No so By Byron L. Bull The problem with Another Country is that, like so many screen adaptations of plays, by the time it's been ripped apart and reassembled and twisted into usable form for the screen, all of it's original assets, the elements that may have made it so powerful on stage, are lost. Quite often the only thing to remain, and often quite glaringly, is the sole central idea that spawned the work. Noble as such ideas often are, such flagrant pontification can make for one boring film. Author Julian Mitchell (who wrote both the stage and screen versions) has fashioned an interesting enough premise about loyalty, trust, tolerance, and the perversion of those ideas by a. society, but fails to integrate them ef- fectively into a dramatically satisying tale. The film opens in a suite in Moscow where Guy Bennett (Rupert Everett), an English.defector to the Soviet Union, sits, an old man, retelling of the days that led to his decision to defect, causing an international scandal. When the reporter interviewing him asked him if the rewards he reaped personally were worth his ensuing notoriety, he answers matter-of-factly, "Fame or in- famy . . . What's it matter if you're not forgotten?" The ensuing movie-long flashback focuses on Bennett's days as a young man attending the English boarding school of Eton during the 1930s. Mit- chell and director Marek Nanievska. paint a grim portrait of an ancient in- stitution, whose rigid military structure good ol' and inner hierarchy are as archaic and complex as its architecture. The pressure within the school to succeed and conform to established customs is devastating to those inclined to noncon- formity. Students who don't adhere to the self perpetuating upper-class em- pirical mentality are quite effectively ground under its heels, and Bennett is a prime target. ' Amidst a hotbed of repression, homosexual affairs between the boys are frequent, if not an expected part of life. It's something of a tradition among the boys, an accepted part of adolescence that they eventually grow out of. The problem is Bennett is an open, flirtatious gay, who spends the better part of his time gazing longingly from a distance at his latest pretty flame. Coupled with his open detestation for the regimentated, often absurd routines of school life (cricket and military exercises), he becomes an object of intense hatred for the more fervent students, who in their brown shirts look appropriately like Fascists. Guy's solo friend, by the simple fact that he is the only other student as defiantly singular, is Tommy Judd. Judd is an intense, brooding intellectual -Marxist ideologue, who is as asexual as Bennett is rabidly homosexual, and is as pragmatic as his friend is hopelessly romantic. While Judd's politics may be openly sneered at by his classmates, they at least respect his sharp wit at defending his political views. Bennett on the other hand, is often a gratingly childish prigs,' flaunting his homosexuality just to irritate his classmates. It's his actions, The Michigan Daily- Friday,;October 12, 1984 - Page7 country living coupled with his openly paraded affair with another boy, that leads to a con- spiracy that publicly humiliates him and destroys his prospects of finding a niche in the school's political structure, which he needs desperately to secure a political career. The problem with Mitchell's script is that while he constructs a clever arena for talking about prejudice and in- tolerance, he fails to come up with con-, vincing characters to give it impact. Bennett and Judd are walking caricatures, carefully crafted but lifeless set pieces. Judd has perpetually mussed hair and burns the midnight oil while pouring over his battered copy of the writings of Marx. He is like a religious zealot engrossed in a lifelong study of The Bible. Bennett is also letter perfect with his casual sensuous mannerisms, and a pastel sweater draped lightly about his waist that would put him right at home in a GQ spread. Everett and Firth's performances are solid enough, but lack the insight and depth to really make their characters feel alive. They may have the mannerisms down pat, but they're still only impersonating steretypes. Mitchell's dialogue, paticularly in the climactic confrontation between Ben- nett and Judd, is full of powerful feelings and ideas, but Mitchell could be a little more subtle in conveying them. The conversations lack a natural feel, and they're so loaded with vital infor- mation that one needs time to pause to absorb it all. In a theater, with the inherent power that the intimacy which live actors can bring to a piece on stage, I can imagine Another Country working. On the screen, the characters seem too distant, and the author's techniques are too obvious. In the end, the film never arouses ones feelings as deeply as it yearns to do. No funny Bill Murray stars in his first dramatic role as a man searching for Spiritual enlightenment after World War I in 'The Razor's Edge.' The movie is based on the novel by W. Somerset Maugham. Re cordsr Romeo Void - Instincts (415 Records/CBS) It's, almost cruel to expect Romeo M Void to ever equal or better the achievement of "Never Say Never." This can still stand, after nearly three years, as my nominee for the best single dance song of the '80 s so far - though an unlikely one, an emotionally violent ode to sexual frustration, with the ambiguous