w w w w w w w w w w i T w - qw -qw_- -1w -w- FILM LOGIE Continued from Page 8 Bruce Willis got stuck on a bad 'Blind Date' By John Shea LOOK UP TO THE SKIES OF Hollywood and you can't help but notice tie intense, brightly burning star of Bruce Willis; the man is hot. When he's not busy on the set of his hit televison series, "Moonlighting," he is off pushing wine coolers or cutting albums. ,Yet, while finding success with every project he undertakes, Willis is still not satisfied. He wants more. And now, he is starring in his first major motion picture, Blake Edwards' Blind Date, hoping to ascend even further. Willis plays Walter Davis, a young executive with a pathetic social life. Walter needs a date for an important client dinner, and ultimately trusts his brother Ted (Phil Hartman), a seedy car dealer, to set him up with someone. Ted actually does a good job; Nadia (Kim Basinger, 9 1/2 Weeks, The Natural) is beautiful. She is quiet, bright, and an art lover too. Walter is very taken with her - so taken that he ignores the emphatic plea of his brother ("Whatever you do, don't let her drink") and indulges by drinking champagne with her before the dinner party. Ooops! Big mistake. What started out as a wonderful evening turns into a nightmare as Nadie loses all control, with Walter scrambling to keep her from getting into a lot of trouble. He must also deal with David Bedford (John Larroquette, "Night Court"), a psychotically jealous ex-boyfriend who has made a personal vow to "Kill Walter" before the night is through.. Considering this is a Blake Edwards' film, Blind Date is a rather ironic title. Despite the fact that almost every single one of his 45 films are light-hearted, romantic comedies, we're never quite sure what to expect. The same man who has brought us Victor/Victoria and That's Life has also brought us S.O.B. and A Fine Mess. Working within a single genre of film for his entire career, one would imagine that Edwards would know by now what works and what doesn't. Instead he wavers back and forth, between touching and tasteless, a credit to his industry and an embarrassment. Blind Date falls somewhere in between the two extremes. Edwards wants this film to be hip and bizarre, much in the tradition of After Hours. And for parts of the first half of the movie, Edwards' attempts succeed. But he gives up on the film at the end, and resorts to an unoriginal, slapstick ending which is too reminiscent of a TV sitcom. We've seen it all before, and it's tired. It is ultimately up to Willis to carry the load, and he can't because the producers have put handcuffs on him. What makes Willis so appealing is his aloofness and, if you will, his "super-coolness." Here, he is restrained, simply a reactor to the events around him. He tries hard, but it just doesn't work. Larroquette, with a high, intense energy level, is the best part of the movie. We are most interested in him, while we should be interested in Willis and Basinger, And that says something. Like most blind dates, this one is better left unseen. r&%I--- ---Bs Food Best of the Mst- Burger Radio station M A G A Z I N E'S Pizza Local band Popcorn Building Hot Dogs Dorm Bagels Bar Greek food Dance. Bar Italian food Happy hour Oriental food Place to meet people Mexican food Place to take a first date Seafood Birth control method Junk food Place to get away from it all Breakfast Place to study Late-night eats Excuse for a late paper Take-out Person in Ann Arbor Greasy spoon Best thing about Ann Arbor Deli Best (fill-in-the-blank) New restaurant Food bargain _______________ Place to take the folks The Wost of A Dorm cafeteria Most unsightly building_ Worst place to take a first date Be tBe sWorst dorm meal__ _ R E A D E R P O L L B stsnWorst thing about Ann Arbor Men's clothing store Worst (fill-in-the-blank) THIS IS YOUR OFFICIAL BALLOT for Weekend Women's clothing store M agazine's fifth annual Best of Ann Arbor reader Thrift/used clothing store __pt'_aur ntd i aSeeD IIl. It's quite a gesture on our part, devoting a whole Shoe store _________________ Magazine to your opinions, so don't blow the oppor- Grocery tunity. Fill this out. Now. Mail or deliver it to the Gift store What do you like about Weekend Magazine? Daily (Weekend Magazine, 420 Maynard St., 48109) Copy shop by April 6, or give it to our people in the Fishbowl Liquor store What do you dislike about it? today. Results will be printed in our April 17 edition. Book store Used book store What do you like about the rest of the Daily? Signature Record store Address Used record store What do you dislike about it?