ARTS Friday, February 8, 1991 The Michigan Daily Page 5 The jerk vs. the smog monster L.A. Story dir. Mick Jackson by David Lubliner *A sa native New Yorker, I have always been taught to hate Los Angeles. I never really understood the reason for this resentment, but it was emblazoned into my con- science at a very early age. I actu- ally began to believe all the bad things said about the place - the smog, the superficiality, the shoot- ings on the freeways. But often, as @1 walk to class with my icy toes three-feet deep in snow, I think to myself, "What about the sun, and the beautiful people, and the glamour of it all?" With the words of Frank Sinatra's not-so-famous "L.A. Is My Lady" dancing around my head, I dove into L.A. Story with all of the excitement and enthusiasm of any good West Coaster wanna-be. . Steve Martin is Los Angeles weatherman Harris K. Telemacher. Harris has become rather disgrun- tled with his career. He tapes his weather reports in advance be- cause, .as he says, "This is L.A. What's going to change?" But af- ter one of his forecasts turns out to be completely inaccurate, Harris is fired. On the same day, he discov- *ers that his girlfriend has been hav- ing an affair for the past three years with his longtime agent - a typical Los Angeles problem. Har- ris' life finally takes a dramatic shift when a freeway sign commu- nicates mysterious messages to him. According to the sign, the weather will change his life. This crazy scenario sets the tone for the entire film. L.A. Story takes real-life events and exagger- ates them, just a bit, in order to convey different messages. First there's the brunch, in which 10 people each order a different kind of cappuccino. Then there's the restaurant, appropriately named L'Idiot, which demands to exam- ine;Harris' financial status before. When Martin Scorsese's King of Comedy was released in 1982, the film was considered a disaster. But if any of the director's works have been critically redeemed, it is this one. Has there ever been a more an- noying, obsequious New Yorker than Rupert Pupkin (Robert DeNiro)? He's a stand-up comic so desperate to make it in the big-time that he's taken to hounding stars, and his number one target is Jerry Langford (Jerry Lewis), the Carson- like don of late-night TV. Despite Rupert's appeals - he immediately assumes he's on a first-name basis with Langford - the neurotic fan is rebuked. The fact is, it's hard to believe that Rupert, with a prostituted '70s Atlantic City style, has any talent whatsoever. And the audience wrenches when it sees this leech consistently embarrass himself; even when his demo tape is rejected flat out by Langford's aides, he refuses to take no for an answer As Rupert reels further into de- nial and obsession, The King of Comedy goes from idiosyncratic to sadistic and becomes truly intrigu- ing. First, Rupert shows up at Langford's house. Then, in cahoots with a Langford groupie named Masha, brilliantly played by Sandra Bernhard, Rupert conspires to kidnap "Jerry." Scorsese's black comedy begins to articulate the thin line between the parasitic and the so- ciopathic, revealing the humor and madness in idolatry and the will to fame. I like to think of this film as an interesting partner to Scorsese's Taxi Driver : they're about different kinds of potential New York psychopaths, both of whom are redeemed in the end. But where then conclusion of Taxi Driver is contrived salvation, it would be unjust if Rupert Pupkin were to be anything less than universally loved, since that's the only thing he really ever wants. The King of Comedy is being shown at Hillel on Saturday at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. -Gregg Flaxman Childhood's unit of memory is summer, as one school year blends into another. The emotions of summer hold powerful impact in film, drawing on the audience's nostalgia for lost innocence and days before sunscreen. Summer represents a combination of free- See CINEMA, Page 8 Harris Telemacher (Steve Martin) helps British journalist Sara McDowel (Victoria Tennent) shop, another typical LA activity. allowing him to make a reserva- tion. Scripted by Martin, L.A. Story is full of insightful and biting satire that has been written by someone who knows his subject matter well. But Martin does have a ten- dency to resort to juvenile sex jokes. At one point, Harris says to one of his females friends, "I couldn't be a woman. I'd sit home and play with my breasts all day." This kind of stuff is not funny, but thankfully, the audience isn't sub- jected to much of it. For most of the film, Martin demonstrates what he did best in films such as All of Me and Roxanne - engage in a lot of physical humor. Martin roller skating through the corridors of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art is hysterically funny. Victoria Tennant, Martin's real- life wife, plays Harris' love inter- est, Sara. She is a reporter for the London Times, on location in Los Angles to write a story on its peo- ple and lifestyle. However, Harris is also preoccupied with a young "California girl" named SanDeE* - that's right, uppercase S, up- percase D, uppercase E, and a star at the end. Sarah Jessica Parker, best