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- REVIEWS, Page 101Short Takes
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- MUSIC
- Thunder at the Top of the Charts
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- "Do you wanna get rocked?" shouts DEF LEPPARD on its new
- album, Adrenalize (Mercury). The answer, judging by the way the
- record has beaten Springsteen to the top spot on the pop charts,
- is a thunderous yes. The British band offers its trademark
- formula: a sonic avalanche of crunching power chords, rock-solid
- rhythms and surprisingly tuneful vocals. The lyrics remain
- gleefully sophomoric. On Make Love Like a Man, singer Joe
- Elliott pleads, "Don't call me gigolo./ Don't call me Casanova./
- Just call me on the phone, and baby c'mon over." The Leps may
- not change the world, but when it comes to crafting unabashed
- anthems to sex, girls and love, they are deffer than ever.
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- TELEVISION
- Heart Tuggers
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- In most respects, Dateline NBC, the network's new
- prime-time magazine show, is typical of the booming genre. Two
- well-manicured hosts (Jane Pauley and Stone Phillips) introduce
- three stories a week, from investigative pieces to heart-tugging
- features. For shameless emotional manipulation, however, the
- show may set new standards. A report last week on a Pennsylvania
- company accused of selling machine tools to Iraq was loaded,
- irrelevantly, with grieving parents of dead U.S. soldiers. A
- story on forecasting failures at the National Weather Service
- tried to clinch its case by coaxing tears from a woman whose
- husband had been killed by a freak storm. Ratings so far are
- promising, alas.
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- CINEMA
- Cheerful Shuffle
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- A Murdered courier, his body discovered on the rim of a
- New Mexico canyon; an attache case stuffed with the usual large
- sum of money; any number of strange disappearances: WHITE SANDS
- bedazzles mainly by the speed and dexterity with which it
- shuffles and deals its assorted plot elements. Eventually,
- corrupt FBI men, a guy who claims to be CIA (Mickey Rourke in
- a role small enough so he doesn't wear out his welcome), some
- crooked arms dealers and a sexy mystery woman (Mary Elizabeth
- Mastrantonio) all cherchez le loot. Director Roger Donaldson
- puts a curiously cheerful spin on paranoia, and Willem Dafoe,
- as a deputy sheriff, provides a knowing parody of Charlton
- Heston doing jut-jawed heroics.
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- THEATER
- Fine Players, Flawed Play
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- What a dream cast: Roger Rees in his first New York
- theater role since he won the Tony for Nicholas Nickleby, as a
- British aristocrat turned Southern California hustler; TV stars
- Nancy Marchand of Lou Grant, double-cast as his London mother
- and his Los Angeles boss, and Jean Smart of Designing Women, as
- both of his abused wives. What a pity that promising playwright
- Jon Robin Baitz, 30, who in THE END OF THE DAY parallels Old
- World and New World corruption from charity medical wards to
- drug dealing to corporate raiding, can't stitch together a
- coherent narrative. His common but fatal mistakes: portraying
- all capitalists as repugnantly the same without making any of
- them believable, and sniffishly equating evil with mere bad
- taste.
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- BOOKS
- Parents at Bat
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- For nine years CBS Commentator Bill Geist has coached
- Little League baseball in Ridgewood, N.J. His rueful LITTLE
- LEAGUE CONFIDENTIAL (Macmillan; $17) does an expert job of
- creating humor out of the chaos of managing squads of unfocused
- kids, like the girl who hesitates to field wearing her press-on
- nails. But most of the laughs come from the author's withering
- observations of parents and fellow coaches. They all suffer from
- Little League Syndrome, which causes "dyspepsia and distemper."
- And very antisocial behavior. At one point a mother snarls: "I
- pity your children." A coach whom Geist calls Dick Knavery plots
- to illegally garner top players. And Geist is hardly immune: in
- the big game he persuades Ms. Press-On Nails to go to the toilet
- so his star can bat. His team wins.
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