_ Phone Candy store PAGE 4 'WEEKEND /APRIL 3, 1987 which hasn't seen action since Saturday night and reads, "-2,196." You're never sure that it knows to reset to zero. All of which prompts me to ask, aside from the obvious, what is wrong with the relatively good-old mechanical meters? They don't need batteries or computers. Once the city buys a mechanical meter, it runs for free, unlike these new high-tech jobbies. It's sort of like buying a digital watch instead of a well-crafted, self-winding watch. Perhaps the digitoid meters are cheaper now, but how much do the batteries cost? Maybe the computer helps nab us crooks, but how much more does it cost to run? And why this sudden concern over how tardy drivers are? The new meters won't prevent the unscrupulous among us - when confronted upon returning to our cars, with a meter-slug in mid-scrawl - from protesting that we had to run down to the corner to get some change and then feeding the meter in front of the reader, only to speed by moments later, hurling obscenities at the trusting fool. In my neighborhood, the prob- lem is just as bad at home. When I and my housemates tried to squeeze our cars onto our tiny driveway, I got nailed for crossing "the set-back line." I've since read the exact regulation in the City Code, and I still don't know what or where this line is. So now I park on a street with signs limiting parking to four hours at a time between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. I rush out at noon to see if my tires have been chalked. If not, I'm probably safe for the whole day. If they have been, I have to drive around the block to rub the chalk off. What a pain. Now I know these regulations exist only to give everyone a fair shot at parking spaces, but I honestly think we could live without them. All of them, as- suming drivers would be cool about not blocking traffic, and things like that. But that will take organ- ization, and time. In the interim, wouldn't it be terrible if cars started leaping sideways during parallel parking, knocking those poor defenseless meters off their moor- ings? And I'd hate to think what some evil computer genius could do to prevent Tally Hall justice... E Read and We D04~~ INTERVIEW Continued from Page 8 D: Will other kinds of sexually oriented literature become more predominant, such as lesbian liter- ature or novels that don't deal spe- cifically with between the rela - tionship between one man and one woman? H: I definitely think that there is a trend toward expanding kinds of relationships. In this Margaret Atwood novel I just read we don't learn until halfway through that the main character has a close woman friend, but we don't really know what kind of woman friend, and then she turns out to be gay - sort of the old "best girlfriend" paradigm, but then she's slightly different because she has a different sexual orientation, so that it kind of slips in, but not in terms of mainstream literature. I think it's interesting to see catalogs on gay literature, with almost none of them are about women. D: I noticed that most women's novels deal alot with violent situations between men and women. Why is that? H: Its become a very controversial issue, especially in black women's writing. The black community has really gone up in arms in terms of how black men are portrayed so negatively in fiction, and that black women writers are doing a real disservice to the black community by representing violent inadequate abusive men. Of course, some people feel that's completely wrong, that one should only have positive role models. Other people will say that this is what it's like, that part of reality to a large extent has never been written about. That's always a big issue: whe- ther you just want to present positive role models so that you can overcome negative stereotypes, or if you want to present it as it is, which might not be a very happy picture, but at least it will present things as they are. Women's literature has some commitment to social change, and part of it is to show a positive role model, but another part is to show it the way it is. D: How does this affect romance novels? H: One interesting thing about romance fiction is that it has a neat ending, and the other kind of fiction tends not to have a clear resolution. If one is going to bring about social change, one doesn't want to present an alternative dogma - 'Well, it's always been like this, now it shouldn't be like this for everybody at all times and all places' rather than 'these are the issues.' I leave (the question) open and each reader figures it out for themselves. The term 'women's literature' is so monolithic. There really are a lot of varieties and variations, and sort of cultural specificities, whether it's an American bestseller or whether its South African or East German.E THE America's Profession PACKING. S STORING. I They all share one ti BOX We'll wrap it, box it, p to meet YOURa We are a major distrib manufacturers... and th wholesale and re North Campus Plaza " (313) 66 When Your Is Classic, Y~ Should Be' f~OR I 1 S Ann Arbor's Only Rib House STUDENT'S TWO BUCK NIGHT Every Sunday $2.00 off any Entree 4- 10 p.m. (with Student I.D.) or B.B.Q. CHICKEN $5.95 1/i Flame-broiled chicken with french fries, cole slaw, and hot rolls only $5.95 every Sunday 116 E. WASHINGTON, ANN ARBOR * 663-3900 OPEN: Sunday 4-10 p.m., Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-midnight Fri. and Sat. 11:30 a.m.-1:00 a.m. 0 0 O O' O "O" S=rrs? arl.:. I 11I J Women in Judaism Series Professor Tikva Frymer-Kensky "Women in Jewish Thought" What Jewish thought has taught about Jewish women and what women are adding to Jewish thought Left: Men's Gold -Tone Champagj Right: Ladies' Gold-Tone Bracelet The Citizen Regent Collection beautiful fature: A total So if you want a watch to con choose one that deserves cc OCITI NO OTHERWATCH EXPRESSi Monday, April 6 7:00 p.m at Hillel (1429 Hill Street) 663-3336 17iLkiV gem= j! - , WEEK(END,/,Ri ', 987