The Michigan Daily- Monday, December 11, 1989 - Page 11 The princess and the improper She-Devil dir. Susan Seidelman BY MIKE KUNIAVSKY Some movies with a serious message are funny. Some funny films make a serious statement. Susan Seidelman's (Desperately Seeking Susan, Making Mr. Right, Cookie) new film, She-Devil, promises to be one of the latter, but ends up being a not-so-funny film with a not-so-profound message. The idea for the film is great: take two women, one a symbol of "normal" America asserting herself in the world of beautiful people and the other an icon of de- tached snobbishness, then put their value systems on a -scale and see who wins. These two leads are played by Roseanne Barr and Meryl Streep, and guess who plays which role? Hyped as "the cat-fight film of the season," the film is so regrettably confused as to what it should concen- trate on - the comedy or the message - that it never gets either one of these across very well. This is the story of the rebellion of an ugly, everyday, "unwanted" housewife (Barr) against the society that has made her so, via the destruction of her sneaky, philandering yup- pie husband (Ed Begley, Jr.) and his mistress (Streep), an exaggerated embodiment of traditional "feminine" values who writes romance novels based on personal experience. Something must have gone wrong in the transition from the book (The Lives and Loves of a She-Devil by Fay Weldon) to the screen, with much of 4he plot and much of any message lost in favor of a series of situational jokes and a story about revenge. The screenwriters (the same team that made the much more successful Married to the Mob) have chosen to concentrate on the ways of Barr's rebellion rather than the reasons for them. And although they put in a lot of good humor (don't get me wrong, this is a funny movie) the filmmakers didn't go the extra step and have the humor mean something. Added to this is the surprisingly bad performance of Streep in her first comedy. Maybe it's all of those Kramer vs. Kramer's and Ironweed's, but she just doesn't have an idea of what a comedic actor should act like. She overextends and overplays the part so much that we never see any part with which we can relate or find funny. Barr, on the other hand, is appropriately deadpan in her wooden role, making her rather ruthless character simultaneously likeable and understandable. Many of the good things about the film lie in its di- rection: the colors, the costumes and the sets provide a very solid base for the action, and it's fun to watch Streep's pink world melt away into blacks and whites as Barr's black and blue life gets pinker and pinker. But it is this superficial concentration on what is in the frame, rather than what takes place on screen, that gives the film its choppiness and confusion. It seems that Sei- delman gave in wholeheartedly to "form over content," often leaving plot ends hanging while showing another good-looking shot of Streep in pink. All in all, though, the film's bad points - no mat- ter how little they fulfill some "ideological agenda" - are generally overshadowed by its chief good point, that it's a funny light comedy and a good vehicle for Barr's emancipation. SHE-DEVIL is playing at Showcase Cinemas and Bri- arwood. Ruth (Roseanne Barr) has reason to look distressed: her husband Bob (Ed Begley, Jr.) is involved with a glamorous writer of romance novels. Barr, though, must be smiling inside, since she's managed to out-act Streep in She-Devil. I D0 INFORMATION MEETING FOR: 1989-90 Study Abroad Programs FLORENCE, ITALY (Spring, Summer, & Academic Year) Monday, December 11th Auditorium 3 -MLB -7-9pm For more information, contact The Office of International Programs n . -r is,. , Wadna!~ddyj thou 5dhirdd P M ai tO5lI. Of CGra& rLm~A dovMrtovn Cr~rn arbor I I O'Sullivan' s Eatery & Pub presents... ollures All You Can Eat Chicken! (,nd all the fixin's, too!) Si idays OnlV Includes chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, dinner rolls, and fresh vegetable of the clay. $4.50 per person (additional charge for all white) /i And Everyday... 8 oz. New York Strip with salad, bread, -and potatoe only $6.75. ' i (Steak r~'oiai1 v'ailil 71 nTTA 1 1Cri .i i