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I: .. r f ...y. ." .. ..... s: :l+ ri ... r' r'r . : : .. ....:.. p:{..::. r......: rr w::.v.+. vr.. .:: vv:.:.......:.:{. ... n..... f..r.; {:. {".{':. ? :r fri' f rt i} :.. f. lf .4. ..... of f .......:vf.:.... i. XF.+r r.. .... . v:... ........... r. ........ .: ..:. .. .: :.. ,! ...i ... r . f rf .. F .+ : ::.Fw::n" v:::::::4 ...........:.: Super priest By Ben Ticho Monsignor Starring: Christopher Reeve and Genevieve Buiold Directed by Frank Perry Playing at the Movies at Briarwood A FRAID THAT this one has to join my "movies for masochists" list, joining recent winners like Sword and the Sorcerer and Author, Author. As is often the case in such films, Monsignor stretches credulity into a thin strand, trying to offset plot excesses by presen- ting powerful characters and illusions of grandeur, but failing to develop an appropriate perspective. Monsignor is billed as a full-blown saga, following Superpriest (Christopher Reeve as Father John Flaherty) from his stateside ordain- ment into the fields of battle as a WWII chaplain and then to the Vatican, site of power plays and international intrigue. The Church enlists Reeve to save its crumbling -finances, and the business major achieves an increased cash flow for the church via connections in the black market. Generally, I dislike films that exploit religion for audience pull, treating the "world of faith' primarily as a set of high-minded but old-fashioned rules destined to be violated by the protagonist's "uncontrollable natural passions and desires" (heavy Barbara Cartland verbiage, huh?), or, better yet, by that great Western tide of progress and modernization, sweeping aside conventional morals in favor of power games, fast money, and Genevieve Bujold's behind. Actually, the producers of this movie took considerable (and surprising) risks, casting a super-popular face (oh those eyes! sigh) as a thoroughly unlikable character, whose supposed ultimate piety, intended to balance his rampant ambition, selfishness, and shady business practices, remains dubious to the end. The idea is to show corruption in the Vatican, as everyone from the Big Man on down justifies criminal activities for the greater glory of God, and the greater Swiss holdings of the Church. All attempts to redeem the basic in- tegrity of the papal mafioso come off as specious double talk. On the other hand, all the actors (including Leonardo Cimino as Pope Pius XII, Fernando Rey as head honcho Cardinal Santoni and Jason Miller as Don Appoloni) are utterly convincing in their moments.of expedience and modern cynicism. Reeve's Flaherty ,is particularly disappointing. While Cimino and Ap- poloni may be excused their wooden stick-figure presence now ard then and Rey his sentimental droolings about picking olives and religious "duty," Reeve holds the crux of the matter, as the embodied confrontation of moder- nity and sacred tradition. When he falls for Bujold we need to see more of his torment, or at least some kind of rudimentary thought process. I mean, priests don't go overboard for a pretty face just like that (didn't you read The Thorn Birds?). Reeve's scenes with Varese (played badly by Joe Cortese), his boyhood chum who grows into a black market middle man and, finally, a dead ab- sconder, should have been much more powerful than they turned out. Here are two men violating deep-set moral codes in each other's presence, watching each Sweet tooth Christopher Reeve: No more blue tights sink in spiritual stature while rising economically and politically, and they've got practically nothing substan- tial to say to each other! By Diane Pawlowski Afternoon Delight 251 E. Liberty Hours: 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday-Friday, till 5 p.m. Saturday. Closed Sunday. T HINK OF fast food and you think of charbroiled substances labeled as hamburgers, soggy french fries and other foods that add up to a'trayful of polyunsaturated fats and starches. At the bustling Afternoon Delight, located at 251 East Liberty, fast food can meafl a trayful of items such as quiche, crabmeat salad or a mountainous vegetarian sandwich or a large vegetable and meat stuffed potato. The Delight is one of the more popular campus restaurants, and with good reason. As one flips the placement menu onto one's tray, one knows why the restaurant has such an outstanding reputation with both students and residents. Repeat customers buzz with conversation about their menu choices this time. As one peruses the menu it is difficult to choose from the array of what could easily be humdrum entrees at just another sandwich shop. Ordering the day's special, one receives a startingly large slice of bub- bling hot, golden-brown topped spinach quiche. The tossed salad that accom- panies it is not just some chopped let- tuce limply hiding under a withered tomato slice, and if you're lucky, a cucumber slice as well. Instead it is a heaping bowl of fresh lettuce, sliced mushrooms, sunflower seeds, raw broccoli and cauliflower, plus tomato. No, they don't just drop any old dressing on it. At a dressing bar there is an assortment of 10 different dressings, some of which are made by the Delight staff. In addition salad fans can use olive oil and one of a choice of tarragon, wine champagne or chateau wine vinegar. Also, an assortment of peppers, croutons and other salad op- tions are available. Slide into one of the booths and you can expect employees to cheerfully stop by to check up on whether or not everything is all right. A closer look at the menu shows eight different types of salad. A crabmeat salad, at $4.80, is the most expensive item on the menu. The salads vary from a beef with nacho to vegetarian nacho. Also, chicken or tuna, spinach, chef's