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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 1
-
-
- THEATER
-
- OUR COUNTRY'S GOOD. The acerbic antimilitary play, named
- London's best last season, gets double exposure: the original Royal
- Court version is at the Canadian Stage Company in Toronto, while
- the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles offers a U.S. premiere.
-
- AUGUST SNOW. Revered novelist Reynolds Price debuts a trilogy
- at the Cleveland Play House (titles of the other works: Night Dance
- and Better Days).
-
- MOVIES
-
- DRUGSTORE COWBOY. Matt Dillon and friends go on a drug spree
- in Gus Van Sant's eye-catching tour of the lower depths. Dillon,
- a punk Montgomery Clift, is pure Acapulco gold as a smart addict
- who gets scared straight.
-
- JOHNNY HANDSOME (Mickey Rourke) has the face of the Elephant
- Man and the brain of a perverse computer. Now all he needs to take
- his revenge on some suave double-crossers is a little plastic
- surgery. Walter Hill's thriller boasts a sturdy cast (Ellen Barkin,
- Morgan Freeman, Elizabeth McGovern) and a ripe sense of criminal
- ambiguity. Neat work!
-
- BLACK RAIN. Michael Douglas glowers through this formulaic cop
- drama set in Japan. Director Ridley Scott can make anything -- a
- nightclub, a chase, a murder -- look sexy. But here he wastes his
- time -- and ours.
-
- MUSIC
-
- BORIS GREBENSHIKOV: RADIO SILENCE (Columbia). The title is a
- self-fulfilling prophecy. Grebenshikov, a dubious product of
- glasnost, sounds like David Bowie on Bosco as he thrashes his way
- -- in English -- through twelve pompous rock anthems as dense as
- the Iron Curtain but not quite so penetrable.
-
- JAMES MCMURTRY: TOO LONG IN THE WASTELAND (Columbia). A fine
- debut album that fixes a bleary, jaundiced eye on the back roads
- and byways of small-town life. McMurtry turns a lyric with irony
- and precision, even if his voice can't carry a tune as far as the
- barn door.
-
- BEETHOVEN: AN DIE FERNE GELIEBTE/BRAHMS: VIER ERNSTE GESAENGE
- (Deutsche Grammophon). Tenors, sopranos, basses, mezzos: eat your
- hearts out! The best classical singer since World War II is
- baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, who proves it on this dazzling
- lieder collection.
-
- TELEVISION
-
- COMMON THREADS: STORIES FROM THE QUILT (HBO, Oct. 15, 18, 21,
- 24). Friends and family of five AIDS victims, whose lives are
- commemorated in the AIDS Memorial Quilt, reminisce poignantly in
- a documentary directed by Rob Epstein (The Times of Harvey Milk)
- and Jeffrey Friedman.
-
- DO YOU KNOW THE MUFFIN MAN? (CBS, Oct. 22, 9 p.m. EDT). John
- Shea and Pam Dawber play the parents of a boy who has been abused
- at the friendly neighborhood day-care center.
-
- NIGHT MUSIC (NBC, Mondays, 12:15 a.m. EDT). Assemble a handful
- of the best jazz, R.-and-B. and rock artists, and turn them loose
- in a weekly, hour-long musical showcase that has smooth-talking
- alto saxman David Sanborn as host. Result: the best damn music show
- on television. Look for Eric Clapton, Robert Cray and Taj Mahal to
- perform this season.
-
- BOOKS
-
- SOME CAN WHISTLE by Larry McMurtry (Simon & Schuster; $19.95).
- Some of McMurtry's good books, like Terms of Endearment, have been
- turned into good movies. Alas, this novel, about a feckless
- millionaire TV writer discovering his daughter from a long-ago
- marriage, is not a good book. Wait for the inevitable screen
- adaptation.
-
- A PLACE FOR US by Nicholas Gage (Houghton Mifflin; $19.95).
- The author scored six years ago with Eleni, the story of his
- mother's heroic sacrifice in smuggling her children away from
- Communist insurgents in Greece during the 1940s. This time, Gage
- focuses on his father, who had preceded his family to America to
- try to find a better life for them all. Instead he welcomed ashore
- four motherless children and earned this touching, textured memoir
- from one of them.
-
- ART
-
- VELAZQUEZ, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. If you
- want to know what realist painting is or can be, look at Velazquez.
- Artists have said so for 300 years. Here, in 38 choice canvases,
- is the reason why. Through Jan. 7.
-
- TASTES
-
- California has long had Chardonnays to match the white wines
- of Burgundy and Cabernets to challenge the reds of Bordeaux. Now
- it has a brandy that compares, worthily, with the great grape
- distillates of Cognac. It is Germain-Robin, named for French
- expatriate Hubert Germain-Robin, who has been producing it in
- minute quantities in Mendocino County since 1981. Lot 6, now on the
- market, is feather-touch brandy -- smooth, light and spicy, more
- akin to a Cognac by Delamain or a small producer like R. Ragnaud
- than to the mass-market offerings of Remy Martin and Hennessy. Next
- year Germain-Robin and partner Ansley Coale Jr. will start selling
- their first equivalent of a Cognac X.O., a satiny-textured beauty
- with seven years in cask. The price tag, alas, will be strictly
- Faubourg-St.-Honore: about $65 retail.
-