4 ARTS Page 8 Tuesday, May 10, 1983 The Michiaan Daily Scorsese' Sraging 'Comedy' i 4 By Richard Campbell ARTIN SCORSESE'S films, Taxi Driver, New York New York, Raging Bull, have deserved and received much critical analysis. They are detailed, emotional movies that contain some of the most witty and ingeneous use of cinema in recent American films. King of Comedy seems to have scare away critics and audiences alike People who normally appreciate Sco sese for his style seem taken back b this comedy. Critics have called th work unsettling and nervous. But rather than being a dark an disturbing romp through the foiblesc fame and fortune, King of Comedyi simply a lightweight exercise i American humor. There are n brooding, interior monologues o emotionally masochistic personalitie in the film, only caricatures of the rea world played out ina realistic setting. Robert DeNiro, playing the boorish amateur comedian Rupert Pupkin doesn't get to hide behind the actin tricks that helped earlier roles. H doesn't get to weara mohawk, play th saxophone, or gain 40 pounds. H doesn't seem as involved in the rol because the role doesn't demand i Pupkin doesn't do too much thinking he's not the most complex individua you'll ever meet. The only thing Pupki wants is to be famous, even though h has demonstrated little talent a comedy and lots at belligerence. Standing outside the exit to the lat night TV talk-show "The' Jerr Langford Show," Pupkin banters wit other autograph hounds and fanatics When Masha, his sometime associate i signature hunting, gets into the bac seat of Langford's limosuine, Pupki helps kick her out, thus getting into th car himself. Pupkin's adventure in the land o fame begins as he begs Langford to giv him a break on his show, then follow up on the imagined offer from Langfor by badgering the talk-show host' secretary and barging into Langford' country estate. Suddenly, Langfor meets with Pupkin at Sardi's an beseeches Pupkin to take over the shov for six weeks. But as you hear Pupkin' d e. r- y e d of is n o r es al h, 1, g e e e le t. 91 al n e it e- y h 4 4 Sandra Bernhard ... Queen for a day Jerry Lewis yuks it up with Robert DeNiro in a scene from Martin Scorsese's 'King of Comedy.' Dance Theatre Studio 711 N. University (near State St.) Ann Arbor Separate classes for: adults: ballet, modern, jazz children: ballet s. mother scream in the background, you n realize that it's just a daydream you're k watching. DeNiro gives Pupkin a n superficial, one-dimensional character e 'cause that's what Pupkin is. He doesn't demand of his mirror reflection, "Are A you talking to me?" as in Taxi Driver- e he talks to cardboard cutouts of Liza s Minelli on a mock-up Langford show set d and says, "You look terrific, Liza." s As the beleagured Langford, Jerry s Lewis shows us that his talents are d definitely higher than the direction of d his endlessly humorless comedies in- w dicates. On the annual telethon that s Lewis hosts, you get to see a more arrogant, head-strong, and, dare I say, more mature person. Langford acts a lot like that, self-confidant and pom- pous, a little too sure of his fragile life. Scorsese fleshes out his characters only a little, letting Langford stare at silent TV sets in his antiseptic apar- tment and showing Masha's over- decorated but incredibly rich apar- tment. But Scorsese is careful not to let you get too involved in characters that are designed to be exaggerations of reality. The movie gets its biggest laughs in the scenes where the stereotypes confront the real world. When Pupkin invades Langford's home, the argumient between the two is acted and scripted realistically, but everyone in the scene is completely unreal. Pupkin's final act of insanity, the kidnapping of Langford in order to get on Langford's show, ends predictably enough, but remains ambiguous, Is his ultimate success real or just another fantasy? And that's just about all Scor- sese has to say about fame in America., His message isn't particularly im- pressive, and neither is his film. But it's not meant to be as devastating an ex- perience as Raging Bull. Scorsese's vision of America is optimistic but cynical. King of Comedy is lightweight fun, entertaining and full of bizarre people fighting their way to the top. Whatever that is. 4 4 _ ; New classes begin May 16. For current class schedule and more information: 995-4242 1-5 weekdays ANN A IBOR INDIVIDUAL THEATRE $1.50 TUESDAY ALL DAY ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE BEST FOREIGN FILM BERTRAND TAVERNIER'S ENDSICOUP SN0DE1TORCHON TUES-5:15, 7:30, 9:45 WED-12:45, 3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL AWARD WINNER "a... mong it's pleasures is Jeremy Irons darkly funny performance"-Newsweek TUES-5:20, 7:15, 9:20 WED-1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:15, 9:20 4 I