•• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Difference! The • • • • • At Stage the Difference is our commitment to serve the • finest delicatessen...Anytime-Anywhere! EVEN AT HOME! • • You expect the very best. We have it! • • Our carryout staff has only one goal, to provide you with the quality and service you expect. Guaranteed! • Experience the difference! • • • Give Them • What They • • • Want! Delicatessen • • 6873 Orchard Lake "On the Boardwalk" 248/855.6622 • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ENTIRE FOOD BILL Good Anytime 1 Coupon per couple or family Excludes senior citizen-discount Expires 8/15/00 • Breakfasts starting at $179 • Fresh fish • Lamb chops OPEN 7 DAYS • LUNCH & DINNER featuring AUTHENTIC JAPANESE CUISINE AS YOU LIKE IT! • Elegant Atmosphere • Gracious Warmth • Reasonable Prices • Sushi Bar • Private Japanese Rooms • Cocktails including 30 Different Kinds of Sake Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30 - 2 p.m. • Dinner: Mon.-Sat. 5:30-10:30 p.m. Sunday 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. 32443 NORTHWESTERN HWY. 86 (Between Middlebelt & 14 Mile) Visit • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Arts is Edertiin ent (248) 737-7220 Fax (248) 737-7223 us on the web www.hakatasushi.com At The Movies `Loser' In her new romantic comedy, director Amy Heckerling does for college what she did for high school in "Clueless" and "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." Director Amy Heckerling, foreground, replays a scene on the set of "Loser," which draws upon her college years. NAOMI PFEFFERMAN Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles 0 HAKATA JAPANESE RESTAURANT St0 7/21 2000 • • • • • • • • my so much can be written about a Jewish girl from the Bronx, says writer-director Amy Heckerling. Only so many scripts can begin, "Interior: candy store, Queens." That is why the New Yorker didn't bother to draw on her own childhood to create her teen zeitgeist films, con- sidered classics of the genre. Fast Times at Ridgemont High, the first of the mall-generation movies, for example, focuses upon a clique of Southern California teenagers and begins with an image of the Southland Mall, a great suburban microcosm percolating with a full complement of teen trials. Clueless, the tale of Cher Horowitz, a pampered girl who fancies herself more sophisticated than the younger teen she takes under her wing, updates Jane Austen's Emma to modern-day Beverly Hills. Now comes Loser, the story of Paul Tannek (Jason Biggs), an impover- ished college frosh from the heartland who is, well, considered a loser — until he hooks up with another out- cast, Dora Diamond (Mena Suvari). If you can take the girl out of the Bronx, Hecklering concedes, you can't take the Bronx out of the girl. The director, who pronounces her latest film "Lo-sah," couldn't resist making Clueless' Cher (Alicia Silverstone) a Horowitz. Dionne, her African- American best friend, who like Cher is named after great singers of the past who now do infomercials," speaks a word or two of Yiddish. In Johnny Dangerously, Hecklerling's gangster-flick spoof, the movie theater candy counter sells popcorn, jujubes and whitefish. And in Loser, Dora Diamond; Paul's unlikely comrade, is named after a real Jewish teenager who changed every- thing for Hecklering's favorite writer, Czech novelist Franz Kafka. "Kafka was, like, 40, and he never left home or had a proper relationship with a woman until the very end of - his life," says the director, turning off a Woody Allen film to conduct this interview. "Then he met Dora Dymant, a Zionist who wanted to go to Israel, and she was the first person who really got him to break away from his parents, to live with a woman and to move past adolescence. "She was the teenager who got the great Jewish genius to grow up," the director marvels. "I related to the fact that the person who finally saved him was this Jewish teenaged girl." Heckerling, the daughter of a CPA, "