REEL CRITICS
‘The Fast and the Furious’ wild ride
Finally! “The Fast and The Furious” has finally roared into theaters.
I’ve been waiting six months. I was saddened and greatly irritated when
they pushed back the release date from March to June, and I certainly
wasn’t the only one excited to see the new street racing movie. Alluring
men and fast cars, what more could a girl ask for?
Give me more excitement and thrill, please! The action genre needs
some pumping up. “Tomb Raider” and “Swordfish” were so pathetic. But I
was ready, blood was pumping through my veins 10 minutes before “The Fast
and the Furious” even started.
It was a wild ride. The engines would rev, and my pulse shot through
the roof. Paul Walker and Vin Diesel are great eye candy (they play the
roles given them with great power). Yet, my blood pressure quickly
returned to normal. I should have known then that something was
dreadfully wrong with me.
I think the use of nitrous oxide is boring on a straight race course.
The idea of a tricked out Jetta is ridiculous. As such, the speed in the
movie was not a thrill, and the cars are a bit silly at times.
I knew too much about the movie going in. None of the “surprises”
confused me. I wanted heart-pounding excitement and a bit of education
about the racing scene, but the movie jumps from one idea to the next too
fast. No scene gets played out properly.
If director Rob Cohen had expanded the movie, he would have given the
characters and story a chance to get comfortable with each other. As it
is, it all feels a bit awkward.
“The Fast and the Furious” gains momentum as it goes, and does
eventually reach nail-biting suspense, only to end 10 minutes later with
the weakest ending I’ve seen in years.
But, I’m missing the point. This movie is for the car lover and the
drag racing lover. If you can speak the car language, then please, go see
the movie. I hear it’s mandatory for males younger than 30. For the rest
of us, well, there are some good cartoons out right now.
In any case, welcome to “The Fast and the Furious” summer, it’s gonna
be fun.
o7 “The Fast and the Furious” is rated PG-13 for violence, sexual
content and language.f7
* MELISSA RICHARDSON is a Costa Mesa resident and a junior at UC
Irvine.
Acting, story of ‘Songcatcher’ catches viewer
I hope members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences see
and remember this terrific film at Oscar nomination time. Janet McTeer is
absolutely dazzling in the title role of this very special film.
McTeer plays Dr. Lily Penleric, a college professor of musicology in
the early 1900s who finds herself replaced on the staff by a male
professor. Hurt and angry, Lily takes off into the wilds of the Blue
Ridge Mountains to visit her sister, who is a schoolteacher in a small,
rural community.
The mountains hold a wonderful surprise for Lily. This isolated area,
where people have been living for several centuries shut off from the
rest of the country, is a treasure house of early English folk ballads
and dances. Before long, the determined Lily has managed to get recording
equipment delivered to her and has embarked upon a crusade to record this
precious musical heritage.
Needless to say, not everyone in the community is open to having their
music “caught” by this strange newcomer. Before long, the community is
divided between those who are pleased to have Lily’s attention and are
willing to sing their songs into her strange contraption, and those who
see her as a threat.
There are wonderful performances by Jane Adams as Lily’s sister, Elna;
Aidan Quinn as Tom Bledsoe, an embittered man who has retreated back to
the mountains he once left; and Pat Carroll as Viney, Tom’s grandmother.
It would have been easy to tell this story at the expense of these
“simple mountain folk,” but Maggie Greenwald, who wrote and directed
“Songcatcher,” creates characters too strong and three-dimensional for
that. Above all, Greenwald never loses touch with the power of the music
that seems to be an integral part of their lives.
And oh, what music. I have a feeling that the percentage of the movie
audience who become soundtrack CD purchasers will be very high.
Following as it does close on the heels of “O Brother Where Art
Thou?”, another film that celebrates our musical heritage, “Songcatcher”
further fulfills a desire for music that uses neither electronic
manipulation nor synthesizing. I, for one, am going to dust off my old
guitar, find my Woody Guthrie records and get ready for the revival.
o7 “Songcatcher” is rated PG-13 for sexual content and an intense
scene of childbirth.
f7 * JUNE FENNER, a Costa Mesa resident in her late 50s, is vice
president of a work-force training company.
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