ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, September 25, 1990 'he problem with reality Page 5 GoodFellas dir. Martin Scorsese by Mike Kunlavsky ahn the '70s my family and I lived in Italy for a while and were protected by the Mafia. As a child it never occurred to me that the guys that hung around wearing dark suits teaching my mother how to swear in Italian and who gave us a switch- blade as a going away present prob- ably offed some of their counter- parts in rival Sicilian families. So it as never a really big, scary thing or me to see Mafia in the pictures, I always had a very favorable atti- tude towards them: they were just arch-capitalists, doing what capital- ists always did. When I finally did realize who those guys were, it still did not faze me much; all the glorification (or maybe just attention) in films and in the media gave me an attitude of "so hat, if the CIA can make random eple around the world disappear at least with the Mafia the disappear- ances aren't so random; ultimately it's all in The Family." Apparently, Martin Scorsese had a similar expe- rience growing up in New York be- cause his portrayal of gangsters in GoodFellas presents them not as Don Corleone, but as Archie Bunker: everyday guys doing what they have to in order to survive. This makes the film, the whole purpose of which was to portray gangsters as realistically as possible, more like a docudrama than a fiction film. Scorsese, who has made sev- eral excellent documentaries in his career, even puts Henny Youngman and Jerry Vale on stage as them- selves and casts his Italian-American mother as an Italian-American mother. Furthermore, the story (by Nicholas Pileggi, author of Wiseguy, the book the film was based on) is very much grounded in reality: it's true. Naturally, then, the film a believable tale, but unfortu- nately all of this realism also dooms it to an inherently hollow existence., One is left with a "so what?" feeling afterward. Fortunately, Scorsese is a con- summate professional, so the ride that the film takes is well-done and never slow, but when Sid Vicious sings "My Way" at the closing cred- its - implying that the Mafia is not at all as in-tune as Frank Sinatra would have you think - there's still a big hole left where a message should be. Not to say that the film is not entertaining; the performances of Joe Pesci as the livewire Tommy De- Vito and Ray Liotta as the lead are great and there's lots of action and tension, but, whereas there was a "lesson" of sorts to be learned from Raging Bull,Taxi Driver and The Color of Money, here you're sort-of left with the same feeling as after having seen a documentary about sea otters: "gosh, that's interesting, when're The Simpsons on?" I sometimes wonder what those guys that protected my family 15 years ago are doing today, whether they did something dumb and got cement galoshes, whether they're retired and raising grapes outside of Palermo, or whether they moved to America and are living in Pitts- burgh. I hope they're ok; after all, I do still have the switchblade. If you haven't lived the life of certain film reviewers, you might find GoodFellas somewhat scary and these men are the reasons why. GOODFELLAS is playing Briarwood and Showcase. at Theater review O'Neill explores family life by Mike Kolodlv ..y " wnv tVmMM1 G uaranteed to inspire emotion running the gamut from the most obnoxiously loud guffaw to the most sentimental snicker, Ann Ar- bor Civic Theater's spirited produc- tion of Eugene O'Neill's A h , Wilderness is comic theater at its down-to-earth best. Students, profes- ors, clergymen, construction work- ers, metal-lathe operators - people from all walks of life - were urged to attend in order to avoid missing a truly worthwhile performance. The audience is privy to the lives of the Miller family, circa 1900 - a relatively wholesome group that is astonishingly real on stage. They neither venture into the turf of ssly exaggerated anti-families like he Simpsons, nor do they become plastically wholesome like the Cos- bys. Instead, they strike a perfect middle ground that, as you watch, you find yourself looking into a mir- ror image of your own ideal family relationships. The king and queen of the Miller family, Nat and Essie, are the per- fectly-cast pair that cheerfully run he household. On what begins as a run-of-the-mill Fourth of July, Nat keeps a watch over the typical gath- ering of aunts, uncles, cousins, and kids. His sister Lily has been long torn between her good sense, and her heartfelt love for Nat's brother-in- law Sid. In a running conflict, Lily tries as hard as she can to reform Sid's wild ways, while, at the same time, Sid determinedly plots to marry her. Nat's son