w V V V w lV. MUSIC FILM Shoot' starts great, falls off Mega-morbid vinyl spins T Bi oreign Film Selection ALL FILMS $2.87 EVERY MON. & WED. ? for 1 Films VCR Rental + 1 Free Film only $7.99 Megadeth So Far, So Good.... So What? Capitol Records- Did you ever have one of those days when any music you listened to just didn't cut it? The latest Huey/Bruce/Madonna/Prince release doesn't turn you on? And the latest variation-permutation o f Smiths/Cure/Echo Brit-pop doesn't get you off? You know, one of those days when you say, "I want to kill something." Well, here's the perfect soundtrack for those days: Mega- deth's newest, So Far, So Good.... So What? There's plenty of the same stuff that put Megadeth on the top of the speedmetal heap: death, awesome musical technique, death, speed-of- light guitar solos, death, crushing rhythms, and more death. No false advertising here; there's plenty of death in these grooves, whether stated in the lyrics or implied in the music. The music is even tighter and more complex than on their last Megadeth's lyrics deal with death, death, and death. album, Peace Sells... But Who's Buying? New band members Jeff Young (on guitar) and Chuck Behler (on drums) bring a more professional attitude and musical ability to the group. Dave Mustaine has stripped the humor from his lyrics, leaving a cover of "Anarchy In The UK" (with Steve Jones adding guitar) as the only ray of sunshine. And if you're familiar with the song (you ought to be), you know it's no cheerful pop tune. This album should keep Megadeth atop and ahead of the metal scene, See, MUSIC, Page 13 By John Shea Shoot to Kill has a great title. It grabs you by collar and shakes you. Its very harshness and violence suggests an urgency that demands attention. It demands we come to the front of our seats. And that's exactlyiwhere we are for the first ten minutes of the picture. Pan of the Week We're there because director Roger Spottiswoode has put together a taut, suspense-filled opening sequence executed in rapid-fire fashion. Sidney Poitier stars as Warren Stantin, an FBI agent whose investigation of a robbery leads him to a suburban home and a confrontation with a cold-blooded murderer. Despite having the house surrounded by S.W.A.T trucks, Stantin is forced to negotiate with the murderer because the murderer has hostages. If Stantin doesn't back off, the hostages will die. But the killer does slip through the S.W.A.T team's blanket and runs off to the mountains. Stantin dog- gedly pursues. What follows is a 90 minute chase scene through the mountains of the Pacific Northwest. Stantin wants the killer bad, but he isn't on familiar turf; he's the city boy who doesn't know the front end of a horse from the back. So he has to enlist the aid of expert trail guide Jonathon Knox (Tom Berenger, Platoon) to help him through the mountains. Knox takes an immediate disliking to Stantin, but he, too, wants the killer since the killer has taken his expert- trail-guide girlfriend Kirstie Alley hostage. So the two men are forced to work together. The tease of the opening sequence - that there might be some satisfying suspense ahead - quickly goes up in smoke. Screenwriter Daniel Petrie seems content with the conventional. He builds the story around a chase scene we've seen a million times and gives us flat, uninspired characters. The explosive chemistry the film relies on between Poitier and Berenger never comes off because Berenger's lines come mostly in grunts (if it means anything, he grunts well). Petrie's script also has a distinct Swiss cheese quality to it. For instance, how can you explain the FBI sending only Poitier, 50 year- old Poitier, out into the mountains to pursue a spry killer half his age? And what about the killer's saying he needs Alley only until he gets to the Canadian border, and then holds on her well after he gets there? And after spending the whole time building up the suspense - will our two heroes get to the killer before he makes it out of the mountains? - where does the climax take place? On a boat. Go figure. What it boils down to is this: Shoot to Kill is Poitier's film, and Poitier returns to screen. ORIGINAL DEEP DISI WITH 2 ITE * Voted Best F * "The Michigan Daily' MAIN N CAMPUS CA 665-6005 99 .....- .-.- ........ it marks his return to the screen after a ten year absence. As always, See SHOOT, Page 6 -.- .Iw~~www~ A The I-BM Personal System/2 is here. There are four IBM® Personal System/2'" computers: Models 30, 50, 60 and 80, with advanced design and function, ¢- and built not merely for speed but for well-balanced performance. 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