home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- ╩ CINEMA, Page 87Crash Course
-
-
- DAYS OF THUNDER
- Directed by Tony Scott
- Screenplay by Robert Towne
-
-
- Round and round he goes, motor roaring like -- oh, all
- right, thunder. Where the unfortunately named Cole Trickle (Tom
- Cruise) will stop, everyone who has ever seen a race-car movie
- knows: slamming into a wall; skidding across the infield;
- ultimately, after the getting of masculine wisdom (hospital
- stays, love affairs, and rivals suffering gloomy, exemplary
- fates are the traditional teaching aids), in victory alley.
-
- The nerve of these people, recycling that story. No, the
- shrewdness of these people. For Days of Thunder offers
- adolescent males the possibility of a high-speed crash almost
- every minute. It offers their dates the possibility of a shy,
- winning Tom Cruise smile on an equal-opportunity basis. The
- boys get some sober, silly chat about the nature of courage.
- The girls get to see one of their sex (Nicole Kidman) play
- doctor with Cruise.
-
- Just to be certain this is the year's perfect school's-out
- movie, it offers something everyone seems to be looking for
- these days: an ideal father figure. He designed Cole's car and
- is his crew chief. His name -- another misfortune -- is Harry
- Hogge, and he is played by the redoubtable Robert Duvall. Harry
- is, naturally, stern but forgiving, all business on the track,
- a free and playful spirit away from it -- as much a fantasy as
- Cruise's neostud. But Duvall finds an odd shyness in Harry; he
- doesn't assert goodness, he just kind of, you know, behaves it.
- Duvall not only grounds his character in reality; he almost
- succeeds in grounding the whole picture in it as well. Anyway,
- he gives those grownups who happen to wander in where they are
- not wanted something to think about.
-
-
- By Richard Schickel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-