A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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they teach my landlord how to generate that much water pressure ? ) Parents who sit through the film ( MPAA Rating : G ) will have ample time to devise answers , as the characters aren't interesting enough to hold the viewer 's attention . Irene and Curdi are perfect Victorian children who make waxworks figures seem l ively . Curdi just wants to do good deeds ; Irene will only go where the magic t hread of her great-great-grandmother 's ghost ( Claire Bloom ) leads she takes n o real risks and therefore doesn't really grow . The animation , done by crews i n Wales and Hungary , looks like Saturday-morning kidvid . Director Jozsef Gemes , is widely respected for his epic paint-on-glass feature , `` Heroic Times '' ( 1982 ) : He deserves better material as do the children who 'll be parked at a matinee of `` Princess '' while their parents shop in an adjacent mall . CANNES , France Sitting on the terrace of the Carlton Hotel , his lime green pa nts and lavender socks resplendent in the morning sun , Lloyd Kaufman president of Troma Films , casts a benevolent eye on Margot Hope , the fetching writer-pro ducer-director and star of Troma 's latest extravaganza , `` Femme Fontaine : Ki ller Babe for the CIA . '' `` Margot , '' he says , searching for just the right way to be nice , `` your film is much too good for the American Cinematheque re trospective . '' Not really , because nothing is too good or , for that matter , too bad for the feisty folks from Troma , who in truth will be feted with a thr ee-day Cinematheque retrospective in Los Angeles starting June 10 in honor of 20 years in the business . Longer , the New York-based company boasts , `` than an y other independent distributor and most Hollywood marriages . '' Complete with personal appearances , this may be the first Cinematheque series to come with wh at it calls a surgeon general 's warning : `` These films are often repulsively violent and sexually explicit . Not for children ( and many adults ) . '' `` We are especially pleased to be finally honored in Los Angeles , '' was Kaufman 's official response to the event . `` The international flights to the other tribu tes were just getting too expensive . '' Kaufman , who likes to claim that the c ompany name is Latin for `` excellence in cinema , '' wasn't just being hyperbol ic . Troma 's films have been the subject of retrospectives in London , Tokyo , Munich , Toronto and San Sebastian , plus a monthlong `` Aroma du Troma '' tribu te at the American Film Institute in Washington . Why Troma ? Is it because star s like Kevin Costner can be seen just getting started in Troma 's `` Shadows Run Black '' and `` Sizzle Beach USA '' ? Or because Kaufman and company vice presi dent Michael Herz have co-directed something like 30 films , a feat worthy of th e Guinness Book of World Records ? Or is it simply that , as Kaufman has put it , `` we 're the smallest , cheapest movie studio in America '' ? `` In the entir e history of the movie business , '' he says with his usual sang froid , `` ther e has never been a movie studio that existed for 20 years without a hit . And so long as we continue as the heads of Troma , we will continue this perfect track record . '' Self-mocking and with a genius for self-promotion , the Troma Team , as Kaufman likes to call his group , clearly did not get to where they are by taking themselves too seriously . `` We enjoy what you in the media call sex and violence , '' says Kaufman , who has been known to brandish the actual shoestri ng his movies cost . And though his cheerfully tasteless films are as likely to be admired for the spirit in which they 're made than the quality of the executi on , one of Kaufman 's most accurate boasts is that `` when you see something by Troma , you may love it or hate it , but you 'll never forget the movie . '' A sentiment that goes double for the publicity that goes along for the ride . For while most critics have not actually sat through many of Kaufman 's films , almo st everyone in the business is familiar with the clever and cheeky titles and ad lines that are stuck on them . For instance : `` Sgt. Kabukiman NYPD : America 's First Accidental Oriental Crime Fighter ! '' `` A Nymphoid Barbarian in Dinos aur Hell : The Pre-Historic and the Pre-Pubescent , Together at Last ! '' `` Man iac Nurses Find Ecstasy : Their Weapons Are Sterile , Their Bodies Are Fertile , and Any Thought of Escape Is Futile ! '' `` Redneck Zombies , '' filmed in ( wh at else but ) Entrail-Vision : `` Tobacco Chewin ' , Gut Chompin ' , Cannibal Ki nfolk From Hell ! '' This kind of zaniness is visible also in the Troma Times , the company 's genial newsletter whose motto is `` Dictated but Not Read .. . or Even Thought About . '' And it shows up in the `` Troma System '' infomercial t he company has put together , complete with bikini-clad Tromettes , which satiri zes self-help ideologies as it pushes the sale of various kinds of Tromabilia . When you ask Kaufman where he and Herz learned the basics of filmmaking , he is likely to answer , `` if you read the reviews of our movies , you will see that we did not learn . '' But in fact his film education began at Yale , where he an d Herz met and where movie buffs in his dorm made him familiar with the efforts of Joseph E. Levine and Roger Corman , shrewd producers who inspired his own wor k . When he and Herz founded Troma , tiny budgets were the