"# w V V V V Vjj~«, I U i v h Woody's wistful fantasy The Purple Rose Of Cairo Director: Woody Allen Stars: Mia Farrow and Jeff Daniels By Byron L. Bull OODY ALLEN'S The Purple Rose of Cairo is a clever but modest little fantasy about fantasies. It's a sweet and sentimental look at the American love affair with the movies, and though hardly as rich in wit and perception as Allen's modern comedy-romances like Annie Hall and Manhattan, or purely ingenius toys like the recent Zelig, it has its charms. The film opens in the midst of the Depression, a time when Americans were broke, yet were flocking into movie theaters with a fervor never seen since: the wretchedness of the real world only made the incredible fantasy of the celuloid world that much more u-m Oto 542 LSA Building 764-9216 INSTANT: Passport - (visa - 4pp/lcat/oa Photos while -U -wait hrs. 1:00-4:30 Mon - Fri student discount enchanting. Such a person is a woman named Cecilia (played by Mia Farow), who spends her days waitressing in a pit of a diner only to return home to an unemployed lout of a husband (Danny Aiello) who spends his days pitching pennies and drinking. Cecilia's only refuge is the local theater, where she religiously returns to escape into an adventure or a musical. As things worsen, the theater becomes the center of her life, and the running feature-a screwball comedy about a New York high society set called The Purple Rose Of Cairo becomes more real to her than the daylight world outside. Cecilia returns to the film again and again, and even- tually magic happens. Ted Baxter, an explorer-poet-adventurer looks down from the screen into Cecilia's longing eyes, and decides to jump down from the screen and steal away with her. The audience screams, the other characters onscreen stand frozen, awkward, without a plotline to follow; they sit there looking back out at the audience. The theater owner calls Hollywood, and the film's producer and the actor who played Baxter, -one slightly pompous minor star named Gil Shepherd, desperately try to track down the lookalike fugitive before word of the fiasco gets out to the public and ruins his career. Purple Rose though is a simple of- fering, full of terrific little gags, and nostalgic in mischievious way. Baxter, charming and eloquent, seems the man of Cecilia's dreams, but he's hopelessy out of place. He's naive and single minded, trustworthy and pure by nature but ultimately only one dimen- sional. When he pulls Cecilia into a passionate kiss, he suddenly breaks free because the scene hasn't faded out, and he has no idea what to do next. He stares uncomprehendingly into Cecilia's eyes when she explains that in the real world, "People get old and sick and never find true love." Ted-Baxter is the perfect physical embodiment of a fantasy, and of course he has no place in this world. Gil Sheperd catches up with them, and seem as enchanted by Cecilia as Baxter and he begins to soften. Soon he's wooing her affections as well. Even after Baxter takes her on a whirlwind, marvelous tour through his own black and white world, a fairytale New York that could only exist on film, she's eventually drawn back to reality and all its uncertainties. Most of the story is devoted to f ' Allen's Purple Rose: Agreeable , enchanting fun milking the gimmick of a movie character wandering through the real world, the plotting is loose and thin, and many elements, notably the romantic triangle and the sense of hopeless romanticism are dusted off and put through familiar motions. The film has an absurd abandonment, when something wonderfully ridiculous can still happen at any second. It's not a perfect formula, and at times, par- ticularly the unexpectedly dark over- tones by the end, don't quite work. But for the most part it's agreeable, even enchanting fun. The film's only major flaw is the lack of characterizations. Cecilia in par- ticular is the sort of vapid, vulnerable little sweet thing Charlie Chaplin used to fall for, a pretty, innocent, sentimen- tal device. She's in the sort of role Allen himself used to play in his own pictures, but without the wit and snappy one liners. The only thing that saves Farrow's otherwise generic character is her surprisingly radiant presence, an absolutely thrilling warmth that will probably surprise a few people. Jeff Daniels at least has a technical challenge with two-roles to play with, and he succeeds admirably in creating two very distinct people who, after awhile, don't even seem to look that similar. There really isn't much depth to either of the roles, they're both just clever pieces in Allen's machinery. But like Farrow, Daniels has a natural, af- fable screen presence. I can see some people disliking this film, and a lot of their criticism I couldn't refute. It is a gimmicky movie, like Zelig, and it is at times too detached form its characters and more concerned with its own ingenuity. It's also manipulative in its sentiment, par- ticularly its bittersweet ending, almost to a false extreme. But there's no ignoring the gentleness, the genuine af- fection Allen holds for the old films he both parodies and pays tribute to. Pur- ple Rose may be based on a one joke premise that can only be played out just so far, but at a trim 84 minutes it's a wistfully enchanting piece of escapism. It's not indicative of Allen's true genius, but even as a minor effort it's certainly something very special. : , x - STOP LOOK AN LISTEN Saturday April 13th HILL AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. {\ 4 -Z U of M MEN'S GLEE CLUB Patrick Gardner, DIRECTOR 125th Annual Spring Concert Ab / TICKETS AVAILABLE AT HILL BOX OFFICE $6, $5, $4, (students $2) April 8 - 12; 8 a.m.-5 p.m. April 13; 8 a.m.-8 p.m. y ,/ I ry 0 ~4~JA 4,. V 12 Weekend/Friday, March 29, 1985