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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • 44

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
44
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

D2 Sat Late Trite THE ARTS Say January 23 14 Today's schedule at Sundance Film Festival Penn decries misogyny in movie world Here are tiadays screenings at the Sundance Film Festval 1040 aim Shorts 1:40 dratc 440 pm -Fire Eyes: documentary 740 pan- -thalcs-wes wits 11 alms-ones documentary 10-40 Snorts Proram Ii 2 Continued from D-I 'MATE rLs azi Pict City 10 -Tbe Secret Lie al Hawes- 1 -Naked New Vart- pre4 pm rat That tary 7 pm -Betraral- 10 pm -Lives it Hazard- ta re r-- 4 4 6-t 1 I it( ft II zr-i) it 111 ill a I-1 11 14 i I 1 ie '4 1 41r S4 PROSPECTOR SQUARS TIELAITM Sadewiader Orrin Part CIty 930 a -Aschorest- Eatyeas Rem lateramrity sad panel dyseassaat 3 -tlessteg- dramatic pm ')hckey One- Aratar Pe311 tetrcopeetrie 9 pao -The Eat late- premier HOLIDAY VILLAGE conct I 1776 Park Aye Part City 10 k-aa -Clem Staves: drama-0e 1 -Araramt: Park CAI at I IA A- Aly 7- '4 L14 i Sentirr) PIM ror -a A- 113 I fv) 4 041 'C Al 21 4 22 -2 -t 4 pm -Besot of the 'tatter: Mersunestary 7 pm -Freedoms um My Mistdoetztettary 10 pm -comics Out ruder rue- docummtary PARK CTTT 111336ART CLVTElt gCsui Waiters School) 1225 Fart Ave Pm-k City 9:30 41-IL -Leyte au the River Agana- special scr emirs 12:30 pan -Spanking Me blithey" chaznac 330 an1 Atinhara: Euro 6:30 -Cuba Va- documentary 1130 wigs -11ttle Arthur Pena setrospeciave ire Ag LA -A:" -34 1 tot Goodman HOLIDAY VILLAGE CCLEMA 10:20 a-IM- 1:20 jun Wbat Happered Was- dramatic 4:20 lam Up European 720 pin "Minotaur- Part City alt MJdALgh 10-20 pan "Fort- dramatic HOLIDAY VILLAGE CLITMA Old Salt Lake City Jail restaurant building once housed the busy Salt Late Oty Brewing Co STNIDANCE satErtrcG ROOM North Provo Canyon 430 'Karehia take: Native Arnencaa 8 -Darkness a special gaeMMt This 'jai Mouse' has a heady histoly didn't pay much attention to us- What did surprise Penn was learning that "I wasn't goirg to edit my own film- Back then the director had little sway over the film editors "They didn't do anything radically bad" Penn says "Everything is based on choices and pre-visions Somebody else coming in doesn't share that vion It may be all right but it isn't the one you want" The character of Billy the Kid appealed to Penn because of "the sense that there may not have been a Bffiy the Kid but he was a creation of the time" The film includes a character played by Hurd Hatfield who wrote dime novels extolling Billy's "They began to create these characters these 'bad men of the West' he says Likewise Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow began to believe their own press clippings and provide their own In "Bonnie and Clyde" Penn depicts Parker (Faye Dunaway) writing poems about how she and Barrow (Warren Beatty) tore up the countryside robbing banks That was accurate Bonnie was sending these poems to the newspapers about their exploits" "Bonnie and Clyde" is notable for its strong female performances from Dunaway and Estelle Parsons (who won an Oscar) That's a common characteristic in Penns films: Look at Annie Sullivan and Helen Keller in "The Miracle Worker" (in which Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke won Oscan) the earth mother Alice in "Alice's Restaurant- the flighty Georgia in "Four Friends" or Mary Steenburgen's dual roles as villain and victim in the thriller CITYVIEW 1 et- 'sworr' "Dead of Winter? "There is a basic sort of misogyny in the movie world" Penn says explaining the lack of strong parts for women "Male heroes are the ones they sort of embrace Ifs a pity women are more interesting "Bonnie and Clyde" also sparked a national debate about movie violence an argument Penn recognizes all too well in to-days political discourse -They politiciaLs- I always look for a convenient whipping boy to excuse their own basic cowardice when it comes to legislating