known for her role in the tele- vision series Square Pegs, per- fectly captures SanDeE*'s air- headed and sexy free spirit. Martin also tosses in all of his Hollywood buddies for good mea- sure. Woody Harrelson, Chevy Chase, and George Plimpton all have funny cameo bits. Rick Moranis, who seems to appear in every Steve Martin film these days, is very amusing as a Los Angeles gravedigger with an English accent. Although the jokes become repetitive at times, L.A. Story doesn't attempt to do too much. It's the simple tale of a romance - in this case, set against the backdrop of Los Angeles. Ulti- mately, Harris comes to realize that love can exist in the heart of his hometown. It's a pretty sappy ending, but even the most adamant Los Angeles-haters won't be able to resist its uplifting feeling. L.A. STORY opens at Showcase. kimnko's 44 COPIES with this coupon 8 1/2 X 11, white, sef serve or auto fed only " expires 4/30/91 Open 24 Hours 540 E. Liberty 761-4539 1220 S. University 747-9070 Open 7 Days Michigan Union 662-1222 New Offerings at Counseling Services Black Women Graduate Support/Therapy Group For Info. contact: Gwyneth Awai, ACSW at 7648312 12 Week Workshop/Support Group on Compulsive Overeat'n Contact: Jocelyn Towler, MA at 764-8312 Coping as an African-American Student at U of M Contact: LaReese Collins, ACSW at 764-8312 Black Male Graduate Support Group Contact: LaReese Collins, ACSW at 764-8312 5TH AVE. AT LIBERTY 761-9700 A shorter bard of Stratford by Sue Uselmann______ " I I DAILY $2.75 SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM & ALL DAY TUESDAY' (*EXCEPTIONS) i _ITY TH RS_ INC. fln " A classic," according to Mark Twain, "is a book which people praise, but never read." For the Reduced Shakespeare Company, however, this is not the case. Combining hilarious renovations *and unfailing dexterity, the RSC will perform The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) tonight at the Michigan Theater. The hilarious trio, consisting of Adam Long, Jess Borgeson, and Reed Martin, had their humble be- ginnings back in 1981 as a street- theater troop for a Renaissance festival. Daniel Singer, the RSC's founder, helped put together a 15- *minute production of Hamlet, which started them on their way. Through this initial abridged per- formance of the classic, the Com- pany began to develop its style. "In order to keep the audience's at- tention, Long says, we aded a broad, physical aspect, because we were on the streets." By 1987, the RSC had its own full-length snow, performing the first hour-long version in Scotland, and since then the Company has See BARD, Page 8 :::: Oh nol 1 just checked my - calendar and Valentine's Day is Thursday! What on Earth . should I get for Lis ? Well Matt, just check the Valentine's Day page in Tuesday's Daily and find millions of possible gifts! 1 Q A'4GIJJIA7W Ida iloL n "m K w *l11INGITI POST -idIrm DIJAS t1ORNt(4SISG 1l qty .1: tm i . A ium inm A!g apo rt f j1I!.t rother s 7 IoVA n G oI y4 Roer lAI'.l bt anL Or Vrweit Zv Tteo An original portrait of the brothers Van Gogh by Robert Altman. i PG-13 . H a 99 ..k v Qm i. A .. RVM ks G REEN Golden Glb. - (11Winner - est Pictxe. * CARDBest Acit CAIP 1 v j When You Bring In This Entire Ad (no soho) 1 1 1 =own COMPARE. I INTERNATIONAL POP OVERTHROW!! Sure, it's a toddlin' town, and it's the Windy City and the birthplace of electric blues. But to a generation of guitar- crazed midwestern rock fans, Chicago is the power pop capital of the world-the place where Cheap Trick, Shoes, Off Broadway, The Boyzz, and dozens of others cranked, up guitars in sweaty clubs, got drunk on cheap beer, and sang songs about the girls they got and those who got away. These are the roots of Chicago's newest rock and roll band. From somewhere between the styles and sounds of The Romantics and The Buzzcocks emerges Material Issue. Founded in 1985, Material Issue (lead singer Jim Ellison, drummer Mike Zelenko, and bassist Ted Ansani) has consistently thrived on playing live-touring before a recording contract was on the horizon and receiving rave reviews for their performances. Material Issue has recently completed a string of national club dates with The Soup Dragons. In addition, Material Issue crafts great power pop songs. STUDENT A UNIVERSITY TOWERS RESIDENT TU e RISt STUDENT B GO A S PAJCCL. 9DUS? OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING RESIDENT, T HEN: WAKES UP AT 7:25 A.M. 7:25 TAKES SHOWER 7:50 EATS BREAKFAST &00 READS THE PAPER{ 8:20 WALKS TO 8.30 CLASS_ 8:25 ARRIVES IN CLASS STATISTI CS: " HONOR ROLL 3 YEARS IN A ROW- " M.V.P. TRACK TEAM MEMBER 2 YEARS IN A ROW * GRADUATED MAGNA CUME LAUDE " LIVED AT UNIVERSITY T6WERS LAST THREE YEARS IN COLLEGE THEN:': WAKES UP 7:25 A.M. 7:25 HITS SNOOZE ALARM 7:50 HITS SNOOZE ALARM 8:00 JUMPS OUT OF BED; NO WATER FOR SHOWER (LANDLORD NOT IN) .8:20 CALLS TOW TRUCK (CAR WO['T START) 9:15 ARRIVES IN CLASS (TOW TRUCK LATE) STATISTICS: " ACADEMIC PROBATION; 3YEARS INA ROW ./ " CAR BURGLARIZED- 2 YEARS IN A ROW " STILL WAITING TO GRADUATE... " CONTINUES TO LIVE FAR AWAY, OFF CAMPUS HOUSING NOW: 3RD ASSISTANT, NIGHT SHIFT, JOHNNY'S BURGER SUNGERHAUS l NOW: PRESIDENT OF MAJOR CORPORATION (ci I (dRetu' I