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- REVIEWS, Page 81CINEMAAnd Then She Was Nun
-
-
- By RICHARD CORLISS
-
- TITLE: Sister Act
- DIRECTOR: Emile Ardolino
- WRITER: "Joseph Howard"
-
- THE BOTTOM LINE: A creaky plot, predictable characters,
- recycled pop tunes, instant uplift, no style -- how can it miss?
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- For half its length the picture shambles along, perfunctory,
- rhythmless, misdirected, wasting the time of the movie goer who
- couldn't get into Lethal Weapon 3 next door. Then the ragged
- choir of St. Katherine's convent swings into a tambourine-
- rattling version of Smokey Robinson's My Guy -- "There's not a
- man today/ Who could take me away/ From my God" -- and Sister Act
- instantly enslaves its audience. A few more tunes, a chase, a
- conversion (nowadays every movie needs one), and by its end, the
- picture exudes the odor of a summer hit.
-
- Anyway, it stinks of calculation. The film -- about a Reno
- singer (Whoopi Goldberg) finding refuge from her gangster lover
- (Harvey Keitel) in a dilapidated convent run by staid Maggie
- Smith -- allows no room for irony, vagrant inspiration or air.
- There's something piquant about the look of Whoopi in a wimple,
- but the star must soar or sink with the vehicle, and this one
- is a bathysphere. Despite a nice turn by Kathy Najimy as a
- criminally chirpy nun and some inventive charts by ace arranger
- Marc Shaiman, Sister Act has corporate fingerprints smudging its
- smiling face.
-
- The movie began as a screenplay written for Bette Midler
- by playwright Paul Rudnick (Poor Little Lambs, I Hate Hamlet).
- When she said no thanks, the script became an orphan with many
- foster parents, and the usual Hollywood bustle commenced, with a
- new star and half a dozen new writers (including Carrie
- Fisher). In arbitration, the Writers Guild ruled that Rudnick
- was the only writer who deserved screen credit, but he declined
- the honor. "Joseph Howard" is the pseudonym for a committee.
-
- This process does not ensure drivel. Casablanca had seven
- writers, Tootsie eight, It's a Wonderful Life 10, yet each film
- summoned a seamless verbal style, abundant in wit. These
- commodities are out of fashion today. Sister Act could have been
- written by one guy who looked at old movies and decided they
- were about spiritual uplift made easy. If the picture in fact
- turns out to be a hit, Midler may be miserable, but the suits
- will be happy. It will prove to them that films needn't be
- written; they can be assembled like Lego blocks. To others it
- will prove that moviemaking has become a sort of limbo dance:
- the lower you go, the higher you score.
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