about guns" Penn says Railing against violence in movies and TV "doesn't require them to do anything except censor which would hardly be a noble endeavor" Penns recent films haven't approached the critical success of the late '60s the spy thriller "Target" (1985) and "Dead of Winter" (1987) were minor successes: -Penn and Teller Get Killed" (1990) with the notorious magic team was simply awful and his last film -The Portrait" (1992) with Lauren Baca 11 and Gregory Peck was made for the TNT cable channel But Penn is undaunted: He still directs stage plays in New York and is developing a script for a new movie (which he says he can't talk about yet) After 35 years in film directing actors young and old Penn says he works to avoid the "certain loss of magic of awe of the medium" that older filmmakers can face "You find new ways to challenge them" Penn says "and for them to challenge me" JACK GOODMAN upper Yale Avenue and fillIcrest with water coming from Red Butte CanyontSanders also testifies that brewery burned down on Jane 25 1390 with a monetary loss of $50000 Ey that time Matt Culkn hal joined forces with Mr Moritz in the operation- Parenthetically in 1693 a chap tlmed FritL an employee of the Salt Lake Brewing Co carried a 101-pound keg of beer from the Fisher Brewery to Walker Brewery on his shoulder This was a distance of seven miles his time was one tour and 51 minutes and Fritz won a 4100 wager for so doing- Sanders Not long after the turn of the century the brewery on the hill was bottling Extra Pale Premiurn as well as the trustworthy American Beauty Manufacturers trumpeted use of "the finest Utah barley imported hops and mountain spring waterr Saloon keepers could phone Hyland IT reach the office building in today's sketch) and order a case for just $350 "We pay $150 for empty cases returned" an advertisement said Matters did a complete turnabout after enactment of Prohibition in 1919 Matthew Cullen the brewery predent strove manfully organizing the Cullen Manufacturing Co which made candy and soft drinks One product was breakfast cereal called Nekto But the fat was in the fire or the hops cut of the keg In 1923 the Old Castle Co took over the remaining buildings and business but lasted just a few years Some buildings were torn down others became cabinet and furniture-repair shops Now old company effaces house the Old Salt Lake City Jail restaurant One hopes it serves beer Plenty of Penn's films available at video store As yrou speed up the curving hill-clu-nting road swingMg matartsts fnam to 50 Sou1 a L-in buil ding labeled -Old Salt City Jail-- momentarily rashes a 5S your line of sight Kno-wing a restaurant oocupies building at 42 WOO East your ZES may begin to Caw as you muse upon the notion cf dining in premises enriched by jail-cell bars and similar architectural elements with incarceration Take Itiine out if you can to study the rather od I-appearing enshrining edibles ard1 imagined jail yells If you do be sLTrised to rind other ktterMg beneath the cornice of the brick stracture'S facade Obviously of cer--ziderable age reads -Salt Lake City Brewirg revealing the two-story Inuit-windowed b--ucture's original purpose Designed by the notable Richard Klett-Mg it was the office of one 'of our town's most notable producers of beer by the barrelful inducting American Beauty Beer and German Lager Copious research hindered only' by a lack of liquid samples shows that Aaron Keyse: rs's trvarery once occupying Plic entire hilltop produced 7t1000 barrels of the frothy liquid way back in MI5 It was then the largest instituton of its kind in the territory Its closest competitor Wagener's Talifernia Brewery produced a mere 9150 barrels of the stuff that same year Whether or not you Lave a taste for beer facts drained from Utah State Historical Society archives bring ccirietis matters to light -Aaron Keyser organized the Salt Lake Brewing Co at 300 and 1000 East but moved to 500 and 1000 East to tate advantage of the ice ponds on Frillels mtt and