ARTS Ahe Michigan DOily Tuesday, February 17, 1987 Page 5 'Winter': Frightfully t X 1 !' By Geoffrey Riklin At last, a movie that does not cause its patrons to reget having paid money to see it. The plot of the Dead of Winter is complicated but not overly so, and one of its strengths is that it succeeds in holding the audience's attention even if not all the threads of the story are fully comprehended. At least, this was true in my case. Dead of Winter enter - tained me completely, so if you can follow the story you, too, you will most likely be quite rapt. The story goes that our heroine, Mary Steenburgen, gets a job plying her trade as an actress, but unbeknownst to her she is playing the role of a woman who has recently been murdered. The murdered woman was deeply involved in a particularly vicious blackmail plot consisting of the woman herself, her twin sister, and a psychiatrist. The shrink hires Steenburgen to keep his end of the schema afloat, and soon Steenburgen finds her life expectancy rapidly dwindling as both the psychiatrist and the remaining sister try to kill her. The film has two great strengths and a number of slightly lesser ones. The great ones are the afore-mentioned plot and a wonderful supporting performance by Jan Rubes. Rubes plays the psychiatrist and is the main villain. If Rubes were less than very convincing the suspense would disappear; however he portrays his character so intelligently that the presence of fear is very real and very strong. The well- written script (co-writers Marc Shmuger and Mark Malone clearly make an impressive team) and Rubes's controlled nastiness create a solid foundation for the rest of the film, and Mary Steenburgen does the rest of the construction. She plays the actress and both sisters and does so quite well. The Steenburgen-Rubes combination is powerful. There are only two flaws worth mentioning. The first is Roddy McDowall, the psychiatrist's sycophantic manservant/patient. McDowall is all right or better in the film's first half, but in the second he overplays his hand and becomes chilling too obviously demented. The second occurs when Steenburgen attempts to escape after having become sufficiently suspicious to warrant such a thing in the midst of a fierce winter storm. She flees clad only in a shirt and an improvised shawl, and does so after having had an opportunity to wear much more appropriate garments. Her extreme vulnerability to the weather serves to make her flight more dramatic but it's a bit dishonest. Director Arthur Penn, who otherwise has done a fine job, should have exercised better judgement. There is one other thing, the stupidest gaffe I've ever seen in a major movie, sort of the cinematic equivalent of a huge typographical error. In two scenes the microphone arm intrudes onto the screen. It is amazingly obvious and one must wonder how it went undetected. But certainly this is not the sort of thing that can significantly damage a movie, particularly one as good as this. In addition to all that, Bill Brodie's set and Jan Weincke's photography are both commend - able. Dead of Winter is well worth seeing. Mary Steenburgen stars as an aspiring actress caught in a deadly game in 'Dead of Winter.' I Breath-taking quartet finishes off Beethoven cycle By Debra Shreve It's, Friday night. It's been a fong week. But the Guarneri "Quartet didn't get the night off last 'Friday at Rackham. Sometimes ev- - 6n the professionals have to work the weekends. It was no easy shift, either, for ;the Guarneri. On the program for the evening were three Beethoven quartets, including the raucous "Grosse Fuge," Op. 133. This is a particularly exhausting work, both ,physically and emotionally. Originally composed as the final movement of the Op. 130 Quartet, Beethoven later felt compelled to let it stand by itself, as a separate work. Immediately from the discordant, almost Bartokian opening, it is, plain that the "Grosse Fuge" is late Beethoven. There are no lilting, lyrical, themes in this one- only unrelenting dissonance and aggres- sion, a sudden drop into a ghostly Second fugue subject, and then a return to the original, bitter mood. This is certainly one of Beethoven's bitterest, most abstract works. The Guarneri performed the "Fugue" with plenty of passion, and with their usual perfect confid- ence. They seemed, in fact, a bit too relaxed at times- especially }: during pianissimo passages, when ' their usually flawless tone lapsed a bit and the intonation became uncertain. But who can blame Them? It was Friday night. ' The other two works on the program, the Quartet in B -flat Major, Op. 18, No. 6, and the Quartet in F Major, Op. 135, represented both ends of Beet- .hoven's quartet-writing career. The Op. 18, which opened the concert, . was one of Beethoven's earliest works, and the Op. 135 was the last quartet Beethoven finshed. The Program could wasily have been .titled "The History of the -Beethoven Fugue" since each of the . quartets contains a good share of fugal writing. The Op. 135 marks a return for eethoven from the compositional ,wildernesses he explored in, for example, the "Grosse Fuge." It is a conservative quartet in form and style, but exhibits the sophistication Beethoven gained from his experiments with forms and harmony. The Guarneri returned after intermission in top form for the Op. 135. In the vivace second movement, the quartet tossed off some amazing feats of syncopation and some incredible spicatto- full tone, perfect precison, flawless dynamic changes. Only these four men- who have played together for over twenty-five years-could have achieved the musical unity, even down to their matching body gestures, which seemed to turn this movement into an exquisite Guarneri Quartet dance. That they could make it through ten minutes of lento . assai in the third movement further proved that they had regained their concentration, and were at their best . And at their best, no one can match them. The Op. 135 is a breath-taking work, an impressive finale to Beethoven's quartet career and to any program- It was an especially appropriate ending to the six-part series, begun last year, during which the Guarneri played the entire Beethoven quartet cycle. ISPRING BREAK - FLORIDA IStudios, 1 BDR., & 2 BDR. Apts. Close to Beach in Delray Beach, Florida (Between Fort I Lauderdale & W. Palm Beach). Call today: 305-265-0158. $40.00 OFF WITH THIS AD --- --- --- NON-STOP COPY SHOP Kinko's is open 24 hours. 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