ARTS Wednesday, July 24, 1985 I The Michigan Daily Page 6 Enchantment undercut by crass schtick ByfpyronL. Bull E XPLORERS is the latest in the recent deluge of suburban situated fantasies, following in the footsteps of E.T., Poltergeist, Goonies, and Back to the Future, though it marches to an offbeat drum roll that makes it the exception of the bunch. Not always successful, but when it does work, it works gloriously. Three junior high outcast - one's an almost dorky brain, one a scaled- down easy rider, the other a daydreaming, sci-fi buff - who are brought together by a common dream of flying over a giant electronic cir- cuit board. The brain, Wolfgang (Phoenix River), sketches down the details, rewires his Apple Jr. and presto, a force-field generator that creates a transparent sphere, imper- vious, gravity-defying, and variable in size. Ben (Ethan Hawke) hits upon the idea of housing a cockpit within the force field, and with a conglomeration of trash cans, television tubes, and an old tilt-a-whirl shell build their own spaceship. They dub the vessel the Thunder Road - after the Springsteen song - and on the first starry night take off to explore the neighborhood from above, popping in to watch a space opera over at the local drive-in, and buzz a helicopter before heading for the cosmos. Probably a universal fantasy among American boys of the last 411 years, and though Explorers owes a little of its atmosphere to E.T. and Close Encounters, it draws its main inspiration from H.G. Wells, Boys' the kind of backyard fantasies children enact where any old piece of junk, an abandoned car, a junked radio, becomes a prop in an imaginary epic. Joe Dante comes from a background of little practice with sub- tlety, directing low budget/high camp horror film rip-offs like Piranha and The Howling, before making his major film debut with the Steven Spielberg-produced Gremlins, a flat- witted, self-indulgent free-for-all full of incessant in-jokes, slapstick, and commercial greed. But this film shows he's a sharp, mature film- maker with a surprisingly gentle touch. Explorers probes the manners and whims of young boys more thoughtfully, and with far less pon- derous seriousness, than any recent coming-of-age melodrama. It's in the little touches Dante and writer Eric Luke sneak in, the way the boys decorate the Thunder Road with a battery of lights - "It'll be cooler" - and in the way they christen her by sharing nervous sips from a bottle of beer one of them took from home that raises the film's spirit above simple cuteness. Explorers' young cast is at that crucial age between childhood and adolescence, and Dante and Luke make a few delicate probes into the hazy mist of half-conscious yearnings and urges. The first thing Ben does with the gang's invention when he realizes he can use it to fly is to pop up and peek into the second story bedroom of the girl he has a crush on. He doesn't want to catch her taking off her clothes, he only wants to have one private moment where he can sit The pre-teen space travellers talk borrowing spaceships and problems with parents in 'Explorers.' F' FOOD FIT FOR KINGS AND QUEENS Enjoy award-winning Indian cuisine in a beautifully restored Victorian home. Dine in the fresh air and sunshine of our garden or in the surround- ings of authentic Indian Folk Art in one of our dining rooms. Come in and sample the new additions to our menu and savor the finest Indian food west of New York. Choose from our wide selection of beer, wine, and cocktails, or try one of our non-alcoholic house drinks prepared from fresh fruit juices and herbal ingredients. All spices are ground fresh daily and each dish is prepared in pure vegetable oil. and watch her as she sits and chatters with her girlfriend on the phone, just a few feet away. The young cast plays an important and impressive part of making the magic click, transcending their sket- chy stereotypes, and fleshing their roles out with nicely unexaggerated, natural performances. Young Hawked may not be quite as nerdy as the average 14-year-old science fic- tion fan would be, but he throws him- self into the part with enough infec- tious exhuberance to make it click. With his oversized glasses and ill fit- ting corduroy jacket, Phoenix is the perfect pint-sized professor type and Jason Presson, as Darren, the street- wise loner of the bunch, is probably the best, with a nicely understated mix of vulnerability and mock toughness. Explorers is first and foremost an adventure story, and Dante propels it forward at a good brisk clip, though he never pushes it at full throttle. There are little delicate touches, short throwaway scenes that freeze the action for a second so you can savor it, like when the guys first lift off, and hover over their backyard, looking down at the dogs barking up at them, that are quietly exhilerating. There's also a nicely hinted at sub- plot, that never intrudes on the story, about a middle-aged man - Dick Miller - who's been picking up the same dreams as the boys, but was born 40 years too early to join them, which gives the film a dash of bitter- sweetness to balance the excitement a little bit, with out ever resorting to cheap mawkish sentimentality a la Spielberg. See 'EXPLORERS,' Page It Hours: Lunch 11:30- 2:00 pm Mon - Fri Dinner 5:30 - 10:00 pm Mon - Sat Closed Sunday Reservations Accepted 400 S. Division Ann Arbor, Ml 995-1545 AtFavI ,Speial~ An angry alien father chides his children for taking the family spaceship .some things never change).- - . . . ... a a - :?: .., __ ,:. ka-aft .; ,f:aiat=. , -