ARTS Tuesday, March 12, 1991 The Michigan Daily Page 5 s ___ A passage to Indi Mr. and Mrs. Bridge dir. James Ivory by Michael John Wilson M aybe it was a mistake to even try. Maybe the Merchant Ivory filmmaking crew should have had nothing to do with Evan S. Connell's novels, Mr. Bridge (1969) and Mrs. Bridge (1959), instead of trying to compress them both into a single film. Maybe they were doomed to fail before they even started. But if Mr. and Mrs. Bridge is a mistake, what an exquisitely made, intriguing mistake it is. The team of director James Ivory, producer Ismail Mer- chant, and screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala have success- fully adapted several other nov- els toethe screen, including E.M. Forster's Room With A View. This time they tackle Connell's novels, which together describe the Bridges - a middle-aged, upper-middle class WASP fam- ily living in Kansas City during the late '30s and early '40s. Connell presents each Bridge through a segmented style. In Mrs. Bridge, for example, we are given one event after an- other, not tied together by a specific storyline, in 117 brief chapters. The film retains this episodic style, which will surely bore many viewers. One scene after another washes over us, with very little actually occurring. Like snapshots out of family al- bums (or home movies, which open and close the film), we gradually get to know the Bridges, their children, and their friends. It's an unusual film which requires patience; to many, watching these rather unextraordinary lives may not qualify as entertainment. Two brilliant performances, however, make these mundane characters complex, fascinating, and to- tally engrossing. India Bridge (Joanne Wood- ward) in some ways embodies a familiar maternal character, wonderfully caring yet naive and out of touch. What makes her so captivating is her desper- ation at being repressed by her husband, Walter (Paul New- man, Woodward's real-life hus- band). The plot might be de- scribed as Mrs. Bridge's grow- ing realization that her life has been hopelessly stifled by her husband and that her ideals will never really come true. Her name is bitterly ironic, suggest- ing the exoticism and freedom she will never achieve. Nearly all of her enthusiasms are insensitively dismissed by Mr. Bridge, and there's abso- iutely no escape from him. Even when she proposes divorce, he simply calms her down, never believing for a second that she'd have the nerve to go through with it, and he's absolutely right. Woodward's performance is so right on that it's at times uncomfortable to watch her naive cheerfulness, sadly hiding a hopelessly trapped soul. Bridge Mr. Bridge is not merely the bad guy here, however. New- man's performance brings out his sensitivity and his appeal, while never letting us forget what a cold and callous old fart he is. Mr. Bridge also can't be dismissed as merely old-fash- ioned and repressed; he occa- sionally shows signs of life and sensitivity, such as when he takes his wife on a trip to Eu- rope and enjoys a lavishly exu- berant dance show. If your heroes have always been cowboys, why would you send in the clowns? Mr. Bridge's enigmatic flict between repression con- and sensitivity keeps us engrossed throughout the film, but we never gain any sufficient under- standing of him. Minor charac- ters, including their three rebel- lious children, are themselves intriguing and well portrayed, but we learn even less about them; the filmmakers tried to cram too much into the film. Even after 135 minutes, the film ends too quickly for us to get a grasp on the characters. There was just no way both books could be combined into a film of this length. The scant episodes shown to us leave us empty and unsatisfied because they don't form a complete pic- ture. Perhaps as an eight-hour PBS series, the film would have worked better. With its brilliant performances and beautiful pro- duction, however, Mr. and Mrs. Bridge is probably the best dis- appointment released in a long time. MR. AND MRS. BRIDGE is being shown at the Ann Arbor 1 & 2. My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys dir. Stuart Rosenberg by Jon Rosenthal My Heroes Have Always Been+ Cowboys brings to Ann Arbor a: slice of the American pie rarely eaten here. Quintessentially Amer- ican, the film portrays the trials of a rodeo rider named H.D. (Scott+ Glenn), injured while substituting: for a friend as a clown at the rodeo. (It is difficult to understandr why these individuals dress as clowns. They have the unfunny job of providing a target for two tons of highly annoyed bull.) To recover from being gored, H.D. returns to his home town and discovers that his sister Cheryl (Tess Harper) has put their father (Ben Johnson) in the local old-age home. Full of righteous indignation, H.D. rescues his father and romances his old girlfriend (Kate Capshaw), whose husband has conveniently died and left her with two kids. The film suffers from the con- trived nature of its plot, which uses elements that are designed to strike at the heart of rural America. The evil brother-in-law (Gary Busey) works as a bank manager and wants to sell off the father's land - a reflection of the evil foreclosure man who threatens the small farmer. The old-age home is a place where parents are shuffled off to when the children can't put up with their senility. The cowboy is the symbol of the free individual who refuses to give up, against all odds and any form of common sense. All of these elements ap- peal to the ideals and echo the problems of the rural