at Sletml Olivet" As a rion-natve son this cchtmrict always thought the name of the modest eminence up which 500 South climbs was Brewery ILIL No ice pond there As for Mt Olivet it's a cemetery Does it or did it have a pond! Other mysteries: Other reliable state-history-sources say the brewery was established in 1871 by one Richard Margetts When did he make way for Aaren Keyser! How come it grew so fast with 35 employees in 1836! Apparently during the Margetts regime the big malt house bottling worts stables and even housing for many of the workers were built One major question remains who drank all that beer! Were Latter-day Saints responsible for some of that 20000- barrel Peter Cole who manufactures beer and ale at the squatters Pub premises nowadays avers that "that's a lot of beer- by 1990s terms The prime researcher into local production of suds soda water and even postcards is a cheerful and sober) gentleman named Stan Sanders who houses the regions largest display of old and empty beer bottles at his Salt Lake City residence on Blair Avenue near 2700 South Stan believes Marzetts started the company in 1871 and was succeeded by one Jacob Moritt in 1875 and that Aaron Keyser then took ecrumand of the works in 1873 Sanders places the pond from which ice was cut and stored "between with more heart and guts than "Dances With Wolves" ever thought of having Dustin Hoffman is perfectly passive while Chief Dan George blows away HoLlywoods Indian stereotypes with good humor Night Moves (1975) A detective story filled with deceit and double-crosses with Gene Hackman perfect as the private eye being played for a sap The Missouri Breaks (1976) A disjointed Western best known for the one-time pairing of Marlon (in a dress'?) and Jack Nicholson Four Friends (1981) flawed gem that's hard to find on video An ex-hippie (Craig Wasson) muddles through the disillusionment of the '70s and his feelings for a free-spirited woman (Jodi Thelen) Look closely for Mercedes Ruehl and Glenne Headly in small roles Target (1985) A tight little thriller --about a son (Matt Dillon) who learns his staid father (Hackman again) is really a retired CIA spook conceals a tender reconciliation story Dead of Winter (1987) Faux Hitchcock high on the implausibility scale Mary Steenburgen as an actress caught in a blackmail scheme sells it though Means Of the eight Arthur Penn films being screened at the Sundartce Film Festival only "Mickey One" is not on video (though it's worth seeing "Little Big Man" and the others on the big screen) Here is a video tour of Arthur Penns films (an asterisk denotes films being screened at Stmdance): The left-Handed Gun (1958) A moody telling of the Billy the Kid story notable for Paul Newman's sympathetic and psychotic portrayat The Miracle Worker (1962) The tale of Annie Sullivan teaching Helen Keller avoids sentimentality with uncompromising scenes of Sullivan (Anne Bancroft) disciplining Keller (Patty Duke) with fearlessness and flying tackles The Chase (1966) A conventional prison-break story gave Robert Redford one of his first chances to show his stuff Bonnie and Clyde (1967) The violence seems tame now but it was brutal for its time Warren Beatty's killer charm was never more prominent Alice's Restaurant (1969) A rambling trip through the 60s with Arlo Guthrie as the appropriately dazed-and-confused tour guide Good performances by Pat Quinn and James Broderick (and look for IL Emmet Walsh as the Group sergeant) Little Big Man A "revisionist Western" Jack Goodman has teem associated with The Salt Lake Trtltine as a staff or freelance u-riter for more than 45 years 40 OFF Regular Price VA Trui 1 1 Cl'PJ'fA0611J1 (01:11) ItZ Free I i Bride's Pass or Discount Coupon Regular Admission $400 With Coupon (- $300 711 Children under 11 free Brides Free utith pass oent coccoa 1-) 41a 0- 7 0 dilig" 4Lt'i -r'r i 4 4- a --tn-r I :4 1' 'Ici- AiE 474 iiA 41! 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Pages Available:
1,964,073
Years Available:
1871-2004