3.4 New At Sweet Dreams Now Serving "New York Bagels" FREE BAGEL with purchase of Coffee We also have Low Fat & Fat Free Muffins and Speciality Coffees OPEN 7 A.M. Mon. - Sat. 6558 Telegraph Rd., Bloomfield Plaza (Maple 6- Telegraph) • 248-737- 8900 Orpheus Chamber Orc *Richard Goode, piano PRO lUednesday, November 19, 8 p.m. jor, K. 271 in c minor, K. 491 HILL AUDITORIUM Richard Goode, returning with the conductorless Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, has been hailed for music- making of tremendous emotional power, depth, and expressiveness. "What one remembers most from Goode's playing is not its beauty— exceptional as it is—but his way of coming to grips with the composer's central thought, so that a work tends to make sense beyond one's previous perception of it"(New York Times.) s.c ex 19, ‘.< 313.764 2538 of the University o Outside the 313 area code 800. http://www.ums.org 6ee Yourself in the spotlight Each Week. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS vom , co — ern an I .x.r.21 +gm. 0 ing, upscale families, the adults cor- roding from marital boredom (some into bad affairs), alternating with scenes of the kids exploring sex, drink and drugs. Kevin Kline is smiling, basically vacant Ben Hood, who thinks he has something going with jaded Janey Carver (Sigourney Weaver), who's married to the mostly absent Jim (Jamey Sheridan). Ben's wife, Elena, is played by almost anorexically svelte Joan Allen, who gives him the look she gave Anthony Hopkins in Nixon —the look more damning than Watergate. The adults expertly go through Cheever-Updike paces; no doubt they've all read the same stories in The New Yorker. They lurch from one moment of bad faith and forlorn hope to another. The kids are more enjoyable. Two of the best kid actors who've become teens without losing their charm (or brains), Christina Ricci and Elijah Wood, do very gen- uine work here, and are teamed well with Adam Hann-Byrd and Toby Maguire. The Ice Storm lives in its almost finicky accuracies. As the storm offloads sleet and ice, the drama does- n't exactly heat up, but it percolates more intensely and interestingly. Ang Lee films a "key party" as if observing the tormented ritual of a dying tribe. And he pulls off a sad tragedy at the end, not a Thundering Climax — bad luck and recklessness are involved — but with a weight of consequence that the story needs to be more than dab- bling. The Ice Storm still seems like a watercolored seepage of lives. But the cast is so good and the Lee/Elmes com- mand of ambience so adroit that you can leave rather grateful to have met these people — these typical yet very individual people — while feeling not a twinge of '70s nostalgia. Rated R. * * * 1/2 — Reviewed by David Elliott * ## • * * * * No Stars To order your subscription to 11/14 1997 108 The Detroit Jewish News call 248-354-6620 Excellent Worthy Mixed Poor Forget It Movie reviews are written by David Elliott, film critic for The San Diego Union-Tribune and other staff writers for Copley • News Service.