Richard, how- ever, steals the show, with an excel- lent, very palpable performance by budding thespian Ian Lawler. This young lad teeters painfully on the precipice of adulthood, at the openly raw age of 16. When Essie finds scandalous read- ing material in the boy's room - seemingly tame love poetry by to- day's standards - and forces Nat to impose censorship, Richard tries out his newly acquired independence with an invigorating idealism that is as hilarious as it is realistic. Next thing he knows, he's in a very adult situa- tion with a wanton woman, that nothing in his experience has ever prepared him for. This combination of naivete, and determination that characterize Richard serve to drive the plot at a funny, break-neck pace. The cast is an excellent, very down-home group that you feel - and want - to talk to at the end of the performance. This is one of those productions that keep you glued to the action, always wanting to know what will happen next, and then sends you home with a warm, romantic kind of sentimental feeling that is often sought for, but rarely achieved. "I think [the play] is really reflec- tive of many families at the turn of the century," says director Susan Bellinson. It occupies a unique niche in O'Neill's work, as it really isn't thematically like anything else that he wrote. The bleakness of his Long Days Journey Into Night -era plays, nor his earlier, more experimental impressionistic period, aren't really illustrated here at all. What does come through are the subtle turns of plot, deft placement of complica- tions, and deep insight, that made him so famous. Ah, Wilderness, is a piece of drama that clutches at the heart. "I'd recommend this play to anyone, of any age," adds Bellinson, "It provides a nice perspective, illus- trating multiple vantage points on family life from characters of all dif- ferent ages." After Hours dir. Martin Scorsese After rushing to see director Mar- tin Scorsese's new film GoodFellas, take a look at one of this brilliant filmmaker's lesser known films. After Hours, like so many of Scorsese's films, uses the surreal underworld of New York City as its backdrop. This time, the avant-garde streets of Soho serve as the location for this nightmarish look at the City after dark. One evening, a run-of-the-mill computer programmer named Paul Hackett, played to perfection by Griffin Dunne, meets a friendly, but somewhat odd, woman in a coffee shop. Paul and Marcy (Rosanna Ar- quette) exchange phone numbers and say a quick good-bye - yet for Paul, this represents not an ending, but the beginning of a night of bizarre encounters. Later that night, Paul, tired of watching mindless shows on cable television, gives Marcy a call. She invites him down to her loft in Soho. Beginning with a hysterically funny cab ride, Paul embarks on what will become the scariest night of his life. Scorsese brings the often unseen parts of New York to life. Although his dark vision often ex=. aggerates the truth, it is especially effective because its based on reality. One of the inhabitants of this surreal jungle is a quirky waitress; played by Teri Garr, who falls irn See VIDEO, Page 7 DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES Center for AfroAmerican Studies Dr. Darnell F. Hawkins University of Illinois- Chicago Newspaper Coverage of Homicides: Who Makes the Headlines? Tuesday, September 25, 4-6PM CAAS Library Conference Room 200 West Engineering Room 214 Reception immediately following Sponsors: Center for AfroAmecan and African Studies College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Office of the Vice-President for Academic Affairs AH, WILDERNESS plays Sept. 27- 29 and Oct. 4-6 at 8 p.m. at the Ann Arbor Civic Theater, 1035 S. Main. We're Banking on your Career Success. e are Manufacturers National Corporation, a major Detroit-based regional bank holding company with over 6,000 employes and assets of $10.9 billion. Our corporation provides a wide variety of financial services to customers worldwide through the corporation's banking and subsidiary offices. Representatives of Manufacturers National Bank of Detroit (our principal subsidiary) will be conducting campus interviews for career opportunities within the Metro Detroit area at University of Michigan - LSA on Wednesday, October 17, 1990. We will seek individuals who have a Bachelors degree in a business related field. We offer a wide variety of exciting and challenging career opportunities for: " Corporate Trust Analysts in our Trust Department " Credit Analysts in our Commercial Lending Area " Branch Management Trainees in our Retail Services Department Explore career possibilities with us. Contact your placement office to arrange an on-campus interview. to