chanty catch phrase I might like you better if we slept together and Benjamin Bossi's saxophone gradually rising to a night- mare scream of insanity. - All this and more within a solid seven- minute structure of driving rhythm that had to thrust even the mildest sheep in- to dancefloor contortions. Romeo Void's previous and sub- sequent recordings cut out an in- triguingly'unique niche, a moody jazz- wave fusion dominated by synth at- mospherics, sax squeal-outs and the vocal-lyrical presence of Deborah Iyall. Always a shade too intellectual for mass consumption, Romeo Void seemed an uneasy' prospect for the high visibility that "Never Say Never" af- forded them. The very distinctiveness of their sound was a potential limitation Their major-label debut, "Benefac- tor," while certainly attractive in its separate parts, began to sound- monotonously 50% one mood ("Never Say Never" and its bedfellows) and 50% another (space-jazz-wave). After some infighting and a limbo period of two years, Romeo Void is back with a third LP, Instincts. Sur- prisingly, this is their most focused and varied record to date, answering strongly in the affirmative that all- important question, "Yeah, but can RNN, RBOR 7 5th Avenue of Lbert St t i 3 -AY RIn t t[Nix his ih Frta oal tank of Chiag. I ant L.~A( E ~ ~rot[>tanh using the knowlekdge aciitred thrnntwh i ASSISTANT: -ri I wtr, %Xiill, raduatk-? A GROWTH CAREER FOR THE 80 s Iraining as a -awyers Assistant can give today's J ROOSEVEIT UNIVERSITY college graduate a valuable edge in the job jLawyer's Assistant Program market. 430 . Michigan Ave. Chicago, Ill. 60605 Entrv-level positions in the Chicago area pay In Cooperation with as much as 512,0) to dhe National Cnter for Paralsgalnnn as 5I,000 o 5 5,00?-andeasee send me a copy of the Roosevelt paralegals are now earning as much as 832,000I Ladea s Assstant Progra atalog. It takes just three months of daytime study I am interested in the Q Chicago or (six mon~hs in the everting ) to prepare for a Ll Arlington Heights location. career as a l.awvyer's Assistant.1'he program at Ni Roosevelt I niversitv is the largest A.BA.- approved program in Illinois, and its record of Addre. graduate employment assistance is the best I it" there is. State Zip Recruiter will be on campus [oni Phone October 25, 1984 tusines Phoi they put together a whole album of good stuff?" They can, and how. Still moody and somewhat'jazz-influenced, Instincts finds Romeo Void a tighter ensemble. The band is less dependent on repetitious musical signatures (i.e.. Bossi's sax is more integrated into the mix and more controlled, while Iyall does more singing than reciting of her lyrics),, and their excellent new material travels in more than two or, three emotional-keys. There's nothing here that par- ticularly resembles "Neyer Say Never," which is just as well. A com- plex record that keeps gaining interest with repeated listenings, Instincts doesn't have a "single" leaping off the vinyl, though the oddly touching, mid- tempo "A Girl in Trouble (Is a Tem- porary Thing)" is immediately addic- tive. Deborah's sultry/cynical act has lightened up a bit (though her chanty interludes still sound vaguely like Mae West), enough to accommodate a closing title track that is quite simply, and beautifully a love song. "Billy's Birthday," strung out on a bump-and- grind rhythm, is another ode to a sub- ject that Romeo Void handles better- than anybody else right now - the vague paranoia and isolation of over- socialized urban dwellers. "Just Too Easy" and "Say No" are snarling dance tunes with Iyall's wit- tiest lyrics. The opening "Out on my Own" is a sweeping declaration of in- dependence in an ominous minor mode, with the most impressive arrangement in current studio-whizkid-of-the-year David Kahne's ideal production. The. end of this song is, rather surprisingly, the only time on the LP when Bossi breaks into the expected howls of sax hysteria, and it certainly wakes up the house. A smoky instrumental penned by Kahne, "Going to Neon," and the tribal-drummed "Six Days and One" further stretch the album's range. With Instincts Romeo Void suc- cessfully makes the transition from one-hit cult band to both greater com- plexity and accessibility; though they remain an acquired taste, Instincts makes it one all the more worth acquiring. - Dennis Harvey FOR INFORMATION AND A FREE BROCHURE CALL (312) 341-3882 OR MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!- I Approved for VA. and Il. State 4 G;uaranteed Loans I I os,ch Vr-~nivcsr admnits all studcri' on thr aist jind~ivdual rmer~git '.dithout regard toraic.col'or, exor ac - U U "I A (?acA&3o. 1 PE 4 THE " \ 4NATURE RN AN :ER"UNIED WITHSCIENCE ~N APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE 806S BA RBERS & £4t STYLISTS RSONALIZED and DISTINCTIVE W V/UJERRY 0 DAVE STEVE C FULL SERVICE SHOP MEN WOMEN CHILDREN MON T " I-OURI-RI $ Xw AM S IW }'M VM 8-141 AM 6,.D PM S. STATE 9 Bet. Hill and Packard , s: i She will become their most deadly weapon. As long as they can make her fall in love. DIANE KEATON DRU Mki EVEM R A GEORGE ROY HILL FILM DIANE KEATON in JOHN LE (ARRE'S "THE LITTLE DRUMMER GIRL" YORGO VOYAGIS KLAUS KINSKI Music'by DAVE GRUSIN Executive Producer PATRICK KELLEY Screenplay by LORING MANDEL n-- tI. --t L.. IflUdI I E fICADD t FREE SCREENING DATE: October 16 TIME: 1st showing-7:OO PM #4- -fl . . - - A . 4 PEmm i