ARTS Wednesday, November 25, 1987 The Michigan Daily Page 5 'Automobiles' travels smoothly By John Shea Planes, Trains and Automobiles teams the unlikely trio of John Candy, Steve Martin and director John Hughes in a film about the perils of travelling during the holi- day season. It is both a story about the true meaning of Thanksgiving and a slap at the airlines. And it's very funny. It is two days before Thanks- giving, and Neal Page (Martin), a prim and proper advertising execu- tive working out of New York, is trying to get home to Chicago to spend the holidays with his family. Problem is, his plane leaves at six, and he finds that hailing a cab in Manhattan during rush hour is noth- ing short of finding the Holy Grail. Desperate, Neal bribes an attorney for his cab, only to have it inadver- tently stolen from him by Del Grif- fen (Candy), a loveable but loud- mouthed shower curtain ring sales- man, who is also heading t o Chicago for the holidays. Naturally, Neal's and Del's paths will cross; they end up sitting next to one another on the plane. Neal just wants to read a magazine; Del wants to recite his life story to anyone who will listen. And when a snowstorm over Chicago forces the flight to be rerouted to Missouri, Del is eager to share his travelling expertise. Neal wants nothing to do with Del, but unable to find trans- portation or a vacant motel, he goes along with him. What follows is a series of mishaps and accidents that follows Murphy's Law to the letter. Del's good intentions and advice propels them into one disaster after another. Automobiles is reminiscent of sev- eral other films, the two most com- ing to mind are The Out of Towners with Jack Lemmon and Sandy Den- nis and Martin Scorsese's After Hours; thing go wrong and then they get worse. There are no startling surprises to speak of, no interesting twists or turns that are taken; when we first see Neal and Del sharing a bed to- gether in the only available hotel room in Missouri, we know they will spending Thanksgiving to- prise, and the other is not. With last summer's Roxanne, Martin has proven that he is more than "The Jerk." He has no peers when it comes to physical comedy; his facial expressions alone are enough to send one into convulsive laughter. But there is a tender, more serious side to him that he allows to let surface. It is this side that allows him to walk the tightrope of playing an obnoxious, pompous character and yet still be likeable. This is not an easy chore, and Martin pulls it off effortlessly. Candy is something of a sur- prise. His career, marked by notice- able supporting roles in monster hits (Stripes, Splash), has not been one of versatility; he plays the funny fat man every time. He is funny here too, but like in Martin's case, there is a more dramatic side to Candy. And when it surfaces, in particular when he tells Martin that he knows he is not perfect, but likes himself for what he is, it is downright pow- erful. This is by far the best perfor- mance of his career, and while I would not recommend he run off and play Willie Lomax on stage, Auto- mobiles proves that Candy has a broader range of talents than one might think. For writer and director John Hughes (Pretty in Pink, The Break- fast Club), this marks the first time he has ever worked with principals older than he. There is nothing too original in the script, but as always Hughes pens realistic dialogue and interesting situations. The comedy in this movie is very good. But when Hughes tries to get too serious, he runs into problems. He is the kind of director who illus- trates a character's broken dreams by having him sit on top of the mail- box in the pouring rain; there is a lack of subtlety. The same holds true with the end of Automobiles, in which the point of good will and helping strangers out is conveyed with a sledgehammer. Hughes has little touch for drama and would be better off avoiding it whenever pos- sible. That's just-a minor bump in the road, however. Take some good ad- vice: line up early and get your ticket. Planes, Trains and Automo- biles is one fun ride. Steve Martin (left) and John Candy (right) play two unlikely travel companions in John Hughes' new film, 'Planes, Trains, and Automobiles.' gether. of Martin and Candy. These two Yet, what makes this film the former stand-up comedians have treat that it is are the performances made good as actors; one is a sur- The Hollywood clich6: It makes the world go 'round By Lisa Pollak Clichds. We can't live with them; we can't live without them. But most pseudo-knowledgeable film critics - me included - seem to agree with the former. Just read our reviews. "Haven't we seen this before?" we ask coyly. "Another tired