Apollo 13. Ron Howard is a child of TV, so it's to be expected
that his latest film, like all the others, always tells you how
to react. That worked fine in Splash, Parenthood
and The Paper, enjoyable films with regular outbursts of
comedy. But Howard is at his worst when he takes things too seriously,
and he treats the near-fatal Apollo 13 mission with unquestioning
reverence: a historical symbol of American heroism. Rarely does
he touch upon the terror of dying in space or the weird spectacle
the mission became after the public learned of the impending doom.
It's a detailed, technically superb movie with a monotonous point
of view: that the astronauts suffered nobly. Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton
and Kevin Bacon star.
Babe. Animal training and animatronics blend seamlessly
in this terrific children's story about a polite piglet who breaks
through the rules of barnyard conformity to do her own thing--herd
sheep. Made in Australia, with perfectly-cast voices and an impressive
assemblage of good-looking animals, the movie has storytelling
chutzpah on its side: The scenes are playfully divided into episodic
chapters, and the atmosphere feels like it was painted onto the
screen directly from the most imaginative kids' books. Thankfully,
dark, Orwellian moments keep the cute bits in balance--something
more children's movies ought to do.
Batman Forever. This summer's Batman has a new face (Val
Kilmer), a new girlfriend (Nicole Kidman), a new sidekick (Chris
O'Donnell, playing Robin), and two new villains (Jim Carrey and
Tommy Lee Jones) to battle. He's also got a new director, Joel
Schumacher, who directs the spectacle with a glossy light touch
that seems altogether more appropriate than the self-consciously
moody approach Tim Burton took during the first two outings. Though
the series has never been worthy of the hype it has generated,
this one's pretentious aspects are transparent enough that you
can enjoy the movie for the slick, stupid, self-referential commercial
that it is. For once, nobody will believe the lie that a film
about a comic book character adds up to a grand artistic vision;
that's a blessing that makes this picture the lesser of the three
evils.
Braveheart. Writer-director Mel Gibson clobbers the audience
with three hours of blunt storytelling about a rebellious Scottish
clansman who led soldiers into effective battle against British
tyranny. Much of the movie's violence is grippingly effective,
especially a couple of well-orchestrated fight sequences that,
though aesthetically closer to the limbless knight scene in Monty
Python and the Holy Grail than the poetic violence of Sam
Peckinpah, are still quite powerful. But Gibson's relentless chant
of "Freedom!" and the film's overtones of romantic martyrdom
don't really stick; mostly, the movie leaves you with a dispiriting
sense of human brutality.
The Bridges Of Madison County. Based on the popular Robert
James Waller book, this Clint Eastwood tearjerker glorifies an
affair between a neglected housewife (Meryl Streep) and a worldly
photographer (Eastwood, who at age 64, is starting to look like
a turtle). And oh, what a lovely fantasy for lonely middle-aged
housewives it is: The sex is great, the encounter is brief, and
there are no consequences afterwards. It's about as passionate
and tough-minded as a Hallmark card, but Streep's expert performance
renders many of the scenes touching enough to draw out a tear
or two.
Clueless. This is the movie you'll hate to love, full of
innocent, likable characters with completely unbelievable lives.
Far from an offshoot of one of those Fox TV programs, this latest
effort by Amy Heckerling (who also delivered Fast Times at
Ridgemont High) is an original, engaging portrait of Beverly
Hills high school life in the '90s, which remains sincere however
fantastic the lives of her characters become. Clueless
is top of the line, "kids rule" cinema.
First Knight. A round table, a love triangle, a square
movie. Sean Connery plays King Arthur with his usual regal gravity,
Richard Gere reinvents Sir Lancelot as a manic-depressive (but
mostly manic) derring-doer, and Julia Ormond is Guinevere, the
doe-eyed, perpetually confused object of their love. The film
vacillates between blustery action sequences and moments of cheesy
romantic tension, including a rather pornographic scene in which
Gere channels rainwater into Guinevere's mouth via a big leaf.
