Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Daily News from New York, New York • 50

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
50
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Saturday, June '13, 1987 DAILY NEWS 11 ATTENTION MUST BEI PAID MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY. With Tom Bosley, Kevin Pollak, Eddie Deezen, Wendy Sherman. Directed by Richard Fleischer. Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes. Rated PG.

ILLION DOLLAR 'M ripoff Mystery" of is the just a star-stud- cheap ded 1960s comedy "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World." But it may be worth a million bucks to the some DeLaurentiis sharp-eyed viewer. Indeed, entertainment group is offering a fortune to those actually foolish enough to sit through the movie, and figure out the mystery. The deal is this. Some greedy characters charge through the Sunbelt in search of $4 million. The money was stashed away in four separate locations by a corrupt I ON THE TRAIL in "Million Dollar Mystery" government official (Tom Bosley is the only actor in the movie with any kind of a reputation and, fortunately for him, he's not around long enough to do serious damage to his career).

Just before dying in a roadside diner from an overdose of lethal chili, Bosley mutters "Start at the city of the That's just the first clue in this ongoing scavenger hunt. The bungling fortune hunters, who include a smooching honeymoon couple and a would-be Rambo, take to the road in whatever vehicles they can' grab. They bump into the movie's most obvious talent, impressionist Kevin Pollak who, as a small-town cop, does an eyeball rolling imitation of Lt. Columbo that's pretty impressive. And they get to explore that bizarre Arizona tourist attrac-the London Bridge.

But they also manage to find and instantly lose $3 million. What of the remaining million? According to the game plan, you, the viewer, can figure out the location by playing close attention to the additional clues. The trick is to stay awake long enough so you can spot them, which this writer, much to her distress, failed to do; Movies By KATHLEEN CARROLL devil-about-town, who ignites the powers of three modern-day witches, is a curious brew. Using just the bare bones of John Updike's witty original novel, Australian director George Miller creates quite a stir, at first, with some impishly funny scenes. His leading ladies, namely Cher, Susan Sarandon and Michelle Pfeiffer, romp through the movie with just the right giddy, tongue-in-cheek ek approach.

Cher can make you laugh by just tying her tumbling locks into pigtails and dressing like the farmer's daughter. Sarandon's split-second timing and charm make her amusingly bewitching as Jane who goes strawberry blond, after her first passionate tumble and starts wearing lace-trimmed ankle socks to the supermarket. In one deliciously light-hearted scene the trio play tennis with their host who hits the highest lob in the history of the game. But no one really has a chance as long as Jack Nicholson, in a Samurai hairdo and brocade lounging robe, is chewing up 1 the scenery as Van Horn. He hams it up with a gleeful vengeance, raising his pointed eyebrows and flashing his trademark grin in a souped-up replay of every B-movie role he has ever played.

Wallowing in Nicholson's excesses (like the scene in which he spits blood at a startled church congregation and insists he's just the victim of a domestic squabble) can be a howl. But, by placing the ball in Nicholson's court, Miller allows the movie to run away with his megabuck star. It ultimately disintegrates into just a routine horror flick with some cheesy-looking special effects. could call it body-raising since the night's activities usually include a little levitation) at Van Horn's Playboy mansion. As you might have already gathered, this raunchy fable about a flaming SATANIC MAJESTY? Nah, just Jack Nicholson in "Witches of Eastwick" A BIG HELPING OF DEVILED HAM THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK.

Jack Nicholson, Cher, Susan Sarandon. Directed by George Miller. At the Beekman, Criterion Center, Loews 84th Movieland and the Gramercy. Running time: 2 hours, 1 minute. Rated R.

LEXANDRA MEDFORD, A Jane Ridgemont, Spofford, the and spellbinding Sukie trio in "The Witches of Eastwick," usually do nothing more than overdose on dry martinis and cheese whiz at the weekly meeting of their coven. But tonight the frustration of being single in an uptight New England town has driven them to drastic measures. They have decided to test their powers of positive thinking by collectively wishing for "a tall, dark Prince Charming traveling under a curse." That very second Daryl Van Horn blows into town during one of these nasty thunderstorms that always herald the arrival of the bad guy. He makes his presence felt immediately by snoring loudly during Jane's cello recital and soon they are making steamy music together in Van Horn's newly acquired mansion. Alexandra is also persuaded by this veteran seducer to test his king-sized bed which he claims was once owned by the Borgias.

Sukie succumbs as well and soon all three women are holding their consciousness-raising (you STALKING THE WILD ASPARAGUS PREDATOR. Amold Schwarzenegger, Carl Weathers. Directed by John McTiernan. At National, Embassy 72d 86th St. East and Movieland.

Running time: 1 hour, 46 minutes. Rated R. HE THUNDEROUS ROAR of rival a of helicopter Arnold hails Schwarzeneg- the ar- ger and his Army rescue team of Rambo lookalikes in the opening scene of "Predator." Schwarzenegger, playing the terse, actionminded Major (Dutch) Schaefer, is informed of his new mission by the base commander who claims they're in "a charming little country." Charming indeed. This unnamed Latin American hellhole, complains one tough survivor, "makes Cambodia look like Kansas" for in the thick of the jungle they stumble across a gruesome spectacle- -the bodies of several men who have been skinned alive. A little later a member of the team is mysteriously disemboweled by what looks like a jungle fern (this movie, need I say, is not for the squeamish).

"Did you find Hawkins?" asks Schaefer. "I don't know," replies the soldier who has just discovered the remains. "There is something out there waiting for us and it ain't no man," conSTONI 912 -250 7001 cludes a wise man in the team. The audience already knows that Dutch and his men are being dogged by a carnivorous creature from an unnamed planet because the movie includes footage inside the jungle. alien's head, showing just how his prey looks to him.

The not-so-jolly green giant proceeds to devour the entire cast with the obvious exception of the movie's star who, as you would expect, meets him head on in a manto-beast combat sequence. The fleshVEGGING OUT: Arnold Schwarzenegger in "Predator" eating monster is a bit of a chame- I say strange because the former beefleon, though. In his final denouement, cake artist has not only shed some of he no longer looks like a plant, but suddenly changes into a mighty warrior in metal armor. He also seems strangely taken with Schwarzenegger who, in case you have trouble telling them apart, is the one in the 008. 12 his greatest -namely his veinpopping muscles -he, perhaps because the jungle heat sapped his energy, shows so little animal magnetism that this creature feature winds up just a ridiculous bore.

RidE A.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Daily News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
18,846,294
Years Available:
1919-2024