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- <text id=92TT1640>
- <title>
- July 20, 1992: Reviews:Short Takes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 20, 1992 Olympic Special
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 87
- SHORT TAKES
- </hdr><body>
- <p> VIDEO: Edward Scissorhound
- </p>
- <p> Sparky, a pitbull terrier with a sweet disposition, gets
- run over by a car, and Victor Frankenstein (Barret Oliver), his
- 10-year-old master, determines to revive him using a microwave
- and a toaster. FRANKENWEENIE sounds like pure Tim Burton, and it
- is. The 27-min. Disney comedy, made in 1984 and now released as
- a home video, marked the debut of the director of the Batman
- blockbusters. This ripe tale has intimations of Burton's
- Beetlejuice and Edward Scissorhands: the undead and a wild child
- sundered in suburbia. But Burton's Batmanic surrealism is plenty
- evident here. The pet cemetery is adorned with fire-hydrant and
- dog-biscuit tombstones, and the community unites to hot-wire the
- dead-again pooch. It's a prize oddity from a child prodigy.
- </p>
- <p> CINEMA: Supertroopers
- </p>
- <p> UNIVERSAL SOLDIER asks us to believe that the government
- learned to chemically reanimate dead Vietnam vets and turn them
- into immortal, radically improved fighting machines. It further
- posits a squad of these supertroopers running around the U.S.
- as a rogue police force. It's a whopper, all right. But
- Jean-Claude Van Damme is appealing as a "UniSol" whose memories
- of a previous life recur and lead him into rebellion. Roland
- Emmerich's film may be nothing more than lowbrow, high-cal
- entertainment, but with the action genre now encrusted with
- dubious aspirations (Alien 3, Batman Returns), it's good to get
- back to the bloody basics with a little style and
- self-satirizing wit.
- </p>
- <p> BOOKS: Four Sisters
- </p>
- <p> Terry McMillan's breezy pop novel WAITING TO EXHALE
- (Viking; $22) is one more battle communique in the war between
- the sexes, notable chiefly because all the condo-owning,
- Z-car-driving protagonists are black. True, these four
- good-looking, thirtyish women friends and the men who do them
- wrong, wronger and wrongest are the whitest black people ever
- seen off the set of The Cosby Show. This is high-class soap
- opera, and the big, unstated joke is that the soap is Ivory.
- That may be why Pocket Books just bid $2.64 million for
- paperback rights. The subliminal pitch, a home truth for gender
- warriors of all colors, is that buppies are just as baffled by
- their disconnected lives as are their tight white cousins.
- </p>
- <p> MUSIC: Two Who Deserve A Hearing
- </p>
- <p> Most people think of classical music as a white
- enterprise, but two new chamber-music CDs from Koch
- International Classics celebrate a pair of worthy black
- composers. The felicitously named SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR
- (1875-1912), an Anglo-African, was equally at home in the
- Dvorak-tinged idiom of his Clarinet Quintet and the simple
- strains of Negro spirituals, which he set compellingly for
- piano. The album boasts fine performances, especially by pianist
- Virginia Eskin. WILLIAM GRANT STILL (1895-1978) was similarly
- eclectic. A staff arranger for the Paul Whiteman band, he could
- pen a delicate gem like the Seven Traceries suite or a robust
- concert piece like Africa, originally for orchestra. Pianist
- Denver Oldham gets them just right.
- </p>
- <p> THEATER: Dudes and Dudettes
- </p>
- <p> The plot is the thinnest in all of Shakespeare, and by its
- end, as one scholar famously observed, there are no gentlemen
- in Verona. Although the Bard presumably intended an allegory
- about male bonding and Christian forgiveness, nowadays most
- productions of THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA favor a lighthearted
- romp in the woods, making it a cousin to A Midsummer Night's
- Dream. The gorgeous staging by Laird Williamson at San Diego's
- Old Globe Theater is no exception: a dazzling mix of oversize
- umbrellas, masks, giant fans and gauzy shimmers of cloth, all
- displayed amid intensely hued red, green, white and yellow
- costumes. The acting has a monochromatic intensity, but it
- abounds in charm, if usually of a dude and dudette style of
- tomfoolery.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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