ARTS Page 10 Tuesday, July 12, 1983 The Michigan Daily 'Psycho II' makes insanity fun I By Bob Learner T HE LATEST feat of modern psy- chology is the rehabilitation of Norman Bates. I wouldn't have thought it possible, but Norman is as sane as the next person now, and has come home in the sequel to Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho. Psycho II will never become a classic as has its predecessor, but as directed by Richard Franklin and writ- ten by Tom Holland, the movie is fun and scary in its own right. Psycho II begins with Norman's homecoming. The trip up to and through the house is filled with memories for both Norman and us. As Norman goes up the staircase and checks the rooms, he is understandably nervous - after all, this house was the setting for his insanity. Under the telephone he finds a threatening note that is signed by his mother, who has been dead for 20 years. It's just a prank, says his psychiatrist. At his job in a nearby diner, Norman meets Mary, a pretty young waitress played by Meg Tilly. She needs a place to live, and Norman offers her a room mZ INDIIUA ATRESJ $2.00 Daily-shows before 6:00 4 GREAT DIRECTORS: Steven Joe George John Spieberg " Dante 0 Miller " Landis in his house. Mary accepts - obviously she never saw Psycho - and a close, platonic relationship develops. For about the first 15 minutes, things seem to be going well for Norman in this, his second chance at life. Then he gets another note from his mother, and he catches a glimpse of her in her bedroom window. More notes and glimpses follow, and it becomes clear that someone is trying to drive Norman insane. This someone begins to succeed as Norman starts thinking that his mother may still be alive. This is as much of the plot as will be revealed because Psycho II, unlike Psycho, is a mystery as well as a thriller. Suffice it to say that the mur- ders soon begin, but we know that Nor- man is not the killer. An important aspect of Psycho, and all Hitchcock films, was camera technique. Franklin effectively mimics many of Hitchcock's camera angles and movements within the house, and these copies serve to recall the first film in our memories. As an example, we see the mother's room exactly as it was from exactly the same angle. The entire history of the room is instantly More explicitly than in the first film, Norman Bates is a victim in Psycho II. As sympathetically played by Anthony Perkins, Norman is a person who is not allowed to escape his past. As the notes and glimpses start to take effect on him, Norman begins to lose his grip on sanity. Perkins modulates this move away from sanity well, and carries the film as Norman. It is near the film's end that a major problem surfaces. Holland gets a little too clever, and plots himself into a cor- ner. The gimmick he uses to resolve the film is unsatisfying, and as a con- sequence the final scenes don't have the intensity they should. This is par- ticularly disappointing because what had come before was so entertaining. Psycho II substitutes the undertones of guilt and repression in Hitchcock's Psycho for a campy sense of humor. The movie never takes itself too seriously, and wisely so. Franklin shows good sense in not trying to outdo Hitchcock. His aim was to make a good sequel to a classic, and he has done so. The Bates Hotel has been brought back into business by good hands. 4 you can't go home Anthony Perkins: again. I restored in our minds, and Franklin is now free to build on this history without having to retell it. It is a tribute to Hit- chcock that one shot of a room can bring back so much. 'Superman III' comes in last By Joshua Bilmes I DAILY-(PG) 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 Hes hot on efok. BURT REYNOLDS is DAILY- (PG) 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS A ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 F OR A SEQUEL TO succeed, it has to do one of two things: it has to outdo its predecessors, or it has to be totally con- sistent with its predecessors, with no element being much better or much worse. The Star Wars films, with their ever improving special effects, are an example of the former. The Bond series is an example of the latter. Superman III is an example of neither. While some parts of the film are equal to parts of Superman, the Movie or Superman II, nothing is better, and some things are a whole lot worse. The plot itself has some potential with Richard Pryor playing a loser "kitchen technician" (read dishwasher). Pryor is employed as a computer program- mer for a huge conglomerate by Robert Vaughan. These two team up against Superman and eventually ex- pose him to a dose of kryptonite. It fails to kill Superman, but it does make him start to act evil, leading to a conflict between the evilly inclinated Superman and the good guy Clark Kent. Both are played quite nicely by Christopher Reeve. All this does not sound too bad, and it is in fact quite nice in comic book adap- BOB DASCOLA and staff South U & East U are now af DASCOLA STYLISTS 668-9329 opposite Jacobsons I yor fly, but not too high, in 'Superman.' certainly the equal of Hackman's lair beneath Grand Central. But it is there that the good news en- ds. For while Gene Hackman had ex- cellent backing from Ned Beatty and Valerie Perrine, Vaughn's cohorts, An- nie Ross as his sister and Pamela Stephenson as his mistress, are rather awful, Stephenson especially. Why anyone would want such a whiner as a mistress... The film's action and effects both fall See PSYCHOTIC, Page 11 I Christopher Reeve and Richard Pry tation form. But as a movie, it is a dud. The light comic touches and the villainy are the things which come closest to the first two films. The scenes involving the Daily Planet, and especially Jackie Cooper's Perry White, are the film's highlights. Annette O'Toole's Lana Lang is almost as good a love interest as Lois Lane, who spends most of the film off screen in Bermuda. And of course, Richard Pryor is superbly en- tertaining. Robert Vaughn is Gene Hackman's equal, and his penthouse is 4