The Collegian : the weekly newspaper of Behrend College. (Erie, PA) 1989-1993, September 05, 1991, Image 9

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    Thursday, September 5, 1991
Now Available...
Affordable video rentals take the
place of expensive theater visits
B Crai : Cam . bell
The Collegian
In today's world, going to a
theater to see a film is quite
unaffordable to us poor and
struggling college students.
An alternative - wait a few
months for your favorite flick
to hit videotape. Here are a few
worth your time and money.
Fandango
Long before Dances with
Wolves and Robin Hood, Kevin
Costner starred in this film.
The setting is a Texas college
in the mid 70's, and Costner is
the leader of the Groovers.
This gang-o-friends takes off
on a stress-relieving,
spontaneous vacation that all
of us can only dream about.
Judd Nelson costars in this
film as one of the Groovers.
This is a really great movie
with a few references to war
but an overall hilarious plot
and very climactic moments.
Evil Dead 2
As far as cult movies go,
this film is a classic. Any
movie whose hero chops off
his own hand and replaces it
with a chainsaw has my
nomination for an Oscar.
Evil Dead 2 starts where the
first one ended. Our hero, Ash,
is in the wrong haunted woods
at the wrong time. After
killing, beheading, and
burying his possessed
girlfriend things only go
downhill.
Soon his own limbs, the
local yokels, and the corpse in
the fruit cellar attack him.
Attentive viewers will find a
reference to Freddy Krueger in
this classic.
Manhunter
Thomas Harris' fame is
long overdue and the hit film
The Silence of the Lambs is an
excellent adaptation of the
novel, but there is more. Years
ago when Miami Vice was the
rage and Michael Mann was
the greatest director around,
the film Manhunter came out.
Adapted from the novel "Red
Dragon," we first meet Dr.
Lecter in this film.
Although chilling in its
plot and artsy in its look, this
film never made it in the mass
market and only now has
begun to show video
circulation.
The hero in this film is
easy to relate to and the killer
is frightening. Once you find
out how he chooses his
victims, you may never feel
safe again.
Barfly
Mickey Rourke stars in this
movie and, as in his other
films, he plays a character
with a set of morals very
different from society's norm.
He doesn't have a job, doesn't
have any money, and basically
THE LOGAN WINTERGARDEN SERIES
The Collegian
spends his time hopping from
bar to bar and getting into fist
fights in between.
Beneath the glamorous
exterior, Rourke is a cultured
person. He listens to classical
music, struggles as a writer,
and falls in love with Faye
Dunaway (a fellow barfly).
Rourke drinks his way
through the soap opera world
from one dive to the next until
he is discovered, through his
writings, by a rich babe. She
offers to let him live with and
mooch off of her for the rest
of his life, as long as he
continues writing.
The dilemma now facing
Rourke is how to write like a
struggling author when he
doesn't have to struggle. And
which life does he even prefer?
Let It Ride
He gambles, drinks,
smokes, cheats on his wife,
and he's the star of the movie.
He's Richard Dreyfuss as
Trotter, a cabbie who picks up
a tip on a horse race and
decides to try his luck at the
track instead of saving his
marriage. Terri Garr costars in
this flick.
It's a simple movie that you
probably won't like the first
time you watch it, or the
second for that matter, but the
third time you watch it...you'll
love it.
BRING YOUR LUNCH TO THE PENN
STATE- BEIIREND WINTERGARDEN AND
ENJOY WORLD-CLASS CHAMBER MUSIC
IN AN INFORMAL SETTING.
Gray's Something
Leather full of
anecdotal tales
b Paul Plisiewicz
The Collegian
Although a few of the
scenes go down like a
leatherburger from the local
drive-in movie theater,
Alasdair Gray's latest offering
proves to be enjoyable.
The novel details the lives
of four Scottish women,
providing glimpses of each of
their lives from the formative
schoolgirl years, through the
innocence of adolescence and
into maturity. Their lives are
wrought with confusion and
discontent concerning both
social and personal issues. The
story details the class struggle
the women are subjected to, as
well as their search for
emotional and sexual
fulfillment. Something Leather
is a witty, satirical, and
provocative novel.
The novel opens with June -
tired of the "conventional"
apparel and attitudes - window
shopping on the streets of
Glasgow. She wants something
new, yet her traditional
upbringing holds her back.
She locates a leather shop and
steps in - just for a look.
Enter Senga and Donalda,
the proprietors of the shop,
who deal not only in exotic
lineaments, but also in exotic
people. They offer their
services and June is both a bit
wary and intrigued.
Gray halts the action and
sends us back in time to
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
PENNSTATE
THE CHICAGO iINDS
i/ V Erie
review some of the more
influential moments of the
women's lives.
These flashbacks read more
like a collage of anecdotal
tales than one coherent story.
The four women appear as
peripheral characters indirectly
involved in the action. The
women, however, are affected
most by what happens around
them. These are the events
which necessitate the leather
shop - the present.
Despite the panoramic view
of the emotional, social, and
economic worlds of the
women. Gray maintains the
clarity of his narrative. The
author creates a wide variety of
characters which provide for
much of the novel's wit. From
a bum who asks passers-by if
they know about electricity to
a chauvinistic boss and liberal
school mistress, the minor
characters populate a laughable
and endearing landscape. They
are the highlight of the novel,
giving it a breath of reality.
The final two chapters
continue where the first left
off. The women are mature and
self-defined -- except June who
is in the process. The final few
scenes are the most
provocative and, in some
ways, disturbing. Gray ties the
loose ends left by the previous
chapters.
Finally, the women achieve
what it is they are after --
something new, something
different, something leather.
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