I v w- - w i w imf r~w COKY Me Tarzan Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan Directed by Hugh Hudson Starring Christopher Lambert, Sir Ralph Richardson, and Ian Holmes Now playing at Campus Theater By Byron L. Bull A BAD MOVIE is like a bad marriage-quite often all the love and hard work that goes into one will have nothing to do with how successful it turns out. Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan is a marriage on the rocks even before the honeymoon begins. Based on a screen- play that Robert Towne nurtured for eight years, two years in the making under director Hugh Hudson, the result is anything but the epic its purported to be. It's a languid, uninspired melodrama that makes one of Johnny Weismuller's Saturday matinee ver- sions glow by comparison. For one, the narrative is choppy and broken. The film opens in Edwardian Scotland, on the estate of Lord and Lady Clayton, who are about to embark on some sort of expedition to Africa, for reasons never stated. Lord Clayton's father, the Earl of Greystoke, watches their carriage pull away in the rain, overcome by a dire premonition. Cut to an unexplained shipwreck on the African coast, Lord and Lady Greystoke, the only surrivors, peering anxiously into the dense jungle. Cut to some months later where we find them living in an elaborate Swiss Family Robinson-style treehouse. In just a matter of seconds we see that they have an infant boy, John, then watch Lady Clayton die, and then see the family treated to an unprovoked at- tack by a band of apes. The apes kill Lord Clayton and take the baby with them, to raise as one of their own. Cut to a series of sequences, with various boy actors playing the youth as he grows up in an ape society, acting and reacting like his surrogate species. Finally we stop at Christopher Lam- bert, a handsome but otherwise unex- pressive actor who plays John (never once called Tarzan) as an adult who is inexplicably beardless, and who, somewhere along the way, picked up a loincloth. John stumbles across a near-dead Belgian explorer, Phillippe D'Arnot, (Ian Holmes), the sole surrivor of a pygmie attack on his expedition. John takes him back to the ape tribe and cares for him. D'Arnot, upon his recovery, deduces that John is the lost Greystoke heir and teaches him English, convincing him to come back with him to civilization. After a brief scene in a seedy English outpost that has nothing to do with the story, he arrives, dressed in style, at the Greystoke mansion. What follows is a lengthy, heavyhanded but shor- tsighted reworking of the noble savage theme. John is introduced to the aristocracy, makes embarrassing slips in etiquette, seduces Jane, an American woman, finds Industrial civilization cold and brutal and opts for the jungle. Working with an already familiar storyline and theme that has been worked to death in the last century, the only way Hudson could have succeeded would have been to make a purely escapist, action-oriented version of the story, or somehow come up with a novel approach and inject some new ideas in- to the tired Tarzan legend. He goes for the latter, and fails. Stripping the Tar- zan myth of its mystique leaves one with a highly implausible, and, let's face. it, rather silly story. Yes it worked in turn-of-the-century England, but we're far more knowledgable and a lit- tle bit more sophisticated. Hudson's reverance for the Tarzan legend runs to an obsessive extreme. He drapes the proceedings with such a heavy-handed romanticism that it turns absurd in the end. To expect a contemporary audience to swallow a serious, philosophical Tarzan film is too much to ask. Greystoke is further burdened with the same kind of crushing sentimen- tality Hudson weighted Chariots of Fire with. The friendship between John and D'Arnot, and the romance between John and Jane are unconvincing. There's not one honest, character-ex- ploring scene in the whole movie. The actors cry, embrace, shiver, and scream, but they're just going through exercises. And John is such a sniveling, weak-minded character it's impossible to feel anything more than sympathy. We're constantly told how bright he is, and how sophisticated he's become in society, but his reactions are always adolescent. He never displays a con- Lambert: Where's Jane? vincing sense of pride or strength, when confronted with a problem he doesn't reason it out, he snorts and growls. In the end, when we're supposed to believe he's relinquished Jane and society 'to return to the jungle he's really making a cowardly retreat. It's a demoralizing, downbeat ending. Robert Towhe is a writer of im- pressive credentials, and he himself withdrew his name from the project, using his pseudonym in the credits. Therefore the blame rests with Hudson and his rewriter, one Michael Austin. The resulting collaboration is one mon- ster of a mess that ended up way over budget and too long in its running time. Warner Bros. was set to release Greystoke last Christmas, but after a disastrous preview screening they pushed back its release.M The film, then three hours long, was handed to a team of editors who trim- med over an hour, and after three more previews and recuts arrived at the present version. It's not the tightest, or most effective version, merely the least offensive. The studio supposedly considered releasing it only to television and on video cassette as the easiest way to write the project off. But with a $46 million-dollar tag, they were forced to save face, to do something semi- legitimate with it. So they released it in this, the graveyard season, with very little promotion. Beside Hudson's ineptness (he shoots scenes like he was a second-unit direc- tor), the production