clich6!" we exclaim. "Oh, as if we don't know what happens next here," we type, wishing we knew how to roll our eyes in prose. Clich6s. They're something all reviewers must come to grips with. And the subject gives us a lot to sink our teeth into. Are cliches just flies in the ointment? Or can they be pulled off by movie-makers who play their cards right? Let's get to the heart of this mat- ter. In my short-but-sweet career as a Daily film critic, I've reviewed four films ladden with more cliches than you can shake a stick at. Case in point: I've only seen four films this term. But I've seen eight stereotypi- cal love scenes, seventeen stock characters, four predictable story lines, and enough corny pieces of dialogue to feed all the starving ac- tors in Europe. The clich6s were a dime a dozen. And I didn't exactly welcome them with open arms. But let's jump from the' frying pan and into the fire. This month I watched Russkies, where a Russian named Mischa drank vodka while he preached about world peace. I watched The Hidden, where a squid- like alien crawled in and out of hu- man bodies. I watched The Killing Time, where a character said to her husband "You don't love me any-. more! Life just isn't worth living!" Finally there was The Running Man, where Arnold Schwarzenegger growled "I'll be back." And he was. "Clich6s, clich6s, clich6s!" I screamed. "They leave a bad taste in my mouth! They're the last straw! They're a bitter pill to swallow! We're skating on thin ice now!" I was, you could say, fit to be tied. But the whole time I was also painting myself into a corner, burning the candle at both ends, and cutting off my nose to spite my face. Because by making a big stink over the tired and stupidly executed clich6s in today's movies, I - and all film reviewers - are giving the clich6 a bad name. Clich6s are re- peated, familiar ideas. They are stereotypes and colloquialisms. But once in a blue moon clich6s in films can be very effective. They aren't necessarily bad news. Mel Brooks, for example, has made an entire career out of cliches. He made his bed, he lies in it, and he reaps the profits from Blazing Sad- dles, Spaceballs, Young Franken- stein, and others - all of which parody common cinematic clich6s. Perhaps the most remembered scene from Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters was the "mayonnaise and white bread shot" - Allen's "non- Jewish" cliche that never gets stale. * Sure, cliches and stereotypes aren't going to set the world on fire. But just look at a list of Academy Award winning movies. The Godfa- ther. Platoon. Patton. Rocky. Many of their characters were cliches, or stereotypes. Did the academy think Oliver Stone's film was "a Vietnam cliche?" No, but many of the characters and scenes arguably re- flected what Webster calls "a stereo- typical, common, well-known" idea. The difference? They were well done. Shinning stars. Winning plays. You get the idea. But give a movie-maker an inch, he'll take a mile. John Hughes is a perfect example; his endless cine- matic visions of idealized love-at- the-prom high school life give the words "teenager" and "clich6" a bad name. With their 1978 release, 'Singles - 45's and Under,' Squeeze became mainstays of the college rock scene. The band is enjoying new found success with their new LP, 'Babylon and On.' Sauceze vlav succeeds l By Mark Swartz Squeeze, a squeaky clean British pop squadron, performs tonight at the State Theatre in Detroit. Expert purveyors of Beatle-esque melodies, they combine clever wordplay and a quirky sense of humor to create memorable songs. The album with which most Squeeze fans are familiar is Singles - 45's and Under, a compilation of the group's best work from 1978 to 1982. "Tempted," "Pulling Mussels from a Shell," and "Black Coffee in Bed" are just some of the ditties that captured the hearts and minds of the hip but down-to-earth college crowds. After Singles, the band split up. got back together and made osi Fan Tutti Fruitti, not a total >ss, but not the chartbusting omeback the band hoped for, ither. The next installation in the queeze catalog is Babylon and On. ' return to the straightforward pproach of their early albums, it is finely crafted, slickly produced ackage. The single and video, Hourglass," has received more ttention and airplay than any queeze hit to date. In concert, they peddle the same >rm of pop whimsy found on the records. Songwriters Chris Difford and Glen Tilbrook are the centers of attention, along with English T.V. personality Jools Holland, the key- boardist. Holland has been known to perform a raucous solo piano shoot-em-up to the delight of the audience. 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