and a house salad are offered. Sandwiches include chicken Ann Arber's Newest Korean Restaurant KANA STUDENT 10 SPECIAL STUC Bul Ko Ki Bar-B-Q Sandwich 2.80 salad,Swiss cheese and avocado, a very large club sandwich, tuna onion and cheddar as well as a vegetarian salad. Delight also offers a large, baked Idaho potato that has been stuffed with a vegetarian mixture, or, as the menu says, "for those who cheat," fillings of bacon, turkey, ham, roast beef or crab meat. The Delight serves both a chowder and a soup each day. In addition, a number of frozen yogurt- shakes and sundaes are available. A separate breakfast menu that in- cludes omelets, vegetarian Eggs Benedict, blintzes, bagels, waffles, juices, fruit and melon bowl& and hot, homemade muffins. Owner .Tom Hackett states that within about a week, potato pancakes will be served with all of the egg orders. Cheesecake for dessert? One almost expects a heavily sugared fruit topping. Instead, the cheesecake arrives with a topping that is cleanly and simply just a large scoop, of chunks of fresh pineap- ple. Coffee, the measure of a good restaurant, is offered in both regular and decaffinated and at Delight, it isn't stale, bitter or sluffed over. The coffee is hearty and good. The menu not only lists the'price of everything in dollars and cents, it also offers the number of calories per ser- ving: the price to the consumer's physical well-being. Hackett, who owns the restaurant in partnership with Larry Hedman and Jim Broker, feels the restaurant is a good place for vegetarian and non- vegetarian friends to meet. "Here, a vegetrian with two or three friends can come in and each will be able to find what they believe is the most ap- propriate food. Something they like. Most importantly, the vegetarian won't limit his mealtimes to the company of only vegetarian friends." According to Hack, the three own another Afternoon Delight in Grand Rapids and have opened yet another restaurant in an office building. The restaurant, which sells salads by the ounce and sandwiches by the inch, is named just that: Salads By The Ounce and Sandwiches By The Inch. "It's a quick-service idea designed to appeal to the many office workers "in that area. So far, it's working out well, as is our other Afternoon Delight," Hackett says. Hackett views Delight as a fast-food restaurant. Quiches and many other dishes are prepared the night before, and warmed in one of Delight's several microwaves. In addition, all sandwich. preparations are carefully made before hand and assembled in a small kitchen to the customer's order. Delight began as a venture to sell frozen yogurt cones to the shopping mall set. Since the first Delight opened, there have been changes in concepts and menus until. four and a half years Afternoon Delight: Fresh food ago, Delight as Ann Arborites and University students have come to know and love, began. The menu is changed three times a year, not according to the volume of customer requests, but according to the seasons. "In our restaurant, we ac- tually don't get too many requests for new menu items. Most people who come in can't decide what they want to order. I feel people want to eat healthy foods and we are trying to serve good, healthy food. On the other hand, we are not a health food restaurant. Too many health food restaurants just dictate their philosophy to their customers. We aren't trying to do that.. "We try and add items to the menu that we feel will give our customers their money's worth. Today, com- petition in the restaurant business is tough. You've got to be creative and have new ideas or you won't succeed," Hackett says. "Now that restaurants a is that they hr changes to market, 'Hal Just what Hackett ei sophisticated. know good foo know what h market is tig decisions as t spend their f thinking hard going out to e four times a w "Even so, especially upc visit. It's nice their parents that they mus or they wouldi love the stud ployees are p Hackett says. Bujold's appearance is mercifully short. This talented actress (King of Hearts, Isabel, Anne of a Thousand Days) has too honest a face to pretend that her role as a postulant nun contains much beyond predictable outrage and grief. She certainly is no schoolgirl- which is what is essentially called for. The film people did manage to fit in a frontal nudity scene, though, oddly enough. Monsignor does have some redeeming points. First, token violence is admirably limited; the visual hooks are generally restricted to papal ex- travagance and architecture (nice costumes, too). Second, for a pop (should I say pap?) film to carry such a depressing state-of-the-world message (don't for a moment think that Reeve has reformed in the final scene) is very courageous, if perhaps somewhat unin- tentional. And then there is Christopher Reeve. People attending this particular movie to see poster-face won't pay attention to the plot anyway ... The acting is just mediocre enough to warrant reconsidering the masochism rating to maybe a-"OK if you're bored and have $4 lying around" film, but when I next want to view a really good religious adventure movie, I'll dust off Gentleman's Agreement. Jimmy Stewart isn't Superman, but he can still fly in the acting department. dww -.dmkb, -Mmm " U m r- w W -w 9Nw w , PARTHENON G C ' S i I l ; J. ,w ' I U +c ,1 . i j ( f!! i' r f 1i 1!t ' i 1 t << f 4 FINE G GYROS & SAN[ SCARRY MON -SAT SUN 12f 71 % OFF DENTS ONLY 8 Veggie Tempura 1.50 MOUSAKA.'PASTITSIO DOLMADES ".! GREEK SALADS &'PASTRIES COMBINA CA9LL 226 S. MAIN at LIBERTY " ANN A EAT IN OR CARRY OUT-CONVENIENT TO HILL DORMS! 1133 E. Huron Former location of Raja Rani M-Sot 9-9 Monsignor: Corruption in the Vatican 8 Wepkend/Optober 29,,1,982, 113r uo omrlctino ooRn .a - w --w-w w w W-Mop- -13 _Week~