Arts The Michigan Daily Saturday, July 10, 1982 Page 7 Pacino stars in shallow 'Author!' By Chris Case O NE MIGHT dwell upon the similarities between Author! Author! and Shoot the Moon. I won't. They are obvious. Both movies are about writers. Both writers have disin- tegrating marriages and a brood of kids that say witty things which they are not supposed to know how to say. But there are also notable differen- ces. The characters in the two movies are clearly distinct from each other. Moon portrays a loving mother and an angry father, Author! a loving father and a cold-hearted mother. Tones are different. Moon is melodramatic, Author! is not. Moon explores a relationship, Author! glorifies a character. Yet in spite of the differences, there is still the one overriding, all-important similarity: like Shoot the Moon, Author! Author! is not a good movie: It is cute and gimmicky and will oc- casionally make you laugh. But it does not make it as a comedy and it certainly does not make it as a serious movie. What's chiefly annoying about Author! is its milieu. The movie, con- cerns itself with the tribulations and joys of a successful New York playwright, Ivan Trevalian, played by Al Pacino. Trevalian is somewhat wealthy and supposedly brilliant. His wife teaches at a local university. The kids are quirky, loveable, aware beyond their ages. Everything else fits right in. Pacino dresses his part and has all the right accoutrements of the New York Artist: The collar of his sportscoat (acciden- tally) turned up, the coastal intellectual eyeglasses, the improperly tied tie. Here is a forty-three year old man. who is intelligent enough to be a renowned playwright and yet by his own admittance he still can not tie his own tie. Do you believe this and think that it's cute? You're supposed to. This is precisely the kind of substitute for real characterization that Author! leans too heavily upon. And in a movie with no thrills and no violence and very little sex, a movie ob- sessed with the antics and family life of a New York Artist, that kind of charac- terization is a fatal flaw. Author! gets under no one's skin. It exposes nothing. Dialogue leads not to emotion, understanding, or mystery, but only to paltry witticisms. "Are you getting a divorce?" asks Ivan's son. "Why?" asks Ivan. "Because the last time you asked me if I'd seen my mother and let me get another pretzel, you got a divorce." "Really?" There is virtually no substance to this movie, nothing to hold on to or come away with. There is no fascination, whether visual or intellectual, not one moment of intensity. As a serious movie it is altruistic and bogus. As a comedy it is good for a few short laughs. The movie is directed by Arthur Hiller, written by Israel Horovitz. Writing is the root of all trouble. Author! simply is not much of a story, and there is not enough in the dialogue to make up for this lack. The various kids' witty remarks are occasionally char- ming but reek of the conscious effort to -u- THE(MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD [ 1-94 & S. STATE (Ad jcent to JC. Penny) be unusual and mildly shocking. could be. "Your play is "brilliant," Dialogue between Ivan and his wife says Alice to Ivan. Naturally, she wants (Tuesday Weld) is fruitless and only to sleep with him. confirms what we know about her from Entire scenes seem to occur only to the beginning: that she is an unfeeling break the vapid lengthiness of this bitch. Dialogue between Ivan and his movie. When the police come to take actress girlfriend (Dyan Cannon) is away two of Ivan's step-daughters and histrionic the way only dialogue bet- return them against their wills to their ween two glorified artists in a movie See DIALOGUE, Page 10 I fht before your eyes and 11:45 Ct jjf( o 700 -3615 10:00 MIDNITES 12 0STARTREK 1112:00 g:adyou0 BLADE RUNNER-12:00 came9:30ROCKY HORROR 12:00