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- REVIEWS, Page 83SHORT TAKES
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- CINEMA: On the Back Lot With Fellini
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- Long before the Literati invented Magic Realism, the
- people who worked in movie studios were living it. On back lots
- all over the world, the harshly practical has always confronted
- the giddily romantic. In his faux documentary INTERVISTA
- (Interview), Federico Fellini imagines a fictional Japanese
- television crew interviewing him as he shoots an equally fictive
- movie version of Kafka's Amerika. The result is not so much a
- self-portrait as a sentimental-satirical vision of back-lot
- life, a jazzy juxtaposition of past and present, star egos and
- bit-player frustrations, epic pretensions and commercial
- hackery. It's a movie for movie lovers, especially those who
- romanticize the moviemaking process -- and Fellini's undimmed
- capacity for surreal gestures and devil-may-care imagery.
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- VIDEO: Jesus in Jeans
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- Provocative images fill the TV screen. Over a driving,
- syncopated rock beat, a woman's voice -- urgent, seductive --
- tells a story of possession and salvation. No, it's not
- Madonna's Justify My Love. It's the American Bible Society's
- music video OUT OF THE TOMBS, a 9-min. contemporary version of
- Mark 5: 1-20, in which Jesus exorcises from a man the demons
- called Legion. The admirable goal of this first offering of the
- society's Multimedia Translations Program (coming: the Nativity,
- the Prodigal Son) is to carry the Bible's message to a young
- generation not much inclined to read. Alas, this particular
- message is overwhelmed by the medium: the narrative style is
- distracting, and the imagery too often fascinates without
- illuminating.
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- THEATER: Muddled Madness
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- No actor can expect yo conquer the title role in HAMLET --
- only to provide fresh insight into a few scenes. Tom Hulce,
- whose varied work has been overshadowed by his gigglesome Mozart
- in the film Amadeus, specializes in ironic, self-deprecating
- intelligence that ought to meet that modest goal. But in a hokey
- production all too typical of Washington's Shakespeare Theater,
- Hulce fails to make the words sound sincere and obscures the
- political and revenge narratives with muddling about
- real-or-feigned madness. Francesca Buller comes as close as
- anyone can to bringing off Ophelia's breakdown, and Franchelle
- Stewart Dorn provocatively sketches a Gertrude who senses her
- new husband's perfidy -- yet succumbs anyway.
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- THEATER: The Half-Naked And the Dead
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- You might not imagine a lot of laughs in being held
- hostage in Lebanon, stripped to your sweat-soaked shorts and
- sour T-shirt, chained to the wall of a cell shared with other
- victims, not knowing who has taken you or for how long or, above
- all, why. But Irish writer Frank McGuinness finds a trove of
- snarky pub wit and schoolboy antics in SOMEONE WHO'LL WATCH OVER
- ME, which last week moved from London to Broadway with its deft
- West End cast -- Alec McCowen as a prissy English teacher,
- Stephen Rea as a dissolute Irish journalist and James McDaniel
- as a tightly wound American doctor. The roles recall the
- contrived ethnic jumble of old war movies. McDaniel, the most
- touchingly real, most underscores this falsity.
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- BOOKS: Falling Short
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- The six novel series Tales Of The City, with its
- interweaving cast of gay and straight characters, proved that
- Armistead Maupin was a master of the big canvas. Working on a
- smaller scale in MAYBE THE MOON (HarperCollins; $22), Maupin
- seems to have lost his sense of perspective. The story, about
- Cady Roth, a dwarf actress who can't find work, canters along
- in Maupin's usually breezy fashion, but it doesn't go anywhere.
- Cady's friends -- her naive roommate who has bad taste in men,
- a gay best friend who challenges Hollywood's treatment of
- homosexuals, the black single father who becomes her lover --
- are more intriguing characters than she is. Telling their tales
- might have made for a better book.
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