whose prevailing spirit is often summed up in the slogan Laissez le bon temps rouler- Let the good times roll.) When a grinning Remy tells the starched lawyer played by Barkin, "Relax, cher, folks got a different way of doin' things down here," it's both a seduction and a rationalization: sure, he's corrupt. Everybody else is, too. "There's a system down there," Quaid says. "Out here in L.A. there's no room for the particular kind of corruption that goes on down there, because here everybody's spread out and you don't know your neighbors. Down there, you're a cop, you go in a restaurant and sit down and you eat for free. And the criminals know where the police hang out, and they don't hit those places." It's all in the family, in other words-an ethic that makes betrayal all the more painful and Remy's transformation all the more powerful. No vanilla, please: "The Big Easy" was al- most a very different movie. Hard as it is to believe for a film with such a strong sense of place, the film was first set in Chicago until director Jim McBride moved it south. "It was originally written as more of a Mafia murder mystery," Quaid says, "and every- body's seen that a hundred times. But New Orleans is pretty much untapped." And the picture almost got made without Quaid, who threatened to quit early on when the producers tried to cut a key sex scene. "They wanted to turn it into a plain-Jane vanilla film," he says with a touch of annoy- ance. "I'm not for sex for sex's sake, but this was a real integral part of the film. These two people who are complete opposites have to have some reason for being togeth- er. You can't just show that happening over dinner." He won. The scene stayed in and accomplishes just what Quaid hoped-it provides the fuel that drives the romantic relationship between the leads. Also, it's real steamy. "The Big Easy" marks the midpoint of a busy year for Quaid. This summer there was the well-received science-fiction come- dy "Innerspace"; in November he'll be seen opposite Cher in "Suspect," playing a Washington lobbyist, and early next year he'll star in a remake of the 1949 detective chiller "D.O.A."" 'Suspect' ended on a Fri- day and I started 'D.O.A.' on Monday. The only reason I did it is because the title is 'D.O.A.' and I was;" he says with a gravelly laugh. "I was burned out. I figured I was in the perfect shape to do it." The last time he was this busy, in fact, was the summer of 1983, a year The Milwaukee Journal pro- claimed "The Year of the Quaid." That was the year of "The Right Stuff," "Dream- scape" and, yes, "Jaws 3D." This time out it's different. Today Quaid is overworked because he wants to be. "I was a fool in my youth," he says mock-seriously, and then laughs again. "But it was a good lesson." BILL BAROL Two Serious Films A pair of fall releases promise a season of quality Now that summer has ended and the parade of noisy, sweaty movies has dwindled away, the time has come for serious films. Two new ones, in particular, explore substantive issues in a thoughtful, unpretentious way-and there isn't a car chase between them. Matewan tells the true story of a small West Virginia coal-mining town, Mate- wan, in 1920 when a union is starting to form. When Joe Kenehan (Chris Coo- per) arrives to help organize, the local coal company has begun to import blacks and re- cent Italian immigrants in an effort to force down wages. But the new men are offended by the exploitative practices of the company and its gun-toting strikebreakers, and Kenehan persuades them to join forces with the locals. The workers are forced to set up camp out- side the company town, and they suffer hardships and har- assment, but Kenehan ral- lies them by speaking simply to their cause: "There ain't but two sides in the world. Them that work. And them that don't. That's all you need to know about the enemy." The workers hang together, even in the face of violence. In "Matewan," director John Sayles ("Return of the Secau- Understate cus Seven," "Lianna," "The Brother From Another Planet," "Baby, It's You") shows that he has the common touch. This may be the film that, at long last, breaks Sayles through to a mass audi- ence. It has all the simple grace and quiet power of the people it portrays and, for that reason, may remind many of John Stein- beck's depiction of migrant workers in "The Grapes of Wrath." The fact that only a few of the actors (James Earl Jones, Bob Gunton) are well known helps give "Matewan" an ensemble quality. The quiet performances by this uniformly excellent cast provide a democratic, understated eloquence. Set at roughly the same time, but in very different times, is Maurice. The film ex- plores the troubled experiences of a gay young man in England in an era when homosexuality was outlawed. It's based on a 1914 E. M. Forster novel which he sup- pressed during his lifetime because of its autobiographical elements. Maurice (James Wilby) comes from the merchant class and, while studying at Cambridge, meets and falls in love with Clive (Hugh Grant), a landed aristocrat. Clive refuses to consummate the relationship, although they continue to see each other, even after Maurice is expelled from the school and Clive marries. Trapped in a society that jails gays, Maurice must come to terms with his sexuality and decide whether he can risk everything to express his love. BOB MARSHAK-VISIONS eloquence: Organizing in 'Matewan' "Maurice" was produced by the team of James Ivory, director, and Ismail Mer- chant, producer, known collectively as Merchant-Ivory, who have made 12 theat- rical features together, scoring a critical and commercial coup with their adapta- tion of another Forster novel, "A Room With a View." As with that film, "Mau- rice" displays lush costumes and settings and an outstanding cast. Wilby and Grant offer beautifully modulated performances, effortlessly moving from the charming Cambridge days to the more tormented later stage of their relationship. The sup- porting players, including Ben Kingsley in a hilarious cameo as a very questionable therapist, are uniformly excellent; togeth- er they provide a rich psychological con- text for the protagonists. "Maurice" is ev- erything good that we've come to expect from British cinema-fiercely literate and finely nuanced. RON GIVENS SEPTEMBER 1987 NEWSWEEK ONCAMPUS 47