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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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100394
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10039927.000
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1995-02-26
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<text id=94TT1347>
<title>
Oct. 03, 1994: Cinema:Supermom Shoots the Rapids
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Oct. 03, 1994 Blinksmanship
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ARTS & MEDIA/CINEMA, Page 74
Supermom Shoots the Rapids
</hdr>
<body>
<p> A smart, spunky Meryl Streep triumphs in The River Wild
</p>
<p>By Richard Schickel
</p>
<p> It has taken a while to personify her perfectly on film, but
here she is at last--the ideal woman of feminist song, story
and legend. Her name is Gail, she is played--make that attractively
humanized--by the admirable Meryl Streep in The River Wild,
and if men have any sense left, they will add a few bass notes
to the trilling chorus of approval that is soon likely to rise
from the soprano section when this otherwise rather routine
movie opens.
</p>
<p> Gail teaches at a school for the deaf. She is a firm but good-humored
mom. Her tolerance for the workaholic ways of her husband Tom
(David Strathairn) is wearing thin, but she's laboring earnestly
on the marriage. She is also an expert whitewater rafter, and
has arranged a trip down a challenging, unnamed western river
with Tom, their son Roarke (Joseph Mazzello) and the family
dog (boy and dog are also estranged from Tom). The family that
gets sprayed together stays together--or so Gail hopes.
</p>
<p> Shoving off, they encounter a suspiciously charming fellow named
Wade (Kevin Bacon) and his suspiciously charmless pal, Terry
(John C. Reilly), also eager to shoot a few rapids. Wade is
flirtatious with Gail, self-consciously chummy with Roarke.
</p>
<p> You can guess the rest before it happens, since Denis O'Neill's
script is rudimentary. Wade soon proves to be a great deal less
than he seems (he and Terry are grand larcenists on the wilderness
lam). They need Gail's skill and bravery to get them through
the Gauntlet (hushed tones whenever it's mentioned)--a nasty
set of falls, rapids and whirlpools. Tom takes a little more
time to prove that he is a great deal more than he seems, a
tenacious defender of (shall we say) family values.
</p>
<p> The passage through the Gauntlet is a skillful blend of stunt
and special-effects work, nicely orchestrated by the director,
Curtis Hanson. He is less skillful at building suspense around
the campsites, possibly because the screenplay is not very tightly
or eccentrically wound, possibly because Bacon takes his best
line too literally. "I am a nice guy," he says at one point.
"I'm just a different kind of nice guy." As a result, Bacon
doesn't hone Wade's menace as sharply as he might. He needs
to become more erratic, more dangerous, as they paddle farther
and farther from civilization, but he doesn't make it all the
way to psychopathy.
</p>
<p> It is Streep who rivets our attention and holds the picture
together. Under Supermom's omnicompetence, there lurks the spirit
of the larky girl who indeed ran the Gauntlet when she was old
enough to know better and young enough not to give a damn. You
can see that spunky, heedless young woman in her affectionate
banter with her kids, in the sexiness of her response to Wade's
come-ons, in the exultation with which she confronts the river's
perils. This is smart and subtle acting and a gift that is above
and beyond this movie's routine call to duty.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>