CHASING AMY. Director Kevin Smith (Clerks, Mallrats)
falters in his latest attempt when he tries to describe the experience
of young women, a group he seems to neither respect nor like.
Chasing Amy is the story of Holden McNeil (Ben Affleck),
an outsider who falls hard for Alyssa Jones (Joey Lauren Adams),
a sweet but sharp-tongued comic book artist. She's also a lesbian,
a fact Smith uses as a cute little obstacle to their love, which
of course prevails. Though Adams is delightful as Jones, no amount
of snappy dialogue can overcome the film's overt distrust of female
sexuality: While Holden is somewhat fascinated with Alyssa's lesbianism,
he's disgusted when he finds out she's had sex with other men.
This is the point where an annoying movie becomes insufferable.
Smith offers nothing new, even by way of misogynistic anxiety
on the subject of female sex. Hitchcock was doing the same thing
years ago, but at least he had the grace to be entertaining. --Richter
CITIZEN RUTH. Citizen Ruth puts the fun back in abortion! Employing hysterical stereotypes of pro-lifers and pro-choicers, Ruth makes political points without the humorless didacticism of most message movies. Especially memorable is the pederast leader of the "Baby-Savers," played by the eternally slimy Burt Reynolds, who tells the creepy tale of saving his young catamite from the "abortuary." Not to be missed, unless you're so easily offended that a bidding war over the life of an unborn fetus strikes you as "tasteless." --DiGiovanna CON AIR. (Senior editor Jim Nintzel was recently suffering from a neurological disorder, so he asked his 12-year-old nephew Michael Peel to fill in on this capsule review. Take it away, Mikey!) Nicolas Cage stars as Cameron Poe, an Army Ranger sentenced to several years behind bars for killing a Southern bar lout who harassed his pregnant wife. On his way home following his parole, Poe hitches a ride on a U.S. Marshall's plane filled with the most rotten convicts in federal custody. When the convicts escape and hijack the plane, it's Cage to the rescue! Lots of stuff blows up before the plane finally crashes into the Las Vegas strip. While this one's billed as an action-adventure, it's really one of the best comedies released this summer. --Peel FACE/OFF. Hong Kong action guru John Woo's latest Hollywood product, a homoerotically violent take on Freaky Friday, will likely convert a lot of viewers from saying "Woo who?" to "Woo hoo!" Basically, good guy John Travolta has his face switched with evil nemesis Nicolas Cage so he can get crucial information; then Cage (now Travolta) gets loose, puts Travolta (now Cage) in prison and takes over his life (not to mention his wife). The grotesque and technically dazzling face-switching scene alone is worth the admission price, and it gives Woo his best-ever excuse for two men to obsess over each other. This time he throws family values into the mix, creating audacious contrasts between bursts of sexily edited slo-mo violence and bluntly sincere dialogue relating to Travolta's dead son. I loved watching Cage and Travolta try to out-ham and out-earnest each other; they're perfect sparring partners. But when Woo recycled the two best scenes from his most successful Hong Kong films, The Killer and Hard Boiled, it became apparent he'd lost a certain zany quality; and somewhere around the 1,000th gunshot he starts riding a fine line between "the poetry of violence" (as inspired by Sam Peckinpah) and hyperkinetic mush (as inspired by music videos). Sympathetic supporting performances by Joan Allen and Gina Gershon can't mask the cartoonishness of Woo's dramatic style; his attempts to make the audience care are such wholesome failures they become another part of the spectacle. In other words, resolve to take Face/Off only at face value and you'll probably have a good time. --Woodruff SPEED 2: CRUISE CONTROL. Almost unwatchable due to the excessive use of close-ups, shaky hand-held shots and meaningless strobe lights, this is perhaps the worst film so far this year. Its only competition is Lost World, and both films follow the same formula: 20 minutes of setting up nothing followed by an hour and a half of running, screaming, and explosions. Speed 2 does feature the first villain to be driven to criminal insanity by the lack of insurance regulation, and perhaps the first to express his villainy by sticking leeches to his chest. After the bad guy (Willem Dafoe, naturally) gives his requisite "this is why I'm doing this speech," there isn't much else in the way of plot, so he repeats the speech every 25 minutes, just in case we've forgotten. Then again, there's no time for plot or character development when you've only got two hours of movie and a virtually unlimited special effects budget. Basically, this is The Poseidon Adventure, if that film were incredibly boring and stupid. On the whole, Speed 2 is probably the best case for strict, Islamic-style censorship of cinema I've ever seen (i.e., no plot derived from sex or violence allowed). --DiGiovanna WILD AMERICA. This is a great movie for boys who aren't interested in girls yet, and for girls already obsessed with boys. Three really cute brothers, teen idols all (Jonathan Taylor Thomas, Devon Sawa, Jamie Bairstow), buy a used 16mm camera and travel across the United States, looking to capture endangered species on film. Their final destination is the legendary "cave of a thousand bears," but on the way they meet wolves, owls, and anamatronic alligators. Computer effects make some of the nature scenes downright weird, and considering that the movie is set in 1967 ("Born To Be Wild" plays insistently, repeatedly, on the soundtrack) it's possible the brothers have discovered chemicals. Oh no, it's all squeaky clean and cute and dumb. Bring a kid. --Richter ULEE'S GOLD. This sweet, slow-paced movie about a beekeeper who holds his family together through a period of chaos is uneven but ultimately rewarding. Peter Fonda plays Ulee, an emotionally withdrawn man who must muster all his resources to save his family from mayhem, dissolution, and The Law. Some of the supporting characters aren't quite as well drawn as Ulee, but the story is mostly about him anyway. This quiet movie harbors big themes about the value of labor, the redemptive power of nature, and the daily task of giving love, but doesn't hit you over the head with them. And the bees are cool. --Richter
Special Screenings
AU REVOIR LES ENFANTS. This acclaimed 1987 film, directed
by Louis Malle, tells the story of two boys in a Catholic boarding
school during the Nazi occupation of France. One is a Jew being
hidden by friars; the other has little understanding of the danger
and significance of this fact. The two form an adolescent bubble
of friendship that bursts when the adult world of violence and
prejudice intrudes. Based on an incident in Malle's childhood,
Au Revoir Les Enfants is a moving, haunting portrait of
childhood and the loss of innocence. It's playing this weekend
only at The Screening Room. Call 622-2262 for
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