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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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<text id=92TT2736>
<title>
Dec. 07, 1992: Reviews:Short Takes
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
Dec. 07, 1992 Can Russia Escape Its Past?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
REVIEWS, Page 83
SHORT TAKES
</hdr><body>
<p> CINEMA: On the Back Lot With Fellini
</p>
<p> 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.
</p>
<p> VIDEO: Jesus in Jeans
</p>
<p> 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.
</p>
<p> THEATER: Muddled Madness
</p>
<p> 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.
</p>
<p> THEATER: The Half-Naked And the Dead
</p>
<p> 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.
</p>
<p> BOOKS: Falling Short
</p>
<p> 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.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>