is basically shabby. The plastic jungle sets don't match with the location footage, looking little bet- ter than the back drop from a "Gilligan's Island" episode. While Rich Baker's ape costumes are highly overrated his apes don't have nearly the facial expressivness or their fingers the dexterity of real apes. Shot with extreme, over-lit close-ups, they're all too obviously made of latex and rub- ber. Despite their miming of primate gestures and. mannerisms, these apes still look uncomfortably like men in gorilla suits. Sixteen years ago, and for far less than Baker's $7 million tab, Stuard Freeborn created a similar but far more convincing make-up job for the opening sequence in 2001. John (2001, Barry Lyndon) Alcott's cinematography is diffused and listless. He goes through the motions of wide panaramas and crane shots that shout out THIS IS AN EPIC but to no avail. The matte paintings employed to add some grandeur to the settings would stick out even on television. The only ones who seem to be in on what's going on are Ian Holmes and the late Sir Ralph Richardson. They play their roles with a comic, tongue-in- cheek edge that leads me to suspect they didn't buy any of this nonsense for a second. Their roles are minor ones, and an actor does have to eat.. . Edgar Rice Burrough's tale of a wild man may have struck a strong chord once, but it's too outdated to warrant a serious adaptation today.Greystoke, with all its somberness, fails to convin- cingly find a niche to explore man's buried link with nature. The Tarzan saga, like the writings of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells, have lost much of their plausibility, and roman- ce, over the years. They are at best quaint entertainment, and hardly the stuff for provocative filmmaking. Make' my day The Comedy Company University Activities Center Michigan Theater 8 p.m., Saturday, April 7 By Mike Fisch SO, YOUR DORM room's too small to have company. And if the comp- any can't come to you why don't you go to the Company - The Comedy Com- pany. The Comedy Company is an all- student comedy troupe that started back in '79 when two friends decided that it might be fun to put on a comedy show. Since, then the casts have changed as has the troupe's name - it was formerly called Sunday Funnies. Said Jackie Purtan, the associate director of the troupe, "We meet four or five days a week for three hours and more before a show." Why such devotion? "Well, we're not doing it for the money or credits - so we must enjoy it." that folks, is what hasn't changed - the people involved in the Comedy Company think it's fun, they like making people laugh. And the troupe will be doing just that, Saturday, April 17, at the Michigan Theater. Though enjoying themselves is probably enough, being a part of the Comedy Company team has some other advantages, Major said. "It's worth it -100%." Though enjoying themselves is probably enough, being a part of the Comedy Company team has some other advantages. "It's worth it - 100 %," Purtan a communication major said. "It's a good experience. So much of communications is theory. The Univer- sity needs opportunities like this to get hands-on experience.. ." According to Liz Lembke, a director of the troupe, the performance on the 7th will be unlike others in the past. This is the case because the cast is primarily a young one with many freshmen and sophomores, and they have been given the chance to adlib. "They're a great group, they work really well together.. . they are doing some neat interpretations - ex- perimenting with charactgers," Lem- bke said. Interpretation does not tend to include a lot of swearing, however." We've been criticized for our cleanliness, but we don't want cheap laughs . . . We also don't want humor directed just at college students - there's a lot of diversity in the humor. Everyone should be able to relate." Along with these new actors and their fresh ideas, the Comedy Company has added a musical director, Mary Shapiro, who will play the piano in bet- ween sketches. The show includes 20-25 student- written sketches. One of them, just to give you an idea, is Clint Eastwood on a gameshow "Cut the crap o.k. - I know the rules." David Gundry, a junior member and actor in the show said "If we don't like the way something is written we can change it.. . when we screw up lines it really doesn't matter, we just get so in- to it we keep on moving. . . It's free - there are not really any stage direc- tions." If you need some good laughs, and a welcome change of pace, check out the Comedy Company's show. It'll be a lot of fun.® The Comedy Company: 'When you're smiling , Itellya, McPherson- t's not likethe old days wAen menwere men,,, now all theoys'r CITIZEN * A $185 SLIVI IF TIM/ This seaso fashionabl lines on th continue a watchbanc elegant jem with classi So rich, so 0CITI I The Order your GRADUATION I -and BIRTHDAY CAKES Delicious Variety such as: 0 Chocolate Decadance r"* Carrot Cake Join the daughters of MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.ana MALCOLM X for a family evening of music, comedy and drama. FRIDAY, APRIL 6th, 8:00 P.M. MICHIGAN THEATER (313) 668-8480 A benefit for the Student Advocacy Center Tickets $10 Group rates avaiable in advance. Student Advocacy Center 313) 995-0477 l 1""' and many other unusually rich pastries and cakes PARTY TRAYS 2.50 and up per person CREATE YOUR OWN COMBINATIONS 0 Kibbi " Spinach Pie * Taboulen " Lady Fingers Mon.-Thur. 7-6 " Chicken Artichoke Salad... 407 N. Fifth Fri. 7-9; Sat. 7-5 665-6211 Stepping into Tomorrow YolandaKing.AttaUah Shabazz & Company A Theatrical Production by Nucleus wearin' pants V. i 5 I R 11 c ..- r 6 .Weekend /rid4y April6,, 1984 11 We