Susquehanna times. (Marietta, Pa.) 1976-1980, January 09, 1980, Image 4

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    2A Ye ia
=. IBBERSON’S
1
gh CARPET TOR HOME AND CAR
“a 1660 SOUTH MARKET STREET
ELIZABETHTOWN, PA 17022
Open Monday through Friday 9 am-5:30 pm
Saturday 9 am-12 noon
Thursday and Friday evenings by prescheduled
appointment only. Call 367-2724.
SENIOR CITIZEN CARDS HONORED
AUCTIONS make the difference in
" marketing livestock!
NEW HOLLAND
difference in auctions!
MONDAY—8 AM--Fat Hogs
10 AM--Horse Sale
11 AM--Hay & Straw
1:30 PM--Fat Steers, Bulls, Cows & Veal
| WEDNESDAY—12 Noon--Hay & Straw
12:30 PM--Dairy Sale
1:00 PM--Feeder Pigs
THURSDAY—11 AM--Fat Steers, Bulls & Cows
4:30 PM--Sheep & Veal
New Holland Sales Stables, Inc.
New Holland, Penna.
Abram W. Diffenbach, Manager Phone [717] 354-4341
3
7 January
2 Clearance Sale,
January 10, 11, 12
Thursday 9:30-8; Friday 9:30-9, Saturday 9:30-5
Dresses
2 for 1 plus $1.00
Junior & Misses
Sleepwear 20% off . V
\ Sportswear
Slacks—Jackets—Skirts—Sweaters
Hats & ver 120% off
WN VY
New Merchandise Club now starting
Hours: Mon., Tues., Thurs., Sat., 9:30 am to 5:00 pm
Friday, 9:30 am to 9:00 pm; Closed Wednesday
\ 15 Marietta Avenue, Mount Joy, PA 653-5512
~ ORANGE OWL J
Movie Reviews
1941
by John Raiz
nost recent project, 1941,
gives Star Trek a ‘‘run-for-
the-money’’: it cost almost
as much to produce; making
it the most expensive Holly-
wood comedy ever made. A
total of 16 miniature prop
makers are listed among its
unending credits. The film
is one long demolition
derby—houses collapse, air-
planes ignite, bridges ex-
plode, etc.
This insane farce man-
ages a visual laugh or two in
its relentless quest to be
funny. As several critics
have already pointed out,
1941 most resembles Stan-
ley Kramer's It’s a Mad,
Mad, Mad, Mad, World,
The Russians Are Coming,
and, because of John
Belushi, Animal House.
Furthermore, Spielberg bor-
By John Raiz
Steve Martin’s perform-
ance in Carl Reiner’s The
Jerk is a flawless failure. It
has even fewer funny
Roller Boogie
by John Raiz
Roller Boogie is exactly
what you expect from its
title. It takes the music out
of the disco halls and moves
it to the roller rinks. Linda
Blair, unattractively -over-
- weight, plays a wealthy
* Beverly Hills teenager who
dreams of winning a roller-
boogie contest. before she
‘Mount Joy Welcome
Wagon to bowl at
Clearview Lanes
The January board meet-
ing of the Mount Joy
Welcome Wagon was held
on January 2nd at the home
of Ann Bernard.
The Borough Hall will be
the site of our next meeting
on Wednesday, January
16th. Mrs. Thomas Cox will
present a slide presentation
on the history of Mount Joy.
Steven (Jaws) Spielberg's
ous close-ups of nubile
rows heavily, and poorly,
from a dozen other sources,
including Martin and Lewis,
Three Stooges, Laurel and
Hardy, and himself. During
an overly drawn-out dance
number, he lifts a brilliant
slice of choreography from
Gene Kelly, who, of course,
engineered Danny Kaye's
famous walk - up - the - wall
routine for Singing In The
Rain. The unabashed plag-
erizing from other comedies
only demonstrates that
Spielberg is totally unsuited
to direct a wild comedy.
The movie uses a little
known incident about World
War II as the basis for its
custard pie-comedy. The
alledged historical footnote
involves the pandomonium
unleashed upon the resi-
dents of Southern California
when they convince them-
selves that Los Angeles is
The Jerk
moments than 1941—even
adjusting for its shorter
running time. Any film that
contains that hoary comic bit
about a hitch-hiker who
accepts a ride for 75 feet has
moves on to Julliard to study
the flute. David Winters,
who staged the musical
numbers, begins the film
with a Pied Piper roller
boogie line that attracts kids
from whatever they're do-
ing—including making love.
after more than a half hour
of non-stop disco music,
roller dancing, and numer-
Lunch Bunch will be held
on Friday, January 18th, at
the Watering Trough. The
social for the month will be
bowling at Clearview Lanes
on Saturday, January 26th.
To receive a Welcome
Wagon visit, . contact our
hostesses Cherie Dillow,
653-1609, or Sue Binkle,
653-4895.
—Ann Bernard
the ‘‘next’’ Pearl Harbor.
The cast employs about a
dozen recognizable new-
comers and oldtime Holly-
wood character actors in a
wide range of roles. In no
particular order, we get:
Warren Oates as a certified
looney army captain; John
Belushi plays a cigar
chewing P-51 Pilot who is
determined to record the
first downing of a Japanese
plane over the continental
U.S.A.; Christopher Lee
plays a German officer who
tries to convince Toshiro
Mifume that his plan to
bomb Hollywood is insane;
Slim Pickens plays a local
yokel who swallows a
Crackerjack compass to pre-
vent the submarine com-
mander from locating Holly-
wood; Ned Beatty and
Lorraine Gary play a couple
whose house is leveled while
attempting to defend our
to be straining for laughs.
The plot gimmick is com-
pletely mindless. Martin
plays the adopted son of
illiterate Black Mississippi
farmers. During the course
rumps in scanty shorts, I
- waltzed up the aisle and into
to the
Treat yourself
right; subscribe
Susquehanna
Times today.
Details on page 6.
630; ©
January 9, 1980
coastline.
The picture actually be-
gins with a rousingly
promising start. A shapely
blonde slips off her Polar
Bear Club robe and plunges
into the December surf. As
we listen to John William's
score warning us of the
impending underway dan-
ger and enjoy photographer
William A. Fraker's under-
toned shadings, we are
vividly reminded of a similar
opening sequence in Jaws
when a lovely ‘blonde was
devoured by a shark. This
time around the blonde is
lofted twenty feet into the
air by the periscope of a
Japanese submarine. The
visual double meaning be-
tween the two pictures is
truly funny.
1941 is now playing at the
Wonderland 3 theater in
Lancaster.
of the inept story, Martin
goes from rags-to-riches and
back again.
The Jerk is playing locally
at the Eric Twin theater,
Lancaster.
the lobby to “regain my
sanity.