Thursday, June 9, 1983/The Battalion/Page 5 ust Movies r 'resent !| leteonL*^ t ^ ieaters f° r specific ‘ of teclfjB 65, ^ ov,es are subject to a therfo!® n ^ e without notice. AH nor, f 0 n listings are current (effec- .11 die: rive Friday) through press on clea time. ’pemctall MSC Grove y- is ope t l, t ^ 1€ Ri n g s: m is desJLght. Animator Ralph - xa s^Bk s hi (“Fritz the Cat” and i tend' American Pop“) created this said,itiitj-made animated version thosepf jf j.r.r. Tolkien’s classic tril- the UniiAy,about like in the mythical ■die Earth. Rated PG. j] ; Poltergeist: riday and Saturday. Steven fcberg did a wonderful job ■capturing and recreating ■those things that scared "C^Mwhen you were a child, and “S Rated PG. The Sword and the Sorcerer: Double feature with “The Beastmaster.” A pair of light hearted cinematic dwarfs ab out swords and mythical swashbucklers. Both rated R. Chained Heat: Linda Blair stars in this sleazy sexploitation film about the inmates in an all-women pris on. Rated R. Rocky Horror Picture Show: Midnight. The original cult film is still here. The music is great; the plot is campy at its finest; and the audience is usually rowdy. Rated R. Manor East veillance and attack helicopter in this fast-paced adventure. The question is: will the good guys get the copter or will the bad guys get it? Also stars Candy Clark, Malcom McDowell and Warren Oates. Directed by John Badham. Rated R. Tbe Way We Were: Return of the Jedi: so is acin| I has; ssador ttl hcl iday. Robert Redford and (bra Streisand star in this lie love story about a con- fative writer and his liber- political activist wife. United lated PG. tural exds the State s receivi ■ary docti fields ing univc ttehtshift: day. Ron Howard dire- this small comedy about a ght club operated out of a Ky morgue. )tS | tdR ' . , „ underball: head. 11 in thedi ntanddi# [sday. Sean Connery stars 'tie of his best perform- ts as the man with a license d Tuesdj ill, James Bond. Full of all Grab your tub of popcorn and your raisinettes: this is one of the best Saturday matinee movies ever made. Although “Jedi” is not as good as “Star Wars” because of its lack of novelty and its massive pre release publicity, it compen- states with special effects, bizarre aliens and a fast pace. Rated PG. the weaf complete, )r. Fab n usedtol type can d tvitm red the iff. ’ Kahl, i ntified ised by II besenttol usual Bond led PG. trademarks. t Times at Ridge- lont High: tuary sf said Tue /I Ingsday. Sean Penn stars his humorous look at to- s high school students. A above the usual high ol movies, but riot a big Rated R. Plitt Cinema I HI athless: ard Gere and and French [comer Valerie Kaprisky in this well-done remake teJean-Luc Godard 1959 |or classic. Rated R. s Int< NIO- Man From Snowy River: See this one before it leaves. Even if you don’t like West erns or the usual “boy grows to manhood” stories, this is still an entertaining movie. Rated PG. The Toy: Richard Pryor and Jackie Gleason star in this mediocre movie, released last Christ mas, about a millionaire who buys his son a unique toy (Pryor). Rated PG. Post Oak Blue Thunder: Roy Scheider stars as a police helicopter pilot assigned to test an ultra-sophisticated sur- Flashdance: Being hailed as the next “Saturday Night Fever,” this movie has lots of flash, lots of hot music, lots of hot dancing, but not much plot. Sort of like MTV on the silver screen. Jennifer Beals stars as the wel der-by-day, dancer-by-night. Rated R. Savannah Smiles: Something about a young girl who makes a lot of people happy. Rated PG. Schulman Six WarGames: Matthew Broderick stars as a teenage computer whiz who stumbles into the Pentagon’s defense computer and almost starts World War III in this clever, high-tech film. Dire ctor John Badham (“Blue Thunder") wonderfully plays on our fears of technology and nuclear war. See review this page. Rated PG. Octopussy: The usual James Bond stuff. Roger Moore (not the real thing) stars as 007 and Maud Adams has the title (Can you believe it?) role. From the pre views, this movie looks like it will be the typical Roger Moore Bond film, nothing more, nothing less. Rated PG. Trading Places: Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Mur phy star in this update of the old “Prince and the Pauper” story. Aykroyd stars as a weal thy, preppy commodity brok er and Murphy stars as a street hustler who gets to trade places with Aykroyd on a bet. Initial reviews of this movie have said that it is one of the funniest of the summer sea son. Directed by John Landis. Rated PG. Psycho II: Anthony Perkins returns as Hitchcock’s classic schizo, Norman Bates. Twenty-two years later he returns to Bates Motel. Norman is