American. My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys is, above all, an epic Western set in the present, and some of the plot is very familiar. The major difference lies in the substitution of bull-riding for gun- fighting. H.D. find himself ready to lay down his spurs, but the evil landbaron forces him to pick them up again. Sound familiar? Another hint: H.D. also begins to teach a young boy (Balthazar Getty) how to ride bulls. Yep, its Shane all over again, only with the Wild West reduced to the rodeo ring. For the most part, the acting is much more compelling then the1 story. The characters are interest-t ing and well played, especially Glenn's almost childish tantrums when he becomes frustrated with his sister and Mickey Rooney's character Junior, the slightly de- mented old man who believes that Dolly Parton was given her "abundance" for being a good Christian. Director Stuart Rosen- berg is generally competent, ex- celling during the final bull-riding scene, which was shot in slow mo- tion with a heart-beat soundtrack. The element that works best in the film is the terse and laconic dialogue so definitive of the clas- sic western. Harper tells the hero, "You shuffle and grin, but you never grow up. Always more hat than cattle." Some elements clash drastically with the rest of the film. The most obvious is the training H.D. receives before his last battle, taken right from The Karate Kid. Instead of standing on a piling with a foot and hands in the air, he sits on a barn roof with his hand in the air. This final piece destroys the movie's credibility, and leaves the viewer with the feeling that Hol- lywood should wake up and smell what it's shoveling. MY HEROES HAVE ALWAYS BEEN COWBOYS is being shown at Showcase. Educated in Romance: Women, Achievement, and College Culture by Dorothy C. Holland & Margaret A. Eisenhart University of Chicago Press Educated in Romance gives an insightful look at the female college experience, revealing why it often fails to prepare women for their future. Romance is held above all else; the mundane world of academics falls by the wayside. Commissioned to investigate why, decades after the onset of the women's movement, relatively few women were entering traditionally male-dominated fields, Dorothy C. Holland and Margaret A. Eisenhart studied 23 women at two Southern universities from 1979 to 1987. Their study resulted in an alarming discovery. Ultimately, two-thirds abandoned their careers or, at the very least, considered them sec- ondary to those of their husbands. Holland and Eisenhart expected to find an atmosphere in which women supported each other in l academic pursuits and steered friends toward lucrative careers. Instead, they discovered the oppo- site to be true. The women they in- terviewed couldn't have cared less about the academic existence of their peers; what did end up mattering was their standing in the college dating scene. The first few chapters of the book are so bogged down in references to previous studies that it seems the authors wrote it for the sole benefit of their fellow so- ciologists. Once they begin evalu- ating their own material, however, Holland and Eisenhart demonstrate a keen understanding of heterosex- ual relationships on campus. For instance, they suggest that a new version of the old double standard is at work today. While women are no longer barred from having pre- marital sex, it still remains some- thing the woman "gives" in return for "good treatment" from the man. The authors use this idea to make a pointed observation about the implications of a woman's need for this "good treatment." Rape proves the ultimate form of "bad treatment," and, "because attractiveness is attested to by the treatment women receive from men, rape creates the victim's lowr correlated attractiveness come from the attention they receive from women and from success at sports, in school politics, and in other arenas. Women's prestige and correlated attractiveness come only from the attention they receive from men." The authors refer extensively to their subjects, whose quotes enliven and clarify the text. One woman says another woman actually told her, "You may be able to do calculus, but I'm dating a football player." All in all, while I find Holland and Eisenhart's as- sessment of female friendships to be a little bleak, their insights on female college life and relation- ships are compelling and thought- provoking. -Jodi Lustig "Why yes, as a matter of fact these are Bugle Boy jeans I'm wearing," Scott Glenn tells Ben Johnson in My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys. I t1 Summer Job Fair Thursday March 14 I nterview for summer jobs Pick-up applications and fom across the country position descriptions 2:00 - 4:00 pm Michigan Union r- prestige." This goes a long way towards explaining the prevalence of date rape on college campuses; women don't speak out after they are victimized because they fear this lowering of prestige. Holland and Eisenhart also discuss the nature of sexual attractiveness and the role it plays in romantic relationships. They consider attractiveness to consist of two components, one deter- mined by an individual's physical features and the other by the atten- tion the peer group bestows upon the individual. However, a major difference exists in the peer group's method of determining the "auxiliary" attractiveness of the two sexes. "Men's prestige and ANN ARBOR THEATERS.1 & 2-5TH AVE. AT LIBERTY 761.9700 SCENES FROM MR. & MRS. 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