BYW BONNIE jAT CARY? WE'LL GIVE YOU SCARY. Every movie coming out this month is about a cop or an ex- cop. Besides that, there was a strange fit of guerrilla filmmak- ing, with strange groupings of direc- tors and actors (RuPaul, Roseanne and Lily Tomlin?). And don't forget Halloween XLVI (we didn't bother previewing it - you know the deal). People are strange. Never Talk to Strangers Rebecca DeMornay's cradle-rocking days are over, but she's back into risky business. Now she plays a criminal psycholo- gist on the trail of a serial rapist. But somreone's on her trail, too. Antonio Banderas (Desperado) plays the handsome stranger you shouldn't talk to. Or sleep with. Heaven's Prisoners; Alec Baldwin (The Shadow) plays a Litiisiana cop whi, bogged down by the job, quits the for e to ive a peaceful life on the bayou. But when his fainly is threatened, he gets sucked back in and has to swim through mysteries and mysterious women to get ustice. Screamers It's not about sex. It's about people mak- ing creatures to figh t a their battles on a war- to rn plan er. T his race of killing machines is called Screamers. Nut tio b e confused wivth Terminators. Or , Replicants. Peter Weller plays the leader of the good guys, who now need todestroy the wartitors to stop the wars. Four Rooms Four geatdirectors (Allison Anders, Alexan die Rockwell, Robert Rodrigu e z Que ititn Tarantino), four story lines, one ho tel and one poo r bellhop (played by Stev e Buscmi, Reservoir Dogs) to tierit all together. Bruce Willis, Madonna and Antonio Banderas are among Ite guests. Empire Records akei the weird characters and person al crises o f Clerks' day in a convenience sto re tip the budget, set it in a record store and you have Emp irer Records. Debi Mazar (who "spiced" up Batman) and Liv t'Iyler (one of the "crazy" Aerosmith girls) star. And h y, the music should be good. Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead Andy Garcia plays a nice-guy ex-gangster who's called back into the life by The Man With the Plan, his former boss (Christopher Walken, Pulp Fiction). He recruits a few of the old cohorts, and they botch the job. So essentially, they're dead - what to do? Vampire in Brooklyn Paramount Director Wes Craven (Nightmare on Elm Street) is no stranger to horror. What's strange is that Eddie Murphy is cast as the vampire. Angela Bassett (What's Love Got to Do With I) plays a New York cop he wants to neck with. See this if only to find out what that laugh sounds like on the undead. Dead Presidents Hol/ywood/Caravan Pictures The Walking Dead didn t knock em dead. But now Albert and Allen Hughes, who did somse knocking with Menace // Socety, take their twi swing at the black Vietnamatexperince. AitthotityCurtis (IarenzTilate, Menace) plays a 22-year-old who - guess what? _ gets warped by his war experience. Get Shorty Au, lil If you thought Vincent Vega was out of place in shorts and a "UC Santa Cruz" I -shirt, get a load of John TIravolta as Chili Palmer. Chili, a loan shark, comes to Hollywood to collect a gambling debt and gets tangled up in the movie biz. lTsk. Always a shame when the good ores get corrupted' Screen Saver Tie-Died: Rock 'n Roll's Most Deadicated Fans Be grateful there's a movie. Even if you never fol- lowed the Dead - or thought Wavy Gravy was just a Ben & Jerry's flavor - you'll like the documentary Tie-Died. Filmmaker Andrew Behar spent the summer of '94 traveling with Deadheads and capturing the phe- nomenon of a culture fused by music but elevated to spiritual status by the dedication of its followers. And considering the August death of founder Jerry Gar- cia, he has ensured that - on film at least - it will survive . The interviews are colorful, the pace is lively, the film work itself is incredible - Tie-Died is just fun to watch. Yet it's amazingly thorough: There are the pot smokers and the Wharf Rats (drug- and alcohol-free Deadheads); vendors and concert security; people who make a life out of following the Dead and Dead culture scholars; and a lot of talk about peace, love and respect. Tie-Died had a limited release in late September, but it will be truckin' on a spring college tour (sorry -not in a psychedelic VW microbus). The Reel Deal Mallrats You remember the '80s. Hanging out at the mall. Maybe - ifyougot really motivated - catching a movie. The Breakfast Club, Sixteen Candles, Ferris Buefler's Day Off. Mallratswillremind you of those days, saysdirector Kevin Smith, who rocked Cannes last yearwithhis low- budget first effort, Clerks. "My intention was to make a John Hughes movie, but through my eyes," Smith says. "Mall- ratstakes shots at the John Hughes angst." You know, the day-to- day traumas of those crazy kids - not getting along with parents, breaking up, getting mistaken for a would-be assassin.... But there's always the mall. Former zip coder Shan- nen Doherty stars, as does Dazed and Confuseds Jere- my London. But Smith's Clerks friends still make appearances, including motor mouth Jay (Jason Mewes) and his sidekick Silent Bob (played by Smith). The language in Clerks, particularly Mewes', did some rocking of its own. How is it in Mallrats, Kevin? "It's toned down, but it's still there. It's 'R'enough for Seventeen magazine not to do anything with us." But it's no Kids (whose ratings controver- sy made Clerks' look like child's play)? "Kids was like being locked in a room with 20 Jason Meweses. A little Jason goes a long way." Strange Days 20th Cenlw7 fox Ralph Fiennes (Quiz Show) plays Lenny Nero, an ex-cop who knows what you want and knows how to get it - via virtual reality. But when what soateone wants is death, Lenny {finds that virtual reality bites. Meanwhile, real reality isn't that great, either. If Nero doesn't stop fiddling around, the whole world will burn. Blue in the Face Mu,,, xs Smoke has not even faded, and directors Wayne Wang and Paul Auster have already fired up a sequel. They were having so much fun, they decided to keep the cameras rolling and let the sparks fly. Stars flew, too: Harvey Keitel, Roseanne, Michael J. Fox, RiuPaul, Lily Tomlin and more. October 1995 - U. Magazine 35