Forget Paris. Director-actor Billy Crystal has created
a new, rather bland concoction: Woody Allen Lite. In this all-too-formulaic
tale of the ups and downs of a relationship, Crystal tries, with
occasional success, to turn the banal disappointments of marriage
into comic fodder. Co-starring with Debra Winger (who comes across
as attractive but oddly unsympathetic), Crystal's livelier gags
soon give way to masturbation jokes and mediocre, forced melodrama.
It's sort of like When Harry Almost Divorced Sally. And
oooh, somebody turn down that saccharine lite-jazz score.
Mad Love. Two Seattle teens, played by Chris O'Donnell
(ever the perfect boyfriend) and Drew Barrymore (ever the flirty
thrill-seeker), decide to run away and live a wild life on the
road. But after a series of booming alternative music-filled travel
montages, the love story becomes pointlessly morose: O'Donnell
realizes that Barrymore is a manic-depressive, needs medication
and must be taken home. What a dirty trick on the audience. O'Donnell
is effective in this useless role, but Barrymore, who is asked
to stretch herself, dismally reveals her lack of acting ability.
The Net. Once again, Sandra Bullock gives a top-notch performance
as the accidental victim in a fast action thriller. This time
she's on her own, as the introverted, computer program analyst
who stumbles into the twisted world of cyberterrorism. Sci-fi
fans and computer phobics alike will appreciate the implications
of an Orwellian future in which our entire identities are stored
on the Internet, where the war of the Information Age is waiting
to break out. If you can willingly suspend your disbelief, this
one will keep you frozen over your popcorn throughout.
Pocahontas. In their depiction of the Native American woman
who helped forge peace between indians and colonists, Disney delivers
everything you'd expect: a tasteful message of anti-bigotry and
environmental harmony, cute animals, competent songwriting and
a heroine who looks like an animated supermodel. A few of the
key sequences are charming, but most of the film is so calculated
as to lack any viewing joy whatsoever.
Something To Talk About. From the screenwriter who gave
us Thelma & Louise comes this insightful yet directionless
tale of a Southern wife (Julia Roberts) who has to re-think her
life when she learns her husband (Dennis Quaid) has been having
several affairs. Crisp direction by Lasse Hallestrom, warmly vibrant
cinematography and a handful of fun performances (by Kyra Sedgwick,
Robert Duvall and Gene Rowlands) keep the film enjoyable long
after the story has lost sight of a point. And Roberts is surprisingly
good--after years of limited performances in dumb roles, she really
seems to be blossoming.
Species. Get ready for Jurassic Park meets Alien.
When an experiment with a human-extraterrestrial hybrid goes awry,
the government assembles a four-man team consisting of a biologist,
social scientist, empath and assassin to find the escaped E.T.
Species starts off in the right vein, creating a character
both humanistic enough for the audience to relate to and inhuman
enough to keep you on the edge of your seat. Despite an anti-climactic,
typical Hollywood ending, a half-way decent story and chilling
special effects mask most of Species' flaws.
UNDER SIEGE 2. There's no denying that Steven Seagal is
the dorkiest action star around. He only has a few expressions
he can handle, so his movie's scripts always do all the work for
him, writing in his sensitive side and crafting dozens of characters
to admire his all-American killing prowess. That's fine. Once
you have accepted Seagal for the buffoon he is, his latest film,
Under Siege 2, becomes altogether watchable. Here is an action
movie that works hard--really hard--to keep the audience happy,
piling on cat-and-mouse chases, impossible stunts and bizarre
fighting moves with uncontrolled gusto. Eric Bogosian is brilliantly
cast as the baddie, who takes over a train on his way to taking
over the world. And in banal Die Hard fashion, Seagal just happens
to be on board to pick off the henchman--each of whose deaths
are rendered in loving detail by the filmmakers. Seagal may not
be the ideal American patriot, but his latest movie has a very
American appeal: more bang for your buck.
![]() |
![]() |
© 1995-97 Tucson Weekly . Info Booth |
![]() |