4The Daily Tar HeeirTuesday, April 10, 1984 Moscow' shows humor and pathos An American stars as a Russian immigrant. A Venezuelan plays his Italian girlfriend. And Munich doubles for Moscow. This cultural jumble stands at the heart of Paul Mazursky's new film Moscow on the Hudson, a double-edged comic look at the modern American melting pot. Robin Williams plays Vladimir lvanoff, a saxaphone player in a Russian circus. Sick of Moscow's endless waiting lines for toilet paper and shoes, of feeling like "an artist without wings" because of KGB pressure, he defects during a New York City circus tour. The setting for Ivanoffs defection is Bloomingdale's, a site also used in the recent Splash. In both films the department store seems to symbolize the height of American culture. One Russian tourist gushes delightedly about the place, "More decadence!" After sketching a grim, gray Moscow, Mazursky lets his camera spin like a giddy top through the so-called corruption of NYC: fleshy Calvin Klein ads, breakdancers, mohawks. In satiric contrast to the reverential portraits of Lenin in Moscow, one billboard stands out, depicting Abraham Lincoln wearing headphones. The sequence recalls Nicholas Meyer's Time After Time, in which Victorian H.G. Wells acquaints himself with modern San Francisco. Even if it's no more original than a mirror; it's an amusing look at our skewed society. This could be said for the entire movie. The pace and editing are smooth, and the acting is fine. Robin Williams is particularly good, delivering a warm, sustained performance and a believable Russian accent. The Italian girlfriend, Lucia, is played by Maria Conchita Alonso. Cleavant Derricks portrays Lionel, the black Bloom ingdale's security guard who gives lvanoff a place to stay. And Steve Murray Review Alejandro Rey handles the part of the defector's Cuban lawyer. These three characters and actors provide a strong support group for IvanoffWilliams as he discovers jazz bands, bars and a collection of jobs ranging from busboy to street vendor. Luckily, Mazursky doesn't make the crowd-pleasing mistake of setting lvanoff down on the sure-fire, get-rich-quick path of the American dream. lvanoff struggles with the new country and soon comes to realize that his boast, "I'm free like a bird," is easily shot down. He can get a job and pay his own way, but he learns that emo tional freedom isn't bought, and loneliness can't be drowned by the wail of his sax. At times, Mazursky overstates his message to the point of lec turing on the abuse of freedom. And sometimes his symbolism and plot devices are too obvious. Ivanoffs first pair of American shoes, for instance, are made in Italy. He rides the Liberty Lines bus. And he loses his girlfriend and faith in America simultaneously (and temporarily). Still, the message is important, and the movie is pleasant. Maybe it's too pleasant. Like a circus mirror, it throws back a funny image of the world. By making his film so smooth and entertaining, Mazursky runs the risk of letting audiences walk away believing the mirror is distorted, not the world itself. Zemeckis finds success with 'Romancing Once upon a time there was a screenwriter-director named Robert Zemeckis. His first feature film, 1977's Wanna Hold Your Hand, was a master ful comic send-up of Beatlemania that was every bit as good as A Hard Day's Night itself. Then something went wrong. In 1980 he co-scripted Steven Spielberg's mega bomb 1941. A year later Zemeckis hit rock bottom as director and co-writer of the dismal, idiotic Used Cars. The once promising filmmaker now seemed destin ed for obscurity. Zemeckis' latest directorial offering, Romancing the Stone, represents a rever sal of this trend. The movie is no Citizen Kane, mind, but it is nevertheless a light, well-paced comedy-adventure. Romance novelist Joan Wilder, played by Kathleen Turner, leaves New York City and heads for Cartagena, Colombia, where her sister is being held for ransom by a couple of small-time American hoods, Ralph (Danny DeVito) and Ira (Zack Norman). What Ralph and Ira want from Joan is the treasure map her brother-in-law mail ed to her shortly before he was murdered Ed Brackett Review by Zolo, a crooked Colombian cop who is privy to the secret of the treasure but does not know where it is buried. Arriving in Colombia, homebody Joan takes the wrong bus and winds up in the middle of a huge jungle instead of in Car tagena. There she meets, jungle-wise adventurer Jack Colton (Michael Douglas), who, for a fee, promises to take her back to civilization. Meanwhile, Ralph and Ira continue to hold Joan's sister, and Zolo stalks Joan and Jack in his quest for the map. Jack soon discovers the existence of the map himself, and the ensuing romance bet ween he and Joan raises the question: What is Jack after, Joan or the treasure (a gem called "El Corazon")? The script, written by Diane Thomas (an aspiring romance novelist herself and until now a waitress in Los Angeles), travels at a quicksilver pace, and Zemeckis' direction moves right along with it. Inundated with a mixture of ac tion and light-heartd self-criticism, Romancing the Stone never reverts to the wow-look-at-me heroics of its distant celluloid cousin, Raiders of the Lost Ark. Kathleen Turner, in only her third film, does nothing to dispel or downplay her sexual on-screen persona, which she developed with her sizzling debut in Body Heat. Although she keeps her clothes on in this movie, Turner's latent sensuality is nevertheless apparent. Michael Douglas proves himself an apt foil for