home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
032993
/
03299944.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-02-24
|
4KB
|
105 lines
<text id=93TT1314>
<title>
Mar. 29, 1993: Short Takes
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
REVIEWS, Page 67
Short Takes
</hdr>
<body>
<p>CINEMA
</p>
<p> Dirty Harriet Makes Her Day
</p>
<p> There's perhaps no point to point of no return. It's a
remake of an unimprovably stylish, very entertaining thriller--La Femme Nikita--that was released just two years ago. But
hey, that was in French. Why not let people who hate subtitles
in on the fun? Bridget Fonda is a sort of Dirty Harriet, a
reprieved murderer turned into an elegant assassin by a
mysterious government agency. She and her handler (Gabriel
Byrne) fall into unconsummated love. She sublimates with gunplay
while growing wistful for normality. John Badham's film seems
to have more firepower and slightly softer edges than the
original. But the possibly liberating subtext, that a woman is
entitled to be sexy and violent just like a male action star,
is intact--and well played by Fonda.
</p>
<p> TELEVISION
</p>
<p> Ditso from the Start
</p>
<p> Hedda Gabler, a fiercely independent woman trapped in
bourgeois-marriage hell, keeps a set of pistols around the
house, and it's only a matter of time before one goes off. The
tragedy may be inevitable, but a new MASTERPIECE THEATRE
production of Ibsen's classic play (PBS, March 28) is possibly
the first to make it seem like a blessed relief. Fiona Shaw's
self-absorbed, unsympathetic portrayal makes Hedda ditso from
the start: darting, distracted gestures, nervous facial tics and
a voice that drops to an inaudible whisper about every third
line. Stephen Rea (The Crying Game) is more engaging as the
dissolute scholar who once loved her, but Deborah Warner's dark,
eccentric production defeats him too.
</p>
<p> MUSIC
</p>
<p> Changing Horses
</p>
<p> What's happened to the glamorous young German violinist
ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER? She used to be just another pretty face,
riding to glory aboard great war-horses named Beethoven,
Tchaikovsky and Brahms. On her latest Deutsche Grammophon album,
though, she harnesses two modern violin concertos and tames them
both. In Alban Berg's ineffable 1935 two-movement concerto, a
requiem for the daughter of Alma Mahler Gropius, Mutter evokes
the music's intense, passionate suffering. In Wolfgang Rihm's
gorgeous Time Chant, written for her last year, Mutter's
splendid fiddle soars ethereally over the Chicago Symphony led
by James Levine. Can it be that, as the millennium dawns, 20th
century music is not so tough after all?
</p>
<p> MUSIC
</p>
<p> Heroes at a Hootenanny
</p>
<p> It is not as though Nanci Griffith ever forsook her folk
roots. She was just worried that others would forget, and that
her younger fans might never know. So, with Other Voices, Other
Rooms, she pays homage to her heroes, those folk stars who sang
to her from her bedside radio when she was a Texas teenager.
Some of her honorees even come to the party. Bob Dylan plays
harmonica on his almost forgotten Boots of Spanish Leather. John
Prine sings harmony on his Speed of the Sound of Loneliness.
Arlo Guthrie sings on Tecumseh Valley, by Townes Van Zandt,
though not on his father Woody's Do Re Mi. Griffith blends her
voice with these and others to bring something new to the old
songs and make them young again.
</p>
<p> BOOKS
</p>
<p> Impossible Choices
</p>
<p> Modern medicine can keep people alive longer or make them
die slower. But how exactly does anyone decide when the line
between the two has been crossed? When do the medical marvels
turn into miseries for the critically ill? In FIRST, DO NO HARM
(Simon & Schuster; $23), Lisa Belkin vividly chronicles the
painful, draining struggles of patients, families and staff at
Houston's Hermann Hospital as they choose to continue or halt
aggressive treatment. Belkin, a reporter for the New York Times,
has an exceptional eye for detail and tells her tales with a
rare blend of clarity and compassion. Her book more than meets
the second part of Hippocrates' directive: do good.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>