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- REVIEWS, Page 75SHORT TAKES
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- CINEMA: Eddie and The PAC Rats
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- Eddie Murphy is an unlikely front man for a bald satire of
- political action committees. But THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN
- has the star updating Mr. Smith Goes to Washington with heaps
- of '90s cynicism and '60s righteousness. Thomas Jefferson
- Johnson (Murphy) is no saintly Jefferson Smith from the Frank
- Capra classic; he is a shakedown artist improbably elected to
- Congress who is tempted, then troubled, by corrupting PACS and
- perks. A pity that director Jonathan Lynn (My Cousin Vinny)
- lacks the daredevil touch for a blend of 60 Minutes and Saturday
- Night Live. Murphy still has his supernova smile and a gift for
- acute accents -- Chinese, Yiddish, white-bread, soul-food -- but
- this frail, do-gooder comedy seems a holding action until Fast
- Eddie regains his stride.
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- TELEVISION: Battle Royal
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- Marital separations, a fire at Windsor Castle and now
- CHARLES AND DIANA: UNHAPPILY EVER AFTER -- it has been a rough
- year for the royal family. ABC's new docudrama (Dec. 13) starts
- with the 1981 royal wedding and goes downhill from there. Its
- sympathies are plain: Diana is the down-to-earth outsider
- forced to endure a stuffy new life-style (when she pops into the
- palace kitchen for orange juice, the staff is horrified).
- Charles is merely a wuss; the real heavies are his priggish
- parents, forever sniffing about royal propriety. Despite the
- oversimplification, this TV movie is surprisingly likable,
- thanks mainly to Roger Rees and Catherine Oxenberg, who portray
- the couple with more verve and warmth than they perhaps deserve.
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- BOOKS: That Deadly Charm
-
- For eliciting the menace that lurks in familiar
- surroundings, there's no one like Patricia Highsmith. RIPLEY
- UNDER WATER (Knopf; $21) is her fifth novel featuring the
- fastidious, charming murderer Tom Ripley, now living the life of
- a country gentleman in France. But this time Ripley plays the
- mouse; the cats are two creepy new American neighbors who seem
- to know his darkest secrets. Part of the pleasure of reading
- High smith comes from her evocative descriptions of place,
- whether small French villages or Tangier or London. Even so,
- they are but momentary diversions from the sense of foreboding
- and the most terrifying question of all: Why do we hope the
- psychopathic Ripley will prevail?
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- MUSIC: New Delights from An Old Master
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- For listeners who think of Vivaldi as merely the composer
- of The Four Seasons and several hundred indistinguishable
- concertos, VIVALDI'S FAVORITES, VOL. 1 (ESS.A.Y) could be the
- most pleasurable, sensibility-cleansing surprise in a long
- time. The performers are the Philharmonia Virtuosi, who, since
- being founded in 1974 by their protean conductor, Richard Kapp,
- have blended a changing ensemble of players from the New York
- Philharmonic with talented younger musicians in a common
- pursuit of polished eclecticism. These six concertos, for
- diverse combinations of instruments, are utterly distinctive
- and absorbing. Favorite Favorites: the exuberant Concerto in C
- Major and the poignant Largo in the G Minor.
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- MUSIC: Diva Does Dolly
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- Well, of course Whitney Houston is No. 1 on the charts
- again. Listeners are parched for the pretty art of
- balladeering, and Houston's rich soprano intelligently mines the
- emotions -- romantic or spiritual, strong and subtle -- in her
- power-pop arias. The album for her new film, The Bodyguard,
- includes choice cuts from Curtis Stigers, the S.O.U.L.
- S.Y.S.T.E.M. and Joe Cocker, but mostly it's a showcase for
- Houston's mature vocalizing. Her triumph is a reading of Dolly
- Parton's I Will Always Love You, which she builds into a
- deathbed declaration of tenderness and release; you can hear
- life ebbing as the passion to bid farewell soars. The voice is
- a musical instrument too. Houston's is a Strad.
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