movie
- that cannily caters to and satirizes our passion for cinematic
- violence.
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- POP MUSIC
- Digging Deeper
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- Brazilian musician Sergio Mendes captivated U.S. audiences
- in the 1960s by adding a light bossa-nova flavor to pop tunes
- like The Look of Love. But today's record buyers, their tastes
- enlivened by the spicier fare of Jamaican reggae and South
- African mbaqanga, demand more authentic sounds. In his new
- album, Brasileiro, Mendes digs deeper into his musical roots to
- produce a down-home sampler ranging from a lively baiao -- folk
- music from Brazil's northeast -- to an off-beat Bahian-style
- rap. There are lots of leisurely sambas too, but the best
- selections are those on which drummers from Rio's samba schools
- burst into the explosive rhythms that provide the sound track
- for the city's joyous carnival.
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- OPERA
- Minimal to the Max
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- Librettos have been constructed out of some unlikely
- material -- Gertrude Stein's poetry, ancient Sanskrit texts --
- but never have the words been so, well, unwordy as those for
- Atlas, a new opera by the minimalist composer-singer-dancer
- MEREDITH MONK that was performed last week in Brooklyn. La la
- la and Hay yo, Hay yo are just two of the "arias" in this tale
- of an explorer named Alexandra (Monk), who travels to the roof
- of the world with a handful of intrepid companions and finds
- both adventure and, in the end, herself. An offbeat but
- sophisticated hybrid of simple chord changes, birdlike
- ululations, soaring vocalises and stylized dances, Atlas is the
- apotheosis of Monk's decades-long quest for artless simplicity.
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- BOOKS
- Jokey But Not Funny
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- Writing is a simple, rhythmic exercise, like hitting a
- major-league curve ball, and sometimes you go 0 for June. The
- usually peerless Larry McMurtry, author of Lonesome Dove and The
- Last Picture Show, two funny, sad, marvelously human novels
- about the Southwest, misses badly with THE EVENING STAR (Simon
- & Schu ster; $23). The new novel, a sequel to Terms of
- Endearment, is big, flabby and aimless. It picks up Terms'
- Aurora Greenway in her 70s and deals lengthily with the
- impotence of her 80-year-old lover, who has taken to exposing
- himself. There's more, equally jokey and unfunny. Before the
- book's midpoint, the reader asks himself the question that
- should have occurred to the book's editor: Why am I spending
- time with these people?
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- TELEVISION
- Shoe Business
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- "He made love like he worked on the street -- tender as a
- jackhammer." So goes one of the loonier entries in the RED SHOE
- DIARIES, a woman's account of her steamy affair with a
- construction worker who moonlights as -- no kidding -- a shoe
- salesman. The woman (Brigitte Bako), torn between the hunk she's
- secretly sleeping with and the hunk she's engaged to, has just
- committed suicide, and her fiance reads the journal after her
- funeral. That pretty much wraps up the plot of this Showtime
- movie, directed by soft-core wizard Zalman King (9 1/2 Weeks,
- Wild Orchid). The film's heavy-breathing style -- sensuous
- slow-motion, arty dissolves, fetishistic close-ups -- is too
- studied to be erotic, but there's one thing in its favor: it
- looks like nothing else on TV.
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