Black Sheep. Chris Farley and David Spade of Saturday Night Live dominate this fat guy/thin guy, dumb guy/smart guy formula comedy. Farley plays the accident-prone, embarrassing brother of an aspiring senator--a sort of Billy Carter figure. Spade plays the political handler sent to babysit him. Both characters seem to be in their early twenties, though the actors are older. The script is predictable and bland with some unbearably sentimental moments thrown in just to torture the audience. Farley, in his blithe willingness to humiliate himself over and over, does manage to be quite funny sometimes, despite the material. The director, Penelope Spheeris, made some wonderful films in the eighties but has sunk to projects like this and The Beverly Hillbillies movie. If you want to see something honest and funny, rent her wonderful documentary about headbangers: The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years. Broken Arrow. It's good guys against bad in this zippy action flick from acclaimed Hong Kong director John Woo. John Travolta plays an appealingly evil nuclear weapons thief trying to waste the world for fun and profit while Christian Slater and Samantha Mathis do their spunky best to stop him. Travolta's giddy, over-the-top performance along with Woo's creative, reckless directorial style raise Broken Arrow above the humdrum predictability of most action flicks. (The opening boxing sequence alone is worth the price of admission.) Once the initial dose of characterization is administered, the plot just whizzes along, punctuated by regular explosions. Don't expect to have your moral and intellectual horizons broadened; do expect to be entertained. City Hall. Does Al Pacino ever rest? This tale of political intrigue has him playing the mayor of New York, a principled and moral manipulator, if you can picture that. John Cusack plays Kevin Calhoun, the mayor's right-hand man who gets sucked into a murder investigation. It's a man's world out there--there are hardly any women in this movie except Bridget Fonda, who rushes through her small role like she can't wait to get out of there. The main appeal of this movie is the excellent acting by Cusack and Danny Aiello, as well as a refreshingly restrained performance by Pacino, but the story never rises above mediocre. After this movie one guy leaving the theater started yelling, "That was terrible! Now I know why I don't go to movies anymore: They suck!" I wouldn't say it was that bad, but I don't think it's worth $7 to sit in the fetid air of a multiplex and inhale mediocrity. City Of Lost Children. Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro, the dynamic duo who dreamed up the award-winning Delicatessen four years ago, delve into a retro-future fantasy world that is such a visual and narrative feast, you won't even mind the subtitles. Their cinematic Cirque de Soliel is a surreal journey through a dark, dank harbor town populated by genetic mutants, a cult of Cyclops kidnappers and a scrappy band of street-wise orphans. It harkens back to traditional (un-Disneyfied) fairy tales: untamed flights of fancy that are equal parts funny and fearsome. Miette (a haunting nine-year-old femme fatale) and One (a simple-minded circus giant) band together to save One's adopted brother from the clutches of Krank, a horrible scientist who's slowly dying because he lacks one vital function: the ability to dream. From his laboratory on a remote, mist-shrouded rig, Krank invades the dreams of his stolen children in a desperate attempt to make them his own...until One and Miette penetrate Krank's sinister fortress and challenge him on a level playing field--within the world of a little boy's dream. Dead Man Walking. Sean Penn gives an amazing performance as a death-row inmate in this Tim Robbins film. The movie is based on the true story of Sister Helen Prejean, a nun who befriended a convicted killer bound for a lethal injection. The nun slogs through a moral minefield as she visits the prison, the victim's families, and the family of the condemned man, trying to figure out what she's doing hanging around with a low-life. Susan Sarandon does a fine job as Sister Helen, but it's Penn who really steals the show with his restrained, charismatic portrayal of the convict--it's almost weird how good he is as the hate-filled, anti-social Poncelet. The rest of the story sometimes drifts into sentimentality or preachiness, but whenever Penn is on-screen, everything clicks. Happy Gilmore. Adam Sandler is a bloodthirsty hockey player turned pro golfer in this largely unfunny comedy about the pro golf circuit. Yes, Bob Barker does call Sandler "bitch," but the charm of watching Mr. Smooth and Nice talk like a bad boy is the absolute highlight of this grim picture. Sandler's antics oscillate between the sickly sentimental and the relentlessly sadistic, with the emphasis falling on the sadistic. Gilmore turns to golfing because his sweet grandmother's house is being repossessed by the IRS and besides, he has a knack for it. On the green, he pouts, throws tantrums and wreaks havoc in general when things aren't going his way, like a truly psychotic John McInroe. All the funny parts are in the preview. Leaving Las Vegas. A moving, melancholy portrait of a desperate alcoholic making one last grab for love and redemption in the city of neon. Nicolas Cage plays Ben, a total loser who has lost his family, job and self-respect. He goes to Las Vegas in an effort to escape everything, basically, and there he meets Sera (Elisabeth Shue), a heart-of-gold hooker who takes him in and accepts him just the way he is (sort of). There's no moralizing about the evils of drink here, or romanticizing either--it's just relentless scenes of Nicolas Cage quaffing liquor like water and spreading some kind of bottomless sadness all over the screen. Though Leaving Las Vegas is very sad, it never panders and it never manipulates the audience. Instead, it treats its grim subject matter with intelligence and restraint. Rumble In The Bronx. Hong Kong film fans rejoice! It's a Jackie Chan film shot in New York! And it's in English, sort of! Jackie Chan, the Buster Keaton of Hong Kong, is one of the most engaging action stars of all time. He's credited with inventing the kung fu comedy and is famous for choreographing and performing all his amazing stunts himself. Rumble In The Bronx has the impish underdog protecting his uncle's grocery store in the bad South Bronx from a coed band of marauding motorcycle thugs. Thrill to one breath-taking stunt after another of Roadrunner-and-Coyote-style action come to life! Marvel at the campy coolness of the production values! The English voices of the Cantonese-speaking actors are overdubbed and the whole thing is charmingly out-of-synch. Plus, the plot seems to have been dreamed up by someone whose primary contact with American culture is '70s action movies. What could be more delightful? |
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