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- <text id=92TT1858>
- <title>
- Aug. 17, 1992: Reviews:Cinema
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 17, 1992 The Balkans: Must It Go On?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 63
- CINEMA
- Family Values Get Real
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>TITLE: GAS FOOD LODGING</l>
- <l>WRITER AND DIRECTOR: Allison Anders</l>
- </qt>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: A no-budget look at adolescence and
- lower-class life--smart, tough and compassionate.
- </p>
- <p> Adolescents, as everyone in the movie business knows, are
- a market, not an audience. You do anything you can to separate
- them from their allowances--pimple-brained comedies,
- incoherent action films, imbecilic slasher flicks--but you do
- nothing to connect them with the realities of the often
- desperate passage they are attempting to navigate.
- </p>
- <p> Teenagers (and most other people for that matter) are
- likely to encounter Gas Food Lodging only by chance, given its
- modest release pattern and the fact that it is going forth
- unpopulated with major stars, unequipped with big-time
- advertising and utterly devoid of glamour. But Allison Anders'
- film is like its main characters--spunky, smart, tougher than
- they look--and one wants to believe that the film, like them,
- will somehow make its way in an uncaring world.
- </p>
- <p> Based on a novel by Richard Peck, it's about a single mom
- named Nora (Brooke Adams), living in a trailer park in a small
- New Mexico town, working as a waitress in a roadside
- restaurant, at once harried and patient (and wonderfully
- authentic) as she tries to raise two daughters. The younger of
- them, Shade (Fairuza Balk), narrates the story of a crucial few
- months in their lives. She has a busy, dreamy mind. She may moon
- over the romantic fictions shown at a little Hispanic theater
- and end up falling for the Latino boy who works as its
- projectionist. But she's also up and doing--looking for (and
- eventually finding) her lost dad, arranging a really awful blind
- date for her mother. Her sister Trudi (Ione Skye) is more
- troubled and rebellious. She has a "fast" reputation, and a
- sexual trauma in her past, a doomed love affair and an unwanted
- pregnancy in her future.
- </p>
- <p> Both young actresses achieve an unforced naturalism in
- their work, and so does Anders, whose first major feature this
- is. A single mother (and once a welfare client), she is less
- interested in making melodrama--or ideological points--out
- of these lives than she is in showing how testy affection and
- a talent for emotional improvisation can sustain "family values"
- in no-budget circumstances. Anders' film is a compassionate
- meditation on the desperate lengths to which poverty-ridden
- decency must go to preserve itself. As such, it makes
- ruminations on this subject by the likes of Dan Quayle look
- supremely irrelevant. She's talking reality; they're talking
- country-club theory.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-