order of the day , th e plan being to make films that would have negligible theatrical releases but ma ke most of their money in video , cable and overseas markets . Kaufman calls `` The Toxic Avenger '' `` our Mickey Mouse , the movie that put us on the map . '' Familiarly known as Toxie , it is a movie so successful it inspired a TV series , hundreds of licensed products , two sequels ( one called `` The Last Temptati on of Toxie '' ) already released and a third ( `` Mr. Toxie Goes to Washington '' ) is in the planning stages . Set in Tromaville , N.J. , `` the toxic waste d ump capital of the world , '' `` Avenger '' details the awful circumstances that turn health club mop boy Melvin Furd , `` 98 pounds of solid nerd , '' into `` the first superhero born out of nuclear waste . '' Another Troma classic is `` C hopper Chicks in Zombietown , '' which explores what really happens when an all- female motorcycle gang takes a breather in a quiet hamlet mainly populated by th e undead . Typical dialogue , from the leader of the gang to her troops : `` You 're the Sluts . Try and act like it . '' The company has been associated with s ome classier films as well : `` Def by Temptation , '' a slickly made ( by James Bond III ) and stylishly photographed ( by Ernest Dickerson ) all-black horror film about a sexy succubus who has her way with men and a genuine sleeper , Bob Dahlin 's 1986 `` Monster in the Closet . '' Better films may actually be in Tro ma 's future , since the company has created a subsidiary called Fiftieth Street to concentrate on doing just that . And then there is the projected `` Tromio a nd Juliet , '' a no-doubt liberal adaptation of Shakespeare 's play . And after that ? `` We 've become an institution , a national treasure , '' Kaufman has sa id , probably more than once . `` It 's not going to be long before Troma will b e awarded the coveted Nobel Peace Prize . '' Election-year politics are about to torpedo one of the few functioning mechanis ms to cut government waste . Last week the Clinton administration , looking ahea d to the 1996 election , appeared ready to cave in to a congressional proposal t o delay the 1995 round of military base closures . Some members of Congress are pushing for the delay because they fear the backlash from voters adversely affec ted by base-closings in their districts , while the administration has its eye o n the electoral map . A good number of the estimated 70 bases to be axed in 1995 are in states such as California , Florida , and Texas that are crucial to Clin ton 's chances for reelection in 1996 . And as George Bush learned , nothing bre eds anti-incumbency quite like unemployment . But if it 's successful , the effo rt to delay base closings in 1995 will have several damaging consequences . It w ill saddle the Pentagon with unnecessary costs at a time when its budget is badl y stretched . It will taint the highly effective Base Closure and Realignment Co mmission ( BRAC ) , and it will hurt , not help , communities that will inevitab ly lose bases . From its peak in 1985 , the overall defense budget will have fal len 40 percent by 1999 , force structure will have declined by 30 percent , and spending on new weapons will have been slashed by a whopping 65 percent . Meanwh ile , despite rounds of base closings in 1988 , 1991 and 1993 , only 15 percent of domestic base infrastructure will have been cut . The 1995 round of closures is expected to be as large as the three previous rounds combined , and would bri ng infrastructure cuts more into line with reductions in other areas of the budg et . Proponents of the delay are quick to point out that savings from base closi ngs haven't been as great as expected . But the administration 's own figures in dicate that annual savings from closed bases will reach $ 4.6 billion by 2001 , half of which will be generated by the 1995 round of closures . The military ser vices are counting on that money to fund new equipment and training . Delaying t he 1995 round by two years would be an outright waste of $ 2.3 billion each year at a time when the Pentagon 's six-year budget is already underfunded by as muc h as $ 100 billion . According to Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Sam N unn , `` The longer we delay closing unneeded bases , the longer it will take to achieve real savings , and the more the other parts of the budget readiness , p ay , procurement , and research and development will suffer . '' The delay would also undermine the BRAC , which Congress created in 1988 specifically to take p olitics out of the base-closing process . Between 1977 , when Congress ceded its elf the authority to close bases , and 1988 , not a single base was closed mostl y because no member of Congress in his or her right mind would vote to close a b ase and thereby put voters out of work . BRAC changed all that , by placing the onus for base closing on an independent commission . With political cover , Cong ress was able to close 103 bases . But suborning BRAC to the politics of the ele ction year will anger those who have already lost bases and make it difficult to generate support for future base closings . Yes , future base closings . Becaus e even after BRAC 's current authority ends in 1995 , there will still be a grea t deal of excess infrastructure that should be cut . Finally , members of Congre ss seeking to hold up the 1995 base closure round argue that by postponing the p ain for communities they are helping them . Nothing could be further