Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls. Alllrighty then! We all
know a little bit of Jim Carrey goes a long way, so let's cut
to the chase. If you think you'll hate Ace Ventura, you
will. No need to test the theory. The unfathomable lot of you
who don't know what to expect from this movie can count on reporting
for jury duty real soon. For the rest of you, this is vintage
Ace with all the trademark gags: Speaker of the Arse, Master of
Mugs, the relentlessly goofy gumshoe that cracks so many jokes
it's statistically impossible not to laugh at least once. Thankfully,
this incarnation goes straight for the younger audience: They've
nixed the "mature" subject matter and succumbed to unadulterated
juvenile humor, one truly harrowing racoon rescue possibly excepted.
Carrey is in his element in this unholy hybrid of Wild Kingdom,
The Nutty Professor and Wayne's World. Let's not
get too critical--it's not as if Carrey's the only Hollywood celebrity
known for speaking out of his butt. At least when Carrey does
it, it's intentional.
Fair Game. It's the Beautiful versus the Ugly as Cindy
Crawford gets chased by a band of renegade Russian agents with
bad skin. Crawford plays a mini-skirted lawyer who is maybe-sort-of
about to stumble upon a band of high-tech Russian bank robbers;
the robbers, in turn, become inexplicably fixated on blowing her
up. William Baldwin plays the good cop trying to protect the girl
and kill two dozen bad guys all by himself. The entire plot seems
to be an excuse to get Crawford in and out of wet T-shirts, which
is certainly more engrossing than watching her "act."
Baldwin, by the way, also shows us places his bathing suit normally
covers. All this builds to an ending with a complexity that rivals
almost any episode of Scooby Doo. Almost.
Get Shorty. After a long, banal summer, Get Shorty
hits like a bracing blast of cool fall air, reminding us why we
love movies so much. Get Shorty (from Elmore Leonard's
1991 best-seller) follows the trail of Chili Palmer (John Travolta
in a great performance), a collector for a Miami loan shark who
heads for L.A. in search of a skip and lands smack dab in the
middle of the movie biz. He falls in with movie producer/ schlockmeister
Harry Zimm (Gene Hackman) and Zimm's big star Karen Flores (Rene
Russo), who is also the ex-love interest of Hollywood's biggest
star, Martin Weir (Danny DeVito). Chili hits Zimm up with an idea
for a movie. Zimm likes the idea, but first wants to buy a hot
script so he can offer it up to Weir. Zimm is also dodging drug
dealers, who have given him money as a ticket into the film business
and who are, in turn, ducking their angry Colombian suppliers.
Chili dances through this jungle, impressing the phonies and winning
the girl as he goes. And when the impatient loan shark hits town
to find out what's taking Chili so long, it all comes to a wild
(and wildly satisfying) conclusion.
Now and Then. This coming-of-age comedy about a tight-knit
circle of friends in small-town America is hardly a female-version
of Stand By Me, but it does succeed on its own cinema-lite
level, thanks to fresh performances by young guns Gaby Hoffman,
Thora Birch (My Girl), Ashleigh Aston Moore and Christina
Ricci (Casper). Now and Then follows the nostalgic
flashback formula, with a chain-smoking Demi Moore narrating as
she hurtles down the highway toward a dreaded reunion in the master-planned
suburban setting of her childhood. Thankfully, most of the film
winds through the delightful and melodramatic summer of '69, sparing
us the agony of watching too many scenes with Demi Moore and Melanie
Griffith side by side. While at times Now and Then promisingly
touches upon the social upheaval that lurks behind all those perfect
suburban lawns and single-family homes, these themes are never
developed. Rest assured, this sentimental journey comes with the
requisite happy ending, tying up all loose ends with a big, pink
bow.
Powder. Writer/director Victor Salva may be a social pariah,
but his latest filmic effort certainly proves that talent isn't
selective. Mind you, Powder is no groundbreaking cinematic
effort; but it is entertaining sci-fi, with the optimistic twist
that the highly evolved and intelligent "alien" life
form is actually from our own planet. Meanwhile, we less-evolved
beings find it impossible not to wonder about the connection between
the writer and his creation, considering he had plenty of time
to formulate his next screenplay while serving a sentence for
child molestation. Promotional copy reads: "Alienated from
society, he tries to fit in but only finds intolerance. Despite
the cruelty inflicted upon him, Powder's extraordinary compassion
helps him to persist, and people begin to understand that their
harsh judgment is more a reflection of their own ignorance and
fear." You may not want to spend any length of time in Salva's
head, but spending a couple of hours with Powder may be
slightly more uplifting. While none of the characters seem particularly
challenging, Sean Patrick Flanery, Mary Steenburgen and Jeff Goldblum
deliver engaging performances. In fact, Powder is so successful
at fitting a compelling subject into a tepid screenplay it will
undoubtedly earn the dubious achievement of an academy award nomination.
Strange Days. Given the scarcity of original screenplays
coming out of the Big Studio establishment, Strange Days deserves
due credit. Katherine Bigelow's first noteworthy attempt since
Near Dark blows away all other attempts at cyber-cinema
we've seen thus far. If you're expecting a lot of high-priced
special effects, you'll be disappointed. But creative use of point-of-view
camera work and a dark, documentary-style vision of the year 2000--with
humvies rolling down Sunset Boulevard and soundbites from the
evening news bringing us up to speed on the violence and mayhem
in Los Angeles at the end of the millennium--draw us into a believable
future in which cop-turned-cyberdrug dealer Lenny Nero (Ralph
Fiennes) and straight-laced friend Mace (Angela Bassett) fight
for survival in a world gone mad with paranoia, deception and
murder. Despite some snags in the fabric of believability, Strange
Days is entertaining up until the last minute--which is a
good 60 seconds of unforgivable drivel.
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