Clockers. Spike Lee's adaptation of Richard Price's intricate
novel follows a young park-bench drug dealer (Mekhi Phifer) who
may or may not have been the gunman in a murder. In spite of his
over-emphasis on style, Lee successfully juggles a number of characters
whose lives affect each others' like chess pieces in a microcosmic
Brooklyn neighborhood, including the wire-pulling dealer who runs
the show (Delroy Lindo) and a friendly homicide cop played (very
engagingly) by Harvey Keitel. Because the story is more a societal
character study than a mystery, don't expect the oomph of Do
the Right Thing; the film deals in texture and dialogue, not
bright action. And while it's a cut above most other movies in
drug-related black cinema, the content unfortunately fails to
reach deeper.
How to Make an American Quilt. Winona Ryder gets seven
lessons in love when she spends a summer listening to the romantic
histories of all the women in her grandmother's quilting bee.
We're talking flashback-o-rama, with the majority of the stories
taking bittersweet turns in which the women's husbands either
leave them, cheat on them or die. This uninspiring "quilt"
of mini-narratives is somehow supposed to help Ryder choose between
a hunky Don Juan type (Jonathon Schaech) and a regular-guy carpenter
(Dermot Mulroney). Though the appearance of so many fine actresses
has its benefits, the movie's lessons about life are mere bromides,
and they're made all the sappier by Ryder's talentless presence
and weak narration. (Why does Ryder always choose scripts that
require her to narrate?) American Quilt features Maya Angelou,
Anne Bancroft, Ellen Burstyn, Samantha Mathis and Alfre Woodard.
Jade. Joe Eszterhas ought to win a special award, because
he's responsible for two of the worst films this year. At least
Showgirls has campy laughs, extravagant choreography and
soft-core nudity on its side. What does Jade have? Ornate
set design, an extended (and very boring) car chase and an incomprehensible
murder-mystery plot, for starters. Directed unpleasantly by William
Friedkin, it's kind of like Basic Instinct without the
sex. David Caruso does his NYPD Blue shtick--again--as
an investigator trying to uncover the identity of Jade, a prostitute-turned-psychologist
played by Linda Fiorentino. The role is supposed to showcase the
cold, ruthless sexuality Fiorentino displayed so engagingly in
The Last Seduction, but the actress is lost in this dispiriting
mess. Let's hope she finds something better soon.
Jeffrey. Based on the play by Paul Rudnick (the scribe
behind the wildly funny Libby Gelman-Waxner movie reviews in Premiere),
this tale of love and sex in the age of AIDS has caustic wit to
spare. The movie becomes stale, however, whenever the love story
between Jeffrey (Steven Weber) and HIV-positive Steve (Michael
Weiss) receives focus; the sparks don't fly and you become too
aware you're watching a stage adaptation. If only Jeffrey
had concentrated a little more on Rudnick's rude, crazy comedy,
it would have been a great film--the kind of entertainment that
could break down barriers between straights and gays with laughter.
Also starring Sigourney Weaver, Nathan Lane and Patrick Stewart.
The Scarlet Letter. When the opening credits state the
film is "freely adapted" from the novel, they aren't
kidding. The filmmakers have taken an American literature classic
and turned it into a plainly idiotic bodice-ripper that pits small-town
intolerance against Hester Prynne's fiercely independent feminist
sexuality. This is the second film of the year in which a woman's
love is signaled by a little bird that leads the way (the other
is How to Make an American Quilt). The bird leads Prynne
(Demi Moore, as superficial as ever) into the arms of Gary Oldman,
a minister who swims naked so as to expose his buttocks to God
and anybody else who might be watching. You can bet that when
the time comes for nooses to be tied around the lovers' necks,
a bunch of Indians will pop out to save the day. Maybe this movie's
creators should be forced to wear a big letter "A" around
Hollywood--for the sin of asinine adaptation.
Showgirls. With this heavily hyped NC-17 travesty, Robocop-director
Paul Verhoeven has created a new type of robo-erotica where robocharacters
have robosex in the roboscummiest areas of that robocity they
call Las Vegas. Roboscreenwriter Joe Eszterhas fills his inane,
behind-the-scenes roboexposé with gobs of crude robosub-plots
and robodialogue, creating plenty of excuses for roboactress Elizabeth
Berkely and others to bare their robobreasts and robopelvises
with increasing regularity. If you're a robot, you'll no doubt
be turned on. (All others stay away.)
Unstrung Heroes. Diane Keaton directed this quirky nostalgic
tale about a young boy whose troubles dealing with the death of
his mother (Andi Macdowell) are exacerbated by the cold, scientific
mentality of his father (John Turturro). Ironically, the boy finds
emotional release by staying with his two crazy uncles, played
by Maury Chaykin and Michael Richards (a.k.a. Seinfeld's
Kramer). The result is a low-key, subtly magical-realist film
with a welcome European flavor. The film works very well in its
modest terms, though viewers should be warned that the picture
is as much a weepie as it is a comedy.
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