Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 22, 1989 True Believer Drama will make one out of you BY TONY SILBER One of the better films of 1987 was Suspect, in which Cher played an unconventional attorney defending a homeless man suspected in the killing of a Washington, D.C. woman. The film, half of which be- came a charged courtroom drama, exposed many social problems of law enforcement cover-ups and far- reaching conspiracies. True Believer is nearly identical to Suspect in the type of story and the outcome, and it works just as effectively. James Woods (Against All Odds, Salvador) plays the basic role Cher played, but with a few twists. He is Greenwich Village lawyer Eddie Dodd, a '60s activist turned contro- versial trial attorney. He is a hero to drug dealers and pimps because he gets them acquitted on revelations of government entrapment and legal technicalities. He calls himself a "crusader for civil liberties." The story in the film involves a new case Eddie has agreed to take: an' eight-year-old murder in which he must prove the innocence of a Ko- rean man (Yuji Okumoto) sent to WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 prison for the killing of a Chinese man in New York's Chinatown. As in Suspect, the evidence against his client is indisputable on the surface, and Eddie must persevere over the many legal and physical obstacles put in his way by those who want to keep the case closed. He must over- come a group of neo-nazis, a vicious and calculating district attorney, and a group of ex-convicts who operate a plumbing supply shop, among oth- ers. The pacing of the film is thus very quick and thoroughly enticing. Woods unquestionably makes the film work. His energetic zeal and passion for role playing shine through in this most recent perfor- mance. But great portrayals are nothing new for Woods. He has al- ways been a favorite of critics, and a few years ago he received a nomina- tion for Best Actor for his role in Salvador. Robert Downey, Jr. (Weird Science, Less Than Zero) has escaped somewhat from his brat pack past and turns in a competent portrayal as Dodd's assistant, Uni- versity graduate Roger Baron. Director Joseph Ruben (The- Stepfather) is a real life University graduate, and he brings to True Be- liever an action-drama-thriller lead- ership and a cunning sense of story construction. The film emerges as an exciting, thoughtful, sharp-witted suspense yarn which culminates in an excellent trial sequence, denounc- ing traditional courtroom endings and offering instead a provocative Trial attorney Eddie Dodd (James Woods, left) seeks to get client Shu Kai Kim (Yuji Okumoto, right) on the other side of these bars in the courtroom drama True Believer. Human, geometric featured in exhibit BY JOHN KIPFMUELLER TWO Michigan artists, painter Peter Gooch and sculptor Robert Wil- helm, challenge the notions of "abstract" and "realistic" in a small but in, teresting show at Gallery One One Eight. Both artists offer works that are immediately recognizable as abstrac tions of realistic objects. Wilhelm's sculptures are fiberglass and lead constructions, averaging three feet in length. Given titles such as "Torso," or "Appendage," they are representations of human limbs "Appendage" is competely covered with small strips of pounded lead that are soldered together like a repaired airplane wing. This work creates im- ages of broken, but repaired technology, and at the same time it creates a feeling for the human form. In contrast, Wilhelm's work "Emerging" is a more organic sculpture, created by combining a painted fiberglass egg shape with a leaded shoulder-like form that emerges from the fiberglass. This sculpture, with' its green, blue and red painted fiberglass and pieced lead surface, creates a feeling reminiscent of science-fiction horror films. It seems both alive and threatening; we see the lead section of the sculpture as familiar, and yet the fiberglass bulb appears alien. Gooch's works are based not on the human form, but, in the words of the artist, "on a geometry reminiscent of paving tiles..." "Blue Tile," ond of the more colorful paintings, looks like someone took blue and olive paint to rectangular floor tiles. He creates sharp edges between the olive and blue by surrounding each olive tile with a yellow space, and each blue tile with a ox-blood space. The olive tiles make up the edges of the paper, while the blue tiles form the core of the painting. The viewer alsd becomes aware of the textures in the work; it is acrylic on paper, and a great part of the rough paper is visible. The paint is unevenly applied in places. In "Dancing Backwards," Gooch again relies upon a tile motif, using tans and browns to create a stone-like surface on the canvas. The edges area much less defined in this work, and the tiles and stone merge into eachi other without effort. This blending technique is aided by a few well placed splashes of red that draw the eye to the center of the canvas, where the textures meet. Are Wilhelm's sculptures machines, limbs or organic fiberglass shapes? Are Gooch's paintings images of tiles, stone or simply paint? Regardless of how one choses to look at the works, an exploration of all, of the options makes the works more enjoyable. The exhibit runs through February 24 at Gallery One One Eight, located at 118 North Fourth Avenue. d4 V. ii 'I A 0' and realistic conclusion for the pic- ture. One thing True Believer does not suffer from is predictability. Through the work of leading man Woods and director Ruben, the story is provided with a generous supply j7 X)VXAY'\AXXXY XA'X at~AXX X )X XXX IA)AWAWAW~ AW~f lX Y , PLASMA DONORS $Earnextra cash $, Earn $20 on your first donation. You can earn up to $120 a month. Couples can earn up to t'5Y3 i" ' $240. Repeat donors who have not donated in 4 the last 30 days receive an additional $5 bonus - --""a for return visit. - M .ichiigan YPSILANTI PLASMA CENTER c ..:, 813 W. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti MlLES Monday thru Friday 8:00am-4:00pm cal Plasma donors are people helping people 4 today 67 of cliffhangers, action sequences, and a dramatic atmosphere of gripping uncertainty. As Dodd, Woods' frus- tration with the case and hungering drive for new information consumes his character and brings him to the brink of tragedy, but he is saved by his own twisted brilliance and faith in justice. True Believer serves up a winning combination of a great story and great acting and becomes the next success story in the new Suspect genre. TRUE BELIEVER is now showing at Showcase Cinemas and State Theater in Ann Arbor. '1 i TAs/SAs YOUR CONTRACT EXPIRES IN ONE WEEK We must decide what we will do. We must make contingency plans in the event that contract issues are not resolved. COME TO THE GEO MEMBERSHIP MEETING. YOUR ATTENDANCE IS VITAL. 'The Cicago az ette }w NO.22 FEBRUARY 16, 1929 10CENTS BILLY FLYNN TO DEFEND ROXIE HART Billy Flynn, defender items was held at the top bid of $200. The of Chicago's loveliest Rivera Nightclub last evening netted over lawbreakers, an- night. Eager fans $3000. nounced today that he rioted outside the Roxie Hart is would represent nightclub screaming, being held at Cook Roxie Hart. Mrs. Hart "Roxie Rocks!" County Jail awaiting confessed to fatally For our read- her trial. shooting her lover, ers who missed the Fred Casely, during a big event, Roxie's AUCTION quarrel on Valentine's tube of Roaring Red IT'S HAPPENING HELD TO Day. lipstick sold for $50, I H C G RAISE MONEY Topay the her fishnet stockings estimated $5000 in went for a whopping at the Power Center,' FOR ROXIE'S legal fees, an auction $100, and her lacy March 23-26 DEFENSE! of Roxie's personal lingerie captured the 4. 11 .4 raiFAN 1MAMiV"f I" X. 1 19