Turner's talent, and he has all the suavity and sophistication of his old man, Kirk. He does, however, have a tendency to overact a bit. Clearly the funniest cast member is the diminutive Danny DeVito, formerly Louie of television's Taxi. Much of the "comedy" part of this comedy-adventure comes from him. Even though its ending is somewhat predictable and its content is less than earth-shattering, Romancing the Stone emerges as a no-holds-barred story racing to its finish. And for the most part, it's a race worth watching. Why flelie Chance? This fall Granville Towers begins its 20th year of service to UNC-CH. Our reputa tion is established as COMPLETE student housing, and THE PLACE TO BE AT UNC. Our 1984-1985 rate of $ 13.79 per day includes EVERYTHING: -19 meals per week while classes are in session -Super location -Furnished rbom with all utilities including AC -Weekly maid service -And, of course, active social programming The price is right, and so is everything else Come let us show you Granville Towers A Where Convenience is Standard Applications still available for fall. University Square 929-7143 f - - .Sa -- - - X5 A :xW'S' .oMWHNfT" " " - s - f ' x , ". " N X. I ' i . v Si. - IRS- A T 'w. .-::.:: Robin Williams is a Russian who learns about life in the U.S. in 'Moscow on the Hudson' . !i 'Reuben' combines comedy, sensitivity What can be said about a film whose main character is a boozing poet who seduces middle-aged nymphomaniacs and is finally defeated by a livid dentist and a hairy sheepdog? One thing Reuben, Reuben is the year's best film, a film with more wit and sensitivity than The Big Chill and Terms of Endearment combin ed, and a character study that actually ex plores its character. At the helm of Reuben, Reuben, is relative newcomer Tom Conti, a native Scot. Although Conti has appeared in a number of British films, this is his American debut. No one else could have played this Dylan Thomas clone who lives by lec turing along the East coast and stealing waiters' tips. Conti makes the most of his part, replete with rolling eyes and drunken verbal attacks. Actors love to play drunks and au diences love to watch them. They live out fantasies by being uninhibited. Conti, however, makes his performance special by defining his character's' sorrow and depression. In one scene on a nam he mimicks a rather stuffy old lady reading the New Yorker, then goes into the Steve Can- Review bathroom where he. breaks down Into tears. In another scene, a housewife undoes her bra, whereupon Conti wickedly com pares her breasts to hanging men. Conti manages to leave New England in shambles, but he also reveals a certain self-loathing that is crucial to the plot. The rest of the cast, while not as well known as Conti, is very effective. The players practically match Conti in their depth and control. Standouts are Joel Fa biani giving the definitive portrayal of . middle-class revenge and E. Katherine Kerr as his voracious wife. The people behind the camera read like a Who's Who of film. Robert Ellis Miller is most famous for the television plays he directed during the 1950s. While his theatrical output leaves something to be desired, Reuben, Reuben is an adroit mix of the outrageous and the subtle. Conti' s suicide and train scenes are particularly well-handled. Walter Shenson was responsible for bringing Peter Sellars to public attention aim aisu piuuuicu me iwu oca i ics nuns, A Hard Day's Night and Help! Although Reuben, Reuben looks like a modest film, it uses every bit of its resources and loca tion. Some of the film was shot at the Earl Owensby Studios in Shelby, N.C. The real star of the film, aside from Conti, is veteran writer Julius J. Epstein, who worked on such classics as Casablan ca and Arsenic and Old Lace. Epstein manages to blend a character study with a satire on American mores. Usually the two genres work at odds with each other, but Epstein skillfully manipulates them so they complement each other. The secret of Reuben, Reuben is its script. The suburbanites who inhabit the region are little more than cardboard cutouts. Conti takes pot shots at them I 1 L auu wc laugn. Conti's character, however, is a real one, and we are made to identify with his isolation, his creative impotence, his ram page through American culture. The characters mafce us identify all the more with Conti, and his viewpoint is what gives the film its drive-and-emotion TME ATLANTIC ANC? 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For Further Information Call 832-0535 or 1-800-532-5384 917 West Morgan St. Raleigh, N.C. 27605 . O O O O 1 WJm tn. 'THIS WEEK: o i TODAY: i o o O i o o o o o o o o WEDNESDAY: FRIDAY: 3 PM BASEBALL vs. CAMPBELL 3 PM BASEBALL vs WAKE FOREST SOFTBALL vs. WINTHROP 8 PM LACROSSE vs. DUKE MEN'S GOLF TAR HEEL INVITATIONAL fit n n f j9, tf jF ' 0mak 1mt Fm3 213 West Franklin St. & 1800 Chapel Hill-Durham Blvd. ) i j o o o o o o o ! o i i o I o I o I o ! o o o I o I o 2 Terrific Films ACAOAMY AWARD NOMINATIONS- i PL BEST SCREENPLAY - Julius J. Epstein BEST ACTOR - Tom Conti Fri. & sat. 11:45 HAIR i "A witty comedy with bittersweet bite ! -P.MjAn.rn.NtWSUfcbk If W - filmed in North Carolina A VARSITY EXCLUSIVE 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:10 j jfi THE C0IIEDY SLIASn 0? THE YEAIl! TOM HANKS DARYL HAMH EUGENE LEVY JOHN CANDY ZSU rsHi 7:15 I "1 lujuujiu. iii,n....L hi .m m-r-n r ""fsTfM PHYSICAL! Anytime's the right time to look great and feel better, i Why wait! Make this the best summer yet. 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