home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- REVIEWS, Page 75SHORT TAKES
-
-
- CINEMA: Twentynothings in Seattle (90210)
-
- Bridget Fonda has our favorite mouth in movies, and a
- spirit to match; we'll happily watch her for the next 40 years.
- Matt Dillon is perfecting a comic shagginess. Funny Jeremy
- Piven steals a scene at a check-out counter. The other actors
- in SINGLES are stuck with playing cliches -- twentynothings.
- They mate, they muse, they inhabit soap-opera plots. Meet urban
- planner Campbell Scott ("a realist slash dreamer"),
- Greenpeacenik Kyra Sedgwick ("This whole decade is going to have
- to be about cleaning up"), maitre d' Jim True ("I live my life
- like a French movie"). Writer-director Cameron Crowe's movie
- lives like too many others. Singles may aspire to be a Big Chill
- from Seattle, but it is really a fizzled St. Elmo's Fire with
- rowdier music.
-
- MUSIC: Electronic Venture
-
- Maybe this is the liberation of Suzanne Vega. Hearing
- DNA's hip-hop remix of her popular tune Tom's Diner has
- obviously encouraged the breathy folk singer to venture beyond
- the safety of her acoustic guitar. Her latest album, 99.9 F
- degrees, is a bold experiment in both verse and technology, with
- Vega's haunting images now pegged to electronic percussion and
- warped-sounding keyboards. Two of the more raucous songs, Rock
- in This Pocket and Fat Man and Dancing Girl, are even hot enough
- to hit the dance circuit. But unvarnished Vega fans need not
- fret: the album still sports tunes like Blood Sings, in which
- she breaks from technopop and delivers straight folk with
- Dylanesque force.
-
- TELEVISION: Top Cops
-
- TV cop shows (fictional ones, anyway) have gone so
- decisively out of fashion that THE HAT SQUAD looks downright
- fresh. The new CBS series, about three brothers who wear black
- fedoras as members of a police special-crimes unit, is in many
- ways the most preposterous new show of the season. In last
- week's premiere, the villain, a sadistic ex-con, was an
- unstoppable monster straight out of Friday the 13th, and the
- action scenes (including a bungee-jump knockout) made Road
- Runner cartoons look realistic. Still, creator Stephen J.
- Cannell (The A-Team, Hunter) has a knack for vivid characters
- and punchy dialogue, and he invests the genre with the
- good-vs.-evil intensity of an old-fashioned western. Also, the
- hats are cool.
-
- BOOKS: Whirling Electrons
-
- While most readers have been looking the other way, writer
- Eric Kraft has turned out a series of whiz-bang novellas about
- a kid named Peter Leroy who does a lot of neat stuff, like
- thinking, squidging for clams with his toes and noticing the
- fantastic legs of his new science teacher, Miss Rheingold. Now
- the out-of-print novellas have been published by Crown as LITTLE
- FOLLIES ($22) and Peter's new adventures as WHERE DO YOU STOP?
- ($15). Kraft misses endless opportunities to be poisonously cute
- about a smart boy who likes words (spline, ontology) and worries
- about the universe being mostly empty (and since it is
- expanding, every day emptier) space between whirling electrons.
- His books are good, luminously intelligent fun.
-
- THEATER: A Trip to Fanciful
-
- Horton Foote's gifts for wood, dialogue and vignette won
- screenplay Oscars for To Kill a Mockingbird and Tender Mercies
- and gave Geraldine Page unforgettable moments in The Trip to
- Bountiful. But his stage plays suffer from haphazard structure,
- predictable plot and an inability to invest poignant incidents
- with larger significance. These faults beset THE ROADS TO HOME,
- which opened off-Broadway last week under the author's
- direction. The cast of nine, an army on the tiny stage, seems
- thin and the story wan. But Emmy winner Jean Stapleton and the
- author's daughter Hallie glow as two Texas housewives, one full
- of repressed fury at a hollow marriage, the other retreating
- from reality into dark memories of her father's violent death.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-