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- <text id=92TT2080>
- <title>
- Sep. 21, 1992: Reviews:Short Takes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 21, 1992 Hollywood & Politics
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 69
- SHORT TAKES
- </hdr><body>
- <p>MUSIC: Disappointingly Small Step
- </p>
- <p> It's been four years since Bobby Brown's album Don't Be
- Cruel marked "new jack swing" as a creative hotbed of black pop.
- The fresh mix of funky, hiphop beats and bright, soulful
- melodies set a widely influential musical style, fitting
- perfectly around Brown's slim vocal talents. Naturally,
- expectations were out of sight for Brown's latest solo outing,
- Bobby, which assembles the same pro ducers as Cruel. The album,
- however, doesn't pack the wallop to distinguish it from other
- slick R. & B. records on the charts these days. Something in
- Common, a ballad Brown shares with his wife Whitney Houston is
- typical of the problem: short on juice but heavy on sap. New
- jack may not be exhausted, but right now Bobby is fresh out of
- new ideas.
- </p>
- <p>MUSIC: Religious Roots
- </p>
- <p> Even Geffen Records believes in family values these days.
- Yes, the outfit that gave us the devilish Guns N' Roses is now
- pushing Michael W. Smith, a contemporary Christian star. Last
- year Smith's Place in This World was a No. 6 pop single. With
- his new album, Change Your World, Smith aims for the loftier
- success of Amy Grant, who blazed the Christian-to-pop crossover.
- But while the secular songs Geffen will promote to radio are
- pleasant (the syrupy duet with Grant, Somewhere Somehow, could
- be a smash), the album's better cuts reflect Smith's religious
- roots. A standout: Cross of Gold, which challenges people who
- wear holy symbols around their necks but lack saintliness in
- their souls.
- </p>
- <p>BOOKS: Many a Slip...
- </p>
- <p> About 40% of Americans drink wine at least occasionally.
- Any of them who latch onto Wine Snobbery (Simon & Schuster;
- $20) will have their eyebrows raised by this self-styled expose
- of what's behind--and what sometimes goes into--the noble
- beverage. In remorseless detail, British oenophile Andrew Barr
- explains how France's supposedly rigid appellation laws protect
- mediocrity more than excellence, why cheap champagne is often
- better than top brands costing upwards of $40, and how producers
- have got away with murder--literally--by dosing their wines
- with dangerous additives. Like most Savonarolas, Barr could
- lighten up a little, but there's no question that he knows which
- clos have skeletons in them.
- </p>
- <p>TELEVISION: Women's Wear Weekly
- </p>
- <p> Leave it to CNN, the world's back fence, to make the
- ephemeral universal. Each weekend, CNN airs Style with Elsa
- Klensch, a brisk survey of how rich people live, dress and
- accessorize. The show offers runway reports of next season's
- couture (for the women) with more cleavage than anywhere this
- side of pay cable (for men), plus grooming tips and a visit to
- some fashion pooh-bah's aerie. Hovering above the glitz, as
- stately and nurturing as the Queen Mum, is the Australian-born
- Klensch. For Elsa, shoddy clothes and naughty tattle simply
- n'existent pas. "Karl Lagerfeld could kill his mother," she told
- HG, "and I'd just ask him about the design of his clothes." Who
- else could merge Diana Vreeland and Diane Sawyer? No one Elsa.
- </p>
- <p>CINEMA: Retro Preppies
- </p>
- <p> Snooty school, snotty preppies, the socially unenlightened
- 1950s. Sound retrograde enough for you? Wait until you see
- School Ties. It even looks like the 1956 movie version of Tea
- and Sympathy and shares with it and other prep-school dramas a
- certain earnest didacticism. This time the sensitive schoolboy
- is not sexually suspect. He is a poor Jewish lad from Scranton,
- Pennsylvania, recruited to lead dear old St. Matthews to
- gridiron glory. David Greene (Brendan Fraser) does so, but when
- his religious affiliation is discovered, anti-Semitism, followed
- predictably by soul-searching, breaks out. The film is well
- meant and, in its old-fashioned way, well made and well acted.
- But one is always about two moves ahead of the plot, which is
- not exactly rich in new news.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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