Page 16 -T he Michigan Daily - Friday, July 20, 1984 'Last Starfighter' bits a tailspin By Byron L. Bull T HE LAST Starfighter is a modestly budgeted, rather tacky looking, heavily derivative space opera with a distinctly homemade flavor to it. It doesn't steal elements from films like Star Wars, Close Encounters, and Wargames as much as it innocently copies them. If the format had been 8mm and the sets cardboard, this would be the quintessential 14-year-old fan's movie. The premise is the now formulaic test of heroism, concerning a gifted young warrior and his aged mentor. Lance Guest (about six years too old for the part) plays Alex Rogan, the high school dreamer faced with the prospect of spending the rest of his life in his lower- middle class trailer park surrounding because his college loan just fell through. Little does he realize that the park video game on which he distracts himself is actually a high-tech Ex- calibur-in-a-stone set on Earth by an alien race. When Alex sets the record score, he unknowningly sends a signal back across space to the machines owners. In a short time an emisarry in human form named Centurri (Robert Preston looking more portly since The Music Man) arrives in his sportscar/space shuttle, and whisks Alex away, leaving an android double of the boy, behind. Centauri takes him to the edge of the galaxy, where a race of baldheaded imps is desperately trying to forestall an invasion by a fleet of melted-face villains. At first Alex balks. Later, though, af- ANN ARBOR J 2 IDIVIUALTHEATRES 1:00 P.M. SHOWS $2.00 SENIORS EVERY EVEN $3.00 FRI. " SAT. " TUES. 11:45 PM SHOW M ZMOVi?Ovo SECt11E - FR. 1:00, 7:10, 9:20, 11:45 P.M. SAT. 110, 310, 525, 710,920, 1145PM JAMES STEWART DORIS DAY IN ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH M i ter surp his the I the into test part who TI thicl volu tion thro gral spa( sign and like tele' -gen rem wha brus Di is th thril rn; Centauri (Alex Preston) recruits young Alex (Lance Guest) to serve in the fight to defend the universe from the bad guys -in "The Last Starfighter,' the unexciting new space epic. all of the other pilots are killed in a or intimidated to mortification by it, heavily imitating Steven Spielberl prise raid, and when he considers because the actors are continually style. The trailer park scenes in fa only other future is guzzling beer in swallowed by the scenery. He doesn't are shot with camera set ups a back of a pick up truck, he takes up even make a feeble attempt at letting lighting effects that amount to a visa challenge. He's out-fitted, stuffed the actors flesh out their roles, to him tracing of Vilmos Zsigmound's work the sole remaining fighter (an un- they're just part of the trappings. Lan- Close Encounters. There are ev ed prototype) and teamed with a ce Guest is too blandly handsome and repeated shots of the country landsca icularly gung-ho lizard co-pilot, athletic for his role. Alex Rogan, the under starry skies with a meteor 's fond of wisecracking. day dreaming video-whiz needs a ching across, which is becoming t he George Lucas influences are so slightly nerdy portrayal like the one equivalent of a Spielberg cameo. Cas k here one could catalogue them in with which Matthew Broderick has the mechanics down to a tee, but Lmes. Every aspect of the produc- enlivened Wargames. doesn't have the sensitivity to breatl from the set and prop design For an adventure, there is no sense of life into the scenery, and make it ugh the multifarious animated pacing and no feeling of suspense here. magical. The movie lacks the tone it phics to the choreography of the Despite the onslaught of pyrotechnics badly imitates. ce battles reads like a forged and thunderous sound effects, all of the ature - only everything is so cheap action is low key. The story takes too To it's credit, The Last Starfight unfinished looking that they look long to get going, and is continually does try to have fun with itself. Ba leftovers from an old Irwin Allen diverted by the disposable subplot of oneliners and high camp abound, b vision series. Even the computer Alex's earthside double fending off his with the exception of one fine, tw erated effects, although they are promiscuous girlfriend and a horde of second reference to Dr. Strangelov arkable to those who are aware of alien assassins. When the climatic bat- they all produce loud groans. I give t they are, end up with a grimy air- tle comes, Alex disposes of his foes with credit for steering clear of the sortc hed look like bad miniature work. such perfunctory casualness we might portentousness that ruined The Sear rector Nick Castle's lack of vision as well be watching some kid.playing a for Spock and being an amateur fill ie film's weakest link. Either he's real video game. It was certainly not it's free of the kind of wunderkid se lIed to death with all the hardware. something one would want to pay $4 indulgence that polluted Gremlins an to see. Temple of Doom. But I can't help wor As a stylist, Castle had an innocuos dering who gave that bunch of 14-yea ONE NIGHT ONLY generic touch. Either he's framing his olds millions of dollars, to make th: E cast against all of the blinking lights, or movie. gs act and ual on en pe ar- he tle he he all so er id ut No e, it of ch lm lf nd n- ir- kis I 0 a Presents "TAMBOURINES TO GLORY" A Musical Comedy by Lanston Hughes Featuring a Cast of 25 Singers and Dancers in a LIVE ON-STAGE EXTRAVAGANZA SATURDAY, JULY 21 8:00 P.M. Michigan Box Office Theatre 668-8480 Reserved Seating: $7, 8. Students & Seniors: $5, 6. Villella waltzes ballet (Continuedfrom Page 12) dancers. Germer and Manso de Sousa in their Ann Arbor debut gave the up- beat piece the excitement it deserves. Germer was her partner's com- plement, appealing with her own in- triguing and vivacious solo inter- pretations. Legs of Lamb, with choreography by Villella, was another dramatic and high-spirited performance. In this, the last number, Ric Abel and Sheri Little deserve the applause. Suprisingly, Abel said that none of the evening's productions was incredihlo taxing for him, that they were not "vir- tuoso steps." After watching him spin his partner around in his arms and acr- oss the stage, however, his assessment is arguable. If this is the amateur stuff, it would be nice to see the company when they are challenged. Saving the first for last, six dancers darting in and out of nowhere in Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs to an allegro tempo was both a pleasure and a disappointment. The pleasure was on Tuesday night, when the dancers took the care to add technique and excitement to their in- dividual roles. Wednesday was the disappointment. It seemed as though this time the dancers were merely going through the motions. Still a fine performance of a difficult piece. a 0 FRI. 2:00, 7:30. 940. 11:45 PM SAT. 12:50, 3, 5:15,7:30, 9:40, 11:45 PM