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- REVIEWSShort Takes, Page 87
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- CINEMA
- Outcasts of The Universe
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- Alien 3 is set in a maximum-security prison at the far,
- forgotten end of the universe. This dark landscape bespeaks an
- ambition to rise above sequel status. So does a glum, distancing
- story, in which Sigourney Weaver's Warrant Officer Ripley,
- depressed and, yes, alienated, feels pretty much at home in the
- society of outcasts where her spaceship has accidentally landed.
- Eventually they join her in the fight against one of the big,
- nasty creatures she has unknowingly brought with her. But
- 29-year-old director David Fincher doesn't yet know how to scare
- us witless, and the script neglects to develop the kind of human
- relationships any movie needs to draw us into its web. A lot of
- good, serious work went into this film, but it lacks the
- conjurer's touch.
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- TELEVISION
- Iowa Corn
-
- Julie Carlyle is the star of a network TV variety show who
- marries a veterinarian, moves to Iowa and still manages to do
- her show every week from a local TV station. That is known as
- having it all. JULIE, a new ABC sitcom, doesn't have much of
- anything except Julie Andrews, who puts a little sparkle into
- the drab material. Her dedicated husband (James Farentino) tends
- to ailing heifers and brings home an injured dog to share their
- bed. His two kids at first resent their stepmother (sure, who
- wants a TV star for a mom anyway?) but are won over by her
- sunny, motivational lectures. Andrews' husband, Blake Edwards
- (Victor/Victoria, 10), directed the first two episodes, but it
- helps not a bit.
-
- BOOKS
- Dark and Stormy
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- This windy, Cinematic spy novel relies shamelessly on
- quick cuts and spectacular scenery, and never mind logic.
- Anthony Hyde's CHINA LAKE (Knopf; $22) takes its title from a
- secret Naval Intelligence station in the Mojave Des ert, where
- a 25-year-old mystery -- Who gave the heat-seeking Sidewinder
- missile to the Soviets? -- has never been resolved. Hyde leads
- us lengthily through the murk of old lies, from California to
- a wave-swept cliffside in Scotland to another cliff in Wales to
- East Germany and back to the black depths of a lost gold mine
- in the Mojave. Quick, light a match! Nope, despite tireless
- soliloquizing by hero and villain (which is which constitutes
- the book's main puzzle), motivation and plot remain obscure.
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- MUSIC
- The Vibrant Cry Of the Wolf
-
- The border between two cultures can be a barren place. But
- for LOS LOBOS, a scrappy garage band born 18 years ago in the
- Chicano barrio of East Los Angeles, the gap between American
- music and its Mexican roots has been inspirational. The band
- reached a commercial apex with 1987's La Bamba, an international
- hit that was elevated beyond pop predictability by its intricate
- acoustic coda. That flourish of integrity was no fluke. Los
- Lobos' new album, Kiko, blends rock, jazz and Mexican folk
- styles with authority and panache; David Hidalgo's lambent
- vocals transport songs about hardship and redemption to a
- numinous state. More than a mere blending of two vibrant
- traditions, Kiko forges a new American sound.
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- THEATER
- Linked Sins
-
- Lee Blessing's plays are known for elegant language and
- stately topics, epitomized by his witty dialogue of nuclear
- disarmament, A Walk in the Woods. But in LAKE STREET EXTENSION,
- at the Ensemble Theater of Cincinnati, the characters are feral,
- the action grim and the vocabulary redolent of the gutter. Lake
- Street sets a father who sexually molested his son against a
- Salvadoran soldier who joined in the mass murder of peasants.
- The 90 taut minutes strip away layers of secrets and suggest a
- link between the men's sins -- a dependence on the propensity
- of bourgeois Americans to look away from ugly facts rather than
- decry them. A compulsively watch able young actor, Keith Brush,
- portrays the incest victim grown up into a punky, self-pitying
- male prostitute.
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