honor at times —but not enough. Pride and jealousy intervene. The film moves slowly, inexorably, and the threat of violence is con stant in the everyday chores and pleasures. Even the sound is ominous, from the steel blast furnace, the train, the huge threshing machines, a prairie fire, all throb like-fright ened blood'in our ears. Gere is a forceful, dangerous mystery; Adams, with her unusual face, is sometimes beautiful, sometimes worn and tired, befit ting a woman of poverty. Shepard is flawless as the lonely awkward farmer finding his first happiness; Manz, in her acting debut, ties the film together with her New York accented narration and grave ferret face. A victim of others’ circumstances, she survives in spite of them. Each performance is bril liantly subdued; no one person dominates the screen, they are all just people on a land scape, no less compelling for their subordi nation. Although it is a short film (about an hour and a half), it sometimes seems like a long epic; still, I didn’t want it to end. Judith Sims INTERIORS, starring Diane Keaton, Richard Jordan, Geraldine Page, E. G. Marshall, Mau reen Stapleton, Marybeth Hurt, Sam Waterston, Kristin Griffith; written and directed by Woody Allen. In his first serious film, Allen has created a vulnerable family full of uninteresting, self absorbed people. Mother (and interior de corator) Page, separated from wealthy lawyer father Marshall, is an emotional casualty, shock-treated out of one break- '.ichard Gere, starring in Days of Heaven and Bloodbrothers, down and heading for another. Their daughters are real drags: Griffith a super ficial tv actress; Hurt an untalentcd,. sulking woman who’s determined—and expected—to be “creative;” and Keaton, the achiever, a poet with writer’s block and a husband (Jordan) who’s an unsuccessful novelist, jealous of his wife’s acclaim. The only one with no apparent psychological dis turbance is Waterston, who lives with Hurt; why he tolerates her endless angst is beyond comprehension. The daughters all act out their love/hate for their parents and each other, complaining endlessly and tirc somcly, but aside from Page’s fragile grip on sanity, it’s difficult to understand what’s so terrible about their lives. No wife beating, no alcoholism, no kinky sex, no poverty; just a lot of whining about fulfillment and love’s hierachy. Stapleton, as Marshall’s wife-to be, lights up the last half of the film, and not just because she wears brightly colored dresses—the first sign of color in this neutral-tone film. The dress is as obvious as Stapleton’s role—the earthy woman who doesn’t think much, she just feels and laughs and dances. Allen must be afraid of his in tellectualism, afraid that people who “feel” are somehow more in touch with Life’s True Meaning, whatever that is, than are people who “think.” Stapleton is the first dash of fun in the film, likeable as all get-out, but she is a vulgarian, as Hurt claims in anguish. I grew up amid dozens' of such vulgarians, and they’re not privy to Life’s True Mean ing. Or much else. It’s disappointing that Allen should fall for such a lie. It’s also a bit distressing that Allen has chosen Bergman to imitate, so much so that Interiors could be subtitled Homage To Ingmar. The Swedish director’s films are astringent and controlled, opposite to the self deprecating Jewish humor.of Allen’s prev ious films, but both directors are obsessed * with death and alienation; in Interiors people are forever closing windows to keep out the world, their cries for help emerging in stran gled intellectual chitchat. People stare out of windows or speak directly to the camera; the final shot is textbook Bergman: Keaton and Hurt in profile, staring out a window, joined by Griffith in soft focus background, her head framed by the other two heads. But we already have one Bergman, we don’t really need another. With Annie Hall Allen proved he is much more than a gag writer, he proved he could illuminate a rela tionship, probe a few psyches... and make us laugh at the same time. Not even Bergman can do that. BLOODBROTHERS, starring Richard Gcrc, Paul Sorvino, Tony Lo Bianco; written by Walter Newman, based on Richard Price’s novel; di rected by Robert Mulligan. Christ, spare me another macho crotch grabbing back-thumping broad-humping masculine bullshit movie. 'Bloodbrothers is one more in a long line of films that revel in this he-man' buddy crap: Mean Streets, Saturday Night Fever, Lords of Flatbush, Rocky, they are all, apparently, trying to tell us something: Italians are assholes. . And in the middle of Bloodbrothers ’ violent emotion (Italians arc so volatile, you know), what do we have? A sensitive young man! Stony (Gere) has doubts about the lives led by his macho father (Lo Bianco) and good time uncle (Sorvino); they want him to join their electricians’ union and spend the rest of his life working, drinking and screwing, but Stony suspects There’s More to Life Than This. He agonizes over his choices for what seems like years, while everyone shouts at him and everyone else, and after shouting they fight, weep, hug, hit or storm out (Ita lians arc so excitable, you know). If Gcrc weren’t clean and handsome and a valiant actor, I’d have stormed out; whatever atten tion this wretchedly paced, sappily written film commands can be credited to him. Odd, that Travolta should have a strong contender so soon. Ironic, that Gere played Danny Zuko in Grease on Broadway. Nice, that we now have two sexy young stars. MIDNIGHT Express, starring Brad Davis, John Hurt and Randy Quaid; written by Oliver Stone; directed by Alan Parker. In 1970 Billy Hayes taped two kilos of hash ish around his waist and headed for the Is tanbul airport and a plane back to the U.S. His innocent American arrogance didn’t help him; he was snatched and sent to a. wretched Turkish prison for four years, which sentence was later changed to life. Hayes escaped in 1975 and wrote a book of his experience, called Midnight Express— prison jargon for escape. Now there is a film of the book, and while it is tense and grim, it is not nearly so devastating as it could be. The problem is Brad Davis—or Billy Hayes, it’s hard to tell. While Hayes’ punishment exceeded his crime, and while life in a Turkish prison is far from pleasant, I felt'no real sorrow for Hayes. As played by Davis, Hayes does little but stare (with crossed eyes), grimace, and weep. We’re asked to sympathize with him because he U made a mistake” but he was thrown into prison for.his own stupidity and ultimately escaped because of sheer luck. He shows no initiative, no resourcefulness, and certainly no humor. This is not a story of a man’s endurance, outwitting the system with un bending pride, like Papillon. It is a horror story with no tragic dimensions. It’s hard for me to believe that an American abroad in 1970 did not know the fearsome extent of Middle Eastern punishment for dope of fenders. The 1960 s were full of stories about these unfortunates; still today there are hundreds of Americans languishing in foreign prisons, victims of their own ignor ance or greed, their country’s indifference, and medieval penal systems. Director Alan Parker has only one prev ious feature to his credit, the dreadful Bugsy Malone, in which “gangster” kids cavorted oh-so-cutcly. Midnight Express has' no such frivolity; Parker has re-created (on the is land of Malta) a realistic, repressive world and peopled it with believably bizarre char acters. Hayes’ two closest friends in prison arc an English junkie (brilliantly played by John Hurt, last seen in this country as Caligula in PBS’ I, Claudius) and an angry American, Randy Quaid. The production, the script, the supporting players cannot be faulted. It is perhaps a measure of this film’s intensity that the Turkish government is try ing to suppress Midnight Express and suc ceeded, at the Cannes Film Festival, in pre venting the film from winning any awards. October , 1978
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