not happy when he finds that the old Bates Motel has been turned into an “adult motel.” Also stars Vera Miles. Rated R. The Man With Two Brains: A Steve Martin/Carl Reiner collaboration about a surgeon who falls in love with Kathleen Turner’s (“Body Heat“) body, but has another brain in mind, a disembodied one with whom he talks telepathically. I ha ven’t seen it, but I’ve been told that it’s almost as bad as the last Martin/Reiner bomb, “Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid.” Rated R. EKING GARDEN Chinese Restaurant - ALL YOU CAN EAT j police latius Gai g, ranasu 1 a carai Friday and Sunday Evening Buffet 6-8 p.m. 8 5 20 Weekly Noon Buffet *3 98 liffets include: egg roll, fried rice, fried wonton soup, joo goo gai pan, sweet and sour pork, beef with broccoli olicecarjbid fried banana. OPEN DAILY: 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. 131 3 s College 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. 822-7661 Q)ineno tftoorn .*%. 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YES, send more information to: □ Myself □ Nty Parents NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP PHONE Clip & mail to: BRAZOSLAND REALTY, ^ INC., 4103Texas Ave., Bryan,TX77801 ‘WarGames’ hits target by Gary Barker Battalion Staff When I first saw the ads for “WarGames,” I thought it was just another summer movie ab out teenagers and video games — a guaranteed hit for the mak ers, but not much more. But I was wrong. “War- Games” is not just another video-games-and-teenagers film. Instead it’s a wonderful, high-tech adventure film that cleverly plays on our knowledge — and sometimes fear — of computers and nuclear weapons. The premise of “WarGames” is relatively simple. Matthew Broderick plays a computer- wise high school student: he changes his biology grade with his home computer (sounds similar to an event that hap pened in Aggiedom about a year ago) and hunts for new compu ter games by perusing the phone lines. One day he inadvertantly taps into a U.S. defense department system — called WOPR (pro nounced ‘whopper’) for War Operations Plan Response — that is programmed to plqy war games. What David (Broderick) doesn’t know is that the compu ter was given the power to launch nuclear missiles after a defense department study showed that us mere humans aren’t reliable enough to push the button when and if the time comes. Gulp. David tries to terminate the game, but the computer does not cooperate. Once the game is going, there is no stopping. Gulp. David is nabbed by the feds and taken to NORAD (the North American Air Defense headquarters buried deep in the side of a Colorado mountain), where he is interrogated by Pen tagon heavies who think he is a subversive (pronounced ‘commie’). Gulp. Complicating all these events is the computer’s maker, the classic mad scientist with a death wish who refuses to help NORAD in their plight. He mumbles something about man kind going the way of the di nosaurs. All these events come together in the main command Movie Review room of NORAD. Director John Badham (whose most recent work is “Blue Thunder") creates breath-stopping suspense as the NORAD crew watches the in coming Soviet missiles on the big screen and waits to find out: are they live or are they WOPR? The principal players — Broderick and Ally Sheedy, who plays David’s girlfriend — help make the suspense as good as it is. Both are believable, warm, sometimes shy, sometimes troublemakers — not the typical rip-off-their-clothes-at-the- first-chance teenagers por trayed in many of today’s teen movies. Complementing Broderick and Sheedy is Dabney Coleman as the Pentagon heavy in charge of computer operations at NORAD. The other characters are equally well-played. The main, and only, stinker in the cast is a tobacco-chewing four-star general who runs NORAD and rattles off lines like: “I’d piss on a spark plug if I thought it would do any good.” His character was a little too much like the hawkish generals who wanted to bomb Vietnam back to the Stone Age: not exact ly a likely candidate to head the nation’s nuclear defense sys tems. Although some of the plot twists and computer details stretch the imagination, and the limits of computers, the movie remains plausible. It also re mains paranoid. The movie is full of the current nuclear para noia and screenwriters Lawr ence Lasker and Walter F. Parkes brilliantly play on our fears. The movie’s final lesson on the futility of war is childishly simple and perhaps oversimpli fied, but it is still refreshing to see in a summer movie about video games and teenagers. WHILE THE CAT'S 1 AWAY THEM! ILL PLAY SALE! 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