from the tr uth . Research by Business Executives for National Security shows that a well-or ganized community with a head start recovers from a base closure quickly . After a base is turned over to the community , an average of two civilian jobs are cr eated for every military job lost . Most jobs are recovered within five years af ter the base 's doors finally close . But the longer a community waits , and the more it resists the inevitable , the more difficult and costly the process beco mes . Uncertainty will add to the woes of base closure communities if the 1995 r ound is postponed . The military will lay off workers on excess bases even if th ey remain open for two more years . Delaying closure will only destroy the commu nities ' chances to replace jobs they are already losing . Unless the Clinton ad ministration overcomes its election year myopia , it could instigate a return to the hollow military of the 1970s . On the other hand , a strong signal from the White House supporting the base closing process as planned would sink efforts t o place cynical political expediency before fiscal responsibility and military p reparedness . HOLLYWOOD In `` The Endless Summer II , '' creator-narrator Bruce Brown takes p ains to tell us how much has changed since he began filming his definitive surfi ng movie , `` The Endless Summer , '' 30 years ago . He takes pride in the inter national appeal of the sport he helped popularize and ticks off its various inno vations . He does not shy away from showing how crowded some Hawaiian beaches no w are or how the once-deserted beach at a still-choice surfing spot near Cape To wn , South Africa , is now covered with expensive condos and tract houses . To h is credit , he makes a passing acknowledgment of polluted waters . What Brown is really doing , however , is shrewdly getting such matters out of the way in ord er to celebrate all that mercifully hasn't yet changed : fabulous beaches that a ttract world-class surfers to ride the most spectacular waves . Brown 's conceit is that a couple of likable young surfer pals , Robert ( Wingnut ) Weaver he ha s the dark hair and the blond Patrick O' Connell , are such fans of the original `` Endless Summer '' that they dip into some surfing prize money to finance a g lobe-girdling retracing , more or less , of their surfing counterparts in the fi rst film , Robert August and Mike Hynson , who were in search of the perfect wav e . While it 's anybody 's guess if Brown 's mix of awesome surfing sequences in terspersed with travelogue material and good-natured cornball antics will play a s well as it did decades ago , this `` Endless Summer '' is no less endearing th an the original . That this sequel is as fresh as it is is probably in large par t due to the fact that Brown deliberately backed off from further surfer movies after making the first `` Endless Summer '' ( which was part of an entire cycle of surfer epics , all the others lesser efforts ) . Wingnut and Pat 's journey t akes them from Southern California to Costa Rica ( which Brown intercuts with si de trips to Alaska and Hawaii not involving his stars ) , to France , South Afri ca , Fiji , Australia , Bali and Java , which from the looks of it just might be the most glorious , unspoiled place to surf on the face of the globe . Along th e way Wingnut and Pat meet champion surfers like Tom Curren ( in Biarritz ) and Laird Hamilton and Gerry Lopez ( in Java ) . They also meet several men from the first film , hearty rugged types like John Whitmore of Cape Town and Nat Young , of Brisbane , Australia , a veritable Crocodile Dundee , who takes Wingnut and Pat riding the rapids in a rubber raft . ( Neither August or Hynson appear in t he sequel . ) Accompanied by Gary Hoey and Phil Marshall 's driving score , `` T he Endless Summer II '' ( MPAA rating : PG , for brief nudity and mild language ) is such a pleasure to watch , so effective in its ability to take you away and into the healthy , carefree world of surfing , at once exciting and uncomplicat ed , that you 're actually sorry when it 's over . HOLLYWOOD Woody Harrelson is the only reason to subject yourself to `` The Cowb oy Way , '' but to be a straight-shooter about things , he is not reason enough . Instead of enhancing his surroundings , Harrelson 's breezy , amusing performa nce simply underlines everything the rest of the film is not . Based on yet anot her idea from the cornucopian mind of producer Brian Glazer who , if the press n otes are to be believed , came up with this gem `` while horseback riding in his native California , '' `` Cowboy '' will be recognized by film buffs as a rewor king of the tip-top `` Coogan 's Bluff , '' directed by Don Siegel and starring an especially laconic Clint Eastwood as an Arizona lawman out of his element on the steamy pavements of New York . It is perhaps a sign of cinematic inflation t hat this time around `` The Cowboy Way '' is forced to send not one but two stan d-up Western gentlemen into the wilds of Manhattan to right a wrong and see that justice is done . New Mexico cowboys Pepper Lewis ( Harrelson ) and Sonny Gilst rap ( Kiefer Sutherland ) are a formidable team-roping combination and best pals since they were toddlers . But , in one of the film 's many bogus plot contriva nces , Sonny has been giving his partner `` the Eskimo treatment '' since Pepper was a mysterious no-show at the finals of a key tournament . `` There we were , one steer away from the national championship , '' grouses Sonny in one of the many pieces of presumably authentic Bill Wittliff dialogue . Pepper , you may be sure , had his reasons for staying away , but once revealed they , like much el se here , turn out to be as lame as an overworked plow-horse . Sonny and Pepper 's best pal is a wise old Latino named Nacho ( Joaquin Martinez ) who accuses cr anky Sonny of having `` the heart of a tiny raisin . '' But before he can explai n where he got such a gift for metaphor , Nacho is called to New York to try to rescue his daughter , Theresa ( Cara Buono ) . She , illogically enough , is a d ewy illegal just off the boat from Cuba who is in the unfortunate clutches of a bunch of slimeballs ramrodded by the nefarious Stark ( Dylan McDermott ) . Force d to work in a sweatshop while Stark practically drools over her needlework , Th eresa is clearly in need of the kind of help only two hopelessly naive cowboys i n Manhattan can provide . As directed by Gregg Champion , whose only previous th eatrical feature was the forgotten `` Short Time , '' `` The Cowboy Way '' has a tendency to milk every bumpkin-in-the-big-town situation it can think of . As a result , elements of `` Midnight Cowboy '' ( Pepper catching the lascivious eye of effete fashion folk ) awkwardly joust for position with cartoony violent ech oes of `` Home Alone . '' Getting bruised in the melee are some usually reliable actors , including Ernie Hudson as a mounted policeman who loves the West . Esp ecially lost is Sutherland , whose thankless role as the straight-arrow , censor ious Sonny mostly calls on him to frown and say , `` I 've had it with you , '' to the irrepressible Pepper . Losing patience with Pepper is always understandab le . A macho pain in the neck who never stops talking and preening , he could ex asperate a saint . But thanks to Harrelson 's casual flair and his considerable comic energy , Pepper grows on you so much that his rare absences from the scree n bring the picture to a dead halt . While this is not a performance that wins a wards , it does demonstrate the kind of star presence that the movies can never have too much of . What `` The Cowboy Way '' ( MPAA rating : PG-13 for `` violen ce , some language and comic sensuality '' ) does best is underline how much mor e there is to Woody Harrelson than how he looks in his underwear or with a hat o ver his private parts . What if we found a rehabilitation method that could take violent criminals and greatly reduce their likelihood of committing further crimes ? What if this prog ram dramatically raised the odds that prisoners would never return to prison , w ould instead become law-abiding , tax-paying citizens ? The crime legislation no w being considered by Congress should have extra money for this proven crime-pre vention program . Right ? Guess again . Congress is eliminating all of its fundi ng . For this is the federal Pell Grant program , which for two decades has enab led convicts to secure a college education while in prison . The Pell Grant prog ram provides federal money to finance higher education for lower-income American s . Since its inception , prisoners , whose income is effectively zero , have be en eligible to apply for these funds . This has enabled colleges and universitie s to establish extension programs , sending books and professors into the prison s . More than 35,000 inmates are enrolled around the country . However , both th e House and Senate versions of the crime bill forbid the use of Pell Grant funds by prisoners . In most states , which have no network of state funding , this w ould effectively mean the end of prison higher education . As a volunteer profes sor at the Maryland State Penitentiary , I have seen the difference a college ed ucation can make . For the past two years I have been meeting weekly with prison ers to study philosophy . We have ranged from Homer to Gandhi , Socrates to Sart re . The men I teach have serious criminal histories . Many are murderers , comi ng from a background of rage , ignorance and despair . But the chance at educati on has given them a new purpose , and made them feel they can turn their lives a round that when they get out ( and most of them will ) , they 'll have marketabl e skills and credentials . Typically , such a prisoner can tell himself : I don' t have to base self-esteem on the gold chain around my neck and the gun in my po cket . I 'm a college graduate . Recently I was at a prison function for inmates who were alumni of the Coppin State college program speeches , banners on the w all , honorary awards , standard stuff . But most striking was the sense of hope and pride in the room anything but common in a maximum security penitentiary . The keynote address was given by Stanley Covington . Released from the penitenti ary five years ago with a college degree , he is now project director at the Cen ter on Juvenile and Criminal Justice , where he heads up a program for Washingto n , D.C. , youth in trouble . Another student from this prison is Charles Dutton , producer and star of the `` Roc '' show . Then there is H.B. Johnson Jr. , a student I met through my prison class . This year he won ( for the second time ) the Baltimore WMAR-TV contest for best play by a black dramatist . He came into prison with an eighth grade education . Sentence commuted , he left prison last December a college man and a playwright , novelist , newspaper columnist and pu Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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