a Goose chase Racing With the Moon Directed by Richard Benjamin Starring Sean Penn, Elizabeth McGovern, and Nicholas Cage By Byron L. Bull N THE opening scene of Racing with The Moon we see Sean Penn walking down a country railroad track, a cigarette dangling loosely from his lips, as he comes across two boys laying nickles on the tracks in front of an ap- proaching locomotive. He stops, wat- ches the train roar by, and the boys run off with shiny oblong blobs, staring at him like he was from another planet. Right away it's obvious this is going to be another bittersweet coming-of-age mood piece. - This second directoral effort by Richard Benjamin (My Favorite Year) is a low-key comedy/melodrama about friendship and romance in the second year of WWII. A time when the gover- nment was literally emptying whole towns of its young men, many as young as 17, for the service. For a lot of the boys is was adven- turous. For many of the girls it meant going through adolescence with an ac- cute shortage of the opposite sex. Overall, nationalism was probably at its all-time high, with people decorating their living rooms with patriotic paraphenalia. The screenplay, by 23-year-old UCLA graduate Steven Koves follows two boys, Hopper and Nicky, played by Sean Penn and Nicolas Cage repsec- tively, who are waiting out their last six 0 weeks at home in their northern California town before they have to report for duty. Hopper is an ungainly, shy kid who spends a lot of his time alone, walking by the coastal cliffs. Nicky, on the other hand, is a shallow, smarmy and abrasive kid with a cock- sure, self-centered attitude. Not having much of a family he sees going into the war as an escape from the town. Both share an almost fatalistic ob- session with girls. Nicky wants merely to get laid as much as possible while he has the chance, while Hopper longs achingly for romance and intimacy. Someone to whom he can write home and whose picture he can carry in his wallet. As if by providence he stumbles into a relationship with the new girl in town, Caddie, played with quiet grace by Elizabeth McGovern. Penn and McGovern have a nice, low-sparked chemistry, as they nervously kiss, clumsily hold hands, and look at each other with a sweet sense of awe. Penn, a chameleon of an actor, gives a solid portrayal of a small-town boy who walks off balance with his shoulders hunched forward and a perpetual double take on his face. He is an actor capable of filling his characters with so many little nuances, twitches, and un- conscious mannerisms, that watching him is like watching a real character caught off guard on film. McGovern, while lacking in great range, has an offbeat but natural war- mth, similar to her role in Ordinary People, only more matured. Sadly, Klove's screenplay affords the two little to do with their characters. In his attempt to capture a sense of idyllic innocence in the story, he's resorted of old formulaic devices. His dialogue is often just a bit too eloquent for rural, middle class kids. The structure of the story is just one long row of short in- cidences, none of which serve to push the movie forward, and only marginally define characters. 0 9 w 0 U V V V _1 Sean Penn: Hey Bud, let's make a gnarly movie May 4th Departures $45O ROUN mTRIP* DETROIT - LUXEMBOURG Easy Access To All Europe Nicky gets his girlfriend pregnant, and takes her to a sleazy mobile home set up for an abortion. Hopper, disgusted at his friend's lack of remor- se or even basic sympathy for the girl, ends the friendship. But a few short scenes later they're back together, with Hopper saying to Nicky, "We gotta stay together, man." Though there's no reason for him to feel that way, except that Klove's apparen- tly subscribes to those romantic old ideals of male comradery. Most of the characters are sketched rather stereotypically. Hopper's dad is the gentle, supportive, philosophical type. His mom does little more than worry about her baby going off to war. Even Nicky's attitude is blamed away in a contrived, pseudo-psychological manner, with his mother dying when he was young, and his father a drunkard who abuses him. Benjamin's direction is on the whole numbingly conventional, if not outright outdated. He has no eye for texture or atmosphere, no sense of how to make a film come alive sensually. A late-night train hop through the countryside by the boys lacks any exhileration because Benjamin and cinematographer John Bailey shoot it matter-of-factly, with no flair in the angles or lighting. When Hopper and Caddie make love for the first time it's nothing but a series of softly filtered close-ups of their faces in ecstacy set against a candy-sweet -piano score. What should have been a poignant scene is absolutely maudlin.' The one scene that does have vitality, where Hopper and Nicky try to pool hustle a couple of sailors and have the tables turned on them, owes its ex- citement not to the physical staging, but to tight editingkand adpounding swing soundtrack, and basic mechanical effects. Benjamin directs scenes as though her were directing a stage play. As an actor he's obviously learned the basics of the craft but he has no intuitive sense for the medium he's working in. Benjamin has to learn that you can't cram charm down an audience's throat, you have to carefully evoke it with wit and, a sensitive cinematic touch. You can't put your actors in front of sunsets, have them talk about love, and expect to pull it off so easily. As it is, Racing With The Moon is a softhearted film that, aside from two strong performances, has little to offer as anything more than a very light date movie, at best. C -O s O 0) 0 ~0 C1 Blouse by J. Dans, $52; Lonergan-Amerigo skirt, $67 (lef